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I admit this isn't the usual type of science article posted here
We've all heard the rumor that twinkies are immortal, but that's quite overstated.
We've all heard the rumor that twinkies are immortal, but that's quite overstated.
https://www.npr.org/2020/10/15/923411578/a-disturbing-twinkie-that-has-so-far-defied-scienceLast week, craving sweets, Colin Purrington remembered the Twinkies.
He'd purchased them back in 2012 for sentimental reasons when he heard that Hostess Brands was going bankrupt and Twinkies might disappear forever.
"When there's no desserts in the house, you get desperate," says Purrington, who went down to the basement and retrieved the old box of snack cakes, fully intending to enjoy several.
He busted out the Twinkies now, instead of waiting a couple more years, in part because he was "just so bored, with the pandemic," Purrington says. "It's terrible, but it just is mind-numbing after a while."
Like many people, Purrington believed Twinkies are basically immortal, although the official shelf life is 45 days. He removed a Twinkie from the box, unwrapped it — it looked fine — and took a bite. Then he retched.
"It tasted like old sock," Purrington says. "Not that I've ever eaten old sock."
That's when he examined the other Twinkies. Two looked weird. One had a dark-colored blemish the size of a quarter. The other Twinkie was completely transformed — it was gray, shrunken and wrinkly, like a dried morel mushroom.
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He posted photos on Twitter, and they caught the attention of two scientists: Brian Lovett and Matt Kasson, who study fungi at West Virginia University in Morgantown.
Purrington compared the cross section and filling of a Twinkie from 2012 (left) with one from this year.
Colin Purrington
"Matt is going to want that Twinkie," thought Lovett, the instant he saw the mummified one.