Wikkit
08-07-2003, 05:30 PM
Great topic, eh?
I scratched my ear while sitting at the computer, and came up with a bit of earwax. Despite my curiosity about the flavor of earwax, I wiped it off on a torn-off page of my Get Fuzzy daily calendar, then set it (wax side up) on the nearest flat surface: a plate that had some melted margarine on it from a bagel. Only the edge of the paper was touching.
Over time, the soy oils leached up the paper, but were careful to avoid the earwax by a good quarter inch.
So, why would the oil leave cicles around the earwax? Is there earwax oil that doesn't discolor paper that's doing battle with the soy oil? Is this discovery as significant as Fleming's discovery of bacteria-repelling molds?
And what does earwax taste like?
I scratched my ear while sitting at the computer, and came up with a bit of earwax. Despite my curiosity about the flavor of earwax, I wiped it off on a torn-off page of my Get Fuzzy daily calendar, then set it (wax side up) on the nearest flat surface: a plate that had some melted margarine on it from a bagel. Only the edge of the paper was touching.
Over time, the soy oils leached up the paper, but were careful to avoid the earwax by a good quarter inch.
So, why would the oil leave cicles around the earwax? Is there earwax oil that doesn't discolor paper that's doing battle with the soy oil? Is this discovery as significant as Fleming's discovery of bacteria-repelling molds?
And what does earwax taste like?