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Snakes, sharks and surprise contaminants

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Posted 1 hours ago by inuno.ai

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Amid regulatory upheaval and recall fatigue, a string of bizarre food safety mishaps offers a quirky reminder: contamination can strike in unexpected ways. From a snake in a Thai ice cream bar to a shark with a grisly surprise, these real incidents highlight quirks in the global food chain that may surprise even seasoned inspectors.

Snake surprise in Thai ice cream

A man found a snake frozen inside his ice-cream in Thailand.
Photos of the ice cream surprise, posted on Facebook by Rayban Naklengbook.

In Thailand, Rayban Naklengboon unwrapped a black bean ice cream bar on March 6 and found a black-and-yellow snake frozen inside—its eyes wide open. The bizarre discovery, shared in a now-viral Facebook post, quickly spread across social media, with users expressing everything from shock to disbelief.

The incident took place in Pak Tho, Mueang Ratchburi, where Rayban had purchased the frozen treat from a local street vendor. “Such big eyes. Is it dead yet? Black bean, street vendor, real picture because I bought it myself,” he wrote in Thai, as translated into English. Hindustan Times was among the first to report the story, and soon, online speculation began.

Some users identified the snake as a golden tree snake, a mildly venomous species native to the region, while others noted it appeared to be a juvenile. Despite the attention, Rayban did not disclose the brand of the ice cream, leaving many wondering how the frozen horror made its way into the dessert.

Wisconsin boy calls 911 over stolen ice cream
Closer to home, a Wisconsin 4-year-old grabbed headlines last week by calling 911 after his mother ate his ice cream. “Come get my mommy,” he told dispatch, according to Times Now’s March 11 report. Police arrived, defused the crisis with a replacement scoop, and left with a tale for the precinct. It’s not a recall-level scandal, but it underscores how even kids sense when something’s off with their food.

A shark with a grisly secret
Off Florida’s coast in 2023, a fisherman reeled in a 5-foot tiger shark and found a human foot inside — bones, toes, and all. The Sun Sentinel reported the find, which sparked more forensic interest than food safety scrutiny. Still, it’s a stark example of what can lurk in seafood supply chains, where nature doesn’t always play by the rules.

A tiny stowaway in canned tuna
Across the Atlantic, a 2018 Tesco tuna can yielded an unexpected catch: a small crab nestled among the flakes. The Guardian covered the shopper’s discovery, which Tesco called a “rare hitchhiker.” It didn’t trigger a recall, but it showed how even Europe’s rigorous standards can miss the occasional oddball contaminant.

A reminder that food safety isn’t always predictable
These incidents, while outliers, point to gaps worth watching. Thailand’s snake fiasco suggests spotty oversight in informal markets. The tuna crab slipped past canning safeguards and that shark foot? A wild card no regulation could predict.

For our Food Safety News readers navigating the high-stakes world of regulations and best practices, we hope these stories offer a moment of levity — a reminder that, while food safety is serious business, it can also take some truly unexpected turns.

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