We know this to be true: Food prices are out of control. In the US, they’ve increased 28% since 2019, outpacing inflation.
This economic crunch adds a touch more tragedy and urgency to an all-too-common scenario: When that delicious french fry slips out of your hand and tumbles to the ground below.
Of course, according to a common myth, you now have exactly five seconds to grab it before it absorbs enough bacteria to become inedible.
The five-second rule effectively has no basis in reality, per Popular Science:
… this flies in the face of what may seem like basic logic. Surely, the less time a piece of food spends on the floor, the fewer opportunities it has to collect bacteria, right?
Actually, yes!
According to PopSci, most of the bacteria on your kitchen floor is harmless. Eating a little floor-food here and there likely isn’t going to be a death sentence.
That said, the last sentence said “most,” not “all.” It’s hard to tell how clean a floor is, especially if it’s carpeted or — God forbid — wet, so it’s better to be safe than sorry.
Yes, every french fry is precious — especially in light of the ongoing “potato cartel” price-hiking scandal — but no matter how much you’ve been overcharged for it, that french fry on the ground is not worth it.
Fun fact: Women are more likely to eat food off the floor than men, according to a 2003 study, and people are more likely to eat fallen sweets than vegetables.