Guest guest Posted September 1, 2007 Report Share Posted September 1, 2007 Hi, I came across this sentence " MSG is always present in any gelatin- encapsulated vitamin or supplement " in a doc on MSG and have been researching it online, only to find the exact same sentence on a number of sites - with no explanation of what " gelatin-encapsulated " might mean. Is this anything that is soft-gel, such as fish oil capsules?? Is anyone familiar with this who can explain it a little more? Thank you, Carolee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2007 Report Share Posted September 5, 2007 Wow, thanks for bringing it up - I found your answer here: http://www.truthinlabeling.org/hiddensources.html The gelatin has free glutamic acid in it - probably from the processing. If you read " Broth is Beautiful " on the WAP site, it says that the kind of gelatin you can usually buy is really horrible overprocessed stuff with few of the benefits of true gelatin left in it. I hope this helps you - it sure helped me! --- In , " ccbmamma " <caroleebol@...> wrote: > > Hi, I came across this sentence " MSG is always present in any gelatin- > encapsulated vitamin or supplement " in a doc on MSG and have been > researching it online, only to find the exact same sentence on a number > of sites - with no explanation of what " gelatin-encapsulated " might > mean. Is this anything that is soft-gel, such as fish oil capsules?? Is > anyone familiar with this who can explain it a little more? > > Thank you, > Carolee > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2007 Report Share Posted September 5, 2007 --- <haecklers@...> wrote: > Wow, thanks for bringing it up - I found your answer here: > http://www.truthinlabeling.org/hiddensources.html According to Truth in Labeling: " The MSG-reaction is a reaction to free glutamic acid that occurs in food as a consequence of manufacture. MSG-sensitive people do not react to protein (which contains bound glutamic acid) or any of the minute amounts of free glutamic acid that might be found in unadulterated, unfermented, food. " What I don't understand is that most meats contain lots of " bound glutamic acid " , but I thought that proper digestion breaks the proteins into constituent amino acids and thus the bound glutamic acid would be broken into free glutamic acid in the stomach. If this is true, then why is eating free glutamic acid any different than eating bound glutamic acid, since either way you end up with free glutamic acid in the stomach? Am I missing something here? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2007 Report Share Posted September 5, 2007 The Truth in Labeling site said those on the list had enough free glutamic acid to cause problems in those sensitive to it. I think that's the key. MSG is harmful because of the amount of free glutamic acid, it floods the body at rates higher than the body can handle, while meats and other foods where it is more natural are broken down more slowly so it seeps out and is dealt with before it reaches amounts that cause problems. > > Wow, thanks for bringing it up - I found your answer here: > > http://www.truthinlabeling.org/hiddensources.html > > According to Truth in Labeling: " The MSG-reaction is a reaction to > free glutamic acid that occurs in food as a consequence of > manufacture. MSG-sensitive people do not react to protein (which > contains bound glutamic acid) or any of the minute amounts of free > glutamic acid that might be found in unadulterated, unfermented, food. " > > What I don't understand is that most meats contain lots of " bound > glutamic acid " , but I thought that proper digestion breaks the > proteins into constituent amino acids and thus the bound glutamic acid > would be broken into free glutamic acid in the stomach. If this is > true, then why is eating free glutamic acid any different than eating > bound glutamic acid, since either way you end up with free glutamic > acid in the stomach? Am I missing something here? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2007 Report Share Posted September 5, 2007 Thanks for your comments. I'm going to write an email to a few vitamin companies and also to Dr. Mercola who sells gelatin-encapsulated supplements (Dr. Ron too). I'll write back with any responses. It seems hard to believe that all " soft " supplements (as I'm assuming the softness/liquid is gelatin/msg) contain msg, but maybe so! Carolee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2007 Report Share Posted September 5, 2007 --- <haecklers@...> wrote: > The Truth in Labeling site said those on the list had enough free > glutamic acid to cause problems in those sensitive to it. I think > that's the key. MSG is harmful because of the amount of free > glutamic acid, it floods the body at rates higher than the body can > handle, while meats and other foods where it is more natural are > broken down more slowly so it seeps out and is dealt with before it > reaches amounts that cause problems. I'm not sure how much free glutamic acid might be in homemade bone broths, but if you eat 1/4 lb of beef burger plus 2 slices of bacon and 2 sliced of cheddar cheese, you get about 7 g of glutamic acid. If it takes 7 hours to digest, that's an average of 1 g per hour ingested. Surely this would be enough to bother someone who is sensitive? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2007 Report Share Posted September 6, 2007 " MSG " is a form of free glutamate, not the other way around. Some people are sensitive to all glutamates - they can't have whole, unprocessed soy, gluten, casein, corn, peas, etc. Some are only sensitive to the MSG form of free glutamate (I think this has to do with the sodium causing it to be absorbed prematurely). I used to be really glutamate sensitive, but thankfully, that was one of the easier things to fix. It is a very basic issue: Glutamate and Aspartate (the amino in aspartame) are both acidic. They are the only two aminos that are acidic. These aminos are neutralized during fermentation (they become the amines Glutamine and Asparagine), so fermented glutamate foods will cause less of an issue - but that still doesn't correct the existing acidity. You need the two base aminos for that: Lysine and Arginine. These " pair " with glutamate and aspartate in the cells to neutralize them. Lysine is an essential amino acid. Arginine is one of the " conditionally essential " amino acids - but unlike a lot of the conditionally essential aminos, it is acknowledged as an essential amino acid for children. It is found in the thymus/sweetbread, spleen, lung and pancreas and I suspect its deficiency has something to do with pancreatic insufficiency. " On a whole-body basis, synthesis of arginine occurs principally via the intestinal–renal axis <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Intestinal%E2%80%93renal_axis & action=\ edit>, wherein epithelial cells <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epithelial_cell> of the small intestine <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_intestine>, which produce citrulline <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citrulline> primarily from glutamine <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamine> and glutamate<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamate>, collaborate with the proximal tubule cells<http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Proximal_tubule_cell & action=edit\ >of the kidney <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidney>, which extract citrulline from the circulation and convert it to arginine, which is returned to the circulation. Consequently, impairment of small bowel or renal function can reduce endogenous arginine synthesis, thereby increasing the dietary requirement. " (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arginine) Arginine and Lysine is how I fixed my glutamate sensitivity. I took a short course of them in pills (500mg each for about a month, if that). I have been having issues getting affordable sweetbreads and spleen from quality animals, so I haven't been keeping up with my arginine intake - after 9 months, I can start to feel the acidity setting in again. I plan on skipping the pills this time and using food: I have some sweetbreads and spleen coming from a local farmer, but I have to wait until October when he slaughters his cattle. In the meantime, crispy pumpkin seeds and nuts will have to do. -Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2007 Report Share Posted September 6, 2007 Lana, Thanks for the informative post. How do you prepare the spleen/sweetbreads? Where did you find recipes? How do they taste? This is totally something I've been looking for - sometimes I know I've gotten too much MSG and start feeling awful and needed to know what to do to detox it. For some reason bee pollen and black strap molasses seem to help, but really it's just a crazy guess why, I was trying to get more minerals, but looks like I needed the aminos. Have you heard of " Snack Jack " pumpkins? You can find the seeds sometimes and grow them yourself - they have huskless seeds so you can roast them and eat them without getting stabbed in your gums by the hard fibers! I read that the Native Americans used to grow pumpkins more for the seeds than the flesh of the squash. I guess we've probably lost most of the varieties they used to grow. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2007 Report Share Posted September 6, 2007 > > How do you prepare the spleen/sweetbreads? Where did you find > recipes? How do they taste? Recipe is in NT - they're pretty bland for organ meats. > This is totally something I've been looking for - sometimes I know I've > gotten too much MSG and start feeling awful and needed to know what to > do to detox it. For some reason bee pollen and black strap molasses > seem to help, but really it's just a crazy guess why, I was trying to > get more minerals, but looks like I needed the aminos. Hmmm... bee pollen you say? I can't find an amino acid analysis, but I am finding several indications that it does contain arginine, how it has a better amino acid profile than many foods (40% protein according to one source) and how it is a food for *young* bees... I'd say there's a chance you've discovered another source of arginine inadvertantly. I'm seeing healing, rejuvination, anti-aging and a variety of other words being used in conjunction with bee pollen, and arginine stimulates growth hormone... I'm gonna see if I can find an actual amino acid profile. Have you heard of " Snack Jack " pumpkins? You can find the seeds > sometimes and grow them yourself - they have huskless seeds so you can > roast them and eat them without getting stabbed in your gums by the > hard fibers! Now that sounds useful: I'll look into them, thanks! I read that the Native Americans used to grow pumpkins > more for the seeds than the flesh of the squash. I guess we've > probably lost most of the varieties they used to grow. > I didn't know the NA grew the pumpkins more for the seeds, interesting! There are a variety of heirloom squash available, but I don't think any of it is old enough to have come from the NA. -Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2007 Report Share Posted September 6, 2007 Sorry, didn't notice you also inquired about the spleen. There is a spleen crostini recipe I'm pretty fond of but I can't find it ATM. It has capers and white wine and stuff in it - very tasty. I've heard spleen used to be ground up with beef to give it more of a red color, but since I don't have a meat grinder I haven't tried this yet. -Lana On 9/6/07, Lana Gibbons <lana.m.gibbons@...> wrote: > > How do you prepare the spleen/sweetbreads? Where did you find > > recipes? How do they taste? > > > Recipe is in NT (for sweetbreads) - they're pretty bland for organ meats. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2007 Report Share Posted September 6, 2007 Found it! (http://www.alternativescentral.com/beepollen.htm) It has a decent amount of arginine (292.52 mg/oz), but it isn't as good as the sweetbreads or pumpkin seeds when you consider it in terms of a ratio between glu/asp and arg/lys (it is .58 whereas pumpkinseeds are .86). I did notice that both the bee pollen and the blackstrap molasses are high in Manganese. Mn really helped me with all of my food sensitvities in general. Bee Pollen has 1.395 mg/oz (that's almost the DV right there!!) whereas blackstrap molasses has .5 mg/tbsp. Mn is needed for the part of the urea cycle that breaks arginine into ornithine and urea to complete the urea cycle. It is also needed for the enzyme Glutamine synthetase, which is what neutralizes the acidic glutamate with an ammonia molecule. Mn also plays a major part in Biotin, Thiamin, C and choline absorption. I find I do best getting between 2 and 4 mg Mn a day, which is between 110% and 240% the DV for a woman. I would not recommend using the supplemental form of this vitamin as there are issues with absorbtion/toxicity in doses that would be fine if acquired through diet. Foods we see in NAPD that are high in Mn include mollusks, rye and oats. Brown rice and lentils are also decent sources (mmm dosa!) as are pumpkin seeds (1/8 cup gives 25% DV). More into on Manganese here: http://www.whfoods.org/genpage.php?tname=nutrient & dbid=77 and here: http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/minerals/manganese/ -Lana Hmmm... bee pollen you say? I can't find an amino acid analysis, but I am > finding several indications that it does contain arginine, how it has a > better amino acid profile than many foods (40% protein according to one > source) and how it is a food for *young* bees... I'd say there's a chance > you've discovered another source of arginine inadvertantly. I'm seeing > healing, rejuvination, anti-aging and a variety of other words being used in > conjunction with bee pollen, and arginine stimulates growth hormone... I'm > gonna see if I can find an actual amino acid profile. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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