• @bstix
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    1810 months ago

    It’s just water and flavour. Nothing dangerous about it, except for the wooden stick.

    • MentalEdge
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      2410 months ago

      Water is like the best environment there is for microorganisms.

      Freezing doesn’t make unsafe food safe, it can only keep already safe food, safe.

      If something frozen, anything, was unfrozen at any point, you can’t know for how long, or in what conditions. Hence, re-frozen products should not be consumed.

      • Gamey
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        510 months ago

        That thing is pure sugar, water, color and aroma, unless it’s a milk based ice you are almost certainly fine even if you leave it out for years…

      • tate
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        -710 months ago

        Literally nothing can live in pure water. What matters is everything else in the Popsicle, which is mostly processed sugar. Processed sugar is a preservative and will prevent bacterial growth.

        • MentalEdge
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          10 months ago

          What exactly do you mean by processed sugar?

          Sugar can refer to any sweet-tasting carbohydrate, but most commonly the word refers to glucose, sucrose or fructose. There are bacteria which can consume all of these. “Processing”, at most, might break down sucrose into the other two, but that’s not a significant change.

          Nothing can survive in pure anything. Any substance is lethal if an organism is entirely immersed in it. Sugars or starches are a bacterial favourite, but yes, they too kill in high enough concentrations.

          But not because they are intrinsically antibacterial. You’re not wrong to say that sugar is a preservative, but it’s still just sugar. The difference is in how much of it there is.

          • @Revan343@lemmy.ca
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            510 months ago

            “Processing”, at most, might break down glucose into the other two

            Slight correction, but sucrose breaks down into the other two

        • @Astroturfed@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          The water in a Popsicle isn’t pure water. There’s other shit in water. Hate to break it to you but there’s also other shit in the water in your tap or that they use to make food. It’s not all the most chemically pure water on the planet. Sugar in a high enough concentration is a preservative, doubt they’ve reached that in a Popsicle. If you make like concentrated simple syrup which is 2:1 it sort of is, but I think that’s only shelf stable for a few months. That’s basically liquid sugar at that point though and way more than is in a Popsicle. In lower amounts sugar basically acts as food for bacteria.

          • @redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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            10 months ago

            I got curious so I tried googling what concentration of sugar actually inhibit bacterial growth. According to this paper, it varied according to sugar type and bacteria species, but generally inhibition started at ~5% concentration for sucrose and ~10% for fructose, with maximum inhibition at ~35% sugar concentration. Popsicles can contain 15% sugar or more, so bacteria might not be able to grow effectively there, though growth still does happen.

    • @idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works
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      810 months ago

      So you’d drink weeks-old kool-ade if it hadn’t been refrigerated? Water and sugar is an ideal breeding ground and food source for a vast number of different bacteria.

      • Gamey
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        110 months ago

        There is nothing about a soft drink that will get bad or harmful even after months…

        • @idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          True if sealed, I meant the type of kool-ade you mix yourself, which gets gross after not very long. With this wrapped in paper, I’m doubting it’s air tight.

      • @bstix
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        -210 months ago

        It’s wrapped in plastic. Besides, I’m not sure there’s actual sugar in those things. Most I’ve seen were all additives.

        • @idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works
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          810 months ago

          Being wrapped in plastic has absolutely no effect on it. The bacteria likely to colonize are already in there, but keeping it frozen keeps them from multiplying, unless it melts. And many such colonies (botulism, for example) thrive in hypoxic environments, so being wrapped can actually make it worse. And corn syrup or any other substitute is just as bad as sugar.

          • SaltySalamander
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            210 months ago

            Brother, we used to buy freeze pops in the supermarket that came in liquid form, and then were frozen by us in our freezer. They’re still sold this way. You’re making something out of nothing, and then doubling down on that nothing.

            • @idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works
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              410 months ago

              A product intended to be sold that way. Steak and slim jims are both beef (in theory), but I wouldn’t recommend storing them the same way…

              I’m far from guaranteeing that the popsicle from the picture would make you sick, I’m just saying I wouldn’t trust it with no telling how long it sat around melted before refreezing, and almost definitely not something processed for that type of storage.

        • SaltySalamander
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          310 months ago

          Besides, I’m not sure there’s actual sugar in those things.

          High fructose corn syrup. Which, for all intents and purposes, is sugar.

      • tate
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        -410 months ago

        relevant user name.

        Ever notice that you don’t need to refrigerate candy? Processed sugar is such a bad food source for bacteria, you can actually use it as a preservative. The melted Popsicle will rot eventually, if it stays wet, but the likely first organism in will be a yeast.

        • @idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works
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          510 months ago

          No. Candy is heated to extremely high temperatures while processing and has a low water content, which are very important for its sterilization and entirely different from something like this. And candy still goes bad if you wait long enough… Candy is more equivalent to something like fruit preserves/jelly, which use heat and sugar to sterilize and preserve, yet which still have to be refrigerated to maximize shelf-life/minimize contamination. So you’re right that sugar can be used to preserve, but only by following a very different process.