I live in an apartment building. Another unit recently caught on fire, and the building was evacuated. Smoke was everywhere. No heat reached my part of the building. I have not seen any soot, either.

I tried googling it, but I haven’t been able to find a good answer that relates to things like chip packaging. They still have air in them, and the packaging doesn’t fully match the descriptions of what foods to throw away.

Are things like this ok to eat after smoke exposure, or should I throw *** every *** type of food out? Thanks in advance.

-17 points

People have put worse things in their bodies. Some mildly contaminated chips won’t kill you and probably won’t even give you cancer.

Let’s be honest, though… a standard bag of chips is already kind of bad for you – maybe you should toss them out because you’re better off without them either way? It’s just a bag of chips at the end of the day.

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-15 points

Who said it was only 1 bag of chips? Who only buys 1 bag of chips every time anyway?

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5 points

How many bags of chips do you buy at once?

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-3 points

Usually 4, since I intend on not having to go back to the store for more again in a couple days

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-5 points

At least 3. 2 of the best flavor and 1 of a new flavor.

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3 points

I buy two at a time. And I can demolish a bag of chips in one sitting.

I try not to do that. I try REALLY hard not to. But sometimes it just happens, and I have no clue how. The chips just disappear somewhere 🤔

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22 points

For a lot of people, chips are a treat, and they buy only a single bag occassionally

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7 points

Unrelated but I kind of love that I heard your username

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28 points

The soot from a building fire will absolutely give you cancer. Most deaths from a building fire are caused by the contaminants in the air and not the fire itself. It’s very nasty, and I wouldn’t shrug it off. At the very least, it will taste nasty. At most, it will give you health complications.

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3 points

I think it’s a little unfair to escalate my talking about a presumably invisible and flavorless level of contamination into somehow advocating for choking down soot-blasted cancer nachos.

For the record: that’s not what I meant and I think any reasonable person would not have interpeted it as such having read the context of the post. It’s a sealed bag of chips – they have functioning taste buds and eyeballs for Pete’s sake!

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3 points

If you have to ask, you’re not hungry enough to take that risk. Toss those chips. Don’t take unnecessary chances with your body.

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3 points

Upholstery-soot ( the fire-retardent version of polyester, etc ), is evil smog/fumes.

If your food was sealed-away from the smog/fumes, then it should be fine.

I’m saying that after learning 1st-hand how evil upholstery-smoke is.

( guy down the hall fell asleep with a cigarette )

_ /\ _

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16 points

Seems you’ve gotten your answer, but leave an update after you eat and let us know how it went (and to make sure you didn’t die :P )

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22 points

I’ve worked in fire restoration. If there was smoke, there will be soot. You can take a white cloth and rub it over surfaces in the apartment to see how bad it is. As for food, the general rule is when in doubt throw it out. If cans are blown out from heat, toss them. If food was exposed to smoke, toss it. If the power was out for a long time, you may have to toss any refrigerated or frozen food. If there was no smoke in your unit you might be fine.

Feel free to dm me if you have further questions.

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