Been wanting to reduce the amount of waste I generate, and one small way I was thinking of doing so was perhaps by reheating the unpopped popcorn kernels that appear in the bottom of my bowl after making a batch with my air popper.
Would this be safe to do, or is it recommended against? I'd love to reuse them if possible and ensure I have no unneeded waste there, but I also want to make sure I'm not making myself sick by eating something I shouldn't be.
I don't think there would be anything harmful if you tried, but it might just flat out not work. My understanding is that the kernels that end up not popping probably just aren't able to. There's a certain amount of moisture that needs to be inside the kernels in order for them to pop. If that moisture level isn't right then it won't go off. So the fact that they didn't already pop, probably means they can't.
I'm unsure if it's unsafe. The kernals are safe at room temperature, but once they've been heated, they could become unsafe?
Surprisingly, my food manager safety test did not cover this.
It did cover to never touch turtles then food.
My main concern would be the kernals might simply not want to pop, either from being stale or the previous heating process made the water inside escape but not explode the kernal, so there's no more left to make it explode now.
There is still waste involved into putting edible food in the compost. Growing, packaging, and transporting food all consume resources that go to waste if the food is not eaten.
Are unpopped popcorn kernels a significant source of uneaten food? Debatable.
Rolled Oats, Cut Oats, and Instant Oats are all steam treated and dried (I think...) which should remove any chance of contamination, but if they stay unsealed for a long time or are in contact with moisture or oils then it would carry some risks.
Why would you even think this was unsafe? What's the concern? Are you talking about returning the unpopped kernels to storage and popping them later or do you mean right away?
Sometimes I get the time wrong on my microwave and wind up with a lot of unpopped kernels. So when I get to the bottom of the bowl and see how much extra there is, I put them back in. The only problem is you have to watch them carefully. They have a tendency to burn if you don't stop cooking right when your running out.
I should probably note that in not popping microwave popcorn, I'm popping regular popcorn in a special bowl in the microwave.
It's called a Presto Powerpop by Orville Redenbocker. I've never posted a picture on Lemmy before. If you see it at the bottom of this post, you'll know I was successful.
Anyway, there are a couple of concerns. First, it's plastic so it may not be healthy. Second, you have to buy these little paper cards that fit in the bottom and are only good for a handful of pops before you have to replace them and ultimately buy more. Kind of like a printer with ink cartridges, you're buying into replacements. Unlike printer cartridges, though, they are not expensive. I just buy in bulk. Third, only the bowl is machine washable, the bottom black part is not, but it doesn't really need washing anyway.
If you're concerned about the plastic, I used to pop in a brown paper bag. Just put about a teaspoon of oil in the bottom, about a quarter of a cup of popcorn and salt. Fold the bag once and put a staple in it. Don't fold too much, air and steam need to escape. If you leave the staple out, a lot of times the popcorn overflows and comes out all over the microwave. No, a single staple will not destroy the world of you put it in a microwave.
Ok, let me try the pic:
It looks like it needs to be in the internet instead of my phone so here's an Amazon link:
Possibly one of those collapsible silicone popcorn popping bowls, I've also seen glass ones. I don't like rubbery ones because mine started breaking down into sticky goo after a while, but maybe there are better ones available.
If they became coal, toss them. If you collected them last week, toss them, because the oil will go bad. Otherwise should be safe, they are dry so they cannot grow fungus or bacteria.