SnowRidge
Elite Member
Hot coffee and (near) boiling coffee are two different things. There are actual industry standards for what temperature hot coffee should be served at. I even recall seeing large urns with temperature gauges on them. I remember reading a medical discussion of her case. It basically said that if Mickey D's had served the coffee at the industry standard temperature, she would not have been severely injured. The injuries resulted from the extra hot liquid.
I can back this up with my own experience. When I was in the military, I managed to spill a cup of hot water that I had drawn seconds before from the hot water side of a cafeteria coffee urn. It went down my boot and was trapped against my foot by the wool socks I was wearing. I received second degree burns. I distinctly remember the doctor saying that if the water had been any hotter, I would have had third degree burns and would probably had serious tendon damage.
Fortunately, the damage was limited to pain, inconvenience, and embarrassment. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
I can back this up with my own experience. When I was in the military, I managed to spill a cup of hot water that I had drawn seconds before from the hot water side of a cafeteria coffee urn. It went down my boot and was trapped against my foot by the wool socks I was wearing. I received second degree burns. I distinctly remember the doctor saying that if the water had been any hotter, I would have had third degree burns and would probably had serious tendon damage.
Fortunately, the damage was limited to pain, inconvenience, and embarrassment. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif