Watch for white spider webs
Not what the doctor ordered: Tainted Dr. Pepper sickens H-Town woman with a 24th"flavor"
A few years ago, Dr. Pepper ads asked "Can you handle the taste?" For one Houston woman, the answer is no.
Amanda Womack took one sip from a 20-ounce plastic bottle she purchased at a T&W Quickstop and immediately began belching gas, according to a report from KHOU. Womack said the soda smelled like gas, and by the time she went to an emergency room she was feeling dizzy and throwing up.
Womack said the bottle was properly sealed when she opened it but that there was a large white spot on the bottom of the bottle that resembled a spider web. Womack's fiancé returned to the store and found 22 bottles that had the white spot and smelled like gas when opened. (The tainted bottles have since been pulled from shelves.)
Amanda Womack took one sip from a 20-ounce plastic bottle she purchased at a T&W Quickstop and immediately began belching gas.
The Houston Health Department and Dr Pepper Snapple Group conducted a review and determined that the bottles were safe when they left the plant but could have been contaminated at a third party site. Authorities say this is an isolated case and not a public health threat.
According to KHOU, plastic bottles of soda can absorb substances like gasoline through the plastic packaging. Womack's fiancé had the Dr. Pepper tested independently by a lab, which confirmed the presence of chemicals naphthalene and benzene, which are components of gasoline.