This girl at school? She told me that gelatin is made from ground-up cow's feet and that every time you eat Jell-O there's some cow out there limping around without any feet. But I told her that I'm sure the cow is dead before they cut its feet off, right?

Dawn ,'Never Leave Me'


Natter 56: ...we need the writers.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


amych - Feb 04, 2008 9:52:51 am PST #7331 of 10001
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I always took the "what grandparents would recognize as food" suggestion as an elimination of things like "methylchloroisothiazolinone".

Yeah, this is clearly what he means -- and as such I agree with it -- but the fact that I've had this same conversation a bunch of times tells me dude has some serious communication issues.


brenda m - Feb 04, 2008 9:56:54 am PST #7332 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Some of my great grandparents lived on biscuits, cornbread and cured pork products, plus a couple of kinds of vegetables cooked to mush with more pork products.

Less than five ingredients, though!


libkitty - Feb 04, 2008 10:16:13 am PST #7333 of 10001
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

I had Chun King chop suey (or maybe chow mein?) in a can for many, many a childhood dinner. Really two cans, because you got the exciting extra can of crunchy noodles to sprinkle on top.

This was all I knew of Chinese food as a kid. I always thought I hated Chinese food, until I visited my dad in Marin when I was in college, and I told him this. He took me to Chinatown in SF and ordered for me. ZOMG, teh yum. I love Chinese food!

his feeling is that Intuit - on their seal blubber and lichen diet - were/are healthier than the average American do to what the average American.

Most Inuit today don't really eat a traditional diet. Even if they do mostly, what I've seen was drowned with soda. In fact, when I visited Barrow, I noticed a lot of young children with gold or silver teeth. It turns out that they take them in to the dentist and get caps on all their teeth as a preventative measure. To counteract the effects of drinking soda from baby bottles.

Assuming a true traditional diet, there are still terrible problems with environmental toxins that tend to accumulate in the fats that they eat. Mercury levels in hair and mother's milk in some areas of Alaska are kind of mindboggling.

edited for grammar.


Scrappy - Feb 04, 2008 10:16:17 am PST #7334 of 10001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

My assistant just ran into my office to tell me I HAD TO watch this video: [link]

And now I am running in here to tell all of you the same thing.


megan walker - Feb 04, 2008 10:46:29 am PST #7335 of 10001
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

Sorry to start a whole thing and then disappear, but the higher-ups are here from NY and I’ve been in a meeting all morning.

The list I posted is a set of guidelines to help you eat food that is less processed. They are not meant to be taken literally. If the food has oodles of ingredients, it is more likely that it is processed and there might be things you don’t want to eat, or things that our bodies haven’t figured out how to process efficiently. His point about traditional foods is that they have evolved (and been tested on humans) over centuries. One example he uses is tofu. Soy as tofu is something that is time-tested; other soy products, or randomly adding soy to everything, not so much.

I always took the "what grandparents would recognize as food" suggestion as an elimination of things like "methylchloroisothiazolinone".

Or, what Trudy said.

As for chicken, eggs, and beef, “free range” doesn’t necessarily mean very much (as Jess said) and he does mean grass-finished. Because people are starting to demand grass-fed cows, marketers use the term grass finished to appeal these people, even if the cows are primarily grain fed.


msbelle - Feb 04, 2008 10:49:03 am PST #7336 of 10001
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I am hitting a wall. post-lunch/repetitive paperwork/end of internets.

please to post/send links


lori - Feb 04, 2008 10:53:15 am PST #7337 of 10001

Happy semi-nekkid Gracie [link]

Grace reading, sleeping.

Noah sitting!, not sitting.


§ ita § - Feb 04, 2008 11:00:37 am PST #7338 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

There are things my great- grandmothes recognized as food that I simply will not. Never. Lutefisk, people.

I'm probably more likely to try people than lutefisk, presuming humane killing, etc.


megan walker - Feb 04, 2008 11:05:01 am PST #7339 of 10001
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

ION, I still haven't decided whom to vote for tomorrow. I hate to be a one-issue voter, but I think I'm just going to have to pick the candidate whose position is closest to mine in the three issues closest to my heart.


meara - Feb 04, 2008 11:07:38 am PST #7340 of 10001

Heh. I figure my (paternal) grandpa was a farmer, and he grew a lot of soy. So tofu and edamame, he may not have eaten, and may not have recognized as real food, but I'm down with them! :)