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(sorry for crossposting, to those on the chapter leader list)

Two important things they left out:

1) What the plant is fertilized with directly affects oxalate content

2) The breed of the plant makes a big difference in the oxalate content

I found a study, somewhere in the vast and ungodly abyss of the unsearchable

Native Nutrition archives, that found that wild-breed mushrooms contained zero

insoluble oxalates and a much lower proportion of soluble oxalates, whereas

non-wild-breed mushrooms contained much higher amounts of total oxalates as

well as a significant amount of insoluble oxalates.

Another study posted in the same abyss found a direct correlation between the

amount of nitrate fertilizer used and the oxalate content. It was not due to

the nitrogen, because one group that used ammonium (another source of

nitrogen) had a no-slope constant level of oxalates, while two groups, each

using a

different nitrate compound, both had linear relationships between the amount of

nitrate used and oxalate content.

One thing I'm glad they didn't mention is the myth that oxalates are

neutralized by cooking. Everything I've seen indicates that heat does nothing

to

neutralize oxalates, but that boiling or steaming causes a partial loss of

soluble

oxalates in the cooking water.

We've discussed fermentation and oxalates on the NN list before, and what we

came up with was that fermentation by some species destroys oxalates and

fermentation by other species *creates* oxalates! So I wouldn't rely on

fermentation as a safe bet for oxalate neutralization. I have no idea what

effect

sprouting would have. Unless oxalate is a sprout inhibitor and there is an

oxalase

enzyme that breaks it down like there is a phytase, I doubt it would

neutralize the oxalates... but I don't know.

Chris

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> recently someone was talking about this on either the chapterleaders or the

> list, but i didn't see any good solid list of what

> conatins oxalic acid. here's a good conscise article. i would still like to

> know if oxalic acid is neutralized by fermentation/sprouting/etc...

>

> -katja

Unfortunately I've still never come across any good data on this

recurring topic other than the list on the USDA site that I've posted

many times:

http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/Data/Other/oxalic.html

I have no idea how accurate this data is, but it's the best I've

found, and makes me feel really good about eating three of my favorite

foods: kale, turnip greens, and coriander leaves.

I totally agree with Chris' remarks about oxalates, noting that the

only clear example I've found reference to of fermentation reducing

oxalates was in some kind of fermented fish paste, and they seem to

attribute the effect to fungi more than bacteria. I found the

abstract in my personal files--see below. My impression has been that

for all practical purposes there's not much we can do about oxalates

besides avoiding excesses of foods high in them. It's probably not a

big deal, because the plant foods high in them are mostly

super-concentrated foods best used in small quantities for flavor,

phytochemical variety, medicine, etc. The interesting case is seeds

like unhulled (black) sesame, various legumes, amaranth, etc, which

are foods people sometime rely on in large quantities, so it's a very

solid argument against making these foods staples, and eating animal

foods instead. (But note that hulled--brown or white--sesame seeds

are not a problem.)

I don't know or forgot the answer about sprouting. I'm very curious

too. No time to look into it now, so it goes on " the list " .

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

-------------------------------------------------------------------

Record 92 of 147 in FSTA Retrospective 1969-1989

AN: 89-09-R0028

TI: Changes in the total oxalate content in the fermentation of fish

paste hentak.

AU: Vishwanath-W; Sarojnalini-C

PY: 1989

SO: Journal-of-Food-Science; 54 (3) 754-755, 8 ref.

AB: [Fresh petioles of Alocasia macrorrhiza are used in preparation

of hentak, a fermented fish paste. The plant is unsuitable for human

consumption, as it contains calcium oxalate crystals, which cause

irritation, but which seem to be destroyed on fermentation.] Total

oxalate content of sliced petioles of A. macrorrhiza was reduced by

41.3% on incubation for 7 days at room temp. (18-23 degree C). When

incubated after mixing with an equal wt. of powdered sundried fish

(Esomus danricus), for preparation of hentak, oxalate level was

reduced by 84.4%. This loss was greatly inhibited by antibiotics.

Some specific microorganisms [notably fungi] might be important in

oxalate destruction.

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>recently someone was talking about this on either the chapterleaders or the

> list, but i didn't see any good solid list of what

>conatins oxalic acid. here's a good conscise article. i would still like to

>know if oxalic acid is neutralized by fermentation/sprouting/etc...

>

>-katja

The most recent stuff I've read indicates that humans can't digest

oxalic acid, but most people have bacteria in their guts that CAN

digest it. Antibiotic therapy wipes out those bacteria and then

causes kidney stones. So ... fermentation could digest the

oxalic acid if the ferment has the correct bacteria. Cooking doesn't neutralize

it though.

I have made rhubarb wine, and it seems to me (from tasting!) that

the wine doesn't have the oxalic acid content of raw

rhubarb. But that is not based on any science whatsoever.

>

Heidi Jean

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" lamb's-quarter,

buckwheat, star fruit, black pepper, purslane, poppy seeds, rhubarb, tea,

spinach, plantains, cocoa and chocolate, ginger, almonds, cashews, garden

sorrel, mustard greens, bell peppers, sweet potatoes, soybeans, tomatillos,

beets and beet greens, oats, pumpkin, cabbage, green beans, mango,

eggplant, tomatoes, lentils, and parsnips. "

I don't know about all that....that's alot of good foods....I eat about ALL

of it.....If we remove all of that what are we supposed to eat?....Isn't that

going a little overboard? Don't the benefits outweigh any negatives? You

know....we cut out all of the bad, processed, sugared, preserved, artificial

foods....and we are left with veggies that are on that list....and THEN....we

shouldn't eat those either.....are we sure about all this " oxalic acid stuff " ,

we're going to narrow our food choices down to just water and sprouts before

we know it....oh wait....there's bad things in sprouts too!.......WHAT do we

eat?..... ...there's probably something " bad " in EVERYTHING......aren't

combinations of foods helpful in our consumptions of these " suspect "

foods....like when we eat spinach....depends what else we're eating along with

it, and

eating it cooked, or with plenty of raw butter...can we really say that these

foods should be " avoided " ? That stinks.... :-(

--

Steve

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All that stuff sounds way too overboard....try to help a fellow human being

on their diet....explain to them that they should stay away from all the

processed junk, eat more raw veggies and fruits, local pastured

meats....blah,blah,blah....and then try to tell them that they shouldn't eat " x "

because of

" oxalic acid " or....don't eat that good veggie...it's got " oxalic " too....that

said human being would promptly " give up " ....I feel we're making it WAY too

difficult....I was talking to a guy the other day who was a little older than

me....and he was sick with a bad cold....and he was talking how he needed to

lose weight...and I started to tell him.....(he's gotten to know me and can

SEE that I'm not overweight and am very healthy and don't ever get sick...)

that I changed my diet, and I feel great ...he asked me " what do you mean you

changed your diet? " .....I started to explain my diet to him....and it hit me

how " complicated " it sounds to most people....and it seems so simple to

me....getting connected to real foods is probably the biggest challenge....but

the

more I explained to him...the more I didn't want to go any further into

it...it has become SO unusual to eat " good " foods....and if I had to

explain.... " don't eat spinach though...and don't eat peppers though, and don't

have a

beet though.....I mean, REALLY??? That sounds retarded....God put these foods

on

the earth for us to nourish ourselves...and people are going to get THIS

technical about everything???? Don't you think the good Lord knew what he was

doing....and gave us these good foods for our good health? We're going to

nit-pick so much that we are going to drive folks away from eating right....to

me...the reason I want more people to " get on board " is that we will have a

larger " voice " and be able to possibly DEMAND better foods to be available...it

is SO HARD to eat right anymore. I CANNOT go out ANYWHERE and get the kind of

foods that I like to feed my body with....ie. whole foods....they aren't in

existence anywhere in my home town...except in MY kitchen....I'm pretty much

down to healthy meats and veggies...and now..... " oxalics " ?........I don't know

what to think about all this sometimes.....

--

Steve

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Yes, I saw an article that reported about a study they were doing to

see if re-introducing some microorganism (O. _______) would help

people who are prone to develop kidney stones. It was fairly

obscure, and I happened upon it accidentally.

It was really interesting to note that some of our naturally-

occurring gut flora could take care of the oxalates for us. If

they're present.

>

> >recently someone was talking about this on either the

chapterleaders or the

> > list, but i didn't see any good solid list of

what

> >conatins oxalic acid. here's a good conscise article. i would

still like to

> >know if oxalic acid is neutralized by fermentation/sprouting/etc...

> >

> >-katja

>

> The most recent stuff I've read indicates that humans can't digest

> oxalic acid, but most people have bacteria in their guts that CAN

> digest it. Antibiotic therapy wipes out those bacteria and then

> causes kidney stones. So ... fermentation could digest the

> oxalic acid if the ferment has the correct bacteria. Cooking

doesn't neutralize

> it though.

>

> I have made rhubarb wine, and it seems to me (from tasting!) that

> the wine doesn't have the oxalic acid content of raw

> rhubarb. But that is not based on any science whatsoever.

>

> >

>

> Heidi Jean

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> Re: oxalates/oxalic acid

>

>

>

> " lamb's-quarter,

>buckwheat, star fruit, black pepper, purslane, poppy seeds, rhubarb, tea,

>spinach, plantains, cocoa and chocolate, ginger, almonds, cashews, garden

>sorrel, mustard greens, bell peppers, sweet potatoes, soybeans,

>tomatillos,

>beets and beet greens, oats, pumpkin, cabbage, green beans, mango,

>eggplant, tomatoes, lentils, and parsnips. "

>

>

>I don't know about all that....that's alot of good foods....I eat

>about ALL

>of it.....If we remove all of that what are we supposed to

>eat?....Isn't that

>going a little overboard? Don't the benefits outweigh any negatives? You

>know....we cut out all of the bad, processed, sugared, preserved,

>artificial

>foods....and we are left with veggies that are on that

>list....and THEN....we

>shouldn't eat those either.....are we sure about all this " oxalic

>acid stuff " ,

>we're going to narrow our food choices down to just water and

>sprouts before

>we know it....oh wait....there's bad things in sprouts

>too!.......WHAT do we

>eat?

Animals :-)

Suze Fisher

Lapdog Design, Inc.

Web Design & Development

http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg

Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine

http://www.westonaprice.org

----------------------------

" The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause

heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " --

Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt

University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher.

The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics

<http://www.thincs.org>

----------------------------

>

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> Re: oxalates/oxalic acid

>

>

>

>All that stuff sounds way too overboard....try to help a fellow

>human being

>on their diet....explain to them that they should stay away from all the

>processed junk, eat more raw veggies and fruits, local pastured

>meats....blah,blah,blah....and then try to tell them that they

>shouldn't eat " x " because of

> " oxalic acid " or....don't eat that good veggie...it's got " oxalic "

> too....that

>said human being would promptly " give up " ....I feel we're making

>it WAY too

>difficult....<snip>

.....I'm

>pretty much

>down to healthy meats and veggies...and

>now..... " oxalics " ?........I don't know

>what to think about all this sometimes.....

Steve,

I didn't see anyone say to cut high oxalate foods out of the diet, but

rather to consume them in moderation. A few things are worth noting.

Traditional cultures typically *fermented* most of their problematic foods.

Modern Americans tend to eat foods that are not prepared the way our

ancestors did for millenia and thus we tend to CREATE problems for ourselves

by not doing so. It is very *basic* and not really complicated at all.

Secondly, I believe there is some evidence that plants grown in high

fertility soil do not have as much (or any oxalates) compared to those grown

in low fertility soil. I am not absolutely certain about this, but I believe

that plants growing in nutrient- and bacteria/fungi-rich soils tend to have

lower anti-nutrient contents in general. WE human beings have destroyed the

nutrient-density of our soils as well as the soil/food web - GOD didn't do

this - we did. So it's quite possible that the oxalate content of our foods

is reflective of:

a) our not preparing food properly as our ancestors did for millenia

B) our decimation of soil, and subsequently, plant quality

Had we not changed these things for the worse in modern times, perhaps food

selection and preparation would be far simpler.

Suze Fisher

Lapdog Design, Inc.

Web Design & Development

http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg

Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine

http://www.westonaprice.org

----------------------------

" The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause

heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " --

Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt

University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher.

The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics

<http://www.thincs.org>

----------------------------

>

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At 08:51 AM 10/11/2004, you wrote:

> " lamb's-quarter,

>buckwheat, star fruit, black pepper, purslane, poppy seeds, rhubarb, tea,

>spinach, plantains, cocoa and chocolate, ginger, almonds, cashews, garden

>sorrel, mustard greens, bell peppers, sweet potatoes, soybeans, tomatillos,

>beets and beet greens, oats, pumpkin, cabbage, green beans, mango,

>eggplant, tomatoes, lentils, and parsnips. "

>

>

>I don't know about all that....that's alot of good foods....I eat about ALL

>of it.....If we remove all of that what are we supposed to eat?....

I can't say for anyone else, but I just don't worry about oxalates.

Statistically, people who

eat a lot of vegies are healthier than people who don't, oxalates and all! I

think

the bacteria that " eat " the oxalates are pretty common (the article said they

get

in most people's guts when they are babies) and I eat a ton of probiotic foods.

The folks who got kidney stones from oxalates seem to be the ones that

were on antibiotics, so the moral would be: don't eat antibiotics, or if you do,

make sure your digestive tract gets repopulated quickly.

Anyway, one of my favorite foods is rhubarb ... fresh stalks are really good,

and they are loaded with oxalates.

As for getting overloaded with information: this list does have a lot

of curious, creative, scientifically minded people who talk about a lot

of diverse stuff, in depth. But that doesn't mean everyone has to be

so incredibly careful about every bite they eat. There is NO one perfect

diet for every person (though the Paleo stance seems to be looking

better and better). The real point is ... what feels good to YOU when

you eat it? What makes you healthy?

Heidi Jean

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> I didn't see anyone say to cut high oxalate foods out of the diet, but

> rather to consume them in moderation. A few things are worth noting.

> Traditional cultures typically *fermented* most of their problematic

foods.

> Modern Americans tend to eat foods that are not prepared the way our

> ancestors did for millenia and thus we tend to CREATE problems for

ourselves

> by not doing so. It is very *basic* and not really complicated at all.

I'm fairly new to this line of dietary research, so bear with me for a

moment. This argument seems to be the standard response to questions

about plant foods and health, but I have yet to see anyone offer

sources showing that fermentation was so ubiquitous over evolutionary

timescales (Which isn't to say you're required to footnote your posts!

:). Price certainly doesn't mention it in NAPD, but his details on

food preparation are sketchy anyway. Are there any good

books/otherwise written on this subject? I'd guess it's nearly

impossible to make a strong argument either way with regard to

cultures existing hundreds of thousands of years ago, but maybe modern

primitive studies could be a close approximation. Was fermentation a

natural side-effect of food storage? Or vice versa? You see a lot

about drying (fish, figh eggs, seaweed, berries, etc) and freezing,

but not so much on fermenting.

Aside from Price's work on primitive nutrition, I know Vilhjamur

Stefansson wrote about food in Eskimo groups around the turn of the

century... Not sure what he has to say about fermentation in that

culture (haven't read it yet...). There must be tons of other work

out there on Maori, Aborigine, etc?

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At 01:50 PM 10/11/2004, you wrote:

>I can't say for anyone else, but I just don't worry about oxalates.

>Statistically, people who

>eat a lot of vegies are healthier than people who don't, oxalates and all!

>I think

>the bacteria that " eat " the oxalates are pretty common (the article said

>they get

>in most people's guts when they are babies) and I eat a ton of probiotic

>foods.

>The folks who got kidney stones from oxalates seem to be the ones that

>were on antibiotics, so the moral would be: don't eat antibiotics, or if

>you do,

>make sure your digestive tract gets repopulated quickly.

ok, this is how i was feeling, but i didn't know if i was being foolishly

cavalier. also, here i am reccomending people use ground almonds for

everything under the sun... :)

however, i agree. i eat something fermented with every meal, so i think i'm

going to not worry about it.

-katja

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>Are there any good

>books/otherwise written on this subject? I'd guess it's nearly

>impossible to make a strong argument either way with regard to

>cultures existing hundreds of thousands of years ago, but maybe modern

>primitive studies could be a close approximation. Was fermentation a

>natural side-effect of food storage? Or vice versa? You see a lot

>about drying (fish, figh eggs, seaweed, berries, etc) and freezing,

>but not so much on fermenting.

Actually there are some good books and studies that have been

done on it, and some have been linked to on this list. Most cultures

fermented or still do ... the practice didn't go away until the

refrigerator was invented and we all started living off packaged

foods. It is interesting that in history books food is usually ignored,

especially since food has been one of the driving forces of history.

( " Guns, germs, and steel " is the classic on that! Also read the battle

histories ... for Ceasar, feeding the troops was one of his main

concerns, ditto for Napoleon, who pioneered canned food).

Your comment " Was fermentation a natural side-effect of food storage "

is really right on the money ... most things ferment all by themselves.

We had some interesting writups here awhile back about African cultures

who ferment caterpillars ... they just collect them and sit them in a jar

until they die and ferment themselves. They do the same with cow urine.

The Romans collected fish guts in a jar and let them sit out in the sun

to make fish sauce. I have a book of collected family recipes from French

gardeners about their food storage, and while they did do drying and

burying and other stuff, there was a lot of lacto-fermentation in there too.

There really is a fair bit of info about food processing thousands of

years ago ... the Romans and Egyptians kept pretty good records, for

instance. And the Koreans have records of how kimchi has evolved ...

However, there are good documents about much fermenting has been

done worldwide ... here is one:

http://www.fao.org/docrep/x0560e/x0560e10.htm

I also have a PDF " Fermentation as a method of food processing " by

Sahlin that has a lot about the chemistry involved and a couple

of others where I don't have the website link anymore. But there IS

a lot of info out there, if you want to research it.

Heidi Jean

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Steve,

I feel your frustration, man. You have every reason to rant. OTOH, never

give up the search for better nutrition/diet/food. God didn't do a very good

job of giving it to us freely. Nature is nothing but an arms race, and every

organism has some sort of defense against predation, many of them chemical

in nature. Just because it's natural doesn't mean it's not unhealthy; Nature

produces plenty of its own toxins for us to discover the hard way. I think a

better attitude is to keep on keeping on. Let's look more into which type(s)

of fermentation might eliminate oxalics. Time to hit the Google.

There are legends of an ancient perfect/sacred food. There are rumors that

some still know it; that's it's up to us to re-discover it. Might as well

enjoy the search; after all, it is exciting and good tasting. And do we

really have a choice? I just read the other day something about beneficial

prions.hmmm.

SCIENCE!!

******************************

The active misidentification of evil

is the worst kind of evil.

-MRN

_____

From: phishin340@... [mailto:phishin340@...]

Sent: Monday, October 11, 2004 11:15 AM

Subject: Re: oxalates/oxalic acid

* All that stuff sounds way too overboard....try to help a fellow

human being

on their diet....explain to them that they should stay away from all the

processed junk, eat more raw veggies and fruits, local pastured

meats....blah,blah,blah....and then try to tell them that they shouldn't eat

" x " because of

" oxalic acid " or....don't eat that good veggie...it's got " oxalic "

too....that

said human being would promptly " give up " ....I feel we're making it WAY too

difficult....I was talking to a guy the other day who was a little older

than

me....and he was sick with a bad cold....and he was talking how he needed

to

lose weight...and I started to tell him.....(he's gotten to know me and can

SEE that I'm not overweight and am very healthy and don't ever get sick...)

that I changed my diet, and I feel great ...he asked me " what do you mean

you

changed your diet? " .....I started to explain my diet to him....and it hit

me

how " complicated " it sounds to most people....and it seems so simple to

me....getting connected to real foods is probably the biggest

challenge....but the

more I explained to him...the more I didn't want to go any further into

it...it has become SO unusual to eat " good " foods....and if I had to

explain.... " don't eat spinach though...and don't eat peppers though, and

don't have a

beet though.....I mean, REALLY??? That sounds retarded....God put these

foods on

the earth for us to nourish ourselves...and people are going to get THIS

technical about everything???? Don't you think the good Lord knew what he

was

doing....and gave us these good foods for our good health? We're going to

nit-pick so much that we are going to drive folks away from eating

right....to

me...the reason I want more people to " get on board " is that we will have a

larger " voice " and be able to possibly DEMAND better foods to be

available...it

is SO HARD to eat right anymore. I CANNOT go out ANYWHERE and get the kind

of

foods that I like to feed my body with....ie. whole foods....they aren't in

existence anywhere in my home town...except in MY kitchen....I'm pretty much

down to healthy meats and veggies...and now..... " oxalics " ?........I don't

know

what to think about all this sometimes.....

--

Steve

..

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That's been my feeling too - that unless a person has a speciifc need to

reduce oxalates for a time, not to worry about it too much.

An interesting side note - I wa doing some research, comparing US sweet

potatoes and yams to NZ kumera and yams, and dsicovered that what's called a

yam in NZ & Australia is a completely different family to US yams & sweet

potaoes & NZ kumera (which are all one family) and true yams. They're called

oca and are from the Andes. I read that they are high in oxalates and the

traditional way of reducing oxalates was to leave them out in the sun for

several days before eating either raw or cooked.

deb

Re: oxalates/oxalic acid

At 01:50 PM 10/11/2004, you wrote:

>I can't say for anyone else, but I just don't worry about oxalates.

>Statistically, people who

>eat a lot of vegies are healthier than people who don't, oxalates and

all!

>I think

>the bacteria that " eat " the oxalates are pretty common (the article said

>they get

>in most people's guts when they are babies) and I eat a ton of probiotic

>foods.

>The folks who got kidney stones from oxalates seem to be the ones that

>were on antibiotics, so the moral would be: don't eat antibiotics, or if

>you do,

>make sure your digestive tract gets repopulated quickly.

ok, this is how i was feeling, but i didn't know if i was being foolishly

cavalier. also, here i am reccomending people use ground almonds for

everything under the sun... :)

however, i agree. i eat something fermented with every meal, so i think

i'm

going to not worry about it.

-katja

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>>>An interesting side note - I wa doing some research, comparing US sweet

potatoes and yams to NZ kumera and yams, and dsicovered that what's called a yam

in NZ & Australia is a completely different family to US yams & sweet potaoes &

NZ kumera (which are all one family) and true yams. They're called oca and are

from the Andes. I read that they are high in oxalates and the traditional way of

reducing oxalates was to leave them out in the sun for several days before

eating either raw or cooked.

deb<<<

Ah, so that's what they are. There was a discussion on another list about yams,

and I couldn't for the life of me find out what the ones sold as yams here

(Australia) really are. So they're ocas:

http://www.ipgri.cgiar.org/publications/pubfile.asp?ID_PUB=143

Thanks,

Tas'.

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" .to leave them out in the sun for

several days. "

So technically would that be drying, sprouting, or fermenting? Don't most

potatoes sprout in the sun?

******************************

The active misidentification of evil

is the worst kind of evil.

-MRN

_____

From: Deb & Ian [mailto:deb@...]

Sent: Monday, October 11, 2004 3:48 PM

Subject: RE: oxalates/oxalic acid

That's been my feeling too - that unless a person has a speciifc need to

reduce oxalates for a time, not to worry about it too much.

An interesting side note - I wa doing some research, comparing US sweet

potatoes and yams to NZ kumera and yams, and dsicovered that what's called a

yam in NZ & Australia is a completely different family to US yams & sweet

potaoes & NZ kumera (which are all one family) and true yams. They're called

oca and are from the Andes. I read that they are high in oxalates and the

traditional way of reducing oxalates was to leave them out in the sun for

several days before eating either raw or cooked.

deb

Re: oxalates/oxalic acid

At 01:50 PM 10/11/2004, you wrote:

>I can't say for anyone else, but I just don't worry about oxalates.

>Statistically, people who

>eat a lot of vegies are healthier than people who don't, oxalates and

all!

>I think

>the bacteria that " eat " the oxalates are pretty common (the article said

>they get

>in most people's guts when they are babies) and I eat a ton of probiotic

>foods.

>The folks who got kidney stones from oxalates seem to be the ones that

>were on antibiotics, so the moral would be: don't eat antibiotics, or if

>you do,

>make sure your digestive tract gets repopulated quickly.

ok, this is how i was feeling, but i didn't know if i was being foolishly

cavalier. also, here i am reccomending people use ground almonds for

everything under the sun... :)

however, i agree. i eat something fermented with every meal, so i think

i'm

going to not worry about it.

-katja

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@@@

I read that they are high in oxalates and the

traditional way of reducing oxalates was to leave them out in the sun for

several days before eating either raw or cooked.

deb

@@@

@@@

On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 20:30:09 -0500, mark robert <colowe@...> wrote:

> " .to leave them out in the sun for

> several days. "

>

> So technically would that be drying, sprouting, or fermenting? Don't most

> potatoes sprout in the sun?

@@@@

That would be drying.

Yeah, I totally forgot about the drying thing and oxalates! I know

I've got something somewhere about Native Americans drying skunk

cabbage (which is high enough in oxalates to be considered flat out

poisonous in its fresh state) for several *months* and then eating it.

I promise to dig something up about this when I have time--it's

probably either in Steve Brill's book or on the wild edibles list...

This is the best oxalate thread we've ever thread--thanks for the

great posts Suze, et al! I tend to be convinced by Chris'

reasoning about the heat vs leaching thing, but it's worth pursuing

further... Maybe there's a connection between the drying thing and

the heat thing?

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

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> " lamb's-quarter,

> buckwheat, star fruit, black pepper, purslane, poppy seeds,

rhubarb, tea,

> spinach, plantains, cocoa and chocolate, ginger, almonds, cashews,

garden

> sorrel, mustard greens, bell peppers, sweet potatoes, soybeans,

tomatillos,

> beets and beet greens, oats, pumpkin, cabbage, green beans, mango,

> eggplant, tomatoes, lentils, and parsnips. "

>

>

> I don't know about all that....that's alot of good foods....I eat

about ALL

> of it.....If we remove all of that what are we supposed to

eat?....Isn't that

> going a little overboard? Don't the benefits outweigh any

negatives? You

> know....we cut out all of the bad, processed, sugared, preserved,

artificial

> foods....and we are left with veggies that are on that list....and

THEN....we

> shouldn't eat those either.....are we sure about all this " oxalic

acid stuff " ,

> we're going to narrow our food choices down to just water and

sprouts before

> we know it....oh wait....there's bad things in sprouts

too!.......WHAT do we

> eat?..... ...there's probably something " bad " in

EVERYTHING......aren't

> combinations of foods helpful in our consumptions of these " suspect "

> foods....like when we eat spinach....depends what else we're eating

along with it, and

> eating it cooked, or with plenty of raw butter...can we really say

that these

> foods should be " avoided " ? That stinks.... :-(

> --

> Steve

>

Just so you know, Steve, I agree with you completely. I was finding

myself slowly but surely weeding out all of the so-called " bad " foods,

but I've checked myself for the moment because I want to be able to

eat something. I love the discussions on this board and I've learned

a lot, but I try to put some of the information out of my mind because

I can't obsess over every last food I put in my mouth, which is what

happens when I have too much information (I think waaaaaaay too much

about things). We just need to experiment a bit and see what foods

work best for us. If you feel great then you must be doing something

right.

Dawn

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In a message dated 10/12/2004 4:40:26 AM Central Daylight Time,

dawnciano@... writes:

" (I think waaaaaaay too much

about things). "

I'm with you on this....sometimes I wonder why I have this mind that wants

to rationalize everything....while everyone else goes along in their ignorant

bliss! :-)

This is something that I am trying to deal with....I have learned SO much,

that it is too hard to ignore it and just eat anything...I find myself

wondering how everybody else is even alive with the way they feed

themslves....It

goes to show you how resilient the human body is....but I gotta believe that

there is a stopping point....I'm pretty confident that most people are just

" wearing themselves out " by eating and drinking all the junk....and will hit

that

proverbial wall....I think that the next ten years is going to be very

interesting watching what everybody's health is like after they keep up these

dietary habits. Many of my friends and acquaintances are getting older(

40s-50s...) and they haven't changed their diet at all....still downing tons of

soda,

fried foods, cakes and cookies, and the general junk that most americans

eat....we really don't have any good nutritious foods readily available in most

towns across the U.S. I have to earnestly search it out, just to have some

real " nutritional " food...and if you eat out....FORGET IT.....We got this new

resaurant in town....and people have been saying that it is a pretty healthy

place to eat...it's called the " flat top grill " and it's a stir fry resaurant.

Well, I went there, and it was pretty good....but then I (of course...) start

looking at everything...and thought, gee, all those veggies are NOT

organic...who knows WHAT was on them....and did they wash them properly?.....and

then all the sauces....you KNOW that they are filled with high-fructose....and

other " not-so-goodies " ....then the meat...sitting out...NOT organic or free-

ranged, marinated in some " not-so-good " stuff....then the breads.....NO bottled

water.....and I decided that I wouldn't eat there anymore....there is

NOWHERE to really eat out healthy around here....so when everybody goes to " eat

out " with everyone....they are slowly poisoning themselves with all of the

chemicals and unhealthy ingredients in our food supply.....no wonder everybody

is

sick or on drugs....I wonder why there isn't any resaurants that will serve

healthy food prepared in a healthy fashion? There needs to be a cooking school

for " traditional food preparation " (or WAP principles...) I would like to

open up a cafe that just served " traditional " foods, prepared in a

" traditional " way....I couldn't imagine being able to get up on a Sat. morning

and go out

to eat with my mother, and go to a restaurant and have a bowl of " five grain

porridge " , and a bowl of organic strawberries, or a local organic free-range

egg omelet, some sprouted grain toast with raw honey and cinnamon.....and a

glass of raw milk (OK, now I'm really dreaming....), or at least a glass of

CLEAN, healthy water,.... not tap water....why can't there be restaurants

like THATis there no demand?....am I the only one ?....there are TONS of them

(pretty much all of them....) that AREN'T like that...no wonder nobody wants to

eat right....it is way too much effort....it shouldn't be like that.....I've

been thinking of names for my cafe....maybe someday........but people have

to be educated as to WHY they should be searching out real food....I plan on

keeping to my plan(...and trying to keep my mouth shut...) and being an

example for this way of eating!....maybe others will eventually follow!

--

--

Steve

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My husband and I were just discussing this last night ! With a family birthday

coming up, we've discussed going out to eat, and I told him, forget it. The

last time we did that, (supposedly to a " healthy " place) I was sick all

afternoon and had a headache for 2 days. I don't know what additives they used,

but they got to us. If a restaraunt opened here with truly healthy,

traditional foods, I might think I had died and gone to heaven.

Rebekah

.We got this new

resaurant in town....and people have been saying that it is a pretty healthy

place to eat...it's called the " flat top grill " and it's a stir fry resaurant.

Well, I went there, and it was pretty good....but then I (of course...) start

looking at everything...and thought, gee, all those veggies are NOT

organic...who knows WHAT was on them....and did they wash them

properly?.....and

then all the sauces....you KNOW that they are filled with high-fructose....and

other " not-so-goodies " ....then the meat...sitting out...NOT organic or free-

ranged, marinated in some " not-so-good " stuff....then the breads.....NO

bottled

water.....and I decided that I wouldn't eat there anymore....there is

NOWHERE to really eat out healthy around here....so when everybody goes to

" eat

out " with everyone....they are slowly poisoning themselves with all of the

chemicals and unhealthy ingredients in our food supply.....no wonder

everybody is

sick or on drugs....I wonder why there isn't any resaurants that will serve

healthy food prepared in a healthy fashion? There needs to be a cooking

school

for " traditional food preparation " (or WAP principles...) I would like to

open up a cafe that just served " traditional " foods, prepared in a

" traditional " way....I couldn't imagine being able to get up on a Sat.

morning and go out

to eat with my mother, and go to a restaurant and have a bowl of " five grain

porridge " , and a bowl of organic strawberries, or a local organic free-range

egg omelet, some sprouted grain toast with raw honey and cinnamon.....and a

glass of raw milk (OK, now I'm really dreaming....), or at least a glass of

CLEAN, healthy water,.... not tap water....why can't there be restaurants

like THATis there no demand?....am I the only one ?....there are TONS of them

(pretty much all of them....) that AREN'T like that...no wonder nobody wants

to

eat right....it is way too much effort....it shouldn't be like that.....I've

been thinking of names for my cafe....maybe someday........but people have

to be educated as to WHY they should be searching out real food....I plan on

keeping to my plan(...and trying to keep my mouth shut...) and being an

example for this way of eating!....maybe others will eventually follow!

--

--

Steve

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>we really don't have any good nutritious foods readily available in most

> towns across the U.S. I have to earnestly search it out, just to have some

> real " nutritional " food...and if you eat out....FORGET IT...

>no wonder nobody wants to

> eat right....it is way too much effort....it shouldn't be like that....

You're so right, Steve - it shouldn't be like this! The only

people who eat a healthy diet are those like us who are

really interested in food and health, and make a study of

it. But don't people with other interests have a right to be

healthy too? Imagine a world where food makers and

restaurants served healthful food by default, and you'd

have to go out of your way to get junk. I hope I can eat

at your cafe someday ...

Aven

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>

> >we really don't have any good nutritious foods readily available in

most

> > towns across the U.S. I have to earnestly search it out, just to

have some

> > real " nutritional " food...and if you eat out....FORGET IT...

> >no wonder nobody wants to

> > eat right....it is way too much effort....it shouldn't be like

that....

>

> You're so right, Steve - it shouldn't be like this! The only

> people who eat a healthy diet are those like us who are

> really interested in food and health, and make a study of

> it. But don't people with other interests have a right to be

> healthy too? Imagine a world where food makers and

> restaurants served healthful food by default, and you'd

> have to go out of your way to get junk. I hope I can eat

> at your cafe someday ...

> Aven

or a world where your cultural conditioning is actually useful and

important! to learn how to catch, grow, prepare and eat as a child

intimately connected with your world, rather than, well, this...

talk about life managing to exist in harsh and unforgiving

environments... what desert could be worse than anytown USA? at least

in a desert you know damn well where you stand!

ok, i'm done.

eric

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>>>You're so right, Steve - it shouldn't be like this! The only people who eat

a healthy diet are those like us who are

really interested in food and health, and make a study of it.<<<

And many of us have arrived at that point by being so fed-up with how unhealthy

we have become by following the contemporary diet :-(

Cheers,

Tas'.

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This just brought to mind - my daughter LOVES to pick and

eat edible weeds, wild strawberries, etc. The taste doesn't

seem to matter. Do kids just have some instinct that this is

the right way?

Aven

> or a world where your cultural conditioning is actually useful and

> important! to learn how to catch, grow, prepare and eat as a child

> intimately connected with your world, rather than, well, this...

>

> talk about life managing to exist in harsh and unforgiving

> environments... what desert could be worse than anytown USA? at least

> in a desert you know damn well where you stand!

>

> ok, i'm done.

> eric

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At 01:12 PM 10/13/2004, you wrote:

>As I was travelling to the other side of the state to do my " cow hunt "

>I talked to a number of folks. Now mind you, on THIS side of Washington

>we have a lot of liberal-freakish-pierced-I'll-try-anything types, but the

>folks on the other side are a lot more down to earth types. Anyway,

>everyone I talked to was into grass-fed beef and liked my ideas on

>feeding cow guts to chickens etc, which is a big change from the usual

>stuff I've heard in the farming community. In the past it was all " use this

>nice packaged food and the chickens will grow fast " .

well now wait a sec, heidi. *i'm*

liberal-freakish-pierced-i'll-try-anything - that's how i found NT! :P

and my very straight-laced looking butcher nearly fell off his chair when i

told him i wanted all those tongues, livers, etc that he threw away to feed

to my cat. i persisted, and he gave them to me, laughing the whole time.

the next week i went in and there were little 1-lb containers in the

freezer, labeled and everything. " cat food " . i commented and he said that

he'd taken it home to his cat to see if i was insane, and it turned out his

cat liked it! (duh!) so yay for him! course, more yay for him if he'd

continue not to charge me for it, given it was my idea! :P

-katja

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