Is It Safe to Microwave Plastic Containers?

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  • Опубліковано 19 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @PapeySapote
    @PapeySapote 2 місяці тому +26293

    Im fucked.

    • @Jadington
      @Jadington 2 місяці тому +1107

      I just felt my cancer grow more

    • @HardxCorpsxKali
      @HardxCorpsxKali 2 місяці тому +192

      😂😂😂

    • @isamusg
      @isamusg 2 місяці тому +114

      Same

    • @tommivirolainen1886
      @tommivirolainen1886 2 місяці тому +108

      Not alone

    • @Chromosome999
      @Chromosome999 2 місяці тому +160

      We all are! Look up Rhonda Patrick talking about broccoli sprouts on cleaning plastics from your body,

  • @AnthonySmith-sc4zs
    @AnthonySmith-sc4zs Місяць тому +6206

    Operator at a plastics factory here. Most containers that say they are microwave safe should also say BPA free. We don’t use BPAs in our plastics but that being said I’m pretty sure my body is 50% microplastics now and I’m probably not long for this world. Use glass or ceramics.

    • @XxbankerboomxX
      @XxbankerboomxX Місяць тому +697

      If you’re 50% plastic you are staying here for a loooong time😅

    • @DelightfulDissident
      @DelightfulDissident Місяць тому +100

      ​@@XxbankerboomxX too true 😂

    • @soniasierras6988
      @soniasierras6988 Місяць тому +56

      Thank you for sharing your experience

    • @willkessner2674
      @willkessner2674 Місяць тому +52

      Yeah and other plastics might not be as toxic as bpa but are far from inert

    • @RawSauce338
      @RawSauce338 Місяць тому +48

      There are other, equally as dangerous bisphenols other than BisPhenol-A(BPA)

  • @matthewpetzold9878
    @matthewpetzold9878 2 місяці тому +8456

    Thanks! Now ill just go back in time and tell myself to expect cancer

    • @torolavmelhus1092
      @torolavmelhus1092 2 місяці тому

      Cancer? Nono expect your sperm to be 33% less effective. Now if that doesn't scare you, imagine if you have a boy. That kid will have 66% less effective sperm. So.. Do you think it'll stop in the next generation if we continue this way?
      No, it'll be 99%

    • @MrStoney69
      @MrStoney69 2 місяці тому +1

      It's more likely to interfere
      with your testosterone production
      that it is to give you cancer...
      Sincerely, a guy with VERY low T...

    • @reikidreams9265
      @reikidreams9265 2 місяці тому +32

      Start taking Essiac tea now

    • @tmonei4597
      @tmonei4597 2 місяці тому +10

      Weeeeeeelll u can blame your folks

    • @LTAdventurephoto
      @LTAdventurephoto 2 місяці тому

      Essiac is a herbal tea promoted as an alternative treatment for cancer and other illnesses. There is no evidence it is beneficial to health. In a number of studies Essiac either showed no action against cancer cells, or actually increased the rate of cancer growth

  • @tonimarx6405
    @tonimarx6405 Місяць тому +190

    Apparently absolutely everything causes cancer nowadays. The moment i stopped caring was the moment i began feeling healthy. The stress of being a neurotic hypochondriac is going to kill you way before anything like this does.

    • @JoseGomez-rc5wv
      @JoseGomez-rc5wv Місяць тому +11

      Not too many sane people out there claiming “everything” causes cancer. Really it comes down to a handful a recently created, ultra processed compounds that are to blame. Avoid those, exercise, try to eat natural foods, get good sleep and you’re chillin

    • @BlobBlobkins
      @BlobBlobkins Місяць тому +3

      Not everything, plastic is the main problem and bad proceeded oil. Haven't heard that there is something else that major.

    • @sergioayala3973
      @sergioayala3973 Місяць тому

      He's not wrong. There's a cancer for every and anything that has a function in our bodies. Skin, organs, bones, muscle, nervous system is all affected. Unless you're outside of any major cities how do you avoid all the bad fumes in the air that we breathe? Nearby cig smokers? The maintenance guy spraying weed killer next door? That double cheeseburger I had for lunch?

    • @lauralvw8445
      @lauralvw8445 29 днів тому +4

      It's easy to use a plate. That's what we did before it "microwave save" plastic existed

    • @BeforeThisNovember
      @BeforeThisNovember 21 день тому +6

      Well there’s a bit of a difference between being a neurotic hypochondriac and just taking a bit of care in what you ingest.

  • @DGB120
    @DGB120 2 місяці тому +4298

    If I die from BPAs I’ve had an easy life

  • @PlayrAds
    @PlayrAds Місяць тому +1354

    Been doing it for around 30 years but thanks for telling us how.

    • @kayjay8683
      @kayjay8683 Місяць тому +26

      And yet you are still with us.

    • @roelej
      @roelej Місяць тому +38

      Eh, rub some dirt on it and walk it off.

    • @mortuarymax
      @mortuarymax Місяць тому +19

      It's been told to you for 30 years you just never listened

    • @Muttinchopsforevermore
      @Muttinchopsforevermore Місяць тому +6

      ​@@roelejLol 80's kids

    • @DiegoPoston
      @DiegoPoston Місяць тому +7

      You’re probably alright. I only want to hear her dietary advice so I can do the opposite. She doesn’t exactly look like the paragon of health.

  • @ShortFilmVD
    @ShortFilmVD 2 місяці тому +2189

    Context is important. What are the figures? How much BPA is leaked from a plastic container in a typical cooking cycle? How much breaks down into less harmful compounds? How much is absorbed by the food and by the body? What are considered dangerous levels? How quickly does the body process it vs how long it takes to absorb?
    There must be some truth to it as plastic container manufacturers are all doing BPA free products now, but how much is just scaremongering?

    • @gwapod9885
      @gwapod9885 Місяць тому +429

      Stop trying to do real science. 😂

    • @CaGirl93003
      @CaGirl93003 Місяць тому +584

      @@gwapod9885 he’s not wrong to ask these questions, they are both valid and relevant. I asked my husband who is a PhD in inorganic chemistry and is a specialist in material science with a focus on polymers - and these are the exact questions that matter and research is ongoing to answer them - there is no real general consensus yet. Telling someone else to “stop trying to do real science” is maybe the most ignorant statement I’ve heard on the internet, and that is saying a lot.

    • @nivb852
      @nivb852 Місяць тому +400

      ​@@CaGirl93003he was joking luv

    • @JuneHarriseco
      @JuneHarriseco Місяць тому +35

      ​@@CaGirl93003your chemistry husband doesn't know Jack about health

    • @ShortFilmVD
      @ShortFilmVD Місяць тому +76

      @@JuneHarriseco thank you for highly informative your reply. Do you think the people you cited will know these answers? If not, do you suppose that they will more generally know what exact things in their lifestyle, diet and or environment contributed to their conditions? And surely I'd have to ask my friends who don't suffer from such conditions also and cross-reference their answers to come to a more viable conclusion? Even then, I'd probably need to get a lot more friends to get enough responses to get a statistically reliable dataset. Hmm, this sounds like a lot of work, but you seem like a authority on such matters so I'll trust your suggestion June 👏 you gem 💎
      On that note, will you be my friend to participate? You seem like you'd be a good candidate.

  • @user-jt1jv8vl9r
    @user-jt1jv8vl9r Місяць тому +182

    I store food in plastic containers, but I always transfer them into a glass container/plate/bowl to heat them in the microwave. I have done this for 10+ years. Principally because heating food in the plastic container stained the plastic but also because glass handles higher temperatures better than plastic. To be honest I hadn’t considered the potential health benefits of doing so, it just seemed the logical thing to do. I’ve used a metal bottle for water for 10+ years as I can put it in the dishwasher and it’s more durable than a plastic bottle for water.

    • @sabine9012
      @sabine9012 Місяць тому

      European? It seems almost intuitive to us, I would say. How come Germans "know" this.

    • @PFrules
      @PFrules Місяць тому +5

      Doesn't matter, even if you store food in plastic, it still gets into the food.

    • @ifitistobeitisuptome
      @ifitistobeitisuptome Місяць тому

      You are literally AMAZING!!!

    • @Lee-l5k3d
      @Lee-l5k3d Місяць тому +3

      Who cares

    • @ifitistobeitisuptome
      @ifitistobeitisuptome Місяць тому +2

      @@Lee-l5k3d 'Like' your own comment did you Lee?........Sad!

  • @JDB6320
    @JDB6320 Місяць тому +485

    I switched to glass and honestly it warms my food up evenly in the microwave. Lids seal really well. So easy to clean.

    • @hzhang1228
      @hzhang1228 Місяць тому +27

      what is the lid made out of?

    • @jgirl4life07
      @jgirl4life07 Місяць тому +7

      Mine is glass with silicone but the ones I use manufacturer says no lids in microwave. The glass containers can be heated up in a conventional oven too not just microwave. Some people don't know chemistry as how heat and cold affect glass so if anyone is getting glass containers make sure to keep that in mind

    • @triger1
      @triger1 Місяць тому +22

      you have microglass in your food, thats even worse

    • @tonychristensen6714
      @tonychristensen6714 Місяць тому +9

      😂​@@triger1

    • @Imom4Him
      @Imom4Him Місяць тому

      @@triger1microwaves are dangerous no matter what we use 🚫 Agree 👍🏽

  • @hollywoodbb
    @hollywoodbb Місяць тому +609

    Metal water bottle and glass cookware/storage containers will reduce this exposure significantly. I worked in a PVC plant as a chemist and she’s right. Plasticizers are not bound chemically to the PVC. They’re additives that specifically don’t bind to the polymers, so that the product is pliable and can be formed in different ways. Phthalates are often used as plasticizers, and they’re the suspected culprit for the decreased testosterone were seeing in the population today. But as she says, they’re not chemically bound, so they can and do leech out into your food and the environment. DIDP and DOP are 2 plasticizers we used in our analyses, which the industry uses in its end products.
    Needless to say, I’m proud to be out of that industry.

    • @a110100
      @a110100 Місяць тому +13

      Don't put metal in microwave.

    • @ULHIS
      @ULHIS Місяць тому +24

      ​@@a110100get rid of the bloody microwave, dude.

    • @giaaaacomo
      @giaaaacomo Місяць тому +15

      ​@@ULHIS the microwave is doing nothing bad, the problems are in the plastic

    • @a110100
      @a110100 Місяць тому +20

      @@ULHIS The practice of placing your metal objects in a microwave oven is something I highly discourage due to the potential for adverse consequences you'll witness, which can be attributed to the fundamental principles of electromagnetic interactions and the physical properties of metals. Your microwave oven(s) operate by generating non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation at a frequency of approximately 2.45 GHz. When you put your metal objects are put inside and turned on then, they'll cause the microwaves to reflect and concentrate in certain areas, leading to localized hotspots in your microwave oven. This concentration of energy you have caused did induce electrical currents on the surface of the metal, a phenomenon known as arcing. Arcing occurs in your microwave oven when you had put metal in because metals are excellent conductors of electricity, and the high-frequency electromagnetic fields can create sparks and even small electrical discharges inside your microwave oven. The arcing and sparking generated by metal in in your microwave oven did lead to the formation of plasma, a state of matter characterized by the presence of ions and free electrons. This plasma can ignite nearby flammable materials, such as food residue of your filthy microwave ovens' interior components, posing a significant fire hazard, please don't do this anymore. In addition to the risk of fire you've caused, the arcing and sparking can also damage the microwave oven itself. The electrical discharges can erode your ovens' internal surfaces, compromise your magnetrons (the device that generates the microwaves), and potentially lead to a malfunction or complete failure of your appliances. The combination of arcing, sparking, and potential fire hazards makes it imperative for you to avoid placing metal objects in your microwave ovens. These events can result in physical harm, including burns from explosions or fires, and exposure to harmful electromagnetic radiation so, think twice before you do this again. The interaction between metal objects and the high-frequency electromagnetic fields in your microwave ovens creates a hazardous environment characterized by arcing, plasma formation, and a heightened risk of fire and appliance damage. Therefore, it is crucial to for you to adhere to safety guidelines and refrain from placing metal items in your microwave ovens.

    • @PPeggythePirate
      @PPeggythePirate Місяць тому +11

      He never said put metal in the microwave.

  • @dc10ization
    @dc10ization 2 місяці тому +1471

    So glad Im covering my food with a plastic lid that prevents splashing the whole microwave with tomato sauce but poisons my food at the same time.

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 2 місяці тому +52

      Lids would be mostly fine i reckon, it would need direct contact with the food to dissolve

    • @Slumplord22
      @Slumplord22 2 місяці тому +60

      @@devilsolution9781the steam would bead off an go into the food i would guess

    • @sejnitram
      @sejnitram 2 місяці тому +12

      I wouldn’t worry too much about it.

    • @vincent2ice
      @vincent2ice 2 місяці тому +3

      😂same😂

    • @nathansmith5086
      @nathansmith5086 2 місяці тому +46

      Just use a paper towel lol

  • @hutleflowmoneytip7693
    @hutleflowmoneytip7693 Місяць тому +35

    I knew it. I just had a huge hunch 8 years ago and so I never use plastic in microwaves ever!! Thank u for confirming this

    • @ehombane
      @ehombane Місяць тому

      So, sugar is killing us, fat is killing us, plastic is killing us. A million other things added to our food is killing us. How the phuck we are still alive?
      What they forget to tell us here are the chances. Smoking is a better killer than plastic. And yet, my uncle lived to almost 90. He was a passionate drinker too. Cars are definitely killing us in multiple ways, but we still use them.
      And the funniest thing is that our ancestor never used plastic, and barely reached half our our age.

    • @phialinfernandez8387
      @phialinfernandez8387 Місяць тому

      So what do you need the microwave for?

  • @duelingsora
    @duelingsora Місяць тому +490

    Thank you, Mom! Thought you were crazy for all your rules 20 years ago. Turns out you were right about almost all of it.

    • @user-ye7lp9lg1c
      @user-ye7lp9lg1c Місяць тому +2

      Says who?

    • @JoanCouncil
      @JoanCouncil Місяць тому +8

      Probably all of it!😊

    • @Trac82
      @Trac82 Місяць тому +19

      Mom is always right.

    • @JaffaCakes-c7d
      @JaffaCakes-c7d Місяць тому +23

      Same with my mum too. She still says it to this day but nobody listens to her because she's an ''uneducated immigrant housewife"

    • @_sparrowhawk
      @_sparrowhawk Місяць тому +6

      So your mom told you to never put plastic in the microwave? :/

  •  2 місяці тому +2124

    It’s called LEACHING
    glass only

    • @D2O2
      @D2O2 2 місяці тому +45

      Yes, leaded glass....

    • @jvisser4848
      @jvisser4848 2 місяці тому +15

      Or steel.

    • @Nate7700
      @Nate7700 2 місяці тому +22

      Or stainless steel

    • @ivandjartovski3578
      @ivandjartovski3578 2 місяці тому +64

      Ceramics.

    • @akent46
      @akent46 2 місяці тому +30

      All my glass containers have plastic lids

  • @isaiahs.7638
    @isaiahs.7638 Місяць тому +217

    Glass containers are king. I made the switch years ago. A good brand is Ello they use high quality glass and their containers come with a silicone sleeve for easy handling in the microwave and are also oven safe

    • @teabagstain
      @teabagstain Місяць тому +28

      Is the silicone safe after watching this I'm not sure about anything anymore 😂

    • @isaiahs.7638
      @isaiahs.7638 Місяць тому +6

      @ lol yes it’s safe, as long as you don’t eat it 😊 it’s just simply to handle the glass safely when it comes out the microwave or oven

    • @kirakira9906
      @kirakira9906 Місяць тому +9

      I'm European and I've never seen anyone put anything made of plastic inside Ovens / Microwave or anything that creates heat.

    • @bob-p9n8u
      @bob-p9n8u Місяць тому +24

      I used plastic containers for 2 years to prep my weekly meals, and I’d heat them in the microwave. I kept getting these weird headaches now and then, and I had no idea why. I was eating healthy, sleeping well, and working out, so it didn’t make sense. Then, about a year ago, I found out about the dangers of heating food in plastic containers. I switched to glass containers, and honestly, I feel so much better now. That's just me😊

    • @Jonat2Go
      @Jonat2Go Місяць тому +5

      I'll look into them thanks

  • @marcusp905
    @marcusp905 4 дні тому +2

    Dumped my micro wave 12 months ago. One thing I say for sure is cook better food, no easy ready meals anymore

  • @sbryann
    @sbryann Місяць тому +76

    You can taste the difference between a water bottle that was left in a cool environment versus one that has been in the sun/a hot area, and it’s not just that it’s warm, you can taste something plasticy (ik that’s not a word). Test it if you don’t believe me, I live in Texas where the sun can melt plastic btw, so idk if you’ll be able to taste the difference somewhere that doesn’t get as hot.

    • @showbizfashionbeautyandhea2178
      @showbizfashionbeautyandhea2178 Місяць тому +5

      True

    • @charmio
      @charmio Місяць тому +8

      As an Aussie, I can also confirm.
      HOWEVER, I've also noticed the same taste with metal and glass bottles.
      That particular taste seems to have nothing to do with plastic from my experience.

    • @Telados
      @Telados Місяць тому +1

      The last few sips out of a plastic bottle taste absolutely disgusting

    • @rhk199
      @rhk199 Місяць тому

      You're right one of the reasons I bought a glass bottle from IKEA stuff just tastes "right"

    • @pedclarkemobile
      @pedclarkemobile Місяць тому

      It's the UV light from the sun that degrades the plastic more than heat.

  • @Jehyva
    @Jehyva Місяць тому +115

    Nice to know this after 30 years of doing so

    • @Kimo2Time
      @Kimo2Time Місяць тому +6

      I know right. They continue the manufacturing and sale of these plastics regardless. They talk and talk and talk, no action. 😐

    • @NEDMKitten
      @NEDMKitten Місяць тому +2

      You just saw a video and took it at face value? 😂

    • @leeinwis
      @leeinwis 29 днів тому

      40

    • @leeinwis
      @leeinwis 29 днів тому

      @@NEDMKitten No, but it do be havin me a thinkin, will have to look furder now .

    • @Kimo2Time
      @Kimo2Time 29 днів тому

      @leeinwis I wonder what they'll require if they know it's so bad now?

  • @M0stlym3answ3ll
    @M0stlym3answ3ll 2 місяці тому +253

    “Peel back lid, stir and replace lid. Cook for additional 3 minutes.”
    Those words have been printed in more things that I have consumed, than I could ever quantify. I love learning. It’s fine, I like this. This is fun 😐.

    • @90daydifference
      @90daydifference 2 місяці тому +15

      You shouldn’t be eating those kind of foods anyway. The food itself if far worse than the container.

    • @M0stlym3answ3ll
      @M0stlym3answ3ll 2 місяці тому +16

      @
      Yeah, I’ll go tell my past, unhealthy, younger self that.
      Good talk, super-chief.

    • @emisama7800
      @emisama7800 Місяць тому +2

      That’s fine now you know now you can grow :)

    • @tripulet
      @tripulet Місяць тому

      I didn't even think about those kinds of foods 😭 called myself safe using glass Tupperware mannnn

    • @jjjfo1818
      @jjjfo1818 Місяць тому +4

      @@90daydifferenceimagine telling people what they can and can’t eat. Get off your high horse.

  • @ScottRobinson-k6r
    @ScottRobinson-k6r 17 днів тому +4

    Since plastics last forever, I must be immortal

  • @Tripl7x-i4i
    @Tripl7x-i4i Місяць тому +98

    Thanks for letting us know in a timely fashion

    • @44bheavymetal
      @44bheavymetal Місяць тому

      People been saying this stuff for decades. They’re usually labeled as wing nut foil hat conspiracy theorists.

    • @NikNik0123
      @NikNik0123 Місяць тому +2

      😂

    • @Allieari
      @Allieari Місяць тому +1

      This has been known for at least 30 years.

  • @wolfofharlem
    @wolfofharlem Місяць тому +320

    Blessed my mother taught me this as a youth.. this should be taught in schools

    • @klh_io
      @klh_io Місяць тому +7

      Or it's not because it's bullshit.

    • @TheMikeTB
      @TheMikeTB Місяць тому +1

      Just because you were taught something doesn't mean it is true

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Місяць тому +8

      My grandma who can’t even read knew it was a no no to put plastic in a microwave when we first brought one in the early 1980s.
      People kept saying she was crazy 🤷‍♂️to worry

    • @kch3087
      @kch3087 Місяць тому

      True. Most of the teenagers n kids do this unknowingly

    • @tomhannigan2234
      @tomhannigan2234 Місяць тому +2

      Shouldn’t need to be- they need to be banned

  • @davec.3198
    @davec.3198 Місяць тому +147

    The car example is a good one...people forget that in a hot car the plastics in the car off gas. Open your windows when you get in a hot car.

    • @Uberlord001
      @Uberlord001 Місяць тому +18

      The whole interior of my car is plastic. Makes me wonder if new car smell is really just plastic off gas

    • @jjhmlstx
      @jjhmlstx Місяць тому +14

      No my first instinct in a hot car is to seal all openings and enjoy the suffocating sauna

    • @davec.3198
      @davec.3198 Місяць тому +7

      @Uberlord001 It absolutely is off gas. Thats why it slowly goes away.

    • @Angelalivingaquietlife
      @Angelalivingaquietlife Місяць тому +2

      I know! I didn’t think of that!

    • @RobertTownsley
      @RobertTownsley Місяць тому

      the fumes from your car that you are breathing in are probably thousands of times more dangerous than the trace amounts of plastics you might be drinking in your water

  • @JudiChristopher
    @JudiChristopher 9 днів тому +1

    EXCELLENT VIDEO
    Thank YOU for sharing this

  • @csackett0628
    @csackett0628 2 місяці тому +428

    I stopped heating up plastic in the microwave quite a while ago, but I didn't even think about my water bottle in the car!

    • @bodyofhope
      @bodyofhope 2 місяці тому +54

      Not just that, but our clothes, sheets, office chairs, couches, blankets, mattresses, mattress toppers, heating blankets, rugs, carpets... are made of polyester and microfiber- types of plastic treated with chemicals. Right up against our skin, absorbing through our bodies, and breathing the off-gassing chemicals in the air daily.
      Unless you only use natural fibers like unbleached cotton, untreated bamboo, untreated wool, untreated silks, natural untreated real leather, or linen to decorate your home and clothe yourself and your family. Otherwise, we're all in the same boat with plastics and chemicals around us 24/7.

    • @flaviaboa9822
      @flaviaboa9822 2 місяці тому +15

      ​​@@bodyofhopeEating microplastics is another level of danger.
      Microwaving food with plastic containers is 💀
      I only wear cotton

    • @codyhughes1147
      @codyhughes1147 2 місяці тому

      Im so glad we both had common sense! Haha. Like how can that be okay?

    • @lunadecat1991
      @lunadecat1991 2 місяці тому +2

      You know you are eating a whole credit card a week in microplastic right? Don't fear the microwave xD

    • @Brigid1615
      @Brigid1615 2 місяці тому +11

      I quit using the microwave a decade ago, never used plastic to heat anything myself, but when at various friends home, I wasn't rude about it. I always cook & heat up food/drinks on the stove/oven/fire. 🍀🪶🐝

  • @Lime1958
    @Lime1958 2 місяці тому +337

    Thank god my father is an engineer that worked in food packaging. He would never ever let us microwave anything plastic. He made sure to stock up our house with ceramics and microwaveable glassware

    • @fabiansandoval6132
      @fabiansandoval6132 Місяць тому +20

      I'm also in sales for food packaging. First I avoid all plastics in my house as much as possible. All wooden spoons NO plastic dishes. I don't even have a microwave at my home.

    • @KatieKay-q1g
      @KatieKay-q1g Місяць тому +4

      What about plastic lids on glass containers in the microwave? Or cling wrap? How do you hold the steam in?

    • @ARCHR221
      @ARCHR221 Місяць тому +11

      @@KatieKay-q1gThrow a ceramic or glass plate on top of the container or bowl.

    • @kona702
      @kona702 Місяць тому

      ​@@KatieKay-q1gI use old pyrex refrigerator dishes from antique stores (pricy unfortunately)and old pieces of CorningWare with Pyrex lids that I find at thrift shops. You can find lots of glass containers with lids at thrift stores. Knows glass containers before the 2000s came with a glass lid as well. They just started putting plastic on them after that.

    • @Instituto-idem
      @Instituto-idem Місяць тому +3

      Great, so you lived a life exactly like mine, putting plastic in microwave in a regular basis.
      Stop believing everything you see in social media.

  • @InformationIsTheEdge
    @InformationIsTheEdge Місяць тому +28

    Yard sales and thrift stores are excellent sources of vintage PYREX glass storage containers. Old Corning Ware is good too.

  • @ZoeyZoco
    @ZoeyZoco Місяць тому +2

    Always *GLASS* or *CEREMAICS* in microwaves

  • @ResPieces
    @ResPieces 2 місяці тому +269

    my mom had to write a report back in the 80's or 90's about plastics and Styrofoam in the microwave for the canadian health department....nothing much became of it as the government did not warn consumers....but my family knew about it all along.

    • @traaaaan
      @traaaaan 2 місяці тому +12

      Maybe she was a bad writer

    • @ResPieces
      @ResPieces 2 місяці тому +10

      ​@@traaaaan that must have been it!..lol!...though she won awards too in the end...(skipping over the crappy harlequin romance novels stage of her 30's..ugh, that was embarrassing, though it bought the house in Ottawa)

    • @Sunevel
      @Sunevel 2 місяці тому +2

      Ugh

    • @joeshuge
      @joeshuge 2 місяці тому

      ​@ResPieces this wasn't even a thing in the 80s 90s

    • @ResPieces
      @ResPieces 2 місяці тому +8

      @@joeshuge 1967 actually...affordable by late 1970's for residential use, and prices dropped rapidly during the 1980's...(1945 invented accidentally by self taught engineer named Percy Spencer who was leading a radar project for the defence giant, Raytheon) since you mentioned the history of them....but thanks for making me feel more old now..lmao!

  • @KarinBornVienna
    @KarinBornVienna 2 місяці тому +221

    Fat dissolves chemicals from plastic even when not heated. Sausage, ham, cheese packed in plastic… all comes with an extra dose of chemicals.

    • @spontaneousbootay
      @spontaneousbootay 2 місяці тому +20

      from chatgpt: Yes, fats can dissolve certain chemicals in plastic. Many plastics contain additives like plasticizers, stabilizers, or residual monomers, which are lipophilic (fat-soluble). When fats come into contact with plastic, they can absorb these chemicals, especially at higher temperatures or with prolonged exposure. This is why it's important to use food-grade plastics for fatty foods.

    • @talkativeacademy4528
      @talkativeacademy4528 2 місяці тому +23

      And damn OILS! Packed in plastic bottles.

    • @tomjeff1743
      @tomjeff1743 Місяць тому +15

      ​@talkativeacademy4528 Don't use seed oils aka vegetable oils aka machine lubricants.

    • @Lighthammer18
      @Lighthammer18 Місяць тому +12

      ​@@talkativeacademy4528 it's almost like you didn't read the part about food grade plastic.

    • @lordshtee398
      @lordshtee398 Місяць тому

      Sausage is in casing though and can be washed

  • @josiahamaze
    @josiahamaze Місяць тому +73

    My Dad taught me about plastic dangers at a young age. I thank God for him. Plastic used to be a rich man container. We used recyled glass containers

    • @derek4412
      @derek4412 Місяць тому +2

      When was it a rich person’s container?

    • @josiahamaze
      @josiahamaze 28 днів тому

      @derek4412 When I was a kid we never had plastics in the house. It was recycled glassware.

    • @evdl3101
      @evdl3101 27 днів тому

      Your father must have heard it from this lady when he was young. Was that some 60years ago?

    • @josiahamaze
      @josiahamaze 27 днів тому

      @evdl3101 Maybe it was apart of the same knowledge

  • @darylfoster7944
    @darylfoster7944 4 дні тому

    The link between plastics and cancer is a complex and ongoing topic of research and concern. Plastics are composed of various chemical compounds, and some of these compounds have been associated with potential health risks, including the development of cancer. Here are some key points to consider:
    Bisphenol A (BPA): BPA is a chemical commonly found in some types of plastics, such as polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins. BPA has been a subject of concern because it can mimic the hormone estrogen in the body. Studies have suggested that exposure to BPA may be associated with an increased risk of certain types of cancer, although the evidence is not conclusive.
    Phthalates: Phthalates are a group of chemicals used to soften and make plastics more flexible. Some phthalates have been classified as potential endocrine disruptors and may have associations with cancer risk. However, research on this topic is ongoing, and the link is not yet well-established.
    Plastic Additives: Plastics often contain various additives, including flame retardants, plasticizers, and stabilizers, which can release potentially harmful chemicals when they degrade or are exposed to heat. Some of these chemicals have been linked to cancer in animal studies or have raised concerns about their effects on human health.
    Microplastics: Tiny plastic particles known as microplastics have been found in the environment, food, and drinking water. There is concern that these microplastics may carry or absorb harmful chemicals and could potentially contribute to health risks, including cancer, through long-term exposure.
    It’s important to note that while there is evidence suggesting a potential link between certain plastic-related chemicals and cancer, the research is often inconclusive, and the effects may vary depending on factors such as the type and duration of exposure, individual susceptibility, and specific cancer types.

  • @alysgottafigureitout2482
    @alysgottafigureitout2482 2 місяці тому +92

    I did not think about the water bottle in the car. I will admit that but it’s kind of funny. I don’t use my microwave. I hadn’t had one since I moved out for college and the only reason I have one now is that my husband wanted one. I went to culinary school. I don’t make as much as a lot of professionals but I’ve always cooked from scratch and just used left overs in another dish. Now I garden so I can even see what a lot of our daily produce is exposed to.
    I get really self conscious about being oblivious to a lot of things out there but farm to table is something I’ve studied and lived by for 15 years. I’m kind of proud of that.

    • @lurelurche
      @lurelurche Місяць тому +1

      What about all the storage facilities for water bottles that don't really care for heat sources 😐

    • @Long-legged
      @Long-legged Місяць тому

      Grand. Tell your husband to read a popcorn label with 2 columns. 1 for before micro, and 1 column for after.
      Salt reduces, fiber reduces, potassium reduces.....
      There is a complex chemical reaction happening, which is basically a mystery, and an brand new human experiment.

    • @dolcevita713
      @dolcevita713 Місяць тому

      Good for you!

    • @GLZ50Cent
      @GLZ50Cent Місяць тому

      Humble brag ^^

    • @norfolkgarden
      @norfolkgarden Місяць тому

      Asking as a serious question. What are your thoughts on typical shelf stable flour vs milling your own oat berries or wheat berries and using up that bread within a few days. Thank you.

  • @aelfgernon7729
    @aelfgernon7729 Місяць тому +16

    The good thing is that there are regulations on the presence of phthalates and BPA in many food contact consumer products, and they are likely not present above legal limits in anything you buy from a reputable retailer.
    Now, sometimes manufacturers will play cat and mouse games with regulators by moving on to other, chemically similar substances that haven't been regulated.

  • @MrAkeats
    @MrAkeats 2 місяці тому +37

    If the bad chemicals go into the food, does that mean i can safely eat the plastic container?

  • @randallf.4646
    @randallf.4646 Місяць тому +1

    I imagine this especially applies to people in their developmental years i.e. expectant, mothers, and children so parents take heed please

  • @sidneyberry1157
    @sidneyberry1157 2 місяці тому +13

    I have microwaved plastic in years thanks to her!!! Finally got my husband on board about a year ago.

    • @snail847
      @snail847 Місяць тому +3

      Check your words and your spelling before you push the send button !

    • @Redford1-g2t
      @Redford1-g2t Місяць тому +2

      you mean you "haven't"?

    • @richie231
      @richie231 Місяць тому

      Trying to take your husband out?

  • @philmcgroin
    @philmcgroin Місяць тому +52

    When I noticed that plastic microwave containers absorbed tomato sauce and couldn't wash it off, I realised that plastic was melting and probably going into the food. Switched to glass immediately

    • @Josiahsutton1
      @Josiahsutton1 Місяць тому +10

      Its not because its melting the plastic.Tomato sauce and other substances can stain plastic containers. If you take something more abrasive like a scouring pad to it it will remove the tomato sauce.

    • @philmcgroin
      @philmcgroin Місяць тому +9

      @Josiahsutton1 na man, I've tried everything to clean those things. It's like it's fused with the plastic. Only happens with plastic, not glass

    • @waveril5167
      @waveril5167 Місяць тому +5

      @@philmcgroin thats because it stains the plastic lol

    • @philmcgroin
      @philmcgroin Місяць тому

      @@waveril5167 define stain

    • @philmcgroin
      @philmcgroin Місяць тому +3

      Guys out here are trying to argue that plastic doesn't seep out chemicals when you heat it up

  • @OngoGablogian185
    @OngoGablogian185 2 місяці тому +122

    Well... turns out I've been eating plastic for decades.

    • @pianosenzanima1
      @pianosenzanima1 2 місяці тому +3

      Me too...oops

    • @yakuzam846
      @yakuzam846 2 місяці тому +8

      Your body will adapt don’t worry

    • @howdarethee
      @howdarethee 2 місяці тому +13

      Yep that's me. I have used the microwave since I was 6 years old with plastic containers. I'm 36

    • @sejnitram
      @sejnitram 2 місяці тому +5

      Same here.
      Will probably continue that practice indefinitely as well.

    • @bella-eg3pe
      @bella-eg3pe Місяць тому

      Me too...and I think I'm ok😊

  • @SpookytheG
    @SpookytheG Місяць тому +1

    All those noodles cups we been microwaving were never ment for the microwave we all ignored this but we still did it

  • @thomasgeorge307
    @thomasgeorge307 Місяць тому +48

    Solid advice if this was 15 years ago when companies still used BPAs in “microwave safe” products

    • @seancain7299
      @seancain7299 Місяць тому

      BPA is synthetic estrogen. See what has happened to the population?

    • @lawrencehubbell9397
      @lawrencehubbell9397 Місяць тому +3

      Some of the substitutes for BPA were found to disrupt the body's metabolism even worse.
      Toxicological Sciences June 7, 2017.

  • @stevejohnson6645
    @stevejohnson6645 Місяць тому +6

    That would have been nice to know about 45-50 years ago.

    • @Allieari
      @Allieari Місяць тому

      It was known at least 30 years ago. People didn't pay attention!

  • @ClaireGreen-wd2gm
    @ClaireGreen-wd2gm 2 місяці тому +15

    I dated a man that didnt have a microwave and I had moved in with him. I just adapted and we broke up but I just never have used a microwave again. Its not hard to live without one. Just takes a little longer to warm things

    • @joshbridges8410
      @joshbridges8410 Місяць тому +1

      The microwave is not the issue, a microwave just heats water in food, it's no different to any other cooking method.
      The issue is plastic, but it's massively overblown.
      Chewing gum has plastics printed in the ingredients. In-organic matter isn't absorbed by the gut.
      BPAs show some evidence of absorption into the body, but all "food-safe" plastic is BPA-free these days.

    • @erikmyers3888
      @erikmyers3888 Місяць тому +1

      Most other heating methods inherently prevent the use of plastic containers, because they heat the container to heat the contents by conduction. You can't get the food hot enough without destroying the functionality of a plastic container.

    • @thekingofnoobs8362
      @thekingofnoobs8362 Місяць тому

      Okay good for you I guess what's the point here oh your one those radiation from microwave bad people what about 5g did you ask t mobile to shut them off? There is nothing wrong with a microwave

    • @MadMeave
      @MadMeave Місяць тому

      Susan?

    • @ClaireGreen-wd2gm
      @ClaireGreen-wd2gm Місяць тому +1

      @@MadMeave No. Im not Susan. Though one of my greatest internet fears is sharing a story and someone I know putting together who I am from stumbling on a comment

  • @toddgaak422
    @toddgaak422 Місяць тому +1

    Yep. Stopped putting plastic in the microwave 10 years ago.

  • @Curiouslife5607
    @Curiouslife5607 2 місяці тому +64

    I have always instinctively known this and never heated anything in plastic. When the BPA knowledge came out I knew it wouldn’t stop there.

    • @kathleengainor8532
      @kathleengainor8532 Місяць тому +1

      Me, too.

    • @Matthew8Schero
      @Matthew8Schero Місяць тому +7

      Right? Like if you stop and think it just doesn’t seem like a good move. It’s sad that people just believe it’s all good because a giant corporation said so.

    • @BartoszKanałPolski
      @BartoszKanałPolski Місяць тому +2

      My wife went one step further and we don't use Microwave at all

    • @kevineina6454
      @kevineina6454 Місяць тому

      Sure

    • @christophmichel9496
      @christophmichel9496 Місяць тому +1

      Plastics that are microwave safe are mostly polypropylene or polyethylene based. These do not contain any plasticizers or BPA (which is a plasticizer). That does also apply for water bottles. So what she's says is incorrect. Who is she?

  • @aflaz171
    @aflaz171 2 місяці тому +13

    Polypropylene (PP)
    This plastic is often used for food storage containers and frozen meals, and is considered the safest plastic for microwaving. It's transparent to microwaves, doesn't absorb microwave energy, and has a high softening point. Containers made from polypropylene are often labeled with a #5.




    Polyethylene terephthalate (PET/PETE)
    This plastic is safe to use in the microwave if it's labeled as microwave-safe.

    • @Sikofu
      @Sikofu Місяць тому

      No that is not what yhey are talking about. It is a maniputed lie. It is safe because it won’t melt. But it is not safe because it will bleach chemicals onto your food and air or water, as in the sample of a water bottle left in the heat. One on the most known carcinogen is DIOXINS. Be aware! Cancer may happen at any time to anyone.

    • @xnet-pvzok728
      @xnet-pvzok728 Місяць тому +1

      Microwave radiatiom is irrelevant it's about the plastic leaching chemicals from being exposed to heat. That's why she gave the example of a water bottle in a car. BPA and phthalates are endocrine disruptors all the same. Microwave your food in plastic all day if you want a messed up endocrine system.

    • @Sikofu
      @Sikofu Місяць тому

      @ Exactly! the worse is Dioxins. Microwaves safe plasty only refers to as it will not melt

    • @NorsePJ
      @NorsePJ 28 днів тому

      This is correct. The Polyethylene plastic bowls typically have a triangle with the number 5 and the letters PP. This is generally considered safe for microwaving.

  • @alondravazquez9717
    @alondravazquez9717 2 місяці тому +27

    Wonderful to see Dr. Swan, I can't miss this podcast

  • @benedapal7987
    @benedapal7987 Місяць тому +1

    When she said water bottle in the car I knew exactly what she was talking about. I always wondered how a sealed bottle can taste different after just being in the car for a while. Car or pantry shouldn't have been different in my mind. Now I know.

  • @maryv.g.2414
    @maryv.g.2414 Місяць тому +29

    Love this. That's what I've been saying all along. No matter what never, never.
    Here's my BIG TIP... NEVEREVER PURCHASE WATER at your local Safeway store who LEAVE THERE CRATES OF WATER OUT IN THE SUN FOR HOURS!! Especially in the Summer and that probably goes for all STORES. Years ago my Mom useto say the same thing about Crates of EGGS but I think they finally made that better and fixed that. Water and Containers should never be used. ❤🎉🎉😅 PLASTIC THAT IS

    • @mcheatle8270
      @mcheatle8270 Місяць тому +1

      Also during transportation in trucks.

  • @shanxano5778
    @shanxano5778 2 місяці тому +33

    Meanwhile fritters street vendors in my country: "aight, Imma add plastic as well to the frying oil"

  • @goneal86
    @goneal86 Місяць тому +24

    Watching this as I finish thanksgiving leftovers out of a plastic container heated in a microwave......

    • @mikesprigg5495
      @mikesprigg5495 22 дні тому

      You will be fine, just ignore the foot growing out of your spine.

  • @panzeralienofficial
    @panzeralienofficial Місяць тому +3

    I have always sworn by this just by my own logic. Glad to know it was worth getting laughed at for.

  • @Chromosome999
    @Chromosome999 2 місяці тому +59

    Always wonder when I buy bottled water at the store how long it sat in the heat we all know that happens right

    • @djamilawilschke7259
      @djamilawilschke7259 2 місяці тому +1

      i wonder the exact same thing, what are the alternatives except tap water

    • @lorrainecobaugh3822
      @lorrainecobaugh3822 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@djamilawilschke7259 the alternatives are water packed in glass and metal.

    • @OneMountainNine
      @OneMountainNine 2 місяці тому +4

      How often do you gotta buy water? Can’t get a bottle for reuse to carry around or buy Perrier or something in a tin? 30 years ago any liquids in plastics were rare and plastic from petroleum byproducts was used in something else. RFK Jr will fix it! He said so 💪🏼 MAHA USA

    • @jeffmarcum3643
      @jeffmarcum3643 2 місяці тому +5

      Wondered that too! Like when bottles of water are being transported in a shiny semi trailer across the country.

    • @bbbbbbb51
      @bbbbbbb51 Місяць тому

      ​@@lorrainecobaugh3822 which are both just fine. The body processes metals and minerals. It even requires some.

  • @chitwatt2504
    @chitwatt2504 2 місяці тому +19

    What of those HDPE pipes used to supply water to our houses? Are they also leaching dangerous toxins into the water we drink?

    • @chadkline4268
      @chadkline4268 2 місяці тому +1

      Not as much as PVC. Plus, water is cold. I go copper to PEX.

    • @JuneHarriseco
      @JuneHarriseco Місяць тому

      Yes, PVC, PEX and all other incoming plastic pipes are bad. Especially, the hot water.
      Also, chlorine from bleach breaks up PVC even more.

    • @jasperdodge6312
      @jasperdodge6312 Місяць тому +1

      Water is cold? Lol dogs are brown too

    • @chadkline4268
      @chadkline4268 Місяць тому +5

      @@jasperdodge6312 in North America, water travels under ground, which is about 60F at most. Often, much colder. Chemically speaking, that is pretty cool. It's not hot enough to increase the solubility of water to any great extent, generally speaking.

  • @davidtayloromara
    @davidtayloromara Місяць тому +6

    Also just FYI ... crystal glassware... contains lead and does leach into whatever you put into the glass, especially acidic liquids like wine.

    • @WarPigstheHun
      @WarPigstheHun Місяць тому +1

      Screw this, I'm just gonna keep using microwave safe plastic, glass, and ceramic. Too many damn rules.

    • @QuitTrippin
      @QuitTrippin Місяць тому +1

      @@WarPigstheHunthis… this is how you enjoy life

  • @Buflonob
    @Buflonob Місяць тому +1

    i'm of two minds, I wish i'd known this years ago, and thank God i don't do it a lot, and feel sorry for those that do and have suffered. Liek most things there is probably a safe exposure point and some cross it and pay the price.

  • @newday2637
    @newday2637 2 місяці тому +43

    Great video, I now use all Pyrex glass containers for storage. And actually don’t even own a microwave. I warm on the stove if needed .

    • @icebreaker554
      @icebreaker554 2 місяці тому +9

      The microwave itself isnt a problem in any way, it basically just vibrates the water molecules to make them hot

    • @newday2637
      @newday2637 2 місяці тому +3

      @icebreaker554 I know, but I just choose not to have one.

    • @identifying.as.asovereignhuman
      @identifying.as.asovereignhuman 2 місяці тому +3

      ​@icebreaker554 yeah, it vibrates the molecules... via microwave radiation.

    • @icebreaker554
      @icebreaker554 2 місяці тому

      @@newday2637 thats fair enough 👍

    • @imtryinghere1
      @imtryinghere1 2 місяці тому +1

      I threw out all my plastic containers

  • @urichjr
    @urichjr 2 місяці тому +18

    My father taught me to never heat plastic back in the 90's... this should be common sense.

    • @KevinDurantOfficialFittness
      @KevinDurantOfficialFittness 2 місяці тому +1

      My grandpa taught my father to never heat plastic in the 80s, even thouugh plastic is made with heat originally 🔥

    • @amandapartee-manders8534
      @amandapartee-manders8534 2 місяці тому +3

      Should be. But corruption and greed and great marketing and a total lack of transparency means it isn’t.

  • @jasonivy28
    @jasonivy28 2 місяці тому +18

    My microwave broke over a year ago. I've quickly realized how much it's not needed...at all

    • @Ephwerd2yurmother
      @Ephwerd2yurmother Місяць тому +1

      You must be vegan surprised you didn't just blurt it out like y'all always do

    • @johnbernacki6155
      @johnbernacki6155 Місяць тому

      @@Ephwerd2yurmotherI’m not vegan and I don’t need a microwave.

    • @kevinhikes3132
      @kevinhikes3132 Місяць тому

      Mine is half broke , old and dirty, it's going to the junkyard and won't be replaced, thanks for the idea

  • @Jennifr1966
    @Jennifr1966 Місяць тому +2

    I wish we'd been told this many years ago.

    • @Dm3qXY
      @Dm3qXY 7 днів тому

      some of us were.. what have you people been doing ?!

  • @fernie51296
    @fernie51296 Місяць тому +10

    While deployed for a year, our only source of potable water came from plastic water bottles. Cases would be stacked high in a small wood structure with two walls and a roof. The sun would bake them for weeks before some of those cases were grabbed by individuals to take into their tent or CHU. We then cooled our super hot water bottles in our mini fridges so we could then drink it.
    Temperatures were 120 degrees Fahrenheit during the day and 105 degrees at night for months out of the year.
    Pretty sure we all drank a crap ton of plastic.

  • @Billy4767cry
    @Billy4767cry Місяць тому +17

    You can get glass containers, for people wandering, and you're golden !

  • @jacquedegatineau9037
    @jacquedegatineau9037 2 місяці тому +111

    Don't a lot of TV dinner type foods come in plastic trays? Are those any different? I also wonder about the foam take-a-way boxes.

    • @Brand00d
      @Brand00d 2 місяці тому +25

      Same thing with to go boxes. Hot food melts them, then you eat the chemicals

    • @magicalfrijoles6766
      @magicalfrijoles6766 2 місяці тому +13

      Yes, they do come in plastic and I don't eat them. I moved to glass containers for my food and water bottle. The initial investment was the only inconvenience.

    • @TT-zl7ir
      @TT-zl7ir 2 місяці тому +10

      Cheapest containers all from one country. At least it's not tested on animals. Because it's not tested at all!

    • @matthewpetzold9878
      @matthewpetzold9878 2 місяці тому +5

      At a dollar a pop I'm not really sure health came to mind when making them😂

    • @SmickyD
      @SmickyD 2 місяці тому +1

      Yeah they do. I'm sure you've heard about the poison too right?

  • @sawyer4981
    @sawyer4981 Місяць тому +2

    This should be taught in grade school science classes. I didn't know this until o chem in college. Most people don't know it at all.
    The fact that we call Tupperware "microwave safe" should result in some people going to prison.

  • @JuNlethalpoet
    @JuNlethalpoet Місяць тому +16

    I've eliminated plastic from my house about 6 months ago. Best decision. The water bottles i buy at Walmart i run through a filter and store them in mason jars, which i drink my water from. Food storage containers I've upgraded to all glass pryrex. Ceramic and glass plates only. No more cheap 50 cent Walmart plastic plates and no nonstick pans.

    • @ronnie7100
      @ronnie7100 Місяць тому +5

      Pouring bottled water into a filter is so fried dude.. just put a filter on your tap

    • @luccianoblock5127
      @luccianoblock5127 Місяць тому +1

      At lunch I reused dollar store plastic containers to heat up my food; I am not going to grab a plate all the time as that's not convenient for me. But now I will change, but at the same time we must not eat out at restaurants or commercial places that don’t have extra precautions.

    • @ronnie7100
      @ronnie7100 Місяць тому

      @@luccianoblock5127 speaking from the inside of restaurant they all use plastic were cooked

    • @luccianoblock5127
      @luccianoblock5127 Місяць тому

      @@ronnie7100 Exactly! So don’t eat out much; that is if you want to live past 50 and be much healthier than everyone else.

    • @JuNlethalpoet
      @JuNlethalpoet Місяць тому

      @luccianoblock5127 I'm sure that dollar store container is the worst considering how cheap it is.

  • @Ghosts0070
    @Ghosts0070 29 днів тому +4

    Family has been anti microwave, since forever.
    Thank you for validating everything.

    • @christinaannabel
      @christinaannabel 16 днів тому

      Dr. Shanna is speaking about the harms of plastics, not microwaves, ovens, the sun, etc. According to Harvard Cancer Fact Finder, "Microwaves do not emit enough radiofrequency radiation to be harmful to humans (ACS). Microwave ovens are designed so that the microwave radiation is contained within the oven itself. The oven only creates microwaves when the door is shut, and the oven is turned on." Furthermore, "The
      Epidemiological Evidence is that, When microwave ovens are in good condition and are used according to instructions, there is no evidence that they pose a health risk to people."

    • @Dm3qXY
      @Dm3qXY 7 днів тому

      this is about heating plastics, not strictly microwave - pay attention! did the BPA get to your brains?

  • @jeffnorris9611
    @jeffnorris9611 Місяць тому +6

    Been microwaving in Tupperware since the 80s still doing My thang at 56

  • @realadityaparida
    @realadityaparida 29 днів тому +1

    Yeah, sometimes you can smell hot plastic in your food if you're storing hot food inside any plastic containers.

  • @ctexas8749
    @ctexas8749 Місяць тому +7

    All bottled water is transported in a regular trailer, not a refrigerated refer container. That means the bottle water has already been in a hot environment, so you're purchasing contaminated water or whatever drink is purchased in a plastic bottle.

    • @estherbanks3505
      @estherbanks3505 Місяць тому +1

      ⬆️ I was about to comment the same thing.

    • @shako141
      @shako141 Місяць тому

      But those are PET bottles. Not the same thing as plastic containers and such

  • @gembolding
    @gembolding 2 місяці тому +28

    Im 46yo and I literaly grew up in my dad's restaurant. I have NEVER heard anybody say that you shouldn't put plastic in a microwave for THIS reason.
    I don't think anybody I know, knows this..

    • @AJ197-le6zy
      @AJ197-le6zy 2 місяці тому +4

      It isn’t true, it is just ascientific waffle

    • @Mew__
      @Mew__ 2 місяці тому +11

      ​@@AJ197-le6zy Why are you commenting this on multiple comments? She explained it in baby language so that even the simple-minded could understand. Temperature is a catalyst for most denaturing chemical reactions. That's why we cook on a stove and not in a fridge.

    • @AJ197-le6zy
      @AJ197-le6zy 2 місяці тому +10

      @@Mew__ For precisely the reason you are demonstrating. The fact some entirely insignicant amount of plastic may leach during heating is no reason not to put plastic in the microwave, and there is absolutely no data that correlates this with any risk to your health. You have been dazzled by ‘smart lady says smart stuff’, but all this video is doing is fear mongering. Unless you have access to some data no one else does?

    • @AJ197-le6zy
      @AJ197-le6zy 2 місяці тому +6

      @@Mew__Also not sure why you think ‘This is why we cook on a stove not in a fridge’ is some kind of triumphant observation. We cook on a stove because a fridge would not heat our food. That says absolutely nothing about whether or not heating plastic in a microwave is safe or not.

    • @Mew__
      @Mew__ 2 місяці тому +4

      @@AJ197-le6zy The point is that many reactions are endothermic and that matter becomes more fluid the hotter it is made. In other words: higher temperature promotes leaching. Some plastics are thermo-hardening, but it is ridiculous to claim that this holds for all plastics (especially those used for packaging food items). There's nothing ascientific about pointing out that temperature leads to leaching.

  • @bartman2000
    @bartman2000 Місяць тому +4

    I stopped using microwaves 20 years ago. I carry my lunch in a glass lined thermos.

    • @Ddisawake
      @Ddisawake Місяць тому

      Very wise, they're terrible things and linked to cancer and kill nutrients in food. They were never safe.

    • @WarPigstheHun
      @WarPigstheHun Місяць тому

      That's so dumb. Microwaves and radiators and Ovans can be the healthiest forms of cooking so long as you aren't steaming it or submerging it in water because you lose less nutrients. If you're that worried about plastic then just use microwave safe ceramic and glass. And fyi everything radiates. We radiate heat. But we don't get cancer from hugging our loved ones, now do we?

  • @Slik-rik87
    @Slik-rik87 Місяць тому +1

    Every drink out there in plastic bottles.......and all are stored and/or transported in hot environments.....

  • @Marco_di_Martino
    @Marco_di_Martino 2 місяці тому +8

    I wanna hear more from Dr. Swan.

  • @Sams.Videos
    @Sams.Videos 2 місяці тому +6

    That is why we have numbers on the plastic that tells you which toxicity it is and if you can or cannot put it in the microwave.

    • @90MysteriumFascinans
      @90MysteriumFascinans 2 місяці тому

      That’s… still not a good idea?

    • @outspoken117
      @outspoken117 2 місяці тому +1

      The numbers on the plastic are their recycling grouping. You can't mix polymers when recycling.

    • @Sams.Videos
      @Sams.Videos 2 місяці тому +1

      @@outspoken117 Here in Belgium the numbers indicate the toxicity. Number 1 is for example the most toxic, but only toxic if heated. Water bottles are number 1. You should never leave water bottles in your car on a hot summer day, that is when the toxicity gets released.

  • @Cold_Logic
    @Cold_Logic 2 місяці тому +5

    The only way we currently know how to cleanse the body of forever chemicals is to donate blood plasma once a month for minimum of 1 year.

    • @JuneHarriseco
      @JuneHarriseco Місяць тому +2

      Yeah, donate your blood plastic to someone else

    • @Cold_Logic
      @Cold_Logic Місяць тому

      @ That's not how it works 😅

    • @kathleengainor8532
      @kathleengainor8532 Місяць тому

      Does that mean others get our plasticized plasma?

    • @Cold_Logic
      @Cold_Logic Місяць тому

      @@kathleengainor8532 No

  • @DeweyBrooke
    @DeweyBrooke Місяць тому +1

    Over 10,000 of mass spec experience, any solvent that touches plastic (any type) will have plastisizers in abundance. Because they would drown out the compounds I needed to see, everything needed to be prepared and stored in glass. If their presence is a concern, you shouldn’t even store food or water in plastic containers.

  • @sunkat76
    @sunkat76 Місяць тому +11

    I feel this way about Air Fryers too. I am sticking with the stainless steel pan, the main oven and the ceramic slow cooker. When we threw out our old microwave we never replaced it. Haven't missed it. Apart from safety we have more counter space!

    • @emilyb5557
      @emilyb5557 Місяць тому +1

      I was wondering if any air fryers are okay from a plastic exposure perspective. But looks like all use lots of plastic inside where it's heating up food.

  • @ktyhstn
    @ktyhstn 2 місяці тому +14

    I wish my mom would listen 😢 already lost my dad to cancer....

    • @shauna2285
      @shauna2285 Місяць тому +1

      @@ktyhstn OMGOSH SAME ❣️

    • @ktyhstn
      @ktyhstn Місяць тому

      💞 ​@@shauna2285

  • @kevinhollis1229
    @kevinhollis1229 2 місяці тому +27

    Can't stop thinking about all those pallets of water bottles in Iraq and Afghanistan just sitting in the sun waiting for thirsty Joes.

    • @mikhailb5645
      @mikhailb5645 2 місяці тому +2

      PET bottles are bpa free

    • @craigarmstrong6641
      @craigarmstrong6641 2 місяці тому

      I think about this almost every day. I drank over a dozen every day for 9 months...

    • @JakeRagnarok-wn9bg
      @JakeRagnarok-wn9bg 2 місяці тому +2

      Came here to comment this. If you drank that stuff, check your T-levels man. And tell every deployed dude you know to do the same. Not to TMI you, but I promise you that stuff killed my Testosterone (and I know multiple combat vets in the same boat). I'm now permanently on medication if I ever hope to keep having kids.

    • @chrisazzy
      @chrisazzy 2 місяці тому

      I almost exclusively drink water from plastic bottles, my T is low. You think that could be why? My brother's is too so I thought it's probably hereditary but who knows​@@JakeRagnarok-wn9bg

  • @ISRAELrunsINourMOROCANVeins
    @ISRAELrunsINourMOROCANVeins 27 днів тому +1

    I will share this with every human possible.

  • @m.richard.helton1547
    @m.richard.helton1547 Місяць тому +5

    I am a retired appliance Man who specialized in microwave ovens. this is a load of crap. there are some plastics that tells you not to put it in there. but there are plenty other plastics that you're allowed to put in and it will not harm you whatsoever.

  • @basicviolet
    @basicviolet 2 місяці тому +12

    so heating up something on the stove and putting it in a plastic bowl is bad too

    • @djamilawilschke7259
      @djamilawilschke7259 2 місяці тому +2

      yes I always wait until it’s cooled down before putting it in a plastic container

  • @BrianS-ny9yd
    @BrianS-ny9yd 2 місяці тому +10

    How about silicone?

  • @TembusoNeli
    @TembusoNeli Місяць тому +1

    The man is a good listener

  • @MrSkynim
    @MrSkynim 2 місяці тому +25

    What about washing plastic containers in a dishwasher? Is it safe if there's other pieces of kitchen ware along with them?

    • @vcool
      @vcool 2 місяці тому +2

      Use a second rinse, but not heated.

    • @cherylvisconti
      @cherylvisconti 2 місяці тому +1

      Start using glass containers immediately.

    • @czarnoskorynazista159
      @czarnoskorynazista159 Місяць тому +1

      P A R N O I A, our word is made from plastic, there is a ton of chemicals used on plants, water purification etc. Trying to avoid them all is pointless

  • @lisamith
    @lisamith 2 місяці тому +10

    Reusable water bottles and plastic containers often don't have BPA in them and are advertised accordingly. I still prefer metal and glass though

    • @DreadHalfling9
      @DreadHalfling9 2 місяці тому +5

      I also prefer to put metal in my microwave

    • @lisamith
      @lisamith 2 місяці тому

      xD

    • @soniagoncalves4621
      @soniagoncalves4621 2 місяці тому +2

      Correct. BPA has been banned for a while now. But yes, glass is best

    • @Shafeenbedt
      @Shafeenbedt 2 місяці тому

      When I was very young I used to play with hot wheels and other toy cars and I’d put them in the microwave because they would start cracking sparks off like crazy. I was imitating the way cars would blow up in those 80s action movies 😂 I was always a hazard growing up. One time I emptied a bottle of acetone on my kitchen floor and lit it just to see what would happen. The entire room engulfed in flames, I sustained some burns and my mum had the scare of her life but luckily the floor wasn’t flammable and it was a big space so after a while the fire went out.
      Fun fact, poking your finger into a switched on light socket zaps you exactly how it’s portrayed in cartoons. In an instant you jolt back as if a firework had blown up in your hand and your entire body feels a sharp burning sensation along with an excruciating buzzing convulsion that all lasts less than a second but leaves you in a state of shock from the intense rapid pain that also lingers. Almost like a painful numbness, like the body doesn’t know how to process what just happened

    • @muzy8768
      @muzy8768 2 місяці тому

      Well you will be fine with metals as long as its far away from the inner walls. I put a spoon in milky drinks when i warm them. It should never touch anything in the microwave ​@@DreadHalfling9

  • @ADAWC
    @ADAWC Місяць тому +3

    So correct! A professor that I know did not have a microwave in his house and said that because the commissoner's home also didn't have a microwave. I also avoid using microwave.

    • @darylfoster7944
      @darylfoster7944 4 дні тому

      there's absolutely nothing wrong with microwaves

  • @dungeonboient1963
    @dungeonboient1963 Місяць тому

    Very informative I didn't know these things.

  • @noshybabs
    @noshybabs 2 місяці тому +18

    This explains why the millions of people who eat food in microwaved plastic containers everyday are barely living to 80.

    • @cameronandy84
      @cameronandy84 2 місяці тому +3

      😂

    • @cherylvisconti
      @cherylvisconti 2 місяці тому

      Alas.

    • @Keyy7787
      @Keyy7787 Місяць тому +1

      Probably has more to do with their lack of exercise and obesity haha. Here's the thing because we know nothing about the real effects of this best to not cook and use plastics but the truth of the matter is one we don't know exact leakage rates they probably aren't high and chances are they are below the levels the body can deal with so long term if that's the case your fine if your not super heating all the plastics you eat with. As for micro/nano plastics those definately exist and we have data how the rates issues is with all our best efforts we can't find any correlation with micro plastics causing health issue just idea we haven't been able to prove. Ultimately, out of uncertainty should just be safe with it but everything abobut this topic today is mostly just fear mongering

    • @noshybabs
      @noshybabs Місяць тому +4

      @Keyy7787 how to let everyone know you didn't get the joke.

    • @Keyy7787
      @Keyy7787 Місяць тому

      @@noshybabs if only it was worth getting lol jokes tend to be cleaver kid

  • @keithdoeskungfu
    @keithdoeskungfu Місяць тому +3

    I've known this intuitively for years. I would always dump microwave meals into a glass or ceramic bowl. Now I'm feeling justified for doing so even when people would roll their eyes and think I was being a scaredy cat

  • @E.P.7131
    @E.P.7131 2 місяці тому +5

    I got rid of my microwave years ago, haven't looked back.

    • @aximomatic
      @aximomatic 2 місяці тому

      It isn't the microwave that is harmful. 🤨 Get rid of the plastic instead.

    • @E.P.7131
      @E.P.7131 2 місяці тому

      @aximomatic I can't use plastic in the oven or on the range, so I don't have that issue without the microwave

  • @TheLastPharm
    @TheLastPharm Місяць тому +1

    Cigarette packaging is literally plastered with the consequences of smoking. People are incredible when it comes to denial.

  • @thebestone11-r9y
    @thebestone11-r9y День тому +746

    A book that changed my life in ways that I never could imagine is "Secret Testosterone Nexus of Evolution".Drop whatever you're doing right now and go find that book. Trust me after I implemented things from the book my testosterone levels went beast mode

  • @leecasper6657
    @leecasper6657 Місяць тому +1

    I know nothing about chemistry, but I have never found safe heating up food in plastic. Seems so unnatural and nothing our body has ever experienced. I knew I was right.

  • @LemoNiceRock-zz4wt
    @LemoNiceRock-zz4wt Місяць тому +1

    During my pregnancy 10 years ago,i smelled anything100x more than usual and couldnt drink water from plastic bottles,cups,cuttery,cuttingboard,plastic containers etc cause it made me vomit..i threw out the plastic and bought real materials:glas,copper,iron,stainlesssteal,silver,wood,stone.

  • @nickieglazer33
    @nickieglazer33 Місяць тому +1

    I don't nuke my food.
    But thanks for the advice 👍

  • @shadowpapito
    @shadowpapito 26 днів тому +1

    The only thing I regret is having a microwave, meaning I was under the impression that I should purchase one. Family members that visit complained and beg me not to throw it away. If not that thing would have been in the trash

  • @drewseppi710
    @drewseppi710 Місяць тому +1

    Dang she's explaining common sense.. the fact people have to do that is wild 😊

  • @vanlendl1
    @vanlendl1 6 днів тому

    I once worked in a factory that did produce plastic films.
    The plastic was melted in a heater and was pushed through a circular gap, pulled upwards as a hose and finally wrapped on a reel. Sometimes, the hose break off because the reservoir of plastic pellets ran empty. Then, the plastic fumes inside the hose came out all of a sudden. I knew a guy, who got leukemia right after his retirement who had worked for decades in this factory. The smell in that department always was sweetish.

  • @curiousgeorge3735
    @curiousgeorge3735 Місяць тому +1

    My dad was born on a farm in 1918, even he told us this when soda started coming in plastic bottles, he never trusted it and made us promise never to drink from plastic whenwver pissible