It looks harmless — even delicious — but this simple white root has been called the world’s deadliest food. Every year, it silently claims hundreds of lives, yet millions of people continue to eat it daily without even realizing the danger that lies within.
The food in question is cassava, also known as yuca or manioc — a staple crop in Africa, Asia, and South America. When prepared correctly, it’s a nutritious source of carbohydrates. But if handled the wrong way, cassava can turn into a lethal poison.
Here’s why: cassava naturally contains cyanogenic glycosides — compounds that, when improperly processed, release cyanide inside the human body. Consuming raw or undercooked cassava can lead to cyanide poisoning, which causes dizziness, vomiting, difficulty breathing, and, in severe cases, death.
Experts warn that bitter varieties of cassava are the most dangerous, containing up to 50 times more toxins than the sweet kind. The key to making it safe lies in the preparation — soaking, fermenting, and thoroughly cooking the root to neutralize the toxins.
In some rural areas where cassava is a daily necessity, people skip these steps out of habit or lack of resources, leading to hundreds of preventable deaths each year.
Despite the risk, cassava remains vital to the diets of over 800 million people worldwide. When prepared properly, it’s completely safe — but when rushed or eaten raw, it becomes one of nature’s deadliest traps disguised as food.
So yes, millions eat it — safely. But one careless shortcut in preparation… and it could be deadly.