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manu19 March 5 2024, 06:28:09 UTC
He’s flying commercial? Aren’t eggs considered raw food? I’d expect it getting thrown out just like cheese or raw meat on international flights?

Also this sounds like nonsense like how did he even discover this? Did he randomly eat raw eggs on a flight once and realized it didn’t give him jet lag? So many questions

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836am March 5 2024, 09:19:38 UTC
Is that an American thing? I've never heard of cheese being forbidden on flights.

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manu19 March 5 2024, 09:22:34 UTC
Cheese and meat on a sandwich is okay but open cheese or meat without a clear label = lands in the trash at the security check (I am in Germany). One time I had an elderly woman with a carry on full of cheese in front of me (I assume it was home made) and she had to toss it all out. Imagine you take a worm infected piece of cheese to another country and it ends up spreading (not native to country x)

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goshipgurl March 5 2024, 13:47:13 UTC

I think that has something to do with EU laws, you're not allowed to bring unlabeled meat into the country

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ohokaysure March 5 2024, 18:25:02 UTC
thebadunkadunk March 5 2024, 18:52:25 UTC
It depends on if the food lands in the country and go through customs. Same thing as when they serve fruit on a plane- if you eat it on the plane it's fine but if you take it off the plane, you're in trouble (I know this because my mom accidentally saved a banana for later and got in trouble with customs). If he's consuming the eggs on the flight it's nbd

In the US you can bring back hard cheeses so long as it's labeled that it's been pasteurized and you declare them

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