The chances are very slim. Most likely you will encounter 1 rat hair in about 1,267,000 Reese's Peanut Butter Cups. There is virtually no chance of you encountering rat hair in your reeses peanut butter cups unless you eat excessive amounts of them say like 1,000,000 in your lifetime.
Keep in mind this is true for any packaged food. There are health guidelines about just how often rat hairs can be found in foods before health codes are violates and the guidelines aren't 'no rat hair at all'.
yes it does.in fact you can even get sick if you eat to much of it.you can ask a doctor and they will tell you it contains hair.i even know how much.it contains 70 hairs per pound.i would perfer not to eat it.
That's easy. The smell of peanut butter sexually attracts rats. They have sex on the lid and some socalled "pubes" will get into the jar. I hope I helped.
No.
Yeah, 30 or more insect parts per 100 grams. Rodent hairs or rodent droppings are also allowed into it.
Well, this is a new one on me. The government sets purity standards for foodstuffs, and the inclusion of a certain amount of "foreign matter" is permissible as long as it poses no actual health hazard, under the grounds that it's pretty much impossible to make something absolutely pure at an affordable price. That said... it's hard to imagine how pig hairs could get into a peanut butter cup. Rodent hairs in chocolate, sure; peanut shells or insect parts in peanut butter, okay; pig hairs in bacon, maybe; pig hairs in chocolate or peanut butter, though, is a bizarre combination. They certainly aren't intentionally included, if that's what you were asking.
900,000,000,000,000 hairs
porcupines.
Peanut butter was invented and reinvented many times during history. Peanuts were known as early as 950 B.C. and originated in South America. The ancient Incas used peanuts and were known to have made it into a paste-like substance. As a crop peanuts emigrated from South America to Africa by early explorers and then traveled by trade into Spain who then traded the product to the American colonies. The first commercial peanut crop was grown in Virginia in the early to mid 1840's and in North Carolina beginning around 1818.According to the Corn Products Company, Dr. Ambrose Straub of St. Louis patented a peanut butter-making machine in 1903 and some unknown doctor invented peanut butter in 1890.Peanut butter was invented and reinvented many times during history. Peanuts were known as early as 950 B.C. and originated in South America. The ancient Incas used peanuts and were known to have made it into a paste-like substance. As a crop peanuts emigrated from South America to Africa by early explorers and then traveled by trade into Spain who then traded the product to the American colonies. The first commercial peanut crop was grown in Virginia in the early to mid 1840's and in North Carolina beginning around 1818.According to the Corn Products Company, Dr. Ambrose Straub of St. Louis patented a peanut butter-making machine in 1903 and some unknown doctor invented peanut butter in 1890.An adverage 1lb (pound) of peanut butter, contains 5 rodent hairs and 150 bug parts! eww
they use their hairs on their body to smell
Try cooking oil or peanut butter to help make it removable. You may end up pulling out hairs while scraping it. When you have most of it out, wash and condition your hair. While the conditioner is in, try gently removing the remainder.
Everything contains chemicals dude
the eyebrow :D
the eyebrow :D
mopes
The FDA allows :CHOCOLATE AND CHOCOLATE LIQUORInsect filth: Average is 60 or more insect fragments per 100 grams when 6 100-gram subsamples are examined OR any 1 subsample contains 90 or more insect fragmentsRodent filth: Average is 1 or more rodent hairs per 100 grams in 6 100-gram subsamples examined OR any 1 subsample contains 3 or more rodent hairs