Anonymous wrote:2. The other issue is Staphyloccocus aureus. This bactium is carried by about 2/3 of the population on skin and in nasal passages and is very easily introduced to food after it is cooked. As S. aureus grows and multiplies, it produces a toxin that causes nausea, vomiting, fever, aches – symptoms we often associate with “stomach flu.” When you reheat your leftovers, you destroy the bacteria (mostly), but the toxin may be left behind, not destroyed by normal heating. When you eat the food, you ingest the toxin, and the more of the toxin you ingest, the sicker you get. The more times you reheat the leftovers, the more the toxin could be building up, and the sicker you will get when you finally eat that food.
this makes no sense. source please?