• @[email protected]
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    29 days ago

    I don’t think that salad bought in a store should have bugs and dirt on it, if you find them in your sink when you wash it you should change supermarket

    EDIT: My bad, I was thinking about pre packaged salad, not like a whole head of lettuce, OP is correct and OOP should wash their lettuce better

    • @[email protected]
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      5529 days ago

      They’re definitely washed after being harvested, but as someone who has seen how it’s stored between that and the store shelves, I’ll give it a rinse every time.

    • edric
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      4029 days ago

      You might be thinking of pre-packaged salad which, while already washed, can still contain bacteria. But if you’re buying plain lettuce, it’s absolutely not pre-washed.

      • @[email protected]
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        629 days ago

        Ah, you’re right I was thinking about the pre packaged one, now all the people telling me they have found multiple bugs in their lettuce makes sense considering I would probably expect to find small bugs and dirt in a whole head of lettuce

      • @[email protected]
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        129 days ago

        I feel that they still spray it with water, even if not thoroughly, just to remove the biggest pieces of dirt. But I may be wrong.

    • aubertlone
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      3929 days ago

      Bro people poop in the fields because they literally just don’t have time to go back to the restroom in between shifts of picking

      And I don’t blame them in the slightest. They have a very hard job

      So I don’t know about you but I will always be washing any produce that I buy at the grocery store as soon as I bring it in my house

    • @Dabundis
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      3429 days ago

      Lettuce grows in a bundle of very tightly packed leaves. At no part in the growing - transport - shelving - selling chain can anyone be expected to thoroughly wash between the leaves, especially near the root. Rinse your veggies before using.

      • @[email protected]
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        229 days ago

        And that’s for iceberg lettuce. Romain and it’s kind have loose leafs so a ton gets in there. Bok Choi too, I cook with it a lot and I see a bit of dirt in there all the time. I always give my veggies a good rinse.

    • Scratch
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      3029 days ago

      Bugs mean fresh and no pesticides!

      BUGS GOOD!

      It’s like finding soil on your tubers. It’s better to have to wash it off.

    • @[email protected]
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      1329 days ago

      I don’t know where you live but I’m in Australia and I also lived in South America and I’ve seen plenty of dirt, caterpillars, aphids and flies too many times on my lettuce, harvested from different sources, seasons, and purchased from different supermarket chains and small grocer shops.

      And it was never a problem for me. Where are you getting your sterile lettuce from, so I make sure I don’t?

    • @PunnyName
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      429 days ago

      I don’t think

      Yeah, we know…

    • @Resonosity
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      229 days ago

      I’ve been using Original Commenter (OC) to talk about the person who starts a comment thread. Seems to be pretty intuitive. Wonder what the acronym would be for commenters responding to OC and starting different comment branches. Probably makes sense to just use their name

      • @MutilationWave
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        329 days ago

        OC already means Original Content so at best you will just be confusing people.

      • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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        229 days ago

        I feel like OP can be used to mean either the original thread poster or the author of a branching comment, granted that it’s properly contextualized, e.g. multiple layers of O lol. It’s awkward, but it gets the point across.