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Nina,

I did not have thyroid problems before i started having soya milk. I took it

for 2 years thinking it would help with menopause.

I don't think Bruce Fife is saying you can't have fermented soya products. My

question to you and Bonnie was about lecithin. Bonnie said don't have it

because it's soya. Soya i'm told blocks iodine to the thyroid. Does fermented

products do this? Is lecithin considered a fermented product? These are

questions i need answering from someone. I still have soy sauce occassionally

in stirfries.

SAlly.

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>

Hi Nina

Quote from 'The Coconut oil Miracle'

Soybeans are particularly bad because of the goitrogens (antithyroid

chemicals) they contain.

He says that all polyunsaturated oils are bad for the thyroid but

soya particularly. That's one of the references to it but i've seen

loads of stuff in articles on websites and other books. It's just i

can't remember exactly where offhand.

I'm really worried about my bone health because of high calcium in

blood etc.I can't afford to go down the wrong path. There is so

many mixed messages from experts and lay people it is so hard to

know if you are doing the right thing.

Sally

> Nina,

> I did not have thyroid problems before i started having soya

milk. I took it for 2 years thinking it would help with menopause.

> I don't think Bruce Fife is saying you can't have fermented soya

products. My question to you and Bonnie was about lecithin. Bonnie

said don't have it because it's soya. Soya i'm told blocks iodine

to the thyroid. Does fermented products do this? Is lecithin

considered a fermented product? These are questions i need

answering from someone. I still have soy sauce occassionally in

stirfries.

>

> SAlly.

>

>

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Sally, the goitrogens are neutralized by the traditional fermentation

methods used to produce natto, tempeh, miso and shoyu. There are also

goitrogens in raw green cruciferous vegetables (broccoli family) that are

neutralized by cooking. After cooking, however, these are among the world's

healthiest foods.

Nina

Re: soya

>

Hi Nina

Quote from 'The Coconut oil Miracle'

Soybeans are particularly bad because of the goitrogens (antithyroid

chemicals) they contain.

He says that all polyunsaturated oils are bad for the thyroid but

soya particularly. That's one of the references to it but i've seen

loads of stuff in articles on websites and other books. It's just i

can't remember exactly where offhand.

I'm really worried about my bone health because of high calcium in

blood etc.I can't afford to go down the wrong path. There is so

many mixed messages from experts and lay people it is so hard to

know if you are doing the right thing.

Sally

> Nina,

> I did not have thyroid problems before i started having soya

milk. I took it for 2 years thinking it would help with menopause.

> I don't think Bruce Fife is saying you can't have fermented soya

products. My question to you and Bonnie was about lecithin. Bonnie

said don't have it because it's soya. Soya i'm told blocks iodine

to the thyroid. Does fermented products do this? Is lecithin

considered a fermented product? These are questions i need

answering from someone. I still have soy sauce occassionally in

stirfries.

>

> SAlly.

>

>

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Sally, personally I wouldn't touch soy milk with a 10-foot pole. I have had

it on a few occasions and I never feel well from it.

If you want to persuade me not to eat lecithin because it is a soy product,

I would be very open to that. For me it is a moot point, however, because I

don't usually eat individual non-food things like lecithin, unless I am

convinced I have no alternative. As I said in my other e-mail, the

traditional fermentation neutralizes the goitrogenic aspect of soy. Don't

ferment it yourself - just buy a traditional preparation - tempeh, natto,

shoyu and so forth. Use a good quality shoyu or tamari, not " soy sauce " ,

which sounds American to me. I order Ohsawa Nama Shoyu over the internet.

It gives me a big, big boost. Miso also.

Nina

soya

Nina,

I did not have thyroid problems before i started having soya milk. I took

it for 2 years thinking it would help with menopause.

I don't think Bruce Fife is saying you can't have fermented soya products.

My question to you and Bonnie was about lecithin. Bonnie said don't have it

because it's soya. Soya i'm told blocks iodine to the thyroid. Does

fermented products do this? Is lecithin considered a fermented product?

These are questions i need answering from someone. I still have soy sauce

occassionally in stirfries.

SAlly.

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>

Hi Nina

No i don't touch it now either. It's nice to know i can eat

fermented soy products if i choose to.

Why does it make such a difference to your bone health? I'm sure a

lot of people don't eat soya and don't suffer bone loss. I don't

know if i would go out of my way to eat the fermented products

unless i'm convinced it's worth it. Miso soup is highly regarded by

Dr Gillian Mckeith. I don't like salty foods much and i think this

is very salty. Anyway i will try to learn more about the benefits

of fermented soya and make up my own mind.

Thanks

Sally

> Sally, personally I wouldn't touch soy milk with a 10-foot pole.

I have had

> it on a few occasions and I never feel well from it.

>

> If you want to persuade me not to eat lecithin because it is a soy

product,

> I would be very open to that. For me it is a moot point, however,

because I

> don't usually eat individual non-food things like lecithin, unless

I am

> convinced I have no alternative. As I said in my other e-mail, the

> traditional fermentation neutralizes the goitrogenic aspect of

soy. Don't

> ferment it yourself - just buy a traditional preparation - tempeh,

natto,

> shoyu and so forth. Use a good quality shoyu or tamari, not " soy

sauce " ,

> which sounds American to me. I order Ohsawa Nama Shoyu over the

internet.

> It gives me a big, big boost. Miso also.

>

> Nina

>

> soya

>

>

> Nina,

> I did not have thyroid problems before i started having soya

milk. I took

> it for 2 years thinking it would help with menopause.

> I don't think Bruce Fife is saying you can't have fermented soya

products.

> My question to you and Bonnie was about lecithin. Bonnie said

don't have it

> because it's soya. Soya i'm told blocks iodine to the thyroid.

Does

> fermented products do this? Is lecithin considered a fermented

product?

> These are questions i need answering from someone. I still have

soy sauce

> occassionally in stirfries.

>

> SAlly.

> --

> No virus found in this outgoing message.

> Checked by AVG Free Edition.

> Version: 7.1.408 / Virus Database: 268.13.17/505 - Release Date:

10/27/2006

>

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I'm not sure, maybe its own unique configuration of phytoestrogens. In the

case of natto, it may be the nattokinase. I personally prefer to

conceptualize it in terms of the whole food rather than its components. If

your bones are fine, then you can do without it, but a lot of us do struggle

with bone loss and we like to know everything we can that can help us.

Miso was way too strong and salty for me even in small quantities. Now I

eat it in the afternoon, not the morning, a small amount on a teaspoon

together with a full teaspoon of VCO. It works!

Nina

Re: soya

>

Hi Nina

No i don't touch it now either. It's nice to know i can eat

fermented soy products if i choose to.

Why does it make such a difference to your bone health? I'm sure a

lot of people don't eat soya and don't suffer bone loss. I don't

know if i would go out of my way to eat the fermented products

unless i'm convinced it's worth it. Miso soup is highly regarded by

Dr Gillian Mckeith. I don't like salty foods much and i think this

is very salty. Anyway i will try to learn more about the benefits

of fermented soya and make up my own mind.

Thanks

Sally

--

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Checked by AVG Free Edition.

Version: 7.1.408 / Virus Database: 268.13.17/505 - Release Date: 10/27/2006

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> >

> Hi Nina

> No i don't touch it now either. It's nice to know i can eat

> fermented soy products if i choose to.

> Why does it make such a difference to your bone health? I'm sure a

> lot of people don't eat soya and don't suffer bone loss. I don't

> know if i would go out of my way to eat the fermented products

> unless i'm convinced it's worth it. Miso soup is highly regarded by

> Dr Gillian Mckeith. I don't like salty foods much and i think this

> is very salty. Anyway i will try to learn more about the benefits

> of fermented soya and make up my own mind.

> Thanks

> Sally

> --

> No virus found in this outgoing message.

> Checked by AVG Free Edition.

> Version: 7.1.408 / Virus Database: 268.13.17/505 - Release Date:

10/27/2006

>

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Gosh, I'd really take the anti-soy warnings with a

HUGE pinch of salt. I'm married into a Chinese family

and live in Asia, and despite what some anti-soy

people will tell you, here soy (especially as tofu and

soymilk and a neat in-between called to-fu-fwa) is

still eaten, unfermented, DAILY and has been for at

least 1800 years. Osteopoprosis among Chinese has been

increasing in the last 30 years: the same time they

have started to eat more meat and LESS tofu and

veggies. (Tofu is a fabulous source of calcium, as are

those veggies.) Fertility is certainly not a problem:

until modernization, it was routine for parents to

have 6-12 children. Men even took multiple wives: that

doesn't sound effeminate or de-masculinized to me!

(They probably could have benefitted from some

de-masculinization. ;) ) And goiters and

hypothyroidism does not seem to have been a problem

among the highest soy-eaters, the Chinese.

Sure, the strange soy concoctions you often see on

Western shelves look unnatural and some may be

nutritionally unsound, as perhaps eating a diet

largely comprised OF soy may be. But there is a very

long history of eating tofu, soymilk, and soy meats

(as well as the fermented products) daily, with very

little history of harm resulting. Rather, it

definitely appears that these foods, in combination

with veggies, fruit, rice, and the occasional egg or

bit of meat, have kept Asians alive and healthy, and

may be preferable to the high-meat diet they're

beginning to consume.

The anti-soy warnings seem to me even less tenuous

than the anti-coconut warnings (which we all know are

nonsense). This long history of safe use is the same

kind of evidence that won me over to coconut.

My two half-American, half-Asian cents. :)

Ann in Malaysia

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I haven't read the earlier posts on this thread, but there may be a

difference in the soy grown in America. Most of the soy in the US

is genetically modified. The University of Hawaii did a study on

asian men and learned that tofu could be related to the rise in

alzheimer associated problems in asian men living in Hawaii. Of

course, they didn't mention where the soy came from.

>

> Gosh, I'd really take the anti-soy warnings with a

> HUGE pinch of salt. I'm married into a Chinese family

> and live in Asia, and despite what some anti-soy

> people will tell you, here soy (especially as tofu and

> soymilk and a neat in-between called to-fu-fwa) is

> still eaten, unfermented, DAILY and has been for at

> least 1800 years. Osteopoprosis among Chinese has been

> increasing in the last 30 years: the same time they

> have started to eat more meat and LESS tofu and

> veggies. (Tofu is a fabulous source of calcium, as are

> those veggies.) Fertility is certainly not a problem:

> until modernization, it was routine for parents to

> have 6-12 children. Men even took multiple wives: that

> doesn't sound effeminate or de-masculinized to me!

> (They probably could have benefitted from some

> de-masculinization. ;) ) And goiters and

> hypothyroidism does not seem to have been a problem

> among the highest soy-eaters, the Chinese.

>

> Sure, the strange soy concoctions you often see on

> Western shelves look unnatural and some may be

> nutritionally unsound, as perhaps eating a diet

> largely comprised OF soy may be. But there is a very

> long history of eating tofu, soymilk, and soy meats

> (as well as the fermented products) daily, with very

> little history of harm resulting. Rather, it

> definitely appears that these foods, in combination

> with veggies, fruit, rice, and the occasional egg or

> bit of meat, have kept Asians alive and healthy, and

> may be preferable to the high-meat diet they're

> beginning to consume.

>

> The anti-soy warnings seem to me even less tenuous

> than the anti-coconut warnings (which we all know are

> nonsense). This long history of safe use is the same

> kind of evidence that won me over to coconut.

>

> My two half-American, half-Asian cents. :)

>

> Ann in Malaysia

>

>

>

>

_____________________________________________________________________

_______________

> We have the perfect Group for you. Check out the handy changes to

> (http://)

>

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Hi, Ann

Maybe it was just a coincidence i got thyroid problems after using

soya milk for 2 years. I was going through the menopause so maybe

it just unbalanced everything. I did used to prefer soya milk on my

porridge to other milks. I find the fact there is not a problem

with thyroid there very revealing. We have been told by Bruce that

in asia they have never eaten much soya only the poor because there

was nothing else, and in general only ate the fermented products

that had been detoxified. You say different. I am really confused

now. America tried to bring gm foods to Britain. They were going

to grow gm crops here. People in Britain and i think europe resisted

vehmently. Apparently now its all contaminated anyway, so there is

other reasons we should stick to the fermented stuff.

Sally

> Gosh, I'd really take the anti-soy warnings with a

> HUGE pinch of salt. I'm married into a Chinese family

> and live in Asia, and despite what some anti-soy

> people will tell you, here soy (especially as tofu and

> soymilk and a neat in-between called to-fu-fwa) is

> still eaten, unfermented, DAILY and has been for at

> least 1800 years. Osteopoprosis among Chinese has been

> increasing in the last 30 years: the same time they

> have started to eat more meat and LESS tofu and

> veggies. (Tofu is a fabulous source of calcium, as are

> those veggies.) Fertility is certainly not a problem:

> until modernization, it was routine for parents to

> have 6-12 children. Men even took multiple wives: that

> doesn't sound effeminate or de-masculinized to me!

> (They probably could have benefitted from some

> de-masculinization. ;) ) And goiters and

> hypothyroidism does not seem to have been a problem

> among the highest soy-eaters, the Chinese.

>

> Sure, the strange soy concoctions you often see on

> Western shelves look unnatural and some may be

> nutritionally unsound, as perhaps eating a diet

> largely comprised OF soy may be. But there is a very

> long history of eating tofu, soymilk, and soy meats

> (as well as the fermented products) daily, with very

> little history of harm resulting. Rather, it

> definitely appears that these foods, in combination

> with veggies, fruit, rice, and the occasional egg or

> bit of meat, have kept Asians alive and healthy, and

> may be preferable to the high-meat diet they're

> beginning to consume.

>

> The anti-soy warnings seem to me even less tenuous

> than the anti-coconut warnings (which we all know are

> nonsense). This long history of safe use is the same

> kind of evidence that won me over to coconut.

>

> My two half-American, half-Asian cents. :)

>

> Ann in Malaysia

>

>

>

>

_____________________________________________________________________

_______________

> We have the perfect Group for you. Check out the handy changes to

> (http://)

>

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Ann, thank you so much for this.

Nina

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I think some of the confusion over soy's historic use in Asia stems

from the huge culinary diversity among Asian peoples. Indians and South-

Eastern Asians, such as Malays, Indonesians, etc, don't eat very much

in the way of soy products at all, except for the fermented stuff (and

Indians hardly eat that). The Japanese consume a middling amount--a

couple to a few servings a week--of non-fermented soy, and Thais a bit

less than middling. Chinese, in China and wherever they emigrated to in

Asia/worldwide, consume it daily: just about all the Chinese I know (a

lot of them, from Malaysia, Singapore and China) drink soymilk and/or

eat tofu or to-fu-fwa once daily or more. This is lessening now that

they are starting to drink milk and eat more meat (and as I mentioned

before, osteoporosis and other diseases that accompany affuence are

increasing dramatically: not sure why). But it's not a " poverty food "

any more than cheese is in the West: emperors have long eaten it, and

I've personally had it cooked all sorts of fancy ways. No decent

Chinese restaurant fails to have it on their menu. And devout

(vegetarian) Buddhists of many ethnicities have eaten far more soy than

the average Chinese bloke, again, for centuries.

This simply provides evidence of continuous use among one (huge)

population, the Chinese, plus all those devout Buddhists. If you

believe that what humans can eat safely depends on their ethnicity

(/religion? ;) ), I guess that could be a warning for you. But that

theory makes no sense to me. After all, half the foods eaten here in

Asia are originally from the Americas: peppers, chilis, tomatoes,

potatoes, corn, etc etc. ...And I think long continuous use does not

necessarily mean a substance is OK for you: consider alcohol. ;) But I

did want to make the point that soy, including unfermented, is

absolutely eaten regularly here by the masses and has been for

millennia, and definitely seems to have been healthful on the whole for

them. Other arguments against soy should still be checked out on their

own merit, methinks.

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>Thanks Ann for all the info.

However, uncooked broccoli although healthy is not good for thyroid

conditions so there is still that issue. I would consider having

the fermented stuff now if i can find something i like, especially

if it is good for bone health.

I'm going out soon to avoid all the tricker treaters. It goes

against what i believe giving out sweets/candy, i don't think they

would take kindly to be given fruit. Although my 6ft 14 year old

still goes tricker treating and then has all the horrible sweets to

eat. I've told him he's too old LOL. What can you do? LOL.

Sally

> I think some of the confusion over soy's historic use in Asia

stems

> from the huge culinary diversity among Asian peoples. Indians and

South-

> Eastern Asians, such as Malays, Indonesians, etc, don't eat very

much

> in the way of soy products at all, except for the fermented stuff

(and

> Indians hardly eat that). The Japanese consume a middling amount--

a

> couple to a few servings a week--of non-fermented soy, and Thais a

bit

> less than middling. Chinese, in China and wherever they emigrated

to in

> Asia/worldwide, consume it daily: just about all the Chinese I

know (a

> lot of them, from Malaysia, Singapore and China) drink soymilk

and/or

> eat tofu or to-fu-fwa once daily or more. This is lessening now

that

> they are starting to drink milk and eat more meat (and as I

mentioned

> before, osteoporosis and other diseases that accompany affuence

are

> increasing dramatically: not sure why). But it's not a " poverty

food "

> any more than cheese is in the West: emperors have long eaten it,

and

> I've personally had it cooked all sorts of fancy ways. No decent

> Chinese restaurant fails to have it on their menu. And devout

> (vegetarian) Buddhists of many ethnicities have eaten far more soy

than

> the average Chinese bloke, again, for centuries.

>

> This simply provides evidence of continuous use among one (huge)

> population, the Chinese, plus all those devout Buddhists. If you

> believe that what humans can eat safely depends on their ethnicity

> (/religion? ;) ), I guess that could be a warning for you. But

that

> theory makes no sense to me. After all, half the foods eaten here

in

> Asia are originally from the Americas: peppers, chilis, tomatoes,

> potatoes, corn, etc etc. ...And I think long continuous use does

not

> necessarily mean a substance is OK for you: consider alcohol. ;)

But I

> did want to make the point that soy, including unfermented, is

> absolutely eaten regularly here by the masses and has been for

> millennia, and definitely seems to have been healthful on the

whole for

> them. Other arguments against soy should still be checked out on

their

> own merit, methinks.

>

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  • 4 years later...

I am forwarding this to the

forum from Barrie as it may well be of interest to you all.

Luv - Sheila

Dear

Sheila , in trying improve my poor NDT conversion , have been checking on

food labels and was surprised to see nearly all bread and associated products

contain soya flour, found 2 at the Co-op ,none at Lidl . Asked at Tesco in

store bakery , head baker found quite a few soya free items in his list .

Although my diet doesnt allow much bread , the change to soya free over 2 weeks

has shown a noticable improvement . You all may have been aware of this , but

am feeding back in case .

Regards

Barrie

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