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Kinist Kitchen, or, Have you read Pottinger’s Cats?
Posted: 02 January 2009 11:00 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 16 ]
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On a related note an article about diet soda.

The Truth About Diet Soda

...

Just because diet soda is low in calories doesn’t mean it can’t lead to weight gain.

It may have only 5 or fewer calories per serving, but emerging research suggests that consuming sugary-tasting beverages—even if they’re artificially sweetened—may lead to a high preference for sweetness overall. That means sweeter (and more caloric) cereal, bread, dessert—everything.

Guzzling these drinks all day long forces out the healthy beverages you need.

Diet soda is 100 percent nutrition-free, and again, it’s just as important to actively drink the good stuff as it is to avoid that bad stuff. So one diet soda a day is fine, but if you’re downing five or six cans, that means you’re limiting your intake of healthful beverages, particularly water and tea…

Aspartame is 180 times sweeter than sugar, and some animal research has linked consumption of high amounts of the sweetener to brain tumors and lymphoma in rodents. The FDA maintains that the sweetener is safe, but reported side effects include dizziness, headaches, diarrhea, memory loss, and mood changes. Bottom line: Diet soda does you no good, and it might just be doing you wrong….

[ Edited: 30 January 2009 10:27 PM by Faust ]
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Posted: 29 January 2009 08:58 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 17 ]
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Common Chemicals May Delay Pregnancy

THURSDAY, Jan. 29 (HealthDay News)—Chemicals known as perfluorinated chemicals, which are pervasive in food packaging, pesticides, clothing, upholstery, carpets and personal care products, may delay pregnancy, a new study suggests…

“These widespread chemicals apparently lower the fertility in couples trying to get pregnant,” said lead researcher Dr. Jorn Olsen, chairman of the Department of Epidemiology at UCLA’s School of Public Health. Danish women in the study who had with high levels of perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) took longer to get pregnant, Olsen said… The report is published in the Jan. 29 online edition of Human Reproduction. And it follows on the heels of a report linking another common plastic chemical, bisphenol A (BPA), to developmental problems in fetuses and infants…

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Posted: 29 January 2009 11:08 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 18 ]
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wonderful. just wonderful.

Laurel

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God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people and continue to help them. Heb. 6:10

“Victory is won not in miles but in inches. Win a little now, hold your ground, and later, win a little more.”– Louis L’Amour

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Posted: 30 January 2009 10:25 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 19 ]
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Laurel,

Yes one wonders what all the chemical filled plastics all around us are doing to us… nothing good I fear…

Another article:
What Are We Doing To Our Children?

[ Edited: 30 January 2009 10:28 PM by Faust ]
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Posted: 31 January 2009 01:49 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 20 ]
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More about our food. Yikes…
Mercury Found in High Fructose Corn Syrup
Some heavy metal with that sweet roll?

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Posted: 07 February 2009 03:58 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 21 ]
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FDA: Plant knowingly sold salmonella-laced food

WASHINGTON – A Georgia peanut plant knowingly shipped salmonella-laced products as far back as 2007, at times sending out tainted products after tests confirmed contamination, according to inspection records released Friday…

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Posted: 11 February 2009 10:25 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 22 ]
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I just got in some “protein powder” made of soy (some is made of whey).

I don’t remember having this result in the past, but a glass of it instantly drained my energy… which was high having just eaten a nutritious meal. There’s some sugar in it, but not enough for a sugar rush/crash.

—-

I guess the familiar rule of “if it doesn’t rot, it’s not food” should have kept me away from this stuff.

Back to eggs, beans, nuts, and meat.

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Posted: 11 February 2009 10:43 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 23 ]
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Frank,

There are a lot of people who think soy is poisonous and should not be eaten. The natural chemicals in soy beans act like the female hormone estrogen when they enter the body. But this is a much debated issues with many different views on this topic, many of which strongly defend and endorse the eating of soy. But something to think about, I don’t eat soy much; except when I eat East Asian foods. I admit I have a fondness for orange chicken, which has a little bit of soy in the orange sauce. I personally would not eat the stuff as a “health food.” I am all for eating eggs, beans, nuts, and meat.

See these Links:
Why Soy Can Damage Your Health
“Soy is making kids ‘gay’”
“Take that talk about soy with a grain or two of salt”

[ Edited: 12 February 2009 08:46 AM by Faust ]
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Posted: 12 February 2009 05:53 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 24 ]
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Many dangers of soy (as modernly processed and consumed) are outlined in “Nourishing Traditions.”

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Posted: 14 February 2009 02:42 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 25 ]
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Well, if it allows me to keep my hair and to live a little longer, estrogen might not be such a bad thing, though the turning homo isn’t as appealing.

Heh, were I to turn homo, I’d make a good face for kinism. Actually if Marcus Epstein is the new face of white nationalism, having a homo represent kinism might not make our Babelist handlers even blink.

—-

Thanks for the heads up. A doctor (family member) confirmed what y’all say about soybeans, which is somewhat shocking considering the popularity of tofu…

Judging by a google search, soy protein is very cheap. So, its popularity is in part due to it being inexpensive…

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Posted: 16 February 2009 08:46 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 26 ]
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Omega-3 “supplements”

Presumably because it’s cheaper, an Omega-3 supplement is now available.

I see Crisco now adds it in some of their oil.

Hopefully this isn’t what is fed chickens who lay “high Omega-3 eggs” which are sold at grocery stores.

Chickens and man should both eat real food, not “enriched” cheap food. I don’t trust pills for providing nutrition except out of necessity.

[ Edited: 26 March 2009 08:10 PM by Frank ]
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Posted: 26 March 2009 08:06 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 27 ]
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What Seafood is safe to eat?


Seafood Watch list on wikipedia.

In-depth Seafood Watch guide (to figure why these fish are on the “do not eat” list, which isn’t always made clear…)

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Organic Consumers 24 Feb 2004 report:

Fish to Avoid

High mercury: Atlantic halibut, king mackerel, oysters (Gulf Coast), pike, sea bass, shark, swordfish, tilefish (golden snapper), tuna (steaks and canned albacore).

High POPs: Farmed salmon. Limit to once a month if pregnant/nursing. Check TheGreenGuide.com for updates on POPs in other farmed fish.

Fish to Eat

The gift of crab.
Moderate mercury: Alaskan halibut, black cod, blue (Gulf Coast) crab, cod, dungeness crab, Eastern oysters, mahimahi, blue mussels, pollack, tuna (canned light). (Children and pregnant or nursing women are advised to eat no more than one from this list, once a month.)

Low mercury: Anchovies, Arctic char, crawfish, Pacific flounder, herring, king crab, sanddabs, scallops, Pacific sole; tilapia, wild Alaska and Pacific salmon; farmed catfish, clams, striped bass, and sturgeon. (Children and pregnant or nursing women can safely eat two to three times a week.)

Take note, though, that low-mercury but overfished or destructively harvested species—such as Atlantic cod, Atlantic flounder, Atlantic sole, Chilean sea bass, monkfish, orange roughy, shrimp, and snapper—should be avoided for the environment’s sake.

Low POPs: Wild Alaska and California salmon (fresh or canned).

Check with your state’s department of health for POP advisories before eating fish from local waters.

The Final Word

Limit fish consumption by category, not individual species. For example, both cod and mahimahi are moderate-mercury fish, and only one from this category should be eaten per month—not one meal of cod and one of mahimahi.

If you’re in a high-risk group, don’t eat the skin and fatty parts of fish, where POPs collect. Eat grilled, baked, and broiled rather than fried fish, to avoid fat.

And, finally, don’t be daunted by the prospect of remembering all this info
—you don’t have to. Just download The Green Guide’s Fish Picks card [PDF], a handy pocket-sized seafood-rating guide.

For more info on which fish to avoid and which fish you can safely gobble up, see the Environmental Working Group’s website, the EPA’sFish Advisories webpage, and the EPA’s National Listing of Fish and Wildlife Advisories.

The dish on fish.
It’s been a winter of bad news for seafood lovers. A joint draft fish advisory from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. EPA added tuna—America’s second-most popular seafood after shrimp—to its list of mercury-containing fish that should be restricted in the diets of pregnant women and young children. A separate new study found unhealthy pollutants in far higher amounts in farmed salmon than in their wild kin. And, as reported in the February issue of Environmental Health Perspectives, Great Lakes’ sport-caught fish contain PCBs, DDT, and PBDEs, though the study did not show a link between their consumption and rising breast cancer rates.

Having a tough time keeping all these grim reports straight? Here’s an update on toxins to avoid, fish that contain them, and fish that are safer to eat.

Mercury

Fetuses, infants, and young children are at greatest risk of harm from mercury, which can damage developing brains and nervous systems. As the Harvard School of Public Health warned in a study published in the Journal of Pediatrics earlier this month, fetuses and young children exposed to methylmercury can suffer irreversible damage to the heart as well as permanently impaired brain growth.

Because mercury is stored in our bodies, just as it is in those of fish, women planning to have children should also avoid high-mercury fish well before they become pregnant. According to a recent update by the Centers for Disease Control, 16 percent of American women of child-bearing age have levels of mercury in their blood high enough to indicate increased chance of harm to their fetuses.

To market, to market, to buy a fresh fish.
Adults can suffer harm, as well: In April 2003, Environmental Health Perspectivesreported that 89 percent of study subjects—chosen if they ate a significant amount of fish or showed symptoms consistent with mercury poisoning, such as fatigue, headache, decreased memory, and joint pain—had blood mercury levels above the EPA’s safety threshold of 5 micrograms per liter.

The FDA and EPA advise that young children, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and women of childbearing age not eat more than two or three meals, or 12 ounces total, of fish or shellfish a week. They should limit high-mercury fish to one serving per week.

To be safest, however, The Green Guide and the Environmental Working Group recommend limiting moderate-mercury fish to one meal a month, and bypassing high-mercury fish completely. In addition, our list of high-mercury fish is longer than the FDA’s, which includes only king mackerel, shark, swordfish, and tilefish (see fish lists below).

POPs

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)—neurotoxic, hormone-disrupting chemicals banned in the U.S. since 1977—were found at levels seven times higher in farmed salmon than in wild ones, according to a study published in Science in January 2004. PCBs are persistent organic pollutants (POPs), which accumulate in animal fats. Because most farmed salmon are raised on feed that includes ground-up fish—and sometimes other animals, such as cattle
—their bodies collect POPs. PCBs are also found at high levels in fish from polluted water bodies, varying from locale to locale; state health advisories list which fish should not be consumed by children, pregnant or nursing women, and women of childbearing age. Other POPs found in fish include the organochlorine pesticide dieldrin and dioxins, which result from chlorine paper bleaching and manufacturing and incineration of PVC plastic.

—-

The EPA is currently doing an Expanded Investigations of Pharmaceuticals in Fish Tissue

Fish fillets will be analyzed for more than 20 pharmaceuticals and 15 personal care products. We will complete this work and report on our results in 2011. As of July 2008, fish tissue and water samples have been collected at 25 of the urban sites.

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Posted: 27 March 2009 08:49 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 28 ]
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Tom’s of Maine makes wonderful flavors of fluoride free toothpaste.

http://www.tomsofmaine.com/

It is priced the same as regular toothpaste.

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Posted: 27 March 2009 09:42 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 29 ]
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A mix of 50% salt, 50% baking soda, applied on a damp brush, works wonders for the gums as well as the teeth.

God bless,
Laurel

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Deo Volente, Deo Vindice.

God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people and continue to help them. Heb. 6:10

“Victory is won not in miles but in inches. Win a little now, hold your ground, and later, win a little more.”– Louis L’Amour

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Posted: 27 March 2009 10:03 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 30 ]
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Also, carrots and raisins are good for the teeth.

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