Go to your kitchen, grab your black spatula and throw it in the trash. Immediately. That’s the alarming message from a new study published in the journal Chemosphere. Cooking with any plastic ...
Now, a study published in Chemosphere, which was led by researchers at Toxic-Free Future and the Amsterdam Institute for Life and Environment at Vrije Universiteit, gives even more reason to ...
I have black plastic eating utensils, black cooking spoons and spatulas, black beads, and take-out containers with black bases that I normally use for take-out. I even have the black plastic lid tops ...
The study found detectable levels of flame-retardant chemicals in black plastic kitchen utensils, take-out containers, toys and accessories sold in the United States. Some of the products the ...
These recycled plastics may contain chemicals that can be dangerous to humans in high enough quantities, especially when exposed over a long period of time, and are capable of migrating from the ...
For example, I used to keep all of my black plastic takeout containers and reuse them to store food. As soon as we received our results, I swapped my black plastic containers for glass storage ...