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[email protected] medavis5@gmail.com is offline
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Default What are processed foods?

On Wednesday, April 3, 2013 1:28:41 PM UTC-4, Julie Bove wrote:
> "jmcquown" > wrote in message
>
> ...
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> > On 4/3/2013 10:41 AM, Pico Rico wrote:

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> >> "jmcquown" > wrote in message

>
> >> ...

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> >>> On 4/3/2013 3:54 AM, sf wrote:

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> >>>> On Tue, 2 Apr 2013 23:58:42 -0700, "Julie Bove"

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> >>>> > wrote:

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> >>>>

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> >>>>> I just looked this up because I realized that I really didn't know for

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> >>>>> sure.

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> >>>>> But it looks to me like if it isn't raw meat, fruit or vegetables, it

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> >>>>> is

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> >>>>> processed.

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> >>>>>

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> >>>>> Nuts out of the shell are processed. Milk is processed. So are

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> >>>>> cheese

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> >>>>> and

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> >>>>> yogurt. If it's frozen? It's processed. Even if it is simply

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> >>>>> vegetables

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> >>>>> or fruit with nothing added. Flour would be processed. So would rice

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> >>>>> and

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> >>>>> pasta of all kinds. Anything in a can is processed. Dried foods are

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> >>>>> processed. If you cook it? You've processed it.

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> >>>>>

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> >>>>> So I'd be willing to bet that unless you are a raw vegan whole

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> >>>>> foodist,

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> >>>>> you

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> >>>>> are eating processed foods!

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> >>>>>

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> >>>>

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> >>>> I think most people are thinking of foods with additives/preservatives

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> >>>> when they think "processed".

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> >>>>

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> >>> Yep, she's confusing "preparation" with "processing".

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> >>>

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> >>> Examples: I *prepare* mashed potatoes by boiling them, adding milk and

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> >>> butter and mashing them. Using a box of dried potato flakes or a

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> >>> container of refrigerated heat & eat mashed potatoes is "processed"

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> >>> food.

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> >>

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> >>

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> >> So if I "*prepare* mashed potatoes by boiling them, adding milk and

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> >> butter

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> >> and mashing them", put it in the fridge, and then give it to you, it has

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> >> become a "refrigerated heat & eat mashed potatoes [that] is "processed"

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> >> food"? I don't get it.

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> >>

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> > I do believe you get it. You're just being contrary. I'm talking abut

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> > home made vs. storebought. Sure, if you "prepare" mashed potatoes,

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> > package them and sell them in quantities in plastic tubs it's going to

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> > require some sort of chemical stabilizer. Read the label on this tub of

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> > potatoes:

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> >

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> > http://www.hormel.com/products/Variety.aspx?ID=28&

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> >

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> > Oh yum! A Hormel product! That's processed food. Okay?

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> >

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> >> People here talk about dehydrating stuff all the time. If you or I

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> >> dehydrate something at home it is "processed"?

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> >>

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> >>

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> > You know better than that. The Betty Crocker dehydrated potato slices

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> > crap has been sitting in a warehouse for who the hell knows how long? If

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> > you dehydrate it yourself, you prepared it. Fresh. That's the

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> > difference.

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>
>
> But it's still processed. I looked this up because someone said to me that
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> it looked like I bought a lot of processed food. So I said to myself...
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> Just what is processed food! And it's not what I thought it was. I thought
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> it was stuff like bologna, hot dogs, Velveeta, Spaghettios. And they are
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> but so are most of the other things we find in a grocery store. And once we
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> cut into them or cook them, we have processed them too. So that business
>
> about avoiding processed foods is a bunch of hooey.


I know you're...slow...but you can't possibly be this stupid. Please reread all the responses to your original post and try to read for comprehension this time, instead of looking for openings to demonstrate what a unique flower you are.