Re: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Jed Rothwell
Terry Blanton wrote: (Gasp!) Jed does not like sushi?! I don't much care for green tea, either. - Jed

RE: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Rick Monteverde
Terry - >> (Gasp!) Jed does not like sushi?! LOL! Me too, reading that was a bit like the head rush I get from the usual overdose of fresh wasabi! - R.

Re: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Terry Blanton
(Gasp!) Jed does not like sushi?! Terry On Fri, Dec 4, 2009 at 5:17 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote: > Alexander Hollins wrote: > >> well, yes, early colonials in the americas ran into the same issue with >> corn.  but thats not ALL plants. > > Yes, as I said, Wrangham makes it clear that some plants ar

Re: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Alexander Hollins
I eat my beef raw to almost raw (rare, brown on the outside and 98.6 in the center) all the time. Its not unsafe as long as its stored correctly, and more nutritious, less heat damage to a lot of the aminos, and a lot of the really good vitamins leak out in the broth when you cook it. and the body

Re: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Jed Rothwell
Alexander Hollins wrote: well, yes, early colonials in the americas ran into the same issue with corn. but thats not ALL plants. Yes, as I said, Wrangham makes it clear that some plants are fine to eat raw. As I said, some are more nutritious raw. Wrangham makes a strong case against eating

Re: [Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Alexander Hollins
well, yes, early colonials in the americas ran into the same issue with corn. but thats not ALL plants. On Fri, Dec 4, 2009 at 2:38 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote: > I wrote: > >> There are even records of people stuck on desert islands and in the >> Australian outback without fire who had plenty of foo

[Vo]:Quote from Wrangham book

2009-12-04 Thread Jed Rothwell
I wrote: There are even records of people stuck on desert islands and in the Australian outback without fire who had plenty of food yet starved to death. Some did; others were emaciated but lived to tell the tale. It is even worse! Wrangham describes this in chapter 1: In 1860 Robert Burke