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Hey R59, big thanks for alerting me to this one-- i might have missed it with all the projects i'm elsewhere involved in.
Here's a link for a pdf file of the entire 11-page (dense, two-columns) article: https://www.gwern.net/docs/longevity/2019-decabo.pdf
And there's a good brief overview of the article and lead researcher Mattson at https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/12/191226084351.htm (from John Hopkins Medicine newsletter).
Fasting has scientific merit that extends far beyond weight loss according to this research report published yesterday in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra1905136
According to Weindruch and Sohal in a 1997 article in the Journal, reducing food availability over a lifetime (caloric restriction) has remarkable effects on aging and the life span in animals.1 The authors proposed that the health benefits of caloric restriction result from a passive reduction in the production of damaging oxygen free radicals. At the time, it was not generally recognized that because rodents on caloric restriction typically consume their entire daily food allotment within a few hours after its provision, they have a daily fasting period of up to 20 hours, during which ketogenesis occurs. Since then, hundreds of studies in animals and scores of clinical studies of controlled intermittent fasting regimens have been conducted in which metabolic switching from liver-derived glucose to adipose cell–derived ketones occurs daily or several days each week. Although the magnitude of the effect of intermittent fasting on life-span extension is variable (influenced by sex, diet, and genetic factors), studies in mice and nonhuman primates show consistent effects of caloric restriction on the health span (see the studies listed in Section S3 in the Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org).
Figure 1.
Cellular Responses to Energy Restriction That Integrate Cycles of Feeding and Fasting with Metabolism.
Studies in animals and humans have shown that many of the health benefits of intermittent fasting are not simply the result of reduced free-radical production or weight loss.2-5 Instead, intermittent fasting elicits evolutionarily conserved, adaptive cellular responses that are integrated between and within organs in a manner that improves glucose regulation, increases stress resistance, and suppresses inflammation. During fasting, cells activate pathways that enhance intrinsic defenses against oxidative and metabolic stress and those that remove or repair damaged molecules (Figure 1).5 During the feeding period, cells engage in tissue-specific processes of growth and plasticity. However, most people consume three meals a day plus snacks, so intermittent fasting does not occur.2,6
Preclinical studies consistently show the robust disease-modifying efficacy of intermittent fasting in animal models on a wide range of chronic disorders, including obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancers, and neurodegenerative brain diseases.3,7-10 Periodic flipping of the metabolic switch not only provides the ketones that are necessary to fuel cells during the fasting period but also elicits highly orchestrated systemic and cellular responses that carry over into the fed state to bolster mental and physical performance, as well as disease resistance.11,12
Here, we review studies in animals and humans that have shown how intermittent fasting affects general health indicators and slows or reverses aging and disease processes. First, we describe the most commonly studied intermittent-fasting regimens and the metabolic and cellular responses to intermittent fasting. We then present and discuss findings from preclinical studies and more recent clinical studies that tested intermittent-fasting regimens in healthy persons and in patients with metabolic disorders (obesity, insulin resistance, hypertension, or a combination of these disorders). Finally, we provide practical information on how intermittent-fasting regimens can be prescribed and implemented. The practice of long-term fasting (from many days to weeks) is not discussed here, and we refer interested readers to the European clinical experience with such fasting protocols.13
Yes, there are hundreds, probably thousands of articles on the keto diet by this point. One thing to realize is that the keto diet is an "all or nothing" kind of diet.
Those ratios (e.g., only around 5% of calories as carbs, 20% as protein, and a whopping 75% of calories as fats/oils) are carefully designed to PUT YOU INTO KETOSIS after a number of days or weeks.
If you don't achieve or else fall out of ketosis -- because of 1) how you eat; and 2) your particular genetic makeup -- then the body won't be properly producing and/or burning the ketones.
That's why this diet was rated DEAD LAST in the 2018 US News & World Report analysis of 40 different diets. Curiously, for all the talk about keto diets being good for diabetics, it scored very poorly in the rankings for 1) diabetes health; 2) heart health; and 3) longterm weight loss.
The vegan diet scored in the top 3-5 positions on all three of those parameters. (Yet the analysts only rated that diet #19 because of obvious restrictions on what you can eat and "lack of social support". For many vegans that's not a problem at all. We choose the ethical route and that's that.)
The largely plant-based Mediterranean and DASH diets scored the highest in those health parameters and ease of staying on the diet, according to that US News & World Report listing.
More on intermittent keto-type fasting from that Dr. Valter Longo at USC:
https://news.usc.edu/135551/fasting-aging-dieting-and-when-you-should-eat-valter-longo/
It's a good read.
Notice that he speaks of the optimal diet as being essentially a plant-based one. He mentions fish but that's probably b/c of Omega 3s. But vegans get all the Omega 3s they need from eating 2 walnuts or some flaxseeds every day. (I always have a few inexpensive bags of walnuts from TraderJoes in my fridge for those Omega 3s!)
Yes, fasting can provide a much-needed rest for the bodily systems. I prefer to do it with some non-starchy, low-calorie vegetables to provide green energy for the body.
One BIG CAVEAT: anyone with health issues like hypoglycemia, diabetics, et al. need to be very careful with fasting. Do it with medical supervision.
More generally, UNDER-eating (not necessarily fasting / skipping meals) is a proven method for longevity. I think it was Duke Univ. that's been doing the studies for decades on that factor.
Any thoughts on fasting ? That's gotten more support recently - here's an interesting albeit outdated article -
https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2016/03/07/intermittent-fasting-diets-are-gaining-acceptance/
http://maxhealthreviews.com/eat-stop-eat/
p.s.-- typo there in first part of my prior post.
"it's a massively stressful thing for the body to suddenly switch to a ketone-burning organism FROM a glucose-burning organism"
Well, it's a massively stressful thing for the body to suddenly switch to a ketone-burning organism to a glucose-burning organism, which is why people get the dreaded "keto flu" phase.
For Keto to properly work, you really need to be on it for at least 3-5 weeks, minimum, to get past the keto flu and let the body start becoming adept at staying in ketosis and optimally utilizing those ketones. Every human body is different in how well it can adapt to ketosis, what levels of carbs can be tolerated to not interfere with ketosis, etc.
One of the world's most respected experts on nutrition, Dr. Dean Ornish (who has clinically proven he can reverse heart disease and numerous other lethal conditions with a plant-based diet) has stated (in an excerpt from an article i saw back in May 2018):
While Dr. Ornish admits weight loss is possible on a ketogenic diet, he asks whether 'you are mortgaging your health' when doing so.
He says: "The answer is yes. When you look at the arteries of people on a [carnivorous / omnivorous] keto diet, they tend to be more clogged, even though they may be losing weight.
"Weight loss is good but you can lose weight in lots of ways that aren't good for you. Smoking cigarettes is an excellent way to lose weight, chemotherapy is a good way to lose weight, getting profoundly depressed is a good way to lose weight.
"I don't recommend any of those approaches - you want an approach which promotes health."
That's why, if you're going to play with a Keto diet, you've got to really do it to the max, but do it in the healthiest way possible, going plant-based with avocados, nuts, seeds, nut-butters, etc. to get those high amounts of fats/oils without piling up inflammatory toxins and endotoxins in your system.
Inflammation is the key to so much of this. All honest and informed medical scientists today know that INFLAMMATION is the #1 culprit behind so many of our "civilization diseases"-- the big killers like heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and obesity.
It's not just meat/eggs/dairy that are sources of inflammation. Unfortunately, since the 1990s, because of GMO (genetically modified organisms) from Monsanto et al., some major plant groups are also now inflammatory sources-- corn, wheat and soy-- which is why Europe has banned imports of these crops from the USA unless it's organic (they realized that children's skyrocketing rates of allergies and asthma were due to these GMO products).
That's why i've entirely cut out of my vegan diet any GMO products --the way you do this is to always buy ORGANIC forms of corn, wheat and soy. Very easy to do in our era, where every supermarket let alone the TraderJoes, Sprouts, Costco and health food stores have loads of organic products.
But it can't hurt to go on a Keto diet for just a few weeks can it ?
Keto diet - for the sake of your health, guys (and gals?), even the Keto proponents say that you should be under careful medical supervision when you make the massive switch to a ketone-burning diet, which involves changing the primary hominid diet of the past many millions of years (which was the diet of the Great Apes-- 98% to 99% plant-based, supplemented during lean years by perhaps ingesting some insects).
On the things you need to be extremely careful about with regard to the Keto diet, please read this basic piece from Readers Digest
https://www.rd.com/health/diet-weight-loss/keto-diet-dangers/
which will alert you to the many possible dangers with a keto diet if it's not done properly-- such as loss of key nutrients, mineral imbalances, dehydration risk, body feeding on its own muscles and not just fat, etc etc.
And i'll say it again-- highly respected scientific nutritionists led by Canada's Dr./Prof. David Jenkins (who discovered the now-widely-used glycemic index) have shown that a plant-based version of keto is FAR HEALTHIER than a primarily carnivore approach to keto. Recall that the only longitudinal study of the Keto diet, recently published in The Lancet medical journal, showed that the Keto diet takes (on avg) FOUR YEARS OFF YOUR LIFE.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(18)30135-X/fulltext
Here's just one quote from the text of that scientific report:
"Low carbohydrate dietary patterns favouring animal-derived protein and fat sources, from sources such as lamb, beef, pork, and chicken, were associated with higher mortality, whereas those that favoured plant-derived protein and fat intake, from sources such as vegetables, nuts, peanut butter, and whole-grain breads, were associated with lower mortality, suggesting that the source of food notably modifies the association between carbohydrate intake and mortality."
If you're going to insist on eating Keto, then in the much healthier plant-based version, you use avocados and lots of nut/seed butters to get that high daily fat/oil intake that Keto requires instead of butter, cheese, bacon, etc., all of which are proven carcinogens because they carry massive amounts of PCBs and other toxins.
The Keto diet sounds very appealing if indeed one can lose weight without caloric restrictions.
I love good food and so my weight creeps up over time and then periodically I go on a calorie restricted diet to get back to my target weight.
https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/keto
from another blog
Diabetes Cure
Go to www.rawfor30days.com for info on their Simply Raw DVD showing six people with diabetes who go on a 30 day raw food diet and, as a result, cure their diabetes. To avoid legal problems they call it “reversing.”
Well, I’ve been telling you for several years now that changing to a raw food diet can reverse (cure) any illness. Yes, I know, after eating cooked food all your life it’s a whopping change. Pfft go all the fast food places. And almost all restaurants…except those with better salad bars. You’re on your own!
As more and more people wise up that they can cure their cancer by a diet change instead of making the medical industry an average of $340,000 richer…and probably dying…we’ll be seeing more raw food restaurants opening and the others adding raw food meals to their menus.
It’s an interesting and exciting adventure. It’s fun! My fridge these days is full of containers of grapefruit, orange and grape slush, raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, blackberries, banana slices and raw milk. And those are just for breakfast. I make the fruit slushes by pealing the skin and putting the fruit part in a blender. With grapes I just wash the seedless ones and de-seed the seeded ones before blending.
With half of us eventually getting cancer, mainly as a result of our eating cooked food, the addiction to cooked food has to be pretty powerful to overcome those odds. And that’s just cancer. Dr. Comby hasn’t found any illness that a change to raw food won’t reverse
Boycott Kellogg's For Using Genetically Modified Sugar in its Cereal Products
http://www.naturalnews.com/026154.html
Your Health Revolution Petition
http://www.HealthRevolutionPetition.org/index.html?ID=2252
The in-expense and effectiveness of natural cures and cultures that practice them such as the Chinese are a direct threat to the stranglehold that the western medical communities have on this country and most of the world. That is one of the main reasons that many aspects of Chinese medicine were so strongly suppressed, laughed at, made fun of, ridiculed and ignored in the past thirty or so years.
jfyi
Startling new research has found that high fructose corn syrup
has been contaminated with mercury, potentially for many years. Nearly one-third of the HFCS-containing grocery products tested in the study were found to contain detectable levels of mercury.
Read about the clever denials of the Corn Refiners Association and the attemps by their Chicago P.R. firm to get NaturalNews to remove our stories about HFCS (outright censorship?). Today's shocking story reveals the truth on all this, and it warns you to avoid consuming HFCS altogether.
http://www.naturalnews.com/025442.html
Fast Food Causes Alzheimer's Disease, Makes Population Stupid
http://www.naturalnews.com/News_000559_Alzheimers_disease_fast_food_brain_function.html
Raw Milk and SB 201
Fish Oil is Better Than Drugs for Preventing Heart Failure
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2008/09/18/fish-oil-is-better-than-drugs-for-preventing-heart-failure.aspx?source=nl
Ten Foods to Eat This Fall
As the seasons change, a new crop of foods takes center stage on fall menus
By PERVAIZ SHALLWANI
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122090713736811637.html
The official start of fall is only a few days away, and as the air turns crisp, the delicate fruits and vegetables of the summer will give way to an autumnal bounty of apples, pumpkins, root vegetables and more. Hearty greens such as Brussels sprouts, nuts that reach their ripe age this time of year and cheeses that have been aging over the summer take center stage. Many of the fresh produce available in the fall months also reaps health benefits -- fruits and vegetables with dark, rich colors, such as kale and pomegranate, are often packed with essential vitamins and nutrients. Apples and pumpkins may be autumn's go-to foods, but here are 10 others to consider when cooking this fall:
Associated Press1.
Concord grapes: Americans usually associate this blue-black skinned grape with juice, jelly and jam, but the Concord tastes good on its own. Named after the small town in Massachusetts, the grape is native to the Northeast because of its ability to adapt to the harsh weather. Concords are as high in natural anti-oxidants as blackberries or blueberries, and start showing up shortly after Labor Day. They can be found fresh as late as Thanksgiving, with the most plentiful months being September and October. They are generally tart and less acidic than grapes from warmer climates, and so are used more for juices than wine.
Preparation: If you are eating them raw, remove the skin, which can be a little tough and bitter, and be aware of the seed in most varieties. Concord grapes also work well in pies, as compote over pancakes and waffles, and in sorbet or ice cream. Just make sure to add sugar to mask the tartness and remove the pits, which can be done by smashing them with a back end of a chef's knife.
Getty Images2.
Kabocha: Similar to acorn squash, Kabocha is sometimes known as Japanese squash or Japanese pumpkin because of its popularity there. (It was supposedly brought to Japan from Cambodia by the Spanish in the 1500s, and is used in everything from soup to sushi.) Kabocha is a fairly new introduction to the American squash lexicon, and in some parts of the country, it has become the generic name for winter squash, with its harder, deep-green outer rind. The squash's orange flesh is a little sweeter than butternut or acorn squash and is especially rich in beta-carotene -- the health effects of which have been linked to everything from preventing cancer and heart disease to reducing the risk of cataracts and infertility.
Preparation: Like all squash, Kabocha stores well on the counter or in a cupboard for several weeks. Epicurious recommends preparing it the same way you would an acorn squash -- roasted, braised, steamed or pureed. Add it to a curry, serve it roasted over risotto or puree it into a soup.
Associated Press3.
Pears: Like its cousin the apple, the origins of the pear trace back to the Caucasus region that straddles Europe and Asia. It was introduced to America in 1629 and several strains subsequently evolved, including Bartlett, Anjou and Bosc pears. Boasting more than 1,000 varieties in colors that range from yellow and green to red and brown, pears are usually harvested in September and October in the Northeast and Midwest. They are picked a little before they are soft and ripe so they can be transported without being damaged. They continue to age in a cooler environment for two to three days, but spoil quickly after they are soft to the touch. Pears are low in calories, but high in fiber and vitamins C and K. Keep an eye out for seckel, a tiny pear that is so sweet that it is sometimes called the "sugar pear."
Preparation: Delicious on their own, pears are also great roasted and served with ice cream or as the main ingredient in a cake or tart. For a savory entree, mix pears that are a little on the raw side into a meat stew by sautéing them with other vegetables toward the middle-to-end of the stewing process.
Associated Press4.
Pomegranate: Native to Iran, where they still grow wild, pomegranates in the United States can be found as far north as southern Utah and Washington, D.C., but thrive in the drier parts of California and Arizona. The meaty fruit with juices that range from rose to deep red grows through much of the summer and is best harvested beginning in September. Pomegranates store well for several weeks. The nectar is regarded as a great source of antioxidants and has been found to reduce cholesterol and the risk of prostate cancer.
Preparation: A bit of a bear to handle -- but rewarding -- pomegranate seeds are refreshing on their own and add complexity to salads. Cut the fruit into wedges and scrape out the seeds. The juice, thickened, can be a rich addition to sauces and a great glaze for duck or chicken. To de-juice the fruit, run the seeds through an electric or hand-cranked juicer or process them in a blender, and pass it through a fine-mesh strainer.
Getty Images5.
Pine nuts: The seeds of pine cones, these pale nuts are a little larger than sunflowers seeds and are gathered in the fall like many other nuts, including pecans, acorns and chestnuts. They are found in America mostly in the Southwest, where they are best harvested in September and October after being dried by the hot summer sun. While they are high in calories (an ounce packs 160-180 calories), pine nuts are also high in protein, vitamins E and K, niacin and thiamin. Shelled pine nuts will last for roughly two months, stored dry or refrigerated, but can turn rancid and have a bitter taste if exposed to too much humidity.
Preparation: Eat them plain, stuff them into meats or puree them with garlic and basil for a classic pesto. They also add heartiness to salads, lightly toasted.
Getty Images6.
Quince: One of the earliest known fruits and a relative of the apple and the pear, quince is particularly popular in much of Europe, Latin America and parts of Asia. It has a pleasant, sweet smell when ready to eat and turns from yellow to a pinkish color when cooked. American versions, grown mostly in California and New York, differ from their Asian and Mediterranean counterparts and tend not to be as soft or sweet. Varieties include the apple- and pineapple quince, which is the most common type found in the United States. Quince is high in fiber and vitamin C.
Preparation: Too sour to eat raw, quince is typically found in jams, preserves and paste (most commonly known in the U.S. as membrillo) that pair well with cheese. The fruit can be cooked with or without its skin, and is great poached, roasted or baked as part of a dessert – the Pennsylvania Dutch use it to make quince cake. It is also a nice touch stewed in a Moroccan tagine.
Getty Images7.
Rutabaga: Also called swede, the rutabaga is milder version of its cousin the turnip and has a texture that's similar to a potato. This root vegetable is believed to have originated in Europe and reached the United States in the 19th century. Rutabagas harvested across the cooler parts of the United States are sometimes coated in wax to help preserve them longer, so it's best to scrub or remove the skin before cooking. The flesh is most commonly yellow and sweeter than a turnip; milder white-fleshed ones exist as well. Rutabagas are low in calories and are a good source of thiamin and vitamin B6.
Preparation: Boil and mash them with spices or serve them in a mix of roasted winter vegetables. They are better tasting cooked instead of raw.
Getty Images8.
Thyme: This herb is available fresh year-round, but it is one of few examples, in addition to sage and rosemary, that grows well into the fall. Its woody stem allows it to stand up to the harsher weather in a way that softer stemmed basil cannot. Thyme's tiny green leaves, which release a deep fragrance, are particularly popular in Mediterranean foods. Cover the stalks in plastic with the stems submerged in water to keep the leaves from drying out (this will last about a week). Thyme is regarded as an antioxidant, contains high amounts of vitamin K and iron, and is often championed in natural medicine for health benefits such as remedying coughing.
Preparation: De-stem and chop the leaves to marinate meat or flavor just about anything from mashed potatoes to salad dressing. It is essential in a bouquet garni, a classic French combination of whole herbs usually tied into a cheesecloth or with butcher's twine and added to soups, stews and roasts for depth in flavor.
Getty Images9.
Tuscan kale: Known for its dark, almost black leaves, this prettier relative of Scottish kale is native to Italy -- hence its name. It's also called dinosaur or Lacinato kale, and has been gaining in popularity around the world because of its easy cultivation and heartier taste. While fellow members of the brassicia family, such as cauliflower and broccoli, have a harder time with the frost, vegetables such as kale, kohlrabi (a green, turnip-like cabbage) and Brussels spouts carry the torch. When the temperature drops, they convert their starch molecules into sugar to survive, thus enhancing their flavor. Tuscan kale is one of the healthiest vegetables around, and is loaded with vitamins A, C and K, along with significant amount of calcium, iron and manganese.
Preparation: Make sure the leaves are dry and store them in an air-tight plastic bag. Tuscan kale tastes good raw, where its slightly bitter flavor shines. But because of its toughness, this vegetable is best slow-cooked with chicken or vegetable broth. For a classic touch, finish it with white beans.
Getty Images10.
Sheep's milk cheeses: Beginning in late August and running through the end of the year, cheeses tend to be at their best because the cows, sheep and goats have been grazing grass throughout the spring and summer. Aged sheep's milk cheeses in particular reach their peak this time of year because of the strict milking cycle for sheep, which typically begins in late April or May and runs through the summer. It's why cheeses like Vermont Shepherd, a popular reinvention of the classic French Ossau Iraty-style cheese, starts to arrive in late August after being aged for four to eight months. The cheese is produced until the supply runs out (usually in the spring), when the sheep begin their five-month milking cycle again. Sheep's milk cheeses, similar to goat's milk cheeses, are high in calcium and are more easily digested than cow's milk cheeses. Ocooch Mountain cheese, a fairly new aged sheep's milk cheese from Wisconsin, won a first-place award at the American Cheese Society Competition in July.
Preparation: Best served at room temperature, eat these cheeses by themselves, thinly sliced on crusty bread with a drizzle of honey or with a sweet preserve such as cherry or raspberry.
good stuff I eat it every day by the table spoon and fry every thing in it.
>Thanks for the link for the coconut oil. I ordered a gallon knowing that I will be doing a lot of cooking in the autumn and winter.
I noticed that Cherie Calbom, The Juice Lady, nutritionist and best-selling author of “Juicing for Life,” also recommended Tropical Traditions and its coconut oil. Since I juice daily and have her book her recommendation and yours sealed the deal for me.
thanks again,
sumi
list of grass-fed beef ranchers in the United States, where you can find good-quality meats:
Panorama Meats – Black Angus and Red Angus
www.panoramameats.com
Country Natural Beef – Hereford and Angus
www.countrynaturalbeef.com
Tallgrass Beef
www.tallgrassbeef.com
Niman Ranch – A network of more than 600 independent farmers and ranchers, and probably the easiest to find locally
www.nimanranch.com
Pacific Village – Entirely grass-fed cattle since 2002
www.newseasonsmarket.com
The Secretary of Agriculture is up to no good during his last months in office.
Tell him to knock it off!
August 21, 2008
Dear xxxx
Say NO to irradiated meat!
This has been the year of meat recalls. It seems like every time you turn around more ground beef is contaminated with E. coli O157:H7. USDA officials have started to talk about a plan to combat E.Coli by irradiating beef carcasses before they are processed. Tell Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer that you don't want irradiated meat!
With the Bush Administration on the way out, many agencies may take the opportunity to pass as many pro-industry regulations as possible. This USDA plan to irradiate beef carcasses could be the first in a host of bad policies during the last months of the administration.
More reasonable solutions to the E. Coli problem are increasing meat inspections to make sure contamination doesn't happen in the first place, and testing to make sure contaminated meat doesn't leave the plant. However, the beef industry quickly protested when USDA officials recently announced a plan to expand their inspection of E. coli O157:H7.
Irradiation is a band-aid solution for dirty meat, and could be harmful to your health. Food producers need to address the source of the problem - processing lines that are too fast and dirty conditions at plants - not promote an expensive, impractical and ineffective technology like irradiation. Irradiating meat forms chemicals known or suspected to cause cancer and birth defects.
Worst of all, the irradiated carcasses would be further processed, and wouldn't have to be labeled as irradiated, leaving consumers in the dark. Take action now to tell Secretary Schafer that irradiating beef carcasses is not a solution to E. Coli:
http://action.foodandwaterwatch.org/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=25366
Thanks for taking action,
Sarah Alexander
Food & Water Watch
goodfood(at)fwwatch.org
P.S. We're just getting word that FDA is going to add lettuce and spinach to the list of products allowed to be irradiated. Watch for more action on this issue in the coming weeks.
Food & Water Watch is a nonprofit consumer organization that works to ensure clean water and safe food. We challenge the corporate control and abuse of our food and water resources by empowering people to take action and by transforming the public consciousness about what we eat and drink.
If you cook with ex virgin olive oil you ruin it's good qualitys and it becomes hydrogenated :>)
Liquid vegetable oils are often hydrogenated to turn them into solids.
the human body does not reconize hydrogenated oils as food and there for coat the arteries. not a good thing.
>Thanks for the response. I will add coconute oil to my kitchen cabinet. I like to alternate things when I do cook.
I had been using extra virgin olive oil [organic], but wanted to change when I ran out and the Macadamia Nut Oil was given to me as a birthday present. [I like functional presents.]
Thanks for the two links,
sumisu
You can travel the world over, and not find a more perfect cooking oil than Macadamia Nut Oil. Its naturally high smoke point (400-450° F) allows for excellent cooking versatility, and even helps reduce the production of trans fatty acids.
Macadamia Nut Oil is a very good oil to cook with and even better when used totally raw and not heated. definetly one of the better ones out there but always when the oil (any oil) is totally raw and virgin, unprocessed, and organic only.
cocoanut oil is the same when used for cooking very high smoke point but imo has even more nutritional benefits especially when totally raw. I think these are worth reading.
http://www.essense-of-life.com/moreinfo/specialtyproducts/coconutoil.htm
http://coconutdiet.com/candida.htm?gad&gclid=CJ3pvKvp95QCFSQbagodsEYbrA
thankx Todd
>Recently a friend gave me a bottle of organic Macadamia Nut Oil with the following from its web site:
To ensure quality and purity, NOW® Macadamia Nut Oil uses only unrefined, unhybridized macadamias, as grown in Australia. These organically grown nuts are superior in quality and account for its unique nutritional profile. At 81% monounsaturated fat, 2% polyunsaturated fat and an incredibly low 2.2 grams of saturated fat, NOW® Macadamia Nut Oil has one of the healthiest unsaturated to saturated fat ratios, even greater than that of olive oil.
http://www.worldclassnutrition.com/macadamia.html
Todd, just interested on your take. I know that you follow good nutrition.
sumisu
The Many Benefits of Coconut Oil and Coconut Butter
http://www.naturalnews.com/023563.html
With HKBV down today, check out RUNU. Rudy Nutrition, Inc. is a manufacturer of health conscious products that offer great taste as well as healthy choices for parents, children, and athletes.
Mystery Meat Macrophotography
http://www.naturalnews.com/phototour_mystery_meat_1.html
Mr. Potato heads off Food crisis
By Mary Sparrowdancer
4-27-8
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=28981348
The latest "crisis" spreading throughout the world, the food crisis, may actually backfire on the giant capitalists reaping great profits from all they have sown without mercy for nearly a century. The US food crisis is in part being experienced because during the past 80 years, our government slowly formed partnerships with huge, profit-seeking corporations. Local food production was taken away from small family farmers who could not compete with big industry. The critical responsibility of providing food for the masses then fell into the profit-seeking hands of conglomerates that were heavily armed with chemicals, plastics, pesticides, fossil fuels, and topsoil-destroying machinery.
Like a microcosm of what would eventually occur throughout most of the world, people in the US became increasingly dependent upon the agricultural, chemical, and petroleum industries for the production and delivery of "food." Diets that were once healthy became unnatural and based largely upon processed, powdered, light-weight, (easily shipped and stored) grains instead of locally grown, nutrient-dense, fresh organic vegetables and fruits. This dependency began in earnest around the 1930s, the years referred to by some as "the Dirty Thirties." Those were years when corporate profits at all costs seemed to take precedence and business became more important than people. They were years when extraordinary examples of cause and effect occurred, as though a profound message was being offered to us if we would only stop and take notice.
Some feel the Wall Street crash of 1929 was caused by speculation over the exorbitant import taxes the Smoot-Hawley act was about to bring. This business protection act became law in 1930, and humans paid the price. The Great Depression grew and properties were confiscated. Other countries retaliated against the US, passing similar laws causing severe trade restrictions. The US State Department reported that world trade declined by "66% between 1929 and 1934." The market for our surplus grains disappeared. Farmers lost their farms when they could not repay loans taken out for machinery, but the machinery did more than cause homelessness. The machinery had damaged the topsoil of the Great Plains. The damage was so great, the topsoil turned to dust and was carried eastward by winds. Black clouds sent a roiling message from the new Dust Bowl to New York and beyond, New York being the very home of Wall Street. The Dirty Thirties marked the birth of the synthetic, plastic kingdom.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), in the 1900s a full 41% of the US workforce was employed in the important task of growing our food. By 1945, following the elimination of the small farmers this percentage fell to 16%. In 2000, the percentage of humans employed as food growers was a mere 1.9% of the workforce, because as the small farmers lost their farms and their jobs, commercial farming conglomerates took over. Industrialization meant commercial fertilizers would be used to force crops from the damaged earth. According to the USDA, commercial fertilizer use more than doubled after the Dirty Thirties. By the 1980s, nearly 50,000,000 tons of commercial fertilizers were being used yearly.
In a statement given to me by my friend, Dr. Luise Light, former USDA nutrition expert, we were "brainwashed by media publicity into thinking that industrially produced food is more scientific, safer and healthier than old-fashioned locally grown food. This is a lie." Dr. Light was the creator of the true Food Pyramid, which suggested we consume a diet based primarily on fresh vegetables and fruits. Her pyramid was drastically altered by the grain lobby, falsely leading people to think that our diets needed to be grain-based.
The grain foods created by synthetic practices, are clearly not natural. After foods are processed with pesticides, chemicals, plastics and fossil fuels, they become, in part, synthetic, many with additives to hide or enhance taste or appearance and to "extend shelf life." Throughout these years of dependency on "agro-giants," the health of Americans has steadily declined until we have become the top consumers of pharmaceuticals on earth. We who live in this plastic, synthetic kingdom that was born in the 1930s are now a nation completely dependent not only upon synthetic foods, but are now seeking relief from our toxic symptoms via expensive, synthetic drugs.
With the food supply lying in the hands of a few corporations, manipulation and price gouging have apparently been made easy, but these tactics would have little impact on any of us if we began independently growing our food locally as it should be grown. According to the Washington Post, global food prices rose 83% during the last three years, partly due to the rising costs of fuel for shipping. We have paid the price in many ways, poisoning ourselves with synthetic chemicals, then waiting unknown days or weeks while products are shipped over the hemispheres, or stored indefinitely thus losing more nutrients with each passing moment. This food crisis could turn out to be a godsend for the world if the situation is addressed individually and quickly.
For those of us who have grown tired (sick and tired) of supporting the pseudo and synthetic food industry, there is a simple way out of this giant mess. Anyone who has access to a little dirt can reclaim the responsibility of growing at least a portion of our foods right in our own yards, and we can begin today and start out very simply.
One of the easiest and most nutritious homegrown foods is the potato. The potato has long been the victim of curious false advertising. The truth is that fresh, organically grown potatoes can be viewed as one of the top three most nutrient-dense foods in the green kingdom. Freshly harvested potatoes taste great and have generous amounts of natural vitamin C, B complex vitamins (the real ones rather than dubious synthetic Bs), amino acids, and outstanding mineral and trace nutrients, including iodine. They are so "complete" in nutrition that humans living on diets consisting primarily of potatoes appear to have an excellent state of health that surpasses American health at this time.
The potato has more potassium than a banana, and comes in a delicious rainbow of different colors and types, offering a wide variety of nutrients from a natural, fresh, whole and very satisfying food. It now appears that the lowly spud, long ignored or completely dismissed as a joke or a mere starch bomb, is far superior in nutrients to the cheap powdered grains, chemicals, and plastics found in many industrialized breads, cereals, pastas and other processed foods that form the sad bulk of Americans' diet at this time. In addition, while grain foods tend to create an extremely high acid pH residue in the human body, it appears that potatoes do not.
There are many websites available giving detailed instructions in how to grow potatoes. The Google search engine leads us first to its favorite, albeit opinionated and frequently biased giver of information: "wikipedia." According to this site (and others), it seems that one must first have a degree in botany, several acres of land, heavy-duty harrowing equipment, or at the very least a water buffalo in order to prepare the earth for potato production.
"Correct potato husbandry is an arduous task in the best of circumstances," the wikipedia writer grimly warns any potential new backyard potato farmer, and then adds, "Good ground preparation, harrowing, plowing, and rolling are always needed, along with a little grace from the weather and a good source of water. Three successive plowings, with associated harrowing and rolling, are desirable before planting." (2)
The word, "harrow," is described by Webster's as to "pillage, plunder, torment, vex." It seems to sum up the entire suggested planting schedule rather well. One might come away from this exhausting description thinking we should leave potato growing to the harrowing "experts." The truth, however, is that the above techniques are completely unnecessary and are the very techniques that have badly damaged our topsoils.
The whole truth is that growing our food - - and especially growing the top three nutrient-dense foods addressed in this paper - - is not only easy, but can also be done in a way that the topsoil is renewed, nurtured and fed while it in turn produces our food. The potato is easy to grow due to the fact that most potatoes, unlike a loaf of bread or a bowl of corn flakes, are alive. Being so, they will strive to remain alive while also striving to bring forth more potatoes. They have been doing so on their own for countless millennia, long before humans discovered they were good to eat and could be grown next to the kitchen door instead of being hunted and gathered in the wild.
Potatoes, in fact, seem to happily attempt to grow under just about any conditions as long as they have not been killed by radiation or chemicals. One does not even need a yard in order to grow potatoes. They can be easily grown in containers and started by using old potatoes in the fridge or pantry that have sprouted "eyes." Each of the eyes will eagerly grow into a new plant if given half a chance.
After selecting organic potatoes that have sprouted eyes, you can cut the potato into halves, thirds or quarters, making sure there are at least a couple of eyes on each section. These sections should be allowed to sit on a windowsill for a day or so, until the areas that were cut can "heal," and dry. The alternative to sectioning is to just plant the whole potato that has sprouted eyes. I have done both, and the result has always been the same: more potatoes. One need not dig a hole, "work the ground," or commit any harrowing acts when planting potatoes. The seed potatoes can be placed upon the ground surface and covered with compost, leaves, hay, straw, etc. They are not particular. I have known folks who have simply tossed an old potato onto a compost pile, resulting in its taking root and establishing itself.
If planting in a container, fill the lower third of the container with soil, and throw some seed potatoes onto it, or push them down under the dirt. Once they have sprouted, they will grow in height very quickly. When the sprouted plants are about ten inches tall, some growers advocate adding more dirt, compost, leaves, etc., until the bottom portion of the growing plants are completely covered by the soil, leaving only about three inches of the topmost greenery uncovered. As the plants continue to grow in height, the advice by some is to continue adding more dirt until the container is filled. Potatoes will be formed throughout the container.
Others growers, such as organic farmer, Jim Gerritsen, of Wood Prairie Farm in Maine, state that the leaves should never be covered, but only the stems covered. In an email he stated to me, "Our potato leaves are solar factories manufacturing plant food. More leaves equal more food," and this, he wrote, equals better conditions for tuber bulking and higher yields.
Whichever method you choose, when growing potatoes in the yard add straw, hay, leaves, dirt and compost or a mixture of all to form a mound covering either the emerging plants or stems. This helps keep the developing tubers hidden from sunlight which might cause them to turn green. (Green potatoes may contain a substance, solanine, which should not be consumed.) I also incorporate various seaweeds and ocean nutrients into my gardens.
These mounds of organic materials will eventually decompose into rich composted soil, but long before this occurs, the potato plants will create their tubers, some types producing tubers in as early as a few weeks. You can "rob" the mounds early by carefully reaching in and removing tubers before the actual harvest time comes when the plants die back. Gently boiling the fresh potatoes whole, skin intact rather than cutting them up or puncturing them and then nuking them in the microwave, is said to result in less loss of nutrients.
At this time in our synthetic, nutrient-starved world, I feel Mr. Potato shares his spotlight with two other nutritious friends, the first of which is the sweet potato. Many people associate sweet potatoes with Thanksgiving or Christmas, and therefore consume this wonderful food only once or twice a year. The sweet potato is a root rather then a tuber, and is more closely related to the morning glory than to the spud. It is another extraordinarily nutrient-dense food created in the green kingdom of Mother Nature.
Sweet potatoes can be easily grown by first obtaining "slips" or green shoots from a sweet potato suspended by toothpicks in a glass of water, something many of us remember doing as kids. Each green shoot or vine that forms can be pulled off the sweet potato and planted in the ground or in containers. Or, slips can be ordered from farmers if specific varieties are desired.
This year, because of my concerns for my family and friends regarding this "food crisis," and also in an effort to help support and encourage small family farmers, I ordered a variety of seed potatoes and sweet potato slips as well as other organic seeds from various farmers, including Jim Gerritsen. A rainbow of seed potatoes - - reds, yellows, purples, blues, fingerlings, pinks and whites - - are lined up on my windowsill now growing their "eyes" and looking very much like a lineup of small, round (some tall and thin) soldiers preparing to bravely go forth and do what they like to do best, thus addressing in this front yard, "the global food crisis." I would suggest that everyone begin growing potatoes, immediately.
The importance of taking our food back and establishing organic gardening practices can perhaps best be observed by noting two other microcosms in our world that are right now showing us again extraordinary examples of cause and effect, as though another profound message is desperately being offered to us if we would only stop and notice. As though to make this message as clear as possible, these two opposing microcosms are a mere 50 miles from one another. They are Haiti, and Cuba.
According to David Montgomery's book, "Dirt," Cuba was the site of a unique cause and effect revolution that resulted in something rather exceptional. Before the 1959 revolution, four-fifths of Cuba's agricultural lands were controlled by a handful of people primarily engaged in the exporting business, and Cuba produced less than half of its own food. Machinery, fertilizers, pesticides and fossil fuels were all imported, but with the collapse of the Soviet Union, trading ended, and an ongoing US trade embargo "plunged Cuba into a food crisis."
"Unable to import food or fertilizer, Cuba saw the calories and protein in the average diet drop by almost a third, from 3,000 calories a day to 1,900 calories between 1989 and 1994." Out of desperation then, "Cuba began a remarkable agricultural experiment." Industrialized state farms were divided up into small farms and thousands of gardens. Government programs encouraged organic agriculture out of necessity: there was no longer ready access to chemicals, fertilizers, fossil fuels or industrialized machinery. Vacant lots were turned into organic vegetable gardens. People grew their own food and sold it locally. The end result is that Cuba is now entirely self-sufficient and will remain unaffected by the "global food crises" the rest of us are intended to feel.
A mere 50 miles away from Cuba, is Haiti. Haiti, once covered with lush forests of magnificent hardwoods, has suffered from severe poverty that resulted in nearly total deforestation. The deforestation has in turn, led to the washing away of Haiti's topsoil so that now it is very difficult to grow food there. It is said that even the children know hunger daily in Haiti, and out of sad desperation, some of the people are now making flat cakes made of dirt and clay mud. In a poignant irony, having lost the topsoil they needed to provide them food, they are now eating dirt and clay as food.
But there is something hopeful that Haiti might do to help turn all of this around, which brings me to the third most nutrient-dense source of food to be covered in this paper. This is a plant that is easily grown even on poor soils. In fact, growing this plant actually helps to control soil erosion and it helps enrich the topsoil.
Easily grown, and unlike Haiti's lost trees which will take generations to mature if replanted, this is a plant that takes only 120 days to mature. It requires no pesticides and its seeds provide one of the most uniquely nutritious foods in the entire green kingdom. Its fibers create a better paper than tree pulp, without damaging forests. It also creates superior clothing to that of cotton without requiring the excessive pesticides that cotton requires. This plant has been repeatedly shown to heal even advanced cancers as well as treat a variety of other illnesses. The fact that this plant creates products superior to cotton, might provide Haiti with a new economic opportunity, via producing quality clothing, textiles, building goods, and paper products. Finally, as though the green kingdom proved its intelligence to us by producing for us a simple plant that could help provide us with all of our basic needs, this plant also produces an abundance of clean-burning, renewable, sustainable, edible, nontoxic oil. Humanity had been depending upon this useful plant for at least 10,000 years, until it was outlawed.
This plant, maligned even worse in the press than the potato, is the hemp plant (cannabis). Hemp was outlawed during the Dirty Thirties as the plastic, synthetic kingdom was being established. All forms of hemp, including industrial hemp, had to be outlawed, because if hemp were allowed to continue providing us with its many superior, nontoxic products, we would never have developed a need and then a dependency upon the synthetics and plastics/fossil fuel products.
If we all planted hemp from sea to shining sea, in 120 days we could harvest all of the above mentioned superior, health-giving hemp products, and in addition we would also suddenly have a reliable new source of oil, superior and more easily grown than the corn biofuels. We would no longer have the need to harrow other countries in the endless and deadly search for fossil fuels. Lunacy, crises and greed, however, dictate that it is forbidden for us to grow hemp. In fact, lunacy, crises and greed appear to be the primary sources that fuel that keep the synthetic kingdom in operation. While we can legally purchase and enjoy a nice, nutritious bowl of hemp seeds for any meal, it remains illegal to grow hemp here in the U.S.
For those of us throughout the world who are tired of paying the price for, and helping fuel the synthetic kingdom, it is time for each of us to arm ourselves with potatoes and join together in a global revolution that will remove food production from the synthetic kingdom and return it locally to the green kingdom and to the people who are born with an inalienable right to have decent food. Think of Cuba. Pray for Haiti. Join the revolution.
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Mary's son is a 2008 Candidate running for the Florida House of Representatives on the platform of legalizing hemp. Mary Sparrowdancer is an independent journalist and author of a bestselling book, The Love Song. www.sparrowdancer.com She wishes to thank her friends, Luise, Don and Doug for their help with this article.
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References:
US Department of State- Trading down.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/id/17606.htm
Smoot-Hawley.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/id/17606.htm
Cornell history
http://pmep.cce.cornell.edu/facts-slides-self/facts/mod-ag-grw85.html
Agricultural collapse in the 1930s
http://www.agclassroom.org/gan/timeline/ag_trade.htm
Fertilizer history
http://www.agclassroom.org/gan/timeline/farm_tech.htm
Food prices.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content
/article/2008/04/19/AR2008041901601.html
Potato facts.
http://www.all-creatures.org/mfz/health-potatoes.html
Wikipedia (how to succeed in never growing a potato)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potato
"Dirt," by David Montgomery
http://www.theglobalist.com/storyid.aspx?StoryId=6782
Haiti 3rd most dependent country in the world.
http://foreign.senate.gov/testimony/2004/HeinlTestimony040310.pdf
Haiti toxic dump of American sludge from Philadelphia.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/43a/259.html
Haiti The hungry are eating mud pies.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/01/080130-AP-haiti-eatin_2.html
Video: Healing cancer with marijuana: "Run from the cure The Rick Simpson Story." (Part 1 of 7).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjhT9282-Tw&feature=related
The Amazing Health Benefits of Raw Milk
http://www.naturalnews.com/023083.html
USDA Refuses to Recall "Comingled" Meat That Contains Beef from Westland Plant Downer Cows
http://www.naturalnews.com/022703.html
this is the meat thats being fed to our children at school everyday.
Pennsylvania Governor Rethinks Milk Labeling Rule for rBST
http://www.naturalnews.com/022699.html
The Harmful Effects of Sugar and Choosing Healthy Alternatives
http://www.naturalnews.com/022692.html
Stevia Leaf - Too Good To Be Legal?
by Rob McCaleb, Herb Research Foundation
For hundreds of years, people in Paraguay and Brazil have used a sweet leaf to sweeten bitter herbal teas including mate. For nearly 20 years, Japanese consumers by the millions have used extracts of the same plant as a safe, natural, non-caloric sweetener. The plant is stevia, formally known as Stevia rebaudiana, and today it is under wholesale attack by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Stevia is a fairly unassuming perennial shrub of the aster family (Asteraceae), native to the northern regions of South America. It has now been grown commercially in Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Central America, the United States, Israel, Thailand and China. The leaves contain several chemicals called glycosides, which taste sweet, but do not provide calories. The major glycoside is called stevioside, and is one of the major sweeteners in use in Japan and Korea. Stevia and its extracts have captured over 40% of the Japanese market. Major multinational food companies like Coca Cola and Beatrice foods, convinced of its safety, use stevia extracts to sweeten foods for sale in Japan, Brazil, and other countries where it is approved. Europeans first learned of stevia when the Spanish Conquistadors of the Sixteenth Century sent word to Spain that the natives of South America had used the plant to sweeten herbal tea since "ancient times".
The saga of American interest in stevia began around the turn of the Twentieth Century when researchers in Brazil started hearing about "a plant with leaves so sweet that a part of one would sweeten a whole gourd full of mate." The plant had been described in 1899 by Dr. M. S. Bertoni. In 1921 the American Trade Commissioner to Paraguay commented in a letter "Although known to science for thirty years and used by the Indians for a much longer period nothing has been done commercially with the plant. This has been due to a lack of interest on the part of capital and to the difficulty of cultivation."
Dr. Bertoni wrote some of the earliest articles on the plant in 1905 and 1918. In the latter article he notes: "The principal importance of Ka he'e (stevia) is due to the possibility of substituting it for saccharine. It presents these great advantages over saccharine:
1. It is not toxic but, on the contrary, it is healthful,
as shown by long experience and according to the
studies of Dr. Rebaudi.
2. It is a sweetening agent of great power.
3. It can be employed directly in its natural state,
(pulverized leaves).
4. It is much cheaper than saccharine."
Unfortunately, this last point may have been the undoing of stevia. Noncaloric sweeteners are a big business in the U.S., as are caloric sweeteners like sugar and the sugar-alcohols, sorbitol, mannitol and xylitol. It is small wonder that the powerful sweetener interests here, do not want the natural, inexpensive, and non-patentable stevia approved in the U.S.
In the 1970s, the Japanese government approved the plant, and food manufacturers began using stevia extracts to sweeten everything from sweet soy sauce and pickles to diet Coke. Researchers found the extract interesting, resulting in dozens of well-designed studies of its safety, chemistry and stability for use in different food products.
Various writers have praised the taste of the extracts, which has much less of the bitter aftertaste prevalent in most noncaloric sweeteners. In addition to Japan, other governments have approved stevia and stevioside, including those of Brazil, China and South Korea, among others.
Unfortunately, the US was destined to be a different story. Stevia has been safely used in this country for over ten years, but a few years ago, the trouble began.
FDA ATTACK ON STEVIA Around 1987, FDA inspectors began visiting herb companies who were selling stevia, telling them to stop using it because it is an "unapproved food additive". By mid 1990 several companies had been visited. In one case FDA's inspector reportedly told a company president they were trying to get people to stop using stevia "because Nutra Sweet complained to FDA." The Herb Research Foundation(HRF), which has extensive scientific files on stevia, became concerned and filed a Freedom of Information Act request with FDA for information about contacts between Nutra Sweet and FDA about stevia. It took over a year to get any information from the FDA, but the identity of the company who prompted the FDA action was masked by the agency.
In May, 1991 FDA acted by imposing an import alert on stevia to prevent it from being imported into the US. They also began formally warning companies to stop using the "illegal" herb. By the beginning of 1991, the American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) was working to defend stevia. At their general meeting at Natural Products Expo West, members of the industry pledged most of the needed funds to support work to convince FDA of the safety of stevia. AHPA contracted HRF to produce a professional review of the stevia literature. The review was conducted by Doug Kinghorn, Ph.D., one of the world's leading authorities on stevia and other natural non-nutritive sweeteners. Dr. Kinghorn's report was peer-reviewed by several other plant safety experts and concluded that historical and current common use of stevia, and the scientific evidence all support the safety of this plant for use in foods. Based on this report, and other evidence, AHPA filed a petition with FDA in late October asking FDA's "acquiescence and concurrence" that stevia leaf is exempt from food additive regulations and can be used in foods.
FDA, apparently attempting to regulate this herb as they would a new food additive, contends that there is inadequate evidence to approve stevia. However, because of its use in Japan, there is much more scientific evidence of stevia's safety than for most foods and additives. The extent of evidence FDA is demanding for the approval of stevia, far exceeds that which has been required to approve even new synthetic food chemicals like aspartame (Nutra Sweet).
AHPA's petition points out that FDA's food additive laws were meant to protect consumers from synthetic chemicals added to food. FDA is trying, in the case of stevia to claim that stevia is the same as a chemical food additive. But as the AHPA petition points out, Congress did not intend food additive legislation to regulate natural constituents of food itself. In fact, Congressman Delaney said in 1956, "There is hardly a food sold in the market today which has not had some chemicals used on or in it at some stage in its production, processing, packaging, transportation or storage." He stressed that his proposed bill was to assure the safety of "new chemicals that are being used in our daily food supply," and when asked if the regulations would apply to whole foods, he replied "No, to food chemicals only." AHPA contends that stevia is a food, which is already recognized as safe because of its long history of food use. Foods which have a long history of safe use are exempted by law from the extensive laboratory tests required of new food chemicals. The AHPA petition, however, supports the safe use of stevia with both the historical record, and references to the numerous toxicology studies conducted during the approval process in Japan, and studies by interested researchers in other countries.
To date, the FDA still refuses to allow stevia to be sold in the U.S. but the recently-enacted Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 may prevent the FDA from treating stevia and other natural herbs as "food additives."
The previous article courtesy of:
Henriette's Herbal Homepage
E-mail to the originator.
M. Gold Mark Gold's collection of information
Consumers may not be able to avoid cloned food
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/02/18/MN2EUSFR0.DTL
At this point, genetically modified anything is not good, because the long term consequences are unknown.
Go to your local grocery store, and make sure that the butcher department is going to identify cloned meat as cloned meat.
Tell them if they do otherwise, you will find somewhere else to shop.
Encourage every discount "big box" you also shop at to offer grass fed, non hormone-treated beef and chicken.
Look at your resources at various health food stores as an alternative.
When the large retail grocery and big box chains are feeling the pinch because you will not buy what they are selling ( in terms of cloned food), they will get the message.
WRH
Handmade Organic Cultured Butter
http://positron.org/food/butter/
but don't let the FDA know
I don't know I thought it was recent. Monsanto are monsters
Todd. So if I got this right this happened a few years ago.?Do you know if any follow up has taken place?
Man forget baseball players. Test us all! LOL!
Honest Food Guide
http://www.honestfoodguide.org/
why fish oil is good for you!
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2008/1/19/why-fish-oil-is-good-for-you.aspx
Supreme Court Backs Monsanto In Seed Patent Case
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/news/86/i02/8602news4.html
YES!
Beyond junk vitamins: Secrets the public isn't supposed to know about the vitamin industry
http://www.newstarget.com/
http://downloads.truthpublishing.com/BioidenticalVitamins.pdf
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