• village604@adultswim.fan
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    9 hours ago

    I did the same thing at our local sushi restaurant. For a while I was convinced it was the iced tea.

    Nope, I just randomly became allergic to fish in my 20s.

  • Grabthar@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    OMG I did the same thing at a local pub. Thinking steak sandwich. Ordered one up. Pretty good! Went home, went to bed. Three hours later - gurgle - glorp - oh shit! The rest of the night it was coming out both ends. Feel fine after some sleep. Forget all about it. Three weeks later, at the same pub. Thinking steak sandwich again. Pretty good! Went home, went to bed. Sure enough, three hours later, lather, rinse, repeat. Feel fine after some sleep. Forget all about it. Three weeks later, go to the same pub. Thinking steak sandwich again, third time’s the charm, right? My face when the pub had a sign up saying it was closed down for health code violations :/ To be fair, it was a good sandwich.

    • village604@adultswim.fan
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      9 hours ago

      That’s basically my experience with salvia in my late teens/early 20s. Enough time would pass where I’d think, “it really couldn’t be as bad as I remember,” and every time I learned that it could be worse than I remembered.

      Also with smoking weed when very drunk.

    • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Get checked for hepb if you’re unvaccinated for it. It lingers after exposure. That shit will ruin your liver later if ignored.

  • BigBananaDealer@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    i thought my beer had expired one night because i had a terrible time on the toilet at 4am but i totally forgot i ate an entire wedge of blue cheese earlier

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      3 hours ago

      Beer tastes bad when it goes bad, yeast is really good at protecting itself - there’s nothing in beer that anything can eat without oxygen so nothing can reproduce, most things can’t survive the alcohol.

      Beer in commercial places doesn’t have time to go bad they empty multiple kegs a week, a keg typically holds about 100 pints

      My homebrew setup uses kegs that hold about 35 pints and they don’t empty quicker than in a season, some of my beers are on tap for a year or more. Beer life is limited by oxygen penetration and temperature.

      If it’s exposed to air it goes bad in days to weeks depending on temperature but it goes bad by the yeast converting it to vinegar, and that very quickly tastes bad, even very drunk people tip out rather than drink an even slightly oxidised beer

  • bold_omi@lemmy.today
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    14 hours ago

    It’s a shame that this is a re-post: I would like to know if the culprit was the tuna or the house sauce.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      11 hours ago

      Repeatedly off tuna without smell would be kind of hard to replicate.

      My bet is on the sauce (like they kept reflling the same contaminated container)

      Repeatedly getting sick from a work surface or employee hygiene seems sketch. up to 50% of the times and i’d be on board, but every time…

    • JackFrostNCola@aussie.zone
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      14 hours ago

      Plot twist: its because they never properly cleaned the prep area, the fridge was too warm and the employees didnt wash their hands regularly when switching between the cash register and food handling.

  • fubarx@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    There was a cheapo Japanese restaurant downtown. Plastic everything. Went there for lunch a while back. Worst Bento box ever.

    Six months later. Hmm, Bento box sounds good. Go to this Japanese restaurant. Halfway through the awful meal, remember I’d been there! Swore never to go back. Again.

    This cycle repeated SIX times.

    What broke it was the whole building burning to the ground because of a grease fire.

    Point is… hmm… Bento for lunch sounds good.

    • Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      I had a similar experience involving pizza. Growing up I remember eating sbarro. I remember liking it. I know I liked the look of how shiny the pizza was. It reminded me of cartoon pizza.

      Anyway, fast forward till I’m 30 year old man recruiting for the military. I was in malls walking around and I noticed the shiny pizza from sbarro. I ordered it. I ate it. It tasted like cardboard. I don’t know if they changed their recipe, but chances are my taste buds just grew up and had better quality pizza over the years.

      Well…I’m a slow learner and over the course of about 2-3 months I ended up eating sbarro like 3-4 times. Everytime I saw that shiny pizza, my brain had a nostalgia hit and I just went an ordered the 2 slice and a drink deal. After the last time, I wanted to throw it away but I forced myself to finish the cardboard pizza so I would remember how terrible it is.

      I haven’t had sbarro since.

        • psud@aussie.zone
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          3 hours ago

          A Maltese cafe trying to imitate the pizza made in Naples managed to make the only pizza I didn’t finish. I don’t think they cooked it hot enough for the style

        • Soapbox@lemmy.zip
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          11 hours ago

          For real. I’ve had very few truly awful pizzas. I remember the bad ones. Looking at you “Marco’s Pizza.”

    • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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      18 hours ago

      I have such good memories from my time in Fukuoka and the bentos on sale after a certain hour, it really was dirt cheap and super good. If my memory serves right, it was around 200¥, 230¥, something like that. Approximately 2€ ! even less today with the yen having lost value.

  • MutantTailThing@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    When I was an alcoholic I diagnosed myself with lactose intolerance. I’d have the Gatling Shits and wonder ‘Hmm was it the 14 tallboy cans of beer last night or the half liter of milk I had for lunch? Must have been the milk.’

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      So your lactose intolerant huh? That sucks. I used to wonder what food was causing my rectum to bleed so much, but I’ve diagnosed that it wasn’t something to worry about until my 40s.

      • psud@aussie.zone
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        3 hours ago

        Bum bleeding is often resolved by reducing fibre. It happens because of too much traffic through your gut, fibre is nothing but extra traffic, it has no nutrient value

      • almost1337@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        Dealing with bleeding in my 40s after putting it off for a few years, don’t recommend.

        • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Yeah it started for me around 18 or so. I’ve put it off for 18 years now. I’m sure it was a mixture of drinking, dehydration, excessive running, stress and poor diet. For a little while I couldn’t figure out if it was hemmroids from stress/riding a motorcycle and other strains but when I read more into the damages that can be done from long distance running all the time, I think that and diet caused most of it. Excessive alcohol use following that up didn’t help much. I’ve learned that bad choices are my Pokemon, I apparently just have to catch them all before I learn anything

    • AngryDeuce@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I didnt get lactose intolerance until I was in my 30s. So weird that my body just decided “Nah, Im good with dairy products” all on it’s own.

      Really wish I would have discovered that earlier in life, before I developed my crippling cocoa pebbles addiction.

      • teft@piefed.social
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        1 day ago

        So weird that my body just decided “Nah, Im good with dairy products” all on it’s own.

        That’s actually the normal way your body is supposed to be. Most mammals lose their tolerance a little after they are weaned. Only some portions of humans retained lactase in their guts, generally groups that were pastoralists retained lactase and other groups didn’t. It’s why most east asian don’t have lactose tolerance but Mongolians, some Sub-Saharan Africans, and Europeans do.

        • AngryDeuce@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          I’ve read that before, but I guess what strikes me as odd is how it wasn’t until I hit my 30s that I suddenly started shitting my brains out whenever I consumed more than a small glass of milk. I drank a lot of milk growing up…it was pretty much that or water much of the time, and even after I went off to college and stuff I still went through a gallon by myself every 3 or 4 days. Not even just milk but WHOLE milk…I didn’t switch to skim until my 20s when I moved in with my gf and she hated whole milk.

          Anyways, after three decades of no issues whatsoever, and zero change in my habits, suddenly my body decided “NYET! NO MORE!!!” and my ability to properly digest lactose evaporated basically overnight. I didn’t even make the connection until I was traveling and wasn’t drinking any milk on my trip and didn’t have any problems, but then got nearly crippled the next morning after I had a big ol bowl of Captain Crunch before bed the night I got home.

        • applebusch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          19 hours ago

          There’s no way our bodies are “supposed” to be. There’s the way they are and the way they were. Also some brave and dedicated individuals can apparently overcome lactose intolerance through exposure therapy. Basically they eat a bunch of dairy every day for weeks until their gut biome readjusts to digest lactose without all the discomfort. Apparently the gas and bloating are caused by the overgrowth of some bacteria and it just takes some time to find a new equilibrium so you don’t get big blooms every time you eat lactose.

  • Seth Taylor@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    Fun fact: This is not actually much different from the process of testing which foods trigger your IBS. After keeping the low FODMAPs diet, wherein you initially remove all possible triggers, you then test them one by one to see which ones you have specifically.

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      3 hours ago

      With food intolerance you are better off cutting down to just meat (presuming you aren’t morally opposed to eating meat) then adding things back in gradually

      The only trouble is going on any low carbohydrate diet takes weeks to adapt to, so though you’d be symptom free from your food intolerances you’d have keto adaptation symptoms

    • poop@lemmy.zip
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      14 hours ago

      This is me. Turns out basically everything gives me dhiarrea.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      21 hours ago

      No, it’s very different.

      When you have multiple allergies/intolerances, starting at zero and then adding one thing at a time is a lot more efficient than removing one thing at a time.

      Removing one thing at a time will create many false negatives, where you remove a hit but don’t notice because you left another hit behind.

      • groet@feddit.org
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        16 hours ago

        A Binary search requires a ordered data set. Something like "if you react to X, you will also react to any X+1, X+2… X+n. Food is not ordered, you cant know if you react badly to bell peper because you reacted badly to whole grain wheat.

        • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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          11 hours ago

          Can’t you easily reduce this to a compatible problem though?

          Let’s say you have the set of foods you suspect: red blue green yellow brown purple

          You construct an ordered set from this by making the elements sets of foods such that each set is the one to its left plus any one more entry, the leftmost set is the empty one, and the rightmost is the one containing all your suspects:

          {}, {red}, {red, blue}, {red, blue, green} … {red, blue, green, yellow, brown}, {red, blue, green, yellow, brown, purple}

          Now a check operation means eating the elements in the current set, if you get sick you go half way to the left border and update the right one, if you don’t get sick you go half way to the right border and update the left one.

          You should end up with the smallest set that makes you sick. Subtract the set to the left of it and you have the food that makes you sick left over.

          • rumba@lemmy.zip
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            11 hours ago

            Yes, you can reduce it much faster assuming one food doesn’t contaminate random other foods and it’s not a workplace hygiene thing.

            You could also ask for a bowl, dressing on the side, take it home, try the tuna, 12h try the dressing, 12h try the veggies.

        • veleth@lemmy.wtf
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          14 hours ago

          Not necessarily, but searching a data set that’s not ordered relies on an assumption that there’s a single thing you’re looking for.

          If there are 10 ingredients, you get sick and you only take half next time, you need to be able to assume that there’s one set of 5 that doesn’t get you sick and one that does, and so on until you get down to the last ingredient.

          It’s a good way to e.g. quickly find the right breaker in the box, because for each device/ socket there’s just one breaker that’s responsible, so flipping half of them gives you an actionable result

  • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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    1 day ago

    You mean the tuna and the house sauce weren’t the two variables this guy tried isolating first?

    He literally tried removing rice and all the vegetables before thinking “hmm, maybe it’s the tuna or the sauce.”

    What a loon. He deserves every one of those awful shits.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        22 hours ago

        Good science will use previous norms, findings and general trends to provide a more useful starting point tho.

      • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        Good science starts from the body of evidence we already know, creates a plausible hypothesis, and then tests that hypothesis to see whether it can be disproven.

        We don’t say “hey, maybe gravity isn’t real so to be unbiased I need to assume it’s not and test every other possibility before determining what keeps making these bricks fall on my head every time I throw them up in the air”

        No need to reinvent the wheel for every experiment.

        • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          Maybe not the greatest example since we don’t fully understand gravity. ”good" in the sense of being expedient, affordable and conventional. Sometimes approaching unsolved problems without the constraints of prior constructs can lead to better understanding.

          Also, vegetables usually are the culprits anyways.

          • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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            23 hours ago

            Okay, but they can focus on experiments designed to determine whether gravity is caused by quantum mechanics or relativity or something else. They don’t need to drop bricks on their heads just to prove newtonian physics…

    • AbsolutelyClawless@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      In this case it would be an intolerance, and those you really do have to find on your own, unfortunately. And figuring it out can be extremely difficult.

  • SkabySkalywag@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Pretty sure he’s forgetting the constant variable, where x equals the times the cook uses the porta potty divided by the times he washes his hands.

    (i.e division by zero = butthole undefined, or maybe infinite diarrhea).

  • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It’s one of them.

    Flawed assumption. It could be both. You’ll need to eat there at least two more times to find out, assuming each trial yields 100% certainty.


    Edit: I thought it should be obvious that we’re taking them absolutely at their word that they’ve properly isolated these two variables because this experiment exists inside a joke and never happened. The whole point of the joke is that the methodology is god awful and completely unrealistic, so questioning that they’ve truly isolated the variables is pointless.


    Edit 2: Wait, I totally misread the experiment setup. @TheYojimbo@lemmy.world is entirely correct that they’ve eliminated nothing if the experiment is totally defined by 8 bowls and 8 bouts of diarrhea. They’re still converging on at least one cause, but there could still be others. My career is ruined.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      In fact, they could be allergic to some or all of the ingredients eliminated. Or to the delivery driver’s personal hygiene.

      • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        We’ll take them at their word that they’ve truly narrowed the variables to tuna and house sauce (i.e. they’ve eaten a meal consisting of only tuna and house sauce and gotten sick, at least one of which has always been the underlying cause, but everything else they’ve eaten has been properly eliminated, and there are no ways outside of the food truck they could’ve gotten sick), and thus the only logical options are T, HS, or T+HS. The premise of the joke already relies on completely unrealistic simplifying assumptions, so we can too.


        Edit: We will not do this because it’s logically impossible based on the described experiment thus far. I’m an utter dipshit.

        • TheYojimbo@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          They said they ate 8 times and got diarrhea 8 times, the only way to be sure it’s one of them is to eat at least once without those ingredients and not get diarrhea

          • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            They said they got diarrhea 8 times over 8 bowls, but they never said how many ingredients they used. (Edit: Fuck)

            Assume nine ingredients exist: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i

            • Bowl 1: a + b + c + d + e + f + g + h + i: Diarrhea
            • Bowl 2: a: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 3: b: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 4: c: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 5: d: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 6: e: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 7: f: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 8: g: No diarrhea
            • Bowl 9: The one the OP is referring to “tomorrow”, which could have h, i, or h + i

            That’s a perfectly feasible if disgusting way to have a bowl from a poke truck if you’re doing it solely for an experiment. And that’s just one setup; there are more convoluted ones you could do that have fewer ingredients but mixed together so your bowls aren’t just one combination. I just chose the counterexample that’s easiest to construct mathematically and which logically uses the fewest steps to eliminate each ingredient.


            Edit: Wait, sorry, I misconstructed this because I misread it even while quoting it. Fuck, if they got diarrhea each time, then yeah, they’ve properly eliminated nothing.

            • TheYojimbo@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Yeah that’s what I meant, 100% diarrhea means they eliminated nothing. Sorry I should have phrased that better.

              • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                Oh, no, you phrased it fine; I read 8 bowls and 8 bouts multiple times and somehow still misinterpreted the experiment. It was only after I wrote down and submitted an example setup that I snapped out of my own illiteracy. I realized every possible counterexample was assuming “no diarrhea” trials.

                • Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world
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                  1 day ago

                  If we’re taking them at their word (and not the silly joke it is) technically they could have removed 7 ingredients so far, with only 2 left, while still having diarrhea each time. In that context, say next time they try the dish with only 1 ingredient and the don’t have diarrhea, then they have the likely suspect. They could then try the dish with every ingredient except the suspected allergen to confirm it

              • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                100% diarrhea means they eliminated nothing.

                I take exception to this phrasing, whenever i have 100% diarrhea I eliminate the the contents of my guts and a half roll of toilet paper at least.