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It really does not have that much taste. If you get over the idea of

what it looks like, you can make a sandwich with it and anything thrown

in for spice that you like, maybe onions, peppers or whatever. If you

freeze to point of just forming ice crystals, it will slice very thin

and go right on a sandwich. In this semi frozen state, it has even less

taste and is a lot less " slippery and gooey " and does not lend itself

nearly as well to your imagination.

It is really the idea and not the actual taste that gets to you. Blind

folded and fed, you might even like it!

H

>

> You can freeze raw liver, when almost frozen slice into little cubes

> (no nasty slithering around), store in the freezer (free flow) then it

> can be swallowed (still frozen) like a pill.

>

> regards

> Kirsty

>

>

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Somehow I must have missed the beginning of this thread ... which hopefully

explained WHY one would eat so much raw liver. I have always been rather

put off by organ meats. Also, given they filter nasty stuff wouldn't that

imply they hold some nasty stuff in them? So why would I want to comsume

another animal's nasty stuff?

What animal's liver are we talking about here? Cow, chicken, lamb, goat???

*trying to stop making faces and keep an open mind*

Jaxi (who has always hated liver)

> It really does not have that much taste. If you get over the idea of

> what it looks like, you can make a sandwich with it and anything thrown

> in for spice that you like, maybe onions, peppers or whatever. If you

> freeze to point of just forming ice crystals, it will slice very thin

> and go right on a sandwich. In this semi frozen state, it has even less

> taste and is a lot less " slippery and gooey " and does not lend itself

> nearly as well to your imagination.

>

>

> It is really the idea and not the actual taste that gets to you. Blind

> folded and fed, you might even like it!

>

> H

>

>

> >

> > You can freeze raw liver, when almost frozen slice into little cubes

> > (no nasty slithering around), store in the freezer (free flow) then it

> > can be swallowed (still frozen) like a pill.

> >

> > regards

> > Kirsty

> >

> >

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The liver is not a filter. It is a chemistry lab. Animals in the wild

that kill eat the organs first and then get around to the muscle but

they prefer the organs.

Google liver and you will find " filter " so far down on the list that it

may not show up at all. There is a good reason the liver is the size it

is. This a an extremely complex organ and may only be slightly less

intelligent than the brain. A lot of people you would swear have no

brain but you would bet the farm that they have a liver!

Harvey

>

> Somehow I must have missed the beginning of this thread ... which

> hopefully

> explained WHY one would eat so much raw liver. I have always been rather

> put off by organ meats. Also, given they filter nasty stuff wouldn't that

> imply they hold some nasty stuff in them? So why would I want to comsume

> another animal's nasty stuff?

>

> What animal's liver are we talking about here? Cow, chicken, lamb, goat???

>

> *trying to stop making faces and keep an open mind*

>

> Jaxi (who has always hated liver)

>

> On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:17 PM, Harvey Metzler <hpm102@...

> <mailto:hpm102%40hal-pc.org>> wrote:

>

> > It really does not have that much taste. If you get over the idea of

> > what it looks like, you can make a sandwich with it and anything thrown

> > in for spice that you like, maybe onions, peppers or whatever. If you

> > freeze to point of just forming ice crystals, it will slice very thin

> > and go right on a sandwich. In this semi frozen state, it has even less

> > taste and is a lot less " slippery and gooey " and does not lend itself

> > nearly as well to your imagination.

> >

> >

> > It is really the idea and not the actual taste that gets to you. Blind

> > folded and fed, you might even like it!

> >

> > H

> >

> >

> > >

> > > You can freeze raw liver, when almost frozen slice into little cubes

> > > (no nasty slithering around), store in the freezer (free flow) then it

> > > can be swallowed (still frozen) like a pill.

> > >

> > > regards

> > > Kirsty

> > >

> > >

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> The liver is not a filter. It is a chemistry lab. Animals in the wild

> that kill eat the organs first and then get around to the muscle but

> they prefer the organs.

I got this answer from answers.com =

It's not really a " filter " so much as a chemical treatment plant:

it gets rid of toxins by converting them into other

(hopefully less toxic, but not always) compounds.

Smitty

p.s.. I had stopped eating liver because I thought like Jaxi,

that it was filtering *nasty stuff* .

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>

> The liver is not a filter.

Yes it is! It's certainly not the only thing it does, but the liver most

definitely does filter and detoxify the blood.

However it's not the kind of filter most of us think of when we imagine a

filter, such as an oil filter, air filter or charcoal water filter, which trap

wastes and undesirable elements inside themselves and keep them there. Rather

the liver is designed to either neutralize or redirect wastes, pathogens and

toxins so they're either removed from circulation and/or preferably eliminated

from the body.

Everything you eat and drink is filtered by the alimentary canal through the gut

wall, and most everything that passes through that is absorbed into the blood,

which then flows directly to the liver to be filtered and processed.

The liver also filters certain nutrients from the blood, redirecting some and

storing others. Because it's such an amazing storage facility, this is part of

what makes it such a nutrient dense food.

>It is a chemistry lab.

Yes, it's this too.

> This a an extremely complex organ and may only be slightly less

> intelligent than the brain.

Agreed. And what we know about how it works and the myriad roles it plays is

much likely far, far less than what we have yet to learn and understand. IMO

this is true for the entire human body.

Elan

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>

> >

>

> I got this answer from answers.com =

> It's not really a " filter " so much as a chemical treatment plant:

> it gets rid of toxins by converting them into other

> (hopefully less toxic, but not always) compounds.

>

Hi Smitty,

The liver also sequesters some of these toxic compounds into adipose tissue

(fat) for storage to remove them from circulation. It also puts some

wastes/toxins in with the bile it produces so that when bile is released into

the intestines to help with digestion, some of the wastes contained in the bile

will be eliminated with the stool. However some bile salts are reabsorbed by

the intestines and aren't eliminated, which can set up a kind of auto-toxicity

feedback loop, particularly if people are already suffering from some sort of

chronic ailment.

The problem facing many people these days is the our livers (and entire bodies

for that matter) were never designed to cope with the level of environmental

contamination with which we are being faced these days. Nor were our bodies ever

meant to deal with the kind of highly processed, industrially manufactured,

nutrient depleted food products, GMO foods or pharmaceutical drugs many people

consume these days on a regular basis. Our bodies are also assaulted by

countless other toxic synthetic chemicals externally which many people put on

and in their bodies in the form of manufactured personal products. The liver

was never meant to have to detoxify the body from this massive chemical soup to

which we are all being exposed in this day and age, an over time all this can

put an increasingly unnatural burden on the liver, causing it to become stressed

and rendering it progressively less and less able to do the job it was

originally designed to do.

Eating nutrient dense foods, avoiding processed, manufactured packaged 'fake'

foods, and being proactive about detoxing one's bathroom, kitchen, house, life,

mind, heart and body are all positive steps we can take to support our livers

and improve our health.

Elan

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Don't care...

I was referencing beef liver, but I'd use any other that you

mentioned.

Maybe not very long on fish or walrus because of high vitamin A, but

c'mon...

Chuck

Photons have mass? I didn't even know they were Catholic.

> cow, pig, chicken, lamb, fish????

>

> whose liver are we talking about here???

>

> Jaxi

>

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