The mystery of who dumped hundreds of pounds of pasta in a wooded area of New Jersey has reportedly been solved.
Middlesex County residents said the noodles came from an Old Bridge home that is up for sale.
A neighbor told WNBC that a military veteran who is moving out of the house after the death of his mother seemingly found a stockpile of old food there.
“I mean, I really feel like he was just trying to clear out his parents’ house, and they were probably stocked up from COVID,” neighbor Keith Rost told the station, saying it’s generational.
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He noted that his grandparents always had a cupboard full of cans and pasta “just to be safe.”
“I just moved in right next door, so that would have been a big mess to start cleaning all the flies in the house, maggots,” Rost added.
Pictures of the pasta – which has since been hauled away from the banks of the Iresick Brook, with the Department of Environmental Protection reporting no harm – went viral on social media this week.
There were likely about 200 pounds of alphabet noodles and spaghetti there, dumped across roughly 25 feet of woodland.
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The pasta appeared wet following heavy rains over the weekend.
“You might say, ‘Who cares about pasta?’ But pasta has a pH level that will impact the water stream,” Nina Jochnowitz, who posted the photos, had told The Philadelphia Inquirer on Wednesday.
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“That water stream is important to clean up, because it feeds into the town’s water supply. . . . It was one of the fastest cleanups I’ve ever seen here,” she remarked.
Pasta and other refined carbohydrate foods are acid-forming.
Fox News’ Andrea Vacchiano contributed to this report.