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  2. 9 Foods That Smell Awful but Taste Amazing - AOL

    www.aol.com/9-foods-smell-awful-taste-170000841.html

    6. Fish Sauce. A few drops of fish sauce can elevate your stir-fries, soups, and sauces with deep, savory, salty complexity.Just don't sniff the bottle. Ever. It smells like an old fish market ...

  3. Body odor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_odor

    Body Odor and Disease. In mammals, body odor can also be used as a symptom of disease. One's body odor is completely unique to themselves, similar to a fingerprint, and can change due to sexual life, genetics, age and diet. Body odor, however, can be used as an indication for disease.

  4. Dysgeusia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysgeusia

    An alteration in taste or smell may be a secondary process in various disease states, or it may be the primary symptom. The distortion in the sense of taste is the only symptom, and diagnosis is usually complicated since the sense of taste is tied together with other sensory systems .

  5. 6 recipes that prove you can make almost anything in a microwave

    www.aol.com/article/2016/03/18/6-recipes-that...

    Here are six life-changing microwave recipes.. 1. Microwave Monkey Bread. All you need is some butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, biscuits, a bundt pan and four grueling microwave minutes to spare ...

  6. This is what microwaved meals do to your body - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2016-08-04-what-microwave...

    While convenient, microwaved meals are actually extremely bad for us, damaging our bodies immensely.

  7. Thioacetone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thioacetone

    Thioacetone has an intensely foul odor. Like many low molecular weight organosulfur compounds, the smell is potent and can be detected even when highly diluted. [5] In 1889, an attempt to distill the chemical in the German city of Freiburg was followed by cases of vomiting, nausea, and unconsciousness in an area with a radius of 0.75 kilometres (0.47 mi) around the laboratory due to the smell. [9]

  8. Smell as evidence of disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smell_as_evidence_of_disease

    Smell as evidence of disease has been long used, dating back to Hippocrates around 400 years BCE. [1] It is still employed with a focus on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in body odor. [ 2 ] VOCs are carbon-based molecular groups having a low molecular weight, secreted during cells' metabolic processes. [ 3 ]

  9. Foods you can — and definitely should not — cook in the ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/foods-definitely-not-cook...

    Ingredients: 8 oz (225g) lean ground beef. ½ cup (60g) onion, finely minced. 1 teaspoon garlic powder. ½ teaspoon black pepper. ½ teaspoon salt. ½ teaspoon dried thyme or oregano