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Reese Witherspoon Hits Back At Everyone Grossed Out By Snow-Eating Video

Reese Witherspoon Hits Back At Everyone Grossed Out By Snow-Eating Video

HuffPost by HuffPost
Jan 20, 2024 1:37 pm EST
in News
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Reese Witherspoon has responded to a flurry of comments criticizing her for making a tasty treat out of freshly fallen snow.

On Thursday, the “Big Little Lies” star shared a recipe for what she dubbed a “snow salt chococcino” on TikTok.

“We got a ton of snow over the past few days, so we decided to make a recipe,” she says in the video, which shows a person using two mugs to scoop snow from a large pile outside.

The snow gets flavored with chocolate syrup, caramel sauce and cold-brew coffee before Witherspoon digs in with her spoon and declares the mixture “so good.”

Though many of the comments on the video were positive, a number of people criticized the practice of eating snow as unsanitary or warned that she could get sick.

Reese Witherspoon waved away the snow-eating haters.

Robert Smith/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

The Oscar-winner responded to those comments with her own assessment. In one video, she took the advice of someone who recommended that she let the snow melt to see if it looked dirty.

“We microwaved it and it’s clear,” she says, holding up a glass and sounding nervous. “Is this bad? Am I not supposed to eat snow?”

In subsequent videos, she sounds more secure in her snow-gobbling ways.

“We’re kind of in the category of, like, you only live once, and it snows maybe once a year here,” she says in one clip.

Plus, she adds, “it was delicious.”

Witherspoon’s rebuttal isn’t so different from what experts on the matter say.

“I would not hesitate for my children to have the joy of eating a handful of fresh fallen snow from my backyard,” Staci Simonich, a professor of environmental and toxic ecology at Oregon State University, previously told NPR in its investigation of snow consumption.

Snow can accumulate environmental contaminants, like pesticides, she said, but “concentrations are low and the amount of snow eaten in a handful is small, so the one-time dose is very low and not a risk to health.”

Writing for the…

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