plarq
Crazy forever
DHMO is also poisonous in large dose.
Sounds like a stupid way to get sweetness considering how unsweet dandelions are. Better just to juice dandelion greens with apple juice then you get all of the nutrients & can still sweeten to taste.Since I stopped working my day-job a month ago I've been producing my sucrose syrup from dandelions. This sucrose is so healthy, I haven't even been eating any other food. Goddamn I'm healthy.
But it's not sugar, it doesn't have the same glycemic index of ratio of sugars. It has minerals (unlike sugar) & may have beneficial effects on allergies (hasn't been studied much though since there's alot more money in allegra).The only thing I found even possibly significant in those links is that protein makes up a whopping 0.4% of honey. For funsies I worked out that, using the numbers most favorable to honey, a single kidney bean has as much protein as 2½ tablespoons of honey.
So... maybe I'm missing something? Please, point me to the good stuff, something that specifies what honey's health giving properties actually are. 'Cause it's pretty much just sugar with a bean in it.
But most people aren't going to drink five gallons of water a day whereas many people eat tons of sugar every day without even thinking about it. Saying that too much x is toxic isn't a big deal if no one has the inclination, let alone compulsion to use too much x. Reminds me too much of the assertion "well, everything causes cancer so therefore I'm going to do y unhealthy activity".DHMO is also poisonous in large dose.
Congrats.I've cut out a lot of sugar over the past several years. Every step, I've felt better and better.
Soft drinks<water, tea, or coffee
Milk chocolate<dark chocolate
Ketchup<salsa
The only thing I found even possibly significant in those links is that protein makes up a whopping 0.4% of honey. For funsies I worked out that, using the numbers most favorable to honey, a single kidney bean has as much protein as 2½ tablespoons of honey.
So... maybe I'm missing something? Please, point me to the good stuff, something that specifies what honey's health giving properties actually are. 'Cause it's pretty much just sugar with a bean in it.
Both honey and maple syrup are anti oxidants.
How do you make your own chocolate?
I hear good things about dark chocolate, but eating chocolate may be morally wrong based on how it is acquired in Africa.
But it's not sugar, it doesn't have the same glycemic index of ratio of sugars. It has minerals (unlike sugar) & may have beneficial effects on allergies (hasn't been studied much though since there's alot more money in allegra).
http://health.howstuffworks.com/dis...rgy-treatments/local-honey-for-allergies2.htm
If you want to argue that "organic cane juice" is the same as sugar I won't argue but saying honey is the same is a bit of a stretch.
Also honey is sweeter than sugar so you need less of it in recipes.
But like I said, if anyone can point out anyone addicted to honey the way people are addicted to sugar suffering similar health consequences I'll be more receptive to the claim.
There have been no peer-reviewed scientific studies that have conclusively proven whether honey actually reduces allergies. Almost all evidence regarding the immunizing effects of eating honey is anecdotal.
Well, duh!DHMO is also poisonous in large dose.
I really, really, really hope that your 20 grams is entirely plant-based. In fact, I don't know if you can get enough vegetable with only 20 g (that's less than two apples!). Processed meats are pretty crazy as it is, and you're going to want as much defense as possible against them in your intestines.
Chocolate powder, chocolate butter (cacao butter) and honey. Mix it up. You have to heat the cacao butter a bit since it's melting point is 90F or so IIRC.How do you make your own chocolate?
There is fair trade chocolate.I hear good things about dark chocolate, but eating chocolate may be morally wrong based on how it is acquired in Africa.
How do you mean it's "not a food"? Pretty much any human who can get their hands on it will eat it (and many animals).No, I mean, I backed off "just as bad" immediately, I'd liked the sound of itbut you're right, it's not "just as bad". I'm not saying it's the same. I'm saying that it's not significantly better than sugar. It is absolutely better than sugar, it has some minerals and a lower glycemic index. But definitely not "not even close to as bad" and it's not really food either.
Raw honey FTW!That same 2½ tablespoons, the kidney bean of protein, an amount of sugar that probably is more than your diet should make room for every day, has 3mg calcium, or one and a half kidney beans. One and a third kidney beans worth of iron. Half a kidney bean of magnesium and phosphorous. One kidney bean of potassium. Four kidney beans of zinc. The honey has more sodium than the bean, but nobody's short on that. One quarter of a kidney bean of fiber.
So, sorry, I guess it's sugar with four beans in it if you're concerned about your zinc intake.
Sources vary on the glycemic index. Supermarket honey is not substantially better than sugar (less than 15% lower, if at all). Raw honey has a noticeably better score (almost 50% lower) according to some sources.
Hmm, I make cookie dough where I used to use 1/2 cup of brown sugar & a 1/4 cup of white. I think I use about half the amount of honey now (by weight) but I can't be sure, I don't measure anything when I make stuff.Sources vary on sweetness, too. Most generous difference I've found is honey being 25% sweeter than table sugar.
It might be interesting to people who suffer from allergies.This isn't interesting.
"Addicted to honey / addicted tosugar" is a meaningless comparison, the sugar addicts would be perfectly happy with honey and if someone ate as much honey as the sugar addicts there's nothing that would distinguish them. It's just circumstance that the cheapest sugars are most common. You're not immune to the harms of sugar because you eat honey instead. You're only better off because you pay more attention to your food generally.
You can't say they're unfounded absolutely. Probably overblown but I don't think a modest amount of honey in someone's diet is detrimental whereas I'd say a modest amount of table sugar in someone's diet is detrimental. I notice a big difference with even a little bit of sugar whereas not much with honey. You could call it placebo effect of course & I couldn't prove you wrong.On any practical scale honey is around 80% sugar and 20% water. The sugars might be a bit better, but they're still sugars. It's not much sweeter, particularly if you discount the water. The vitamins/minerals are negligible, you need to eat food for those things anyway. Any speculative "health giving properties" are unfounded, and I doubt it's likely that anything would be significant anyway at the scale of a reasonable amount of sweetener one could include in their diet.
I don't agree & I'd be willing to put money behind my hypothesis (if anyone ever did a large scale study on people eating raw honey sweetened sauces & dressings & snacks vs. sugary ones, course this would never happen but if it did). I'm not saying honey is a wonderfood, just that it's not close to as bad as table sugar.I won't dispute that raw honey (not supermarket honey) has a lower glycemic index. Overall, honey is really not much better than table sugar. It's pretty much just as bad as table sugar.
No, eating too much is what makes people fat. If carbs alone made people fat the rice eating Chinese would be among the fattest people.Sugars and carbs and not fat are what are making people fat.
Depends on overall caloric intake & also activity level of course. Glad you're feeling better.I've lost 12-14 pounds in under 2 months by limiting my carb/sugar consumption to <20g a day, cheating once/twice/thrice a week and sticking to a high-fat diet
Not only that, I also feel a lot more energetic and far less lethargic.
It's really blown my mind. I've increased my bacon consumption by a factor of 5 at least. That's supposed to make you fat, right? WRONG
Agreed.The food pyramid is a lie.
Our ancestors highly valued starchy roots & anthropologists speculate the adaptation to digest starch may have been a major factor in human evolution.Human stomachs aren't built to process as many carbs & sugars as we consume these days. For millions of years our ancestors were eating meats, fruits, berries, and nuts, and that's pretty much it - that's the sort of food that our stomachs have evolved to process the best. Breads, pastas, etc. only entered the picture 6,000 years ago or so - that's not enough time for significant changes to occur to our digestive systems via evolution.
I'm definitely curious. I've never done a low carb diet. I lived with a guy who was raw paleo for awhile & ate virtually no carbs (a small fruit of some kind every couple days or so) and he seemed ok (though not super energetic). I think humans are capable of adapting to all sorts of diets, it's one of our strong suits.If anyone's curious about my diet (I prefer to call it a lifestyle), it's called keto. It works as follows: Once you limit your sugar/carb intake to 20g a day or less, your body will stop producing insulin (or it limits its production at least). When that happens your body starts using up stored fat for energy - by eating sugars and fats you are basically telling your body to store the energy as fat instead.
6 months into the diet you are "allowed" to eat up to 50/60g of carbs/sugars a day. The details are up to you though - I've modified the diet by cheating on weekends for example, and once I reach my ideal weight I will probably eat a sandwich here and there, have some pasta, etc. I won't overwhelm my body with tons of sugars & carbs - moderation is key. Pop is def. off my menu no matter what.
When they overeat them they do. Again, common sense says that as a general principle that's not true since most of the world's poorest people eat primarily carbs.So yeah, it's true.. Sugars and carbs make people fat.
Isn't chocolate powder already chocolate? Why not just buy chocolate?Chocolate powder, chocolate butter (cacao butter) and honey. Mix it up. You have to heat the cacao butter a bit since it's melting point is 90F or so IIRC.
I'm not saying honey is a wonderfood, just that it's not close to as bad as table sugar.
No, eating too much is what makes people fat. If carbs alone made people fat the rice eating Chinese would be among the fattest people.
Narz said:Our ancestors highly valued starchy roots & anthropologists speculate the adaptation to digest starch may have been a major factor in human evolution.
Narz said:I'm definitely curious. I've never done a low carb diet. I lived with a guy who was raw paleo for awhile & ate virtually no carbs (a small fruit of some kind every couple days or so) and he seemed ok (though not super energetic). I think humans are capable of adapting to all sorts of diets, it's one of our strong suits.
Narz said:When they overeat them they do. Again, common sense says that as a general principle that's not true since most of the world's poorest people eat primarily carbs.
Sugar is empty calories with nothing else in it. So yeah, that's bad.So is the majority of stuff in sugar not bad for you, and it's only some trace stuff in table sugar that makes it bad?
It's not quite as concentrated and it's lower on the glycemic index. Humans have been eating honey since before we were humans but processed cane sugar is fairly new & is associated with a ton of health problems that honey is not. It appears to have some anti-bacterial, anti-microbial properties & generally doesn't seem as harmful as sugar. There's still alot about nutrition we're learning so why it's not as bad is not fully understood yet.Or is the majority of stuff in sugar bad, but honey has trace stuff that cancels out the badness?
It seems hard to know for sure because Americans eat so much fat and sugar and also hundreds more Calories than they need every day.Obviously if you eat more calories than you burn off, consistently, you will gain weight, no matter what you eat. I was speaking more generally - the obesity problem in north america (if you can call it that) is mostly due to sugars and carbs - not fat
Well they didn't have wonderbread! A starchy root (or some wild honey) was a nice treat. Eventually tribal people began to cultivate root crops or at least find them regularly but I agree, it's not like they were going to down on starch, let alone grains, 3x a day.That's interesting, I will have to look more into that. I'm not even an armchair nutritionist, by any means, this stuff is mostly new to me.. but the thing is that we are consuming way too many sugary & carby foods these days. Our stomachs can't handle that much crap - they're used to processing a more balanced diet consisting of meats, berries, vegetables, etc. some starches sure, but how much of the caveman diet did those make up? I really have no idea, but I'd have to guess "not much"
I can see the appeal. It does seem that low-carb works for many people. I'm curious to try it as it'd be good for my willpower even if I eventually went back.I didn't think it'd work - but I am down 12 pounds and it seems like I haven't really put any effort into this - aside from resisting the temptation to drink a coke or eat a pizza.
But as long as your active your body will burn the carbs.The world's poorest people likely don't consume as many calories as they need per day - which is why they aren't obese.
If you severely limit your carb/sugar intake and replace all those calories with fats and proteins, you will lose weight. When you eat carbs, your body produces insulin, which sends a signal that fat should be stored. and so it is. If there is no insulin your body will be burning off that stored fat.
Stopping & rethinking what you're doing/eating/thinking/etc. is almost always a good thing (especially if you do it often).I'm still surprised that it works, but it's really made me stop and rethink what I eat