Do you microwave food in styrofoam even though you know it's bad for you?

DAWeinG

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Aug 2, 2001
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I've always heard microwaving food in a styrofoam cup or tray releases CFCs and can be deterimental to your health as well as the environment or some other bad voodoo crap like that. Even with many warnings, I still do it, and I still eat my food out of the styrofoam tray. I'm just that lazy to transfer my food to another plate, even if it's a paper plate. But on the plus side, it makes the food a little crispy :D

So do any of you microwave food in styrofoam with the intent on eating that food?
 

DAWeinG

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Aug 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: ElFenix
really? i'd never heard that

Hmm I thought there was something bad associated with styrofoam and microwaves. I've always heard something negative about it.
 

Kaervak

Diamond Member
Jul 18, 2001
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What isn't bad for you? Everything causes cancer, weight gain, stress or a whole host of other things. Nuke away. :D
 

Thegonagle

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2000
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Tne most negative immediate effect is that the styrofoam tends to melt, so based on that alone, I don't nuke food in styrofoam.
 

brtspears2

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2000
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Well it does melt/deform if you do heat it up too long, and your food does taste like eating the box, but eh, what doesn't kill you these days.
 

DAWeinG

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Aug 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: joshsquall
Everything is bad for you. Get over it.

I am over it. That is why I still do it. I am even eating food that has been microwaved in a styrofoam container right now. :p
 

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
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I don't know about styrofoam but I've heard that plastic wrap does if it comes in direct contact with the food. Maybe it's bad, maybe not, but I put an upside-down paper plate over my food instead of using plastic wrap.
 

DAWeinG

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Aug 2, 2001
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1 for safe

"Is it safe to reheat my restaurant take-out foods in the microwave right in their Styrofoam containers?

Sandra McCurdy, University of Idaho extension food safety specialist, considers it safe. However, she notes that some scientists are concerned about degradation products from the polystyrene (Styrofoam) migrating into foods?especially high-fat foods like cheese?during microwaving.

Plasticizers?the chemicals added to plastics to make them more pliable?have been able to mimic or block the action of natural hormones in animal studies, McCurdy says. But there is no compelling evidence that these chemicals act as endocrine disrupters in humans.

"The Food and Drug Administration must approve the food-contact materials used as packages and containers, and it has deemed polystyrene plastic as safe," McCurdy says. Nevertheless, if you are concerned, you can 1) use glass or ceramic containers to microwave foods, 2) cover foods with paper towels rather than plastic wrap when microwaving, 3) rewrap plastic-wrapped cheeses with foil or wax paper and 4) throw out old plastic containers that show signs of breakdown, such as cracking or deformation.
"

1 for unsafe

"The amounts of dioxins and dioxinlike chemicals that may leach out are infinitesimal ? on the order of "trillionths of a gram," according to Fujimoto. While the FDA and other critics of Fujimoto's claim dismiss such small amounts as inconsequential, Fujimoto says that the body does not excrete these toxins and "because you have thousands of them, they all accumulate in the body and they have a synergistic, a cumulative type of effect." It is true that dioxins are chemically very stable and have long half-lives (on the order of eight years). But Fujimoto presents no data showing that they accumulate in the body or whether and how much they might interact synergistically. "
 

Rastus

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Oct 10, 1999
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There are no CFC's in styrofoam. CFC's are (or were) used as a propellant to blow the uncured styrofoam into the molds during manufacturing.
 

DAWeinG

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Aug 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: Rastus
There are no CFC's in styrofoam. CFC's are (or were) used as a propellant to blow the uncured styrofoam into the molds during manufacturing.

Whooops :eek: