Well yes, that's what I was referring to.
I trust what you say, but is residual acetamide a problem?
Photographic gelatin is one the world's most purified products. Eastman Gelatine has been able to transition to supplying the pharmaceutical industry because the purity requirements for photography meet or exceed medical and food standards. A bioassay is provided to prove that a batch of gelatin meets stringent industry standards -- i.e. no contaminants found.
Give it a moment's thought. If gelatin grew a bunch of evil organisms when it got wet, how could gelatin be used as a culture medium in a biology lab? If there were biological contaminants, they would rapidly overgrow the desired culture. But no, if you practice sterile inoculation technique, you are almost guaranteed a pure culture. No tuberculosis, staph, strep, or E.coli. I've grown things in a petri dish of gelatin that you don't want to know about, but it wasn't by accident. We don't have to fear gelatin.
. I can settle for a difference of opinion on what constitutes a 'reasonable time' to store emulsion. I stated my reasoning for short storage times in my first post to this thread. I think that my results speak for the soundness of my reasoning, but I also believe implicitly that different people can have different successful workflow philosophies. 
Acetamide does not form AFAIK as there is no free acetic acid present, nor do you add ammonia during the making process. Ammonium salts of terminal amino acids could form to the detriment of the emulsion.
PE

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