Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 Tell her to eat the yolks cause that's where all the cholesterol is! oh wait... chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 Well as you know the whites are mostly protein and eating protein without fat is not healthy. But really I don't think she will listen to us. She is likely in a television induced trance. I have seen this before. Not everyone who watches the tube suffers this malady but many do. If they haven't seen it on TV then it doesn't exist for them. They see the lowfat mantra daily on TV in its many forms and manifestations that it is no longer a theory. It is reality in the same way that the blue sky is a reality. If you tell someone in this trance something different from what is fed to them on TV they won't react with a question such as " where did you hear that? " the way someone not in trance might. They will laugh much in the same way they would laugh if you said that you just discovered that the sky is actually green and we all only think it is blue. You might just well be telling her that she should be walking on her hands rather than her feet for all the cooperation you'll get. Telling her not to eat lowfat probably makes as much sense to her. If you can unplug the television then there might be some hope. Irene At 07:16 PM 6/3/03, you wrote: >Hey guys? One more question regarding my wife's diet. What's the deal with >egg whites? Once again I know the anwer to this question but I need my peers >help on this one, she just won't listen to me. Does anyone know the what the >health benifits of eating egg whites are? Are there any? I personally hate >them. I usually eat about 8 whole eggs cooked in coconut butter but you know >her, 8 egg whites in good ol' Pam Olive oil. What a waste of good eggs! >Thanks guys, we just got married I need all the help I can get. > >Matt Pack >ImpackTraining Services > >_________________________________________________________________ >MSN 8 helps eliminate e-mail viruses. Get 2 months FREE*. ><http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus>http://join.msn.com/?page=features/vi\ rus > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 ________________________________________________________________ Hi Matt- Here is an article from Mercola.com that may have some helpful info for you: http://www.mercola.com/2002/nov/13/eggs.htm excerpt- Revised Recommendations For Raw Egg Whites Earlier this summer, I posted an article that suggested that one should not eat raw egg whites. This is the traditional nutritional dogma as raw egg whites contain a glycoprotein called avidin that is very effective at binding biotin, one of the B vitamins. The concern is that this can lead to a biotin deficiency. The simple solution is to cook the egg whites as this completely deactivates the avidin. The problem is that it also completely deactivates nearly every other protein in the egg white. While you will still obtain nutritional benefits from consuming cooked egg whites, from a nutritional perspective it would seem far better to consume them uncooked. Since making the recommendation in July, I have more carefully studied this issue. Two groups brought me to back this: pet owners who feed their pets raw foods and Aajonus Vonderplanitz, who wrote the raw food book We Want to Live. Both feel quite strongly that raw eggs are just fine to eat. After my recent studies it became clear that the egg's design carefully compensated for this issue. It put tons of biotin in the egg yolk. Egg yolks have one of the highest concentrations of biotin found in nature. So it is likely that you will not have a biotin deficiency if you consume the whole raw egg, yolk and white. It is also clear, however, that if you only consume raw egg whites, you are nearly guaranteed to develop a biotin deficiency unless you take a biotin supplement. ------------------------------------------------------------- Actually, I feel Dr Mercola has lots of helpful info. I subscribe to his newsletter. He pretty much follows NT philosophy and has quoted Sally Fallon. Hope this was helpful. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 On Tue, 3 Jun 2003, Matt Pack wrote: > Hey guys? One more question regarding my wife's diet. What's the deal with > egg whites? Once again I know the anwer to this question but I need my peers > help on this one, she just won't listen to me. Does anyone know the what the > health benifits of eating egg whites are? Are there any? I personally hate > them. I usually eat about 8 whole eggs cooked in coconut butter but you know > her, 8 egg whites in good ol' Pam Olive oil. What a waste of good eggs! > Thanks guys, we just got married I need all the help I can get. > > Matt Pack > ImpackTraining Services Hi, I started throwing away the whites a few months ago because the USDA data shows they have no nutritional value besides protein, which is already so plentiful in other foods that it's not worth it. All the vitamins, fat, cholesterol, etc are in the yolk, and of course the yolk is delicious. The other reason I discard the whites is because they're more nutritious cooked because of the antinutrients, and it's too much hassle to cook them. The only cooked food I eat is soup (starting from scratch with bones, etc of course), and I used to add the whites in to my soup while reheating, but it detracted from the flavor. Cooking the whole egg is yummy, but I can't bring myself to cook yolks when they are so delicious raw by themselves and more nutritious; it just seems perverse. You can show your wife the USDA data. I would say there are no health benefits to eating egg whites unless you are lacking in protein, which would mean that you're not eating basic, nutrient-dense foods like meats, which offer lots of micronutrient goodies alongside ample protein, and in this case you're likely to run up again more serious deficiencies than protein. Additionally, I think that meat protein is digested more easily than egg white protein. Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 >8 egg whites in good ol' Pam Olive oil. What a waste of good eggs! >Thanks guys, we just got married I need all the help I can get. Personally I think it is the blandest part of the egg ... BUT ... egg white is the " most balanced " protein in existence, according to some. In fact, it is the measure by which other protein combos are measured. If you aren't allergic to it. Also, dogma aside, I've raised so many baby animals on a " boiled egg " diet. Well, nowadays maybe I'd use raw eggs, but when you are stuffing food down a baby bird's gullet, boiled eggs are easier. Just about any animal can survive off eggs and only eggs -- part of that is the yolk, which is full of nice stuff, but part of it is the white, which has really good protein. I WOULD tell her she should get the yolk too, along with the white. I know a lot of the body-builder types will only eat the whites though, because they are so low in calories. But the yolk has all the lecithin and other good stuff. Esp. if it is from a free-range chicken that eats lots of bugs. Hmm ... the bug part probably won't convince her, come to think of it ... Even a whole egg has only 70 calories though. As for the cholesterol ... my aunt was part of a research project where they fed arterlosclerosis-prone rats nothing BUT eggs, and they did just fine. If they were fed nothing but breakfast cereal, they died in a number of weeks. Eggs do NOT cause heart problems. Anyway, I'm not sure you can convince someone else to change their diet. Just change yours, and be in good health, and eventually other people get jealous. Esp. as you eat some nice fried eggs in fat while they dutifully eat egg white in Pam. And leave a few good books lying around .... As a long-term married person, I can say that people change gradually, to mold into each other, and there is no point in rushing the process. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 In a message dated 6/4/03 2:34:10 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > Also, dogma aside, I've raised so many baby animals on a " boiled egg " diet. > > Well, nowadays maybe I'd use raw eggs, but when you are stuffing food down > a baby bird's gullet, boiled eggs are easier. Just about any animal can > survive off eggs and only eggs -- part of that is the yolk, which is full > of nice stuff, but part of it is the white, which has really good protein. For some reason I find boiled eggs to be the hardest to digest out of all forms of eggs. I think I digest sunny-side up best, or separated raw yolk and cooked white (oh but how nasty a cooked white is by itself!), over raw whole eggs, but I'm not sure, it's hard to tell sometimes. But I definitely digest *scrambled* eggs well, and much better than hard boiled eggs. While I'm not an advocate of high-heat foods by any means, I wonder if the higher heat has a better effect of destroying the trypsin inhibitors. At the same time perhaps boiling has only a marginal effect on trypsin inhibitors while having a greater effect at destroying enzymes that might help digestion, or the proteins are harder to digest, in absence of the greater anti-trypsin destruction. Or maybe it's just some quirk in my system. Has anyone else noticed hard boiled eggs being hard to digest? Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 >Or maybe it's just some quirk in my system. Has anyone else noticed hard >boiled eggs being hard to digest? > >Chris Personally I find them impossible to *eat* (I just feed them to animals ;-). However, they are really good in potato salad, and seem to digest ok. Maybe you are right, they need more enzymes, and adding vinegar and fresh vegies supplies that. Devilled eggs seem easier to eat, but I can't choke down a boiled egg. Over easy with hash browns and kimchi is my ideal breakfast ... but with all that kimchi, I think there are plenty of enzymes. Also I found that in the old (1869) cookbook, they use boiled egg yolk, mashed with oil and vinegar, to make things like chicken salad. Whereas nowadays we tend to use mayo. I thought that was interesting, and sounds pretty good ... a lot of the recipes, in fact, they use egg yolk, and toss the white out. Actually I heard merangue was invented as a use for leftover egg white. But like someone said, if you eat a lot of meat (and in 1869, by this cookbook anyway, they ate a LOT of meat), then who needs more protein? The Korean meals seem to commonly feature just a raw egg yolk too, and I can't see any recipes for egg white. I do use egg white in bread, because it makes it hold together (egg white is a good substitute for gluten). BTW one reason I don't feed raw eggs to chickens is that they get used to the taste, and start eating their own eggs. Or so I'm told. They don't seem to make the connection to boiled eggs. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 >>>Tell her to eat the yolks cause that's where all the cholesterol is! oh wait... ----->hahahah! true *insider's* joke ;-) Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/ mailto:s.fisher22@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2003 Report Share Posted June 4, 2003 Hard boiled are hardest on my digestion. Bringing the water to a boil, shutting it off and letting them sit for 10 minutes covered helps some. Better than boiling for about that time. Both seem to be just as cooked but not boiling digests better...go figure. Wanita >Or maybe it's just some quirk in my system. Has anyone else noticed hard >boiled eggs being hard to digest? > >Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 I find that the egg white protion from boiled, farm fresh, pastured chickens,are TOUGH, much denser that store eggs.. The membrane is also hard to remove and it is tough. I prefer these eggs raw, scrabled or boiled for sure. Maybe the vinegar idea would work in egg salad type recipes. ) Carol --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > > Personally I find them impossible to *eat* (I just > feed them to animals ;-). However, they are really > good in potato salad, and seem to digest ok. > Maybe you are right, they need more enzymes, and > adding vinegar and fresh vegies supplies that. > Devilled eggs seem easier to eat, but I can't choke > down a boiled egg. > > Also I found that in the old (1869) cookbook, they > use boiled egg yolk, mashed with oil and vinegar, > to make things like chicken salad. Whereas nowadays > we tend to use mayo. I thought that was > interesting, and sounds pretty good > -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 Carol- The woman I get my eggs from said that really fresh eggs should not be hard-boiled. They are too tough to peel and the whites stick to the shells. If they are two weeks old or more, then they are OK. Pretty scary when I think I've never encountered a store bought egg that had that " problem " ! -Vivian Re: EGG -WHITES!!?? I find that the egg white protion from boiled, farm fresh, pastured chickens,are TOUGH, much denser that store eggs.. The membrane is also hard to remove and it is tough. I prefer these eggs raw, scrabled or boiled for sure. Maybe the vinegar idea would work in egg salad type recipes. ) Carol --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > > Personally I find them impossible to *eat* (I just > feed them to animals ;-). However, they are really > good in potato salad, and seem to digest ok. > Maybe you are right, they need more enzymes, and > adding vinegar and fresh vegies supplies that. > Devilled eggs seem easier to eat, but I can't choke > down a boiled egg. > > Also I found that in the old (1869) cookbook, they > use boiled egg yolk, mashed with oil and vinegar, > to make things like chicken salad. Whereas nowadays > we tend to use mayo. I thought that was > interesting, and sounds pretty good > -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 >I find that the egg white protion from boiled, farm >fresh, pastured chickens,are TOUGH, much denser that >store eggs.. The membrane is also hard to remove and >it is tough. I prefer these eggs raw, scrabled or >boiled for sure. Maybe the vinegar idea would work in >egg salad type recipes. > >) Carol Hmmm ... how long do you boil them? Most people overboil eggs. My chickens are very pasture fed and the eggs fresh, but the whites are not tough unless I overboil the eggs (which I do sometimes!). It could vary though -- the farm eggs sure are different from " store bought! " . The membrane IS tough though, and it took me awhile to get the knack of shelling them (let them cool down in the fridge, then use a spoon). However, I usually eat them in salad (cut fine) so maybe I don't notice the toughness as much either. Here is Cook Magazine's " Perfect boiled egg " recipe: 1. Put the eggs in a pan, cover with enough water to be 1 " over the egg. (and if the egg floats, it is bad!). 2. Put them on the heat til the water boils. 3. Turn off the heat, put the lid on the pan, let them sit for 10 minutes. 4. Pour out the water, and pour in cold water til the eggs are cooled down. Voila! Perfect tender eggs, with a bright yellow yolk. In some pans, I find I have to let them sit a little longer than 10 minutes, but basically it always works, plus, if you forget about them and leave them with the heat OFF a little to long, it doesn't really hurt anything much. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 In a message dated 6/7/03 10:28:28 PM Eastern Daylight Time, honeysuckles@... writes: > 'd try an experiment > myself to see if refrigerating them was the difference (there's also seeing > if previously refrigerated but then brought to room temperature makes a > difference) but our hens went broody and aren't laying now. > God, you are like the *fifth* person in the last few weeks that's said this-- and I don't know many people who raise chickens! Is there something in the air??? -chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 In a message dated 6/7/03 10:48:08 PM Eastern Daylight Time, honeysuckles@... writes: > LOL. Yes, it's called increasing daylight, and here in Alaska we've got a > LOT of it. We've also got 16 auracana layers we're raising and I'm already > planning that their hen house is going to have shutters on the windows! : ) > Don't know if it will work, but a girl can hope (and plan, and hope, and > modify the plan, and hope...) I can keep their daybreak consistent, but > that won't help with sunset since we free range. Anyone herding their > chickens inside in the evening? Maybe I can bribe them with sunflower > seeds... > hmm... this is interesting, since some people get their hens to lay in the winter by keeping a *light* in the barn. by this i thought increasing light would *increase* laying. now i'm just confused ;-) -chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 --- Vivian Kooken <vslk@...> wrote: > Carol- > > The woman I get my eggs from said that really fresh > eggs should not be hard-boiled. They are too tough > to peel and the whites stick to the shells. If they > are two weeks old or more, then they are OK. Pretty > scary when I think I've never encountered a store > bought egg that had that " problem " ! Vivian, I have waited over 4 weeks to boil them and they still turn out that way. It takes for ever to shell them and none of the things I used to do to make the process simple seem to help. --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > Hmmm ... how long do you boil them? Most people > overboil eggs. I use a process similar to yours. I am a Cooks Illustrated fan ). If I happen upon a process that works I will be sure to share. Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 I have a question. : ) Were your fresh eggs refrigerated? The reason I ask is that we recently had hardboiled eggs for the first time from our homegrown eggs. Six of them had been collected previously and been refrigerated, one of them had been collected (and was still warm!) right before going in the pot. Six of the eggs when shelled left a layer of white with the shell, and one of them shelled beautifully. I'd try an experiment myself to see if refrigerating them was the difference (there's also seeing if previously refrigerated but then brought to room temperature makes a difference) but our hens went broody and aren't laying now. For all the eggs, this is how we peel them. We crack them all over. I mean ALL OVER. It's not pretty, it won't win any awards, but it does take advantage of that membrane in that once you've got a hold of it you just pull it off and it keeps coming with all the shell attached. (Instead of a piece here and a piece there.) Rhea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 > God, you are like the *fifth* person in the last few weeks that's said this-- > and I don't know many people who raise chickens! Is there something in the > air??? LOL. Yes, it's called increasing daylight, and here in Alaska we've got a LOT of it. We've also got 16 auracana layers we're raising and I'm already planning that their hen house is going to have shutters on the windows! : ) Don't know if it will work, but a girl can hope (and plan, and hope, and modify the plan, and hope...) I can keep their daybreak consistent, but that won't help with sunset since we free range. Anyone herding their chickens inside in the evening? Maybe I can bribe them with sunflower seeds... Rhea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 >>>>God, you are like the *fifth* person in the last few weeks that's said this-- and I don't know many people who raise chickens! Is there something in the air??? ---->make it six...some farmers in our local chapter have hens that just aren't laying much now. i had to get (ech!) store-bought eggs last week Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/ mailto:s.fisher22@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 > hmm... this is interesting, since some people get their hens to lay in the > winter by keeping a *light* in the barn. by this i thought increasing light > would *increase* laying. now i'm just confused ;-) Too much of a good thing? : ) I'm no expert, but it's my understanding that once the length of daylight reaches a certain point, they start to lay, and that at another, greater, amount of daylight the urge to brood kicks in. _Storey's Guide to Raising Chickens_ says that if you break up the brooding the first day they start, it can take a week to have eggs again (and the longer you take to break it the longer you go without eggs). We didn't catch it until the second day. These ladies are late layers, not morning girls at all, so we didn't realize what was up until the next day. Can anyone explain to me why my chickens don't lay in the morning? : ) Chickens, gotta love 'em. Especially when they come running for treats. : ) Rhea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 > > God, you are like the *fifth* person in the last few weeks that's said this-- > and I don't know many people who raise chickens! Is there something in the > air??? > > -chris That reminds me. Is there a way to raise chickens in the city, and have them be pastured, and not get killed by a dog? like a movable fence or something? i just found out it's legal to have a couple of chickens (though the neighbors would balk at a rooster.. does that make it impossible to have eggs?). my lot is sizable for san francisco, on a steep hill. i'll probably have to limit myself to veggies, fruit, flowers... but one can always dream daphne b. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 > You don't need a rooster to have eggs, and yes, you can move them around in > a portable pen. There's a picture of one at www.backyardchicken.com that > was built for two chickens. It's a little coop and a pen that can be moved > around. > > In the city we used to live in our neighbors had a permanent pen set-up in > the shape of an L. The coop was where the two lines meet and the chickens > could wander around either straight section. Inside the area the L bounded > was their garden. Chicken scraps and garden scraps were tossed into the L > for the chickens to eat all summer long (and kitchen scraps continued in the > winter). After they were done gardening for the year the chickens had run > of the whole garden area until it got to cold and they were confined to > their coop. Then at the end of winter, with snow still on the ground, we'd > see their chickens out in the garden sunning themselves on top of the snow. > Not free-range, I know, but another alternative if you're in the city. : ) > > Rhea *** well there's no snow here, so they won't have to worry about that! hmm, this is interesting. i wonder how many people in sf proper are raising chickens? very few, if any. the way this town is, i hope i don't get PETA demonstrations at my doorstep ;-) i will look into this. thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 >I use a process similar to yours. I am a Cooks >Illustrated fan ). If I happen upon a process that >works I will be sure to share. > >Carol Sheesh. I don't know. I did a batch yesterday and they peeled just fine. But I did set them in the fridge to cool down for an hour or two before I peeled them -- I've been doing that more lately, and it seems to make a big difference. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 >Anyone herding their >chickens inside in the evening? Maybe I can bribe them with sunflower >seeds... > >Rhea One year we put a droplight in the chicken coop. They laid all year! However, the " new " chickens seem to lay all year even with our short-lighted winters. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 > One year we put a droplight in the chicken coop. They laid all year! > However, the " new " chickens seem to lay all year even with our > short-lighted winters. According to Storey's, Spring hatched hens are likely to lay all their first winter, whereas birds born later are more likely to molt and not lay that winter. As our new hens were all early Spring hatching, I'm curious to see if they do lay all winter. We've had no plans to give them additional light this winter. What I was thinking about was how to keep my hens from all going broody come next summer. Right now at 4 in the morning I can read in my bedroom, there's that much light. So I was thinking if we put shutters on the new chicken coop I could keep out that early morning light, but I doubt it alone will do any good if I don't shoo them inside and away from the late night light. It's really not that big a deal, I just like playing around with " problems " in my head. : ) We only have two laying hens now, but next year it will be over 18. If I think I'm sad at having all two of my daily eggs disappear now, can you imagine next year if all 18+ went broody on me? I would say, " I'll just save up in preparation, " except that we've had so many people tell us they want to buy eggs from us once our new hens are laying, that it won't be just me who's disappointed. : ) Rhea > > -- Heidi > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 Hi Rhea, just want to mention the link cited below does not work as intended. It goes to one of those 'catch all' ad sites the pops up a million windows. Maybe you're remembering the link wrong? Or the original site lost their domain name to a domain squatter? If you know a current online resource please let me know. Thanks again. > a portable pen. There's a picture of one at www.backyardchicken.com that Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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