Imagine slicing into a juicy watermelon on a hot summer day, only to find it has spontaneously exploded, releasing swarms of maggots and a foul odor so potent it could singe your nose hairs.
You know how the saying goes, "If you can't take the heat, get out of the kitchen"? Well, watermelons should take the hint. Essentially, the refreshingly juicy pink fruit we crave in the summertime ...
If we had to pick a favorite summer fruit, watermelon would easily take the top spot. There’s truly nothing like eating a slice of juicy watermelon at a picnic, on the beach, or at a backyard barbecue ...
One plump beauty, neatly placed on an amber-hued marble countertop, was foaming at the mouth. Or the rear. It’s hard to tell which end is which with melons. Need a news break? Check out the all new ...
Watermelons can offer a nice explosion of flavor in your mouth, but they shouldn’t be spontaneously combusting. Oddly enough, that’s exactly what some fans of the popular fruit are worried about ...
Watermelons are indicative of summertime, sunny days and the languorous attitude often associated with those halcyon months. A pretty clear-cut food safety issue, these watermelons should be discarded ...
“It was foaming like a volcano, so I thought this is not good,” retired biology teacher Julie Raines tells Inside Edition. Americans eat 5.1 billion pounds of watermelon each year. But this year comes ...