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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Posted to rec.sport.pro-wrestling,alt.support.diet.low-carb,rec.food.cooking,rec.martial-arts,alt.fan.cecil-adams
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![]() Lord Hatred wrote: > In article >, > Dana Carpender > wrote: > > >>Lord Hatred wrote: >> >> >>>In article > , >>> Dana Carpender > wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>Lord Hatred wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>>>In article >, >>>>>Dana Carpender > wrote: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>>Krusty wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>>"Dana Carpender" > wrote >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>>Blair P. Houghton wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>Dana Carpender wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>And yeah, since grains and beans in any quantity have only been part >>>>>>>>>>of >>>>>>>>>>the human diet for 10,000 of the 2 million or more years we've been >>>>>>>>>>around, it's really hard to see how they're essential. Research >>>>>>>>>>indicates that the hunter/gatherer diet generally consisted of >>>>>>>>>>roughly >>>>>>>>>>50%-60% animal food, and the rest vegetables, wild (very low sugar) >>>>>>>>>>fruit in season, and nuts and seeds. Sounds about like my diet. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>You know nothing about evolution, either. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>Nice assertion. Care to back it up? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>Yeah you ****ing idiot. Human Beings haven't been around for 2 million >>>>>>>years. >>>>>>> >>>>>>>What else do you want to know. >>>>>> >>>>>>Cite? >>>>>> >>>>>>This suggests roots 3 million years back: >>>>>>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/231442.stm >>>>>> >>>>>>And we've been homo sapiens for an estimated 200,000 years. If you want >>>>>>to go by that, we were still hunter-gatherers for 80% of our existance. >>>>>> >>>>>>Or do you believe the world was created in 4004 BC? Because if you do, >>>>>>we can talk about who's the idiot. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> So you are calling Krusty an idiot by agreeing that you made an >>>>>ignorant statement? Good job. I think that's a new one on UseNet. >>>> >>>> >>>>Nope. It's a question of what you want to call "human history." I was >>>>clarifying, and making the point that even if you want to go with the >>>>narrowest possible definition, we still, as a species, have an >>>>overwhelming history of eating a hunter-gatherer diet, which makes >>>>claims that grains and beans are essential for human health ridiculous. >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> So you're saying you approve of using evolution as it pertains to the >>>origin of homosapien but against the usage of the evolution of >>>homosapien as a creature itself as it pertains to dietary requirements? >>>You can't have it both ways. >> >> >>No, I'm unconvinced that 10,000 years -- maybe 500 generations -- is >>long enough for evolution to have completely altered our nutritional >>requirements. If grains and beans weren't essential for the first >>190,000 years (and our forerunners for roughly 2 million years previous >>to that), there's no reason why they should be essential now. If a diet >>based on animal foods, vegetables, fruit (keeping in mind that modern >>fruit is candy compared to wild fruit), nuts and seeds, and the like, >>nourished our ancestors well for 190,000 years (and again, their >>forebears for another 2 million years), there's no reason why it >>shouldn't do so now. > > > > What about cooking meat? If you're going to go this route then you > should go all the way with your argument. Early man did not cook meat. > Thus, it is unnecessary for us to do so now. True enough. And I rather like carpaccio. It's actually unhealthy to > do so! The human body wasn't designed to eat cooked meat. Also. hell, > why eat every day? They didn't! I don't know that we know that. Indeed, I've read studies indicating that the average hunter-gatherer ate a diet that compared pretty well, calorically speaking, with the average non-impoverished citizen of a third world country, and higher in calories than your average impoverished member of first-world countries. They went days without eating. Cite? We should > too! It's healthy with out current lifestyles to not eat everyday. So > here's what you do. Go to the local wooded lands, pick a few random > berries. Bring them home. Feast on them for a good day or two. Then go > out and kill yourself a deer. Drag it back home. Use a sharp rock to cut > it open. Don't use knives. Early man didn't use them. They used rocks. > We weren't meant to use knives. Use the sharp rock to ct open that deer. > Cut off a slab and eat it. Yum. Feel those all natural life giving > juices fill your mouth! Feel them dribbling down your chin. This is what > man was meant to do! Be covered in blood. Eat nothing but that deer > until it goes rancid. Funny you should mention it. I have venison in the fridge right now. Also grass-fed beef. >>Furthermore, I see evidence that a diet based on concentrated >>carbohydrate foods is a good idea. Do a quick pubmed search on >>"glycemic load," and see what turns up. > > > Bah Gawd! Eating too many carbs is bad for you! Somebody alert the > media! This might cause widespread obesity and other health disorders! > I'm glad you saved me! I almost ate this entire bag of sugar and drank > this nice thick glass of flour and water! Probably not. But have you eaten a plate of pasta recently? Same thing, nutritionally speaking. But if you agree that eating a high glycemic load is a bad idea, what the hell are you arguing about? Dana |
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