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Yeah... natural whole nuts and seeds have many benefits,

not just pecans (of course!).

As to a " heart-healthy " diet that we dread for its

blandness... I've read a lot of literature on the low

carbohydrate diet frontier, perusing the low-carb sites

and reading thousands of testimonies from REAL people

about their results from a low carbohydrate diet, much

like the testomonies on the BTD message forum, and I can

say that the " heart-healthy cholesterol lowering " diet

propaganda pushed by the medical establishment is pure

freakin' bullshit. I for one know first-hand how eating

a low-carbohydrate has enhanced my own heart. A heart-

healthy cholesterol-lowering diet may work for some, but

the principles it is founded on is basically false.

Read " Protein Power " before you think about going on a

bland diet for your " health " . This post is especially

out-of-place on a mailing list for type O's. The truth

is out there. I personally do my heart a favor by eating

a six ounce steak slathered with homemade mayo and/or

lots of real butter, instead of the trans-fatty acid

poisen margerine which is actually the worst kind of fat

for the heart and every other organ in the human body.

Ever dissect a heart? I have, plenty of times, heart

muscle is a part of my diet, from many different

animals. There are functional deposits of fat on the

outside of the heart... why? To be used as a reliable

and constant source of FUEL for the heart. The heart

actually prefers ketone bodies (the broken down

metabolites of fatty acids) for fuel over glucose, same

for kidneys and some brain cells. And saturated fat is

not the enemy, there are many kinds of saturated fats

just as there are many kinds of PUFAs and MUFAs, and

saturated fats are a valid source of energy.

Cholesterol? Our bodies PRODUCE its own cholesterol,

about 75% to 80% of the cholesterol our bodies use for

basic construction of hormones and structural component

of cells come from our own bodies. That's why you can

eat many times the RDA of cholesterol and not effect

your blood-cholesterol levels (well, marginally). Unless

of course you're a typical American who is eating WAY

too many carbohydrates, the ensueing metabolic havoc

that screws up a person's ability to utilize the basic

blood fats (which are there for a REASON) causing all

sorts of complications.

I will eat pecans. But I say NO! I will not believe this

propaganda anymore. I urge every O to find out for

yourself. Do the research on your own if you don't

believe me.

> You know you should be following a more heart-healthy diet, but you

> dread the boredom of a low-fat, tasteless diet that leaves you hungry

> all the time.

>

> For you and millions of others like you, there's good news! Pecan

> nuts can help the health conscious stick to their cholesterol-

> lowering diets - and will even double its effectiveness.

>

> In the first controlled metabolic clinical study on the health

> benefits of pecans, researchers from Loma University in

> California have discovered a heart-healthy diet, which incorporates

> the nut, can significantly lower blood cholesterol levels.

>

> In fact, the daily addition of pecans more than doubled the

> effectiveness (cholesterol-lowering ability) of a traditional low-fat

> diet.

>

> The research was published in the September issue of the Journal of

> Nutrition.

>

> Study participants were fed both a basic low-fat heart healthy diet

> (the type a doctor might suggest when you first learn your

> cholesterol levels are too high) and a similar diet that replaced 20

> percent of the calories with pecans (e.g., by adding pecans to

> salads, cereal and entrees).

>

> Although both diets lowered total and bad cholesterol levels, the

> pecan diet (which contained 11 percent more fat than the traditional

> heart-healthy diet), lowered cholesterol levels twice as much.

>

> In fact, the response to the pecan diet was as great as that which

> some people experience with cholesterol-lowering drugs, say the

> researchers. Moreover, even on the higher fat pecan diet, study

> participants did not gain weight.

>

> This pecan study not only demonstrates why a heart-healthy diet does

> not have to be bland and tasteless in order to be good for you, it

> adds scientific support to a growing body of evidence supporting the

> increased use of pecans and other tree nuts in a heart-healthy diet.

>

> Hmmm ... now I can't remember if pecans are avoids or not ... will

> have to look into this!

>

>

>

>

>

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I second that!!

Re: Pecans

Yeah... natural whole nuts and seeds have many benefits,

not just pecans (of course!).

As to a " heart-healthy " diet that we dread for its

blandness... I've read a lot of literature on the low

carbohydrate diet frontier, perusing the low-carb sites

and reading thousands of testimonies from REAL people

about their results from a low carbohydrate diet, much

like the testomonies on the BTD message forum, and I can

say that the " heart-healthy cholesterol lowering " diet

propaganda pushed by the medical establishment is pure

freakin' bullshit. I for one know first-hand how eating

a low-carbohydrate has enhanced my own heart. A heart-

healthy cholesterol-lowering diet may work for some, but

the principles it is founded on is basically false.

Read " Protein Power " before you think about going on a

bland diet for your " health " . This post is especially

out-of-place on a mailing list for type O's. The truth

is out there. I personally do my heart a favor by eating

a six ounce steak slathered with homemade mayo and/or

lots of real butter, instead of the trans-fatty acid

poisen margerine which is actually the worst kind of fat

for the heart and every other organ in the human body.

Ever dissect a heart? I have, plenty of times, heart

muscle is a part of my diet, from many different

animals. There are functional deposits of fat on the

outside of the heart... why? To be used as a reliable

and constant source of FUEL for the heart. The heart

actually prefers ketone bodies (the broken down

metabolites of fatty acids) for fuel over glucose, same

for kidneys and some brain cells. And saturated fat is

not the enemy, there are many kinds of saturated fats

just as there are many kinds of PUFAs and MUFAs, and

saturated fats are a valid source of energy.

Cholesterol? Our bodies PRODUCE its own cholesterol,

about 75% to 80% of the cholesterol our bodies use for

basic construction of hormones and structural component

of cells come from our own bodies. That's why you can

eat many times the RDA of cholesterol and not effect

your blood-cholesterol levels (well, marginally). Unless

of course you're a typical American who is eating WAY

too many carbohydrates, the ensueing metabolic havoc

that screws up a person's ability to utilize the basic

blood fats (which are there for a REASON) causing all

sorts of complications.

I will eat pecans. But I say NO! I will not believe this

propaganda anymore. I urge every O to find out for

yourself. Do the research on your own if you don't

believe me.

> You know you should be following a more heart-healthy diet, but you

> dread the boredom of a low-fat, tasteless diet that leaves you hungry

> all the time.

>

> For you and millions of others like you, there's good news! Pecan

> nuts can help the health conscious stick to their cholesterol-

> lowering diets - and will even double its effectiveness.

>

> In the first controlled metabolic clinical study on the health

> benefits of pecans, researchers from Loma University in

> California have discovered a heart-healthy diet, which incorporates

> the nut, can significantly lower blood cholesterol levels.

>

> In fact, the daily addition of pecans more than doubled the

> effectiveness (cholesterol-lowering ability) of a traditional low-fat

> diet.

>

> The research was published in the September issue of the Journal of

> Nutrition.

>

> Study participants were fed both a basic low-fat heart healthy diet

> (the type a doctor might suggest when you first learn your

> cholesterol levels are too high) and a similar diet that replaced 20

> percent of the calories with pecans (e.g., by adding pecans to

> salads, cereal and entrees).

>

> Although both diets lowered total and bad cholesterol levels, the

> pecan diet (which contained 11 percent more fat than the traditional

> heart-healthy diet), lowered cholesterol levels twice as much.

>

> In fact, the response to the pecan diet was as great as that which

> some people experience with cholesterol-lowering drugs, say the

> researchers. Moreover, even on the higher fat pecan diet, study

> participants did not gain weight.

>

> This pecan study not only demonstrates why a heart-healthy diet does

> not have to be bland and tasteless in order to be good for you, it

> adds scientific support to a growing body of evidence supporting the

> increased use of pecans and other tree nuts in a heart-healthy diet.

>

> Hmmm ... now I can't remember if pecans are avoids or not ... will

> have to look into this!

>

>

>

>

>

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I think you are forgetting the whole point of the blood type diet

concept -- that different people respond differently. The low-fat,

whole food, vegetarian diet as promoted by Dean Ornish has been

categorically proven to reverse heart disease for a large percentage

of those studied. That does not deny that some are not helped by it,

but it has been scientifically demonstrated. D'Adamo's research and

theories would suggest that most of those helped would probably be

type A. Not trying to criticize what works for you, but simply to

reinterate that the Ornish diet does work, at least for many who have

heart disease. Personally, I am type A-, having joined this list to

gain insights into what works for O, since my wife is O.

The other insight which research has brought has been the emphasis on

better fats than others and the danger of transfatty acids found in

most magarines and processed food. I have always felt butter was

more healthy than margarine, though I still question how healthy

large amounts would be. Again, type O's may find greater benefit and

my wife does seem to crave more fat than I do.

Finally, the problem of high glycemic foods such as sugar, white

potatoes, etc. is more the issue that the notion that carbs are evil

in general. It does sound like type O's do much better with higher

protein. Would an Atkins level of protein be helpful or harmful. I

know they are studying that question at Duke University. But again,

type O's may need more protein than A's and suffer with too many

carbs.

I only ask that you not sell short what type A's need. I would also

be interested in other things that seems to work well for O's (yes I

have the first book but want to know which ones really make a

difference). So far my O list is as follows:

- Eat some red meat but avoid wheat (I believe these two go together)

- Eat some more fat but deemphasize carbs (that includes sugar

unfortunately for my sweet tooth wife)

- Be careful with which type of beans we choose and have her

deemphasize beans since O's have problems.

Anything else that seems to be a clear win?

Ray

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Who are you speaking to in this message? I want to think

you are addressing my recent response to the same post,

but as you have not addressed me by name I am unsure as

to whom you are speaking to.

Ray wrote:

> I think you are forgetting the whole point of the blood type diet

> concept -- that different people respond differently. The low-fat,

> whole food, vegetarian diet as promoted by Dean Ornish has been

> categorically proven to reverse heart disease for a large percentage

> of those studied. That does not deny that some are not helped by it,

> but it has been scientifically demonstrated. D'Adamo's research and

> theories would suggest that most of those helped would probably be

> type A. Not trying to criticize what works for you, but simply to

> reinterate that the Ornish diet does work, at least for many who have

> heart disease. Personally, I am type A-, having joined this list to

> gain insights into what works for O, since my wife is O.

>

> The other insight which research has brought has been the emphasis on

> better fats than others and the danger of transfatty acids found in

> most magarines and processed food. I have always felt butter was

> more healthy than margarine, though I still question how healthy

> large amounts would be. Again, type O's may find greater benefit and

> my wife does seem to crave more fat than I do.

>

> Finally, the problem of high glycemic foods such as sugar, white

> potatoes, etc. is more the issue that the notion that carbs are evil

> in general. It does sound like type O's do much better with higher

> protein. Would an Atkins level of protein be helpful or harmful. I

> know they are studying that question at Duke University. But again,

> type O's may need more protein than A's and suffer with too many

> carbs.

>

> I only ask that you not sell short what type A's need. I would also

> be interested in other things that seems to work well for O's (yes I

> have the first book but want to know which ones really make a

> difference). So far my O list is as follows:

> - Eat some red meat but avoid wheat (I believe these two go together)

> - Eat some more fat but deemphasize carbs (that includes sugar

> unfortunately for my sweet tooth wife)

> - Be careful with which type of beans we choose and have her

> deemphasize beans since O's have problems.

>

> Anything else that seems to be a clear win?

>

> Ray

>

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  • 8 years later...

i soaked some pecans as per bee's instructions but i forgot to refrigerate them

and left them out for about two weeks. The pecans now have mold on them not a

lot and not the black mold but a greyish fuzz should i throw them out?

Thanks

Colleen

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