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Can I take cooked chicken through airport security?

Cooked meats and seafoods
The TSA allows for unlimited cooked meat to be transported in carry-on bags as well as in checked bags. Note that TSA officers might ask you to remove the leftover turkey, fish or vegetables from your bag if they obstruct other items in the X-ray machine.



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Cakes, sandwiches, fruit, vegetables and all other completely solid food are fine to take through UK airport security. However, there are a number of items that you need to treat as liquids.

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Solid food items (not liquids or gels) can be transported in either your carry-on or checked bags. Liquid or gel food items larger than 3.4 oz are not allowed in carry-on bags and should be placed in your checked bags if possible.

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Foods you can't pack in your carry-on
Think: creamy cheeses, liquid chocolate, liquid coffee, creamy dips and spreads, gravy, honey, hummus, ice cream, jam, jelly, juice, syrup, peanut butter, salad dressing, sauce, salsa, soda, soup and yogurt.

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A8: There are no known adverse effects from eating food, drinking beverages, using medicine, or applying cosmetics that have been irradiated by a cabinet x ray system used for security screening. The radiation dose typically received by objects scanned by a cabinet x-ray system is 1 millirad or less.

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You may transport this item in carry-on or checked bags. For items you wish to carry on, you should check with the airline to ensure that the item will fit in the overhead bin or underneath the seat of the airplane.

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Keep meat and poultry separate from foods that will be eaten raw. Use a separate cooler or place them in a leak proof container or bag. A full cooler will stay colder longer than one partially filled. Use the right size cooler to meet your needs.

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Checked Bags: Yes TSA officers may instruct travelers to separate items from carry-on bags such as foods, powders, and any materials that can clutter bags and obstruct clear images on the X-ray machine.

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Yes, you may pack food in your carry-on or checked bag, but remember all food must undergo x-ray screening. Foods that are liquids, gels, or aerosols must comply with the 3-1-1 liquids rule. TSA officers make the final decision on whether certain items are permitted into the secured areas of the airport.

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There are a lot more restrictions on what you can bring into the UK when travelling from outside the EU. The main thing to remember is that you can't carry any meat, meat products, milk or dairy products – so think twice before packing biltong if you're coming back from South Africa.

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While new scanners have gotten very advanced, they are still not necessarily capable of determining the substances contained in baggage. They can identify whether an item is organic or metallic. They can also identify its shape, structure, and density. But they cannot specifically identify an item's substance.

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They are designed to detect “metallic and nonmetallic threat items,” according to the TSA. Those are things like explosives or knives made out of materials other than metal, like ceramics, says Malvini Redden.

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You cannot bring in:
  • meat or meat products.
  • milk or milk-based products, except powdered infant milk, infant food or special food (including pet food) needed for medical reasons.


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Firearms, ammunition, and fireworks are prohibited, as are all knives and safety razors (including pocket knives and Swiss Army knives). Straight razors and replacement blades for straight razors are also not allowed. Most tools also cannot be packed in carry-on luggage, as they have the potential to cause harm.

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Baked goods can typically be taken through security without a problem. That said, if any of those items qualify as “spreadable,” they need to go into your checked luggage. “Brownies are solid. Cakes, cookies and pies are solid.

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