If You Have This Popular Sauce at Home, Don t Use It, FDA Warns
By John Quinn of Best Life |
If You Have This Popular Sauce at Home, Don t Use It, FDA Warns
With its lockdowns and restaurant closures, the last year has been an opportunity for many of us to get more creative in the kitchen and recreate the dishes we normally eat at a restaurant in the comfort of our own homes instead. However, if you re planning on whipping up some of your favorite Southeast Asian food for yourself and your family, you need to check your ingredients ASAP. This week, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reported a product recall of several common ingredients in Thai cooking, mainly three beloved sauces. For the full details of this sauce recall, read on, and for more foods to steer clear of, If You Have This Seasoning at Home, Throw It Out Now, FDA Says.
Pollen season is starting 20 days earlier and pollen loads are 21% higher since 1990 and a huge chunk of that is because of global warming, a new study says.
Across the United States and Canada, pollen season is starting 20 days earlier and pollen loads are 21 per cent higher since 1990 and a huge chunk of that is because of global warming, a new study has found.
Allergies: Climate change is causing pollen season to being earlier finds study
Warmer Earth leads to spring starting earlier for plants and animals and the more carbon dioxide they get, trees and plants produce more pollen.
Feb 09, 2021 12:35:19 IST
When Dr Stanley Fineman started as an allergist in Atlanta, he told patients they should start taking their medications and prepare for the drippy, sneezy onslaught of pollen season around St. Patrick’s Day. That was about 40 years ago. Now he tells them to start around St. Valentine’s Day. Across the United States and Canada, pollen season is starting 20 days earlier and pollen loads are 21 percent higher since 1990 and a huge chunk of that is because of global warming, a new study found in Monday’s journal the
When Dr. Stanley Fineman started as an allergist in Atlanta, he told patients they should start taking their medications and prepare for the drippy, sneezy