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Egg tarts come with all sorts of fillings nowadays. Besides custard, it might contain tapioca balls or brown suger. But a customer in Kaohsiung was shocked to find something inedible in one of the egg tarts she bought from a popular fast food chain. She was putting the pastries into the microwave, when she noticed that one of them had a black lump. She tore it open and was faced with a tripple-A battery. Good thing she discovered the battery before turning on the microwave, or it could have let to something serious.

Crispy pastry stuffed with a decadent custard filling. Yum! A customer was about to heat up a box of these egg tarts in the microwave, when she discovered a battery inside one of them.

- Wouldn’t it be dangerous to reheat them in the microwave?
- Yes! It would explode!

- The battery would explode. Unbelievable!
How were they made? How did it end up there?

People can’t believe their eyes. The customer found an AAA battery inside the egg tarts bought at a popular fast food chain store in Kaohsiung’s Nanzih District. She says she noticed a black spot in the base of the tart, and even asked the server if it was a black sugar mochi tart. She was feeling peckish so she went to have a bite without heating it in the microwave. That’s when she found the battery.

- They must make these tarts in batches.
The battery must have fallen in then and nobody noticed.

The story has been hotly debated online. But a former worker at the fast food store questioned its veracity, saying that the battery surely would’ve swollen or exploded when the tarts were first baked in the oven. A physicist says carbon-zinc batteries can leak and get deformed at 70°C.

Voice of Chen You-ting
Physicist
At most, the chemicals inside carbon-zinc batteries would leak out. At more than 70°C, they could deform.

Health authorities have inspected the store, while the operator has said the incident may have been caused by an oversight at the outlet. Though not exactly an apology, the shop says it will contact the customer affected.

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