Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 > > >Thank you for your additional clarifications. I hope we have made > >friends again. > > > > > José , I think you must be reading more here than what exists for > me. I was never offended or feeling animosity towards you. Surely, we > are amicable list mates as always. ** Thank you, Deanna. You´re right: That was an overstatement (that we had made friends again). I could have left it out. But it stems from my own insecurity, you know. I am a very insecure person. I am always in need of " reality checks " , if you know what it means. I was checking just to see, don't be offended. But let me add this: from the beginning of our conversation I felt I knew whom I was talking to. > And I am still wondering what exactly worries you about eating fruits, > vegetables and nuts as the only carb source? For me, I would do well to > give up legumes and live this way. However, I do enjoy the taste and > convenience of beans once or twice a week. ** I eat some fruit every day, but I can't eat a lrge quantity: 100g - 200g (sorry, I don't know the American units well) is enough for me. I can't digest more than that. Besides, fruit makes feel cold. Oh, I wish I could live off fruit (and some animal protein) myself, but really it doesn't work for me. I need starches, but I really try to keep it to a minimum, for instance, usually having only two meals a day. I also eat vegetables, both cooked and raw, but, like , I can't overeat them, because of the fiber. Nuts, just a handful now and then. Maybe my digestive system is the real culprit. It would be better for me to try to improve it, but given this present condition there is no other alternative for me than to rely on carbs. I know other people like me, though. > > > > Okay, now I do see a clear reason behind the skepticism of low carb > diets. Thank you for that. ** OK, but let's make it still clearer: not really scepticism of low- carb, but of non-carb. And especially for my own biotype (is that the right English word for it?). Funny thing, the " low fat " diet prescribed > by the orthodoxy in the US is <30%. So accordingly, the 30% carbs of > the French authors might be considered low carb. ** I don't know. May be yes. They really don't mention low-carb. They talk rather about moderation and balance. Would you please > expand on the idea that we need certain carbs for " optimal proteic > assimilation? ** Yes, I will, but could you please give me some time? I will come back to that later. Now I just wanted to give a brief and quick answer. I am in the office. Later when I get home and the kids give me a break. > I think when we get too bent on percentages of calories, we can get > stuck. By this I mean I need a certain amount of protein and fat to > function, but if I get a bit more of one, is it really detrimental to > me? Carbs I can live without indefinitely. The brain can live off of > ketones in lipolysis, just as it can live off of glucose in glucosis, we > have adapted to these duel metabolic systems. And I never said no carb > was for everybody in the long run. However, low carb diets have been > around for a long time, and are not in vitro. In modern times, > Banting popularized a low carb diet in Europe in the 1800s. ** I think I have read a little about Banting somewhere. Also about the Salisbury diet. Well, in this case I was wrong. Low carb is not a modernity nor something in fashion. Now let's hope that it will throw roots everywhere. But again (I am insistent, am I not?) I am wary of non-carb. > http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/banting.html > ______________________________ > > > When I mentioned the addiction, it was an attempt at humor at the time. > Forgive me if I did not include a smile or something to help with that > meaning :-) . ** I know, Deanna. Don't worry. I myself never use emoticons. > > > > If you don't believe there is one formula for all, then why do you think > suppressing carbohydrates is dangerous for some in the long run? ** I said " for some " , not for everybody. > > Our range as a species is global. That is unique among the animals. As > such, I believe, we have adapted, through our individual ancestry and > present environmental conditions, to particular diets. Mine happens to > be high in vegetables and animal foods. Yours will be something else > from your region and genetic makeup. Finding the best lifestyle for us > as individuals is the real challenge, I think. Sharing what we have > learned along the way may help others to at least think, " Perhaps I > should try this, " or, " Perhaps the orthodoxy hasn't all the answers in > their one size fits all diet paradigm. " ** I do agree. I think that you should have typed these four or five final sentences in capital letters. > >Best wishes. > > > >José > > > Best regards to you as well, > Deanna > ** It is a pleasure for me to talk to you. José > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 José >Besides, fruit makes feel cold. That " cold " feeling is often a sign of an IgG or IgA allergy ... I get that when I eat dairy. A lot of people DO react to fruit, esp. citrus I think. I'm not sure exactly what causes it: might be cortisol production that happens when your body is under stress, which causes your blood to retreat from your extremities into your body cavity (like happens when you are in shock: if you have a near-miss while driving, for instance, you might feel cold afterward). Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 >We tend to look at diet through middle-class blinders. What do we make of this? > " For breakfast we have bulldog gravy >For dinner we have beans and bread >The miners don't have any supper >And a tick of straw they call a bed. " > > Very true, . Um, do I dare ask what bulldog gravy is? Off the top of mehead comes: Peas porridge hot, peas porridge cold, peas porridge in the pot nine days old ... Jack Sprat cold eat no fat, his wife could eat no lean ... Come butter come ... I can't think of any folksongs offhand, though. You know, I love old books. The ones that come from 1910 or earlier are generally very ornate with bindings and paper that stand the test of time. Those books must have cost something to produce - especially the Bibles. Contrast that with the NAPD book I got from amazon had pages falling out of the cheap glue binding from the get go. Does anyone have an old copy of NAPD? >This is the Appalachian working class in the 1930s...not very NT, is >it? Not everybody had equal access to the agricultural means of >production, esp. in the cities. And sometimes the means of production >didn't produce. It was basically the potato and modern transportation >that ended famine in Europe...grain crops periodically failed (or >were taken by marauding armies, while the potatoes were safe >underground). > > No, it's not very NT. And that makes me think perhaps NT in the modern industrial era IS a middle class nutritional plan. For who can afford the time and money for these rich foods, organically grown and properly prepared, then or now? Here's the page on WAPF site about the church cookbooks and what these people at before the 20th century. http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/sad_changes_american_standard.html These folks undoubtedly could afford better nutrition than the poor folks. That said, old and new world farmers probably did better, at least in theory. They had clean air, fresh foods (so long as they knew what they were doing and raised good food), and lived a life with lots of good hard work (aka exercise). >The Lapps have been living on reindeer milk for as long as anyone >remembers. I don't know about cows though. > > That's good enough for me <g>. I do like dairy and have a good percentage of Swedish blood in me. Finland was invaded by Swedes long ago. And it is easier to grow livestock than much grain up there, right? >Right, but look at the etymology of the word: smörgas=bread and >butter + bord=table. It's like the Indonesian rijstafel...a zillion >dishes, but ultimately it's all about rice. I've read that >historically, smorgasbord as we know it is more an invention of >hotels for late-19th c train travellers than a traditional Swedish >meal, though certainly traditional dishes are included. It was the >same sort of tempting excess as 's " 31 flavors " , for >the same purpose. > > Ya got me there. I wasn't even thinking along those lines! Interesting history on that invention. >In the Time-Life Scandinavian cookbook, so many of the Norwegian >dishes described seem so NT...the sour cream porridge drunk at >weddings, the fermented fish. And of course they don't include >recipes for any of the " weird stuff " :-( > Yeah. It's not fair that they don't share info on the weird stuff. How many folks eat/ate insects for a cheap source of protein, we'll probably never know. We only know of the weirdos on list who do, lol. These books are dictating what is acceptable much like TV advertising does. That's why the old books rock. Even if they were for the wealthy and guilty of the same sort of thing, at least they were pre mass marketed junk era. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 >> not really scepticism of low- carb, but of non-carb << The only " no-carb " diet would be one of nothing but meat and fats. Dairy products, vegetables, fruits, nuts... all other foods have carbs. This is a false distinction as I know of NO ONE, no book, no author, no guru, who recommends or follows a " no-carb " plan. Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2005 Report Share Posted June 17, 2005 Hello: Thank you for the correction. I though " non-carb " was the right expression. You are right. There are carbs in veggies, fruit and dairy. I have acknowledged this in a previous post. But classically or traditionally when you think of carbs you think of grains and tubers (starches). It may be a simplification, but it's grains and tubers which have the most carbs and need previous preparation (cooking, baking, fermenting, etc) to be eaten. I think this difference must not be overlooked. JC > >> not really scepticism of low- > carb, but of non-carb << > > The only " no-carb " diet would be one of nothing but meat and fats. Dairy > products, vegetables, fruits, nuts... all other foods have carbs. > > This is a false distinction as I know of NO ONE, no book, no author, no > guru, who recommends or follows a " no-carb " plan. > > Christie > Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds > Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 > http://www.caberfeidh.com > http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2005 Report Share Posted June 17, 2005 > Re: a few carb questions (Deanna, Heidi, Wanita) > > >>> not really scepticism of low- >carb, but of non-carb << > >The only " no-carb " diet would be one of nothing but meat and fats. Oddly enough, even meat has a tiny amount of carbs in it. 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> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2005 Report Share Posted June 17, 2005 [José] Orthorexic, aloof, elitist - these are not words to apply to you or to anyone else here. These are tentative descriptions. It is true I have known people who would wear the cap, because it would fit them, but again those were generic observations. Maybe I should have been more careful with my wordage. It is not the first time that words betray me, appearing to mean more than what they actually meant, if you see what I mean. Possibly, it is too late now to justify myself. I have made a blunder, however unintentional it was, and nobody will come to support me. All that is left for me to do is slink off and pray that time will heal this situation. [MikeP] I have just read through this thread here and I must extend my appreciation to you, José, for your valuable postings. I follow your reasoning entirely and I see you are getting at some subtleties in food philosophy that I have also pondered at length. I must also comment on your admirable literary flair. Certainly your remarks above are quite general and don't apply to the special cases of gluten and casein intolerant people (but it's good for our representatives of those special cases to speak loud and clear) and it's wonderful that you've taken up the challenge of articulating these psychological and conceptual issues. I'm also a fairly anti-grain type person who recognizes this bias as an artifact of eccentric striving for optimal nutrition and not a reasonable imposition on humanity as a whole, which must accomodate many conflicting threads of cultural tradition and accept many compromises in the spirit of adaptation. Well, again, thank you, José, for such enjoyable and stimulating reading, and my casual impression is that I agree with your assessments of this topic. I should also apologize because I rarely skim my NN folder or participate these days... Perhaps it has suffered from competition with other priorities... It is in phases like this that I rely on their accuracy of subject lines to direct my clicking... Mike SE Pennsylvania The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.