That wasn’t a peanut at the center of J. Paulette Potts’ M&M’s candy.
Pott said she discovered the offending item in a blue candy last Friday, after she bit down on something that her teeth wouldn’t go though.
She brought the bone to a biology professor, who identified it as a mammal vertebra — although which mammal, he couldn’t say.
She brought the bone to a biology professor, who identified it as a mammal vertebra — although which mammal, he couldn’t say.
“It’s definitely bone, and it came from some type of mammal,” the professor, Larry Blumer, told.Potts has not filed a lawsuit against the candy’s manufacturer.
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ummmm…Maybe it’s a rat vertebrate? I would sue.
I totally agree. Considering the scandal with the peanut butter…you don't want to start finding things in your food that shouldn't be there. Standards are important. (><)
I don't know…sure sounds fishy to me! This bone needs to be analyzed and determined if it went through processing like the M & M's to be certain it wasn't placed there after the fact…like by someone hoping to hit the lottery during today's hard economic times!
"This bone needs to be analyzed and determined if it went through processing like the M & M's"
How could it have? It didn’t Melt in her Mouth.
There are no damages. All she can request is a new pack of M&Ms.