Yummy! Think I'll just fry me up some of those anemic store bought eggs in some plastic for supper.And doesn't that sound downright delicious!
Yummy! Think I'll just fry me up some of those anemic store bought eggs in some plastic for supper.And doesn't that sound downright delicious!
Yummy! Think I'll just fry me up some of those anemic store bought eggs in some plastic for supper.uke:
Well, that's somewhat my point. For sometime now, we have had what is referred to as "The Easy Aisle". It's right at the front of the store (in mine it's right beside aisle one). It contains things like milk, chocolate milk, water, health drinks, pop etc. Things that people just want to pop in quick for. It's right next to the bread aisle (sort of a part of the same aisle), it's next to the produce, the newspapers etc. It truly is the Easy Aisle. I suggested to the last lazy customer that she may want to pick her milk up there but she said "No, she would like someone to get it for her"."(the ones we really love are the truly lazy who come to the till and say "I forgot milk. Would you send someone to get it for me - I don't feel like walking to the back of the store")."- I think they do that for good reason.........It's beyond me why all the staples, bread, eggs, milk etc. are always located at the back of the store.
Yeah. We used to hit Armstrong Cheese when we went through Armstrong, BC. That was before that giant jackass Saputo bought it, moved it to AB, and screwed up the flavor. Used to be local range fed cow milk that Armstrong used, but I bet now it's grain fed cow milk.It has a fairly strong flavour, a bit more 'earthy' than goats cheese, but I enjoyed it in moderate doses. With good wine, of course.
For 'everyday' eating, nothing beats a good old cheddar - back in the early 70s, there was a little Black Diamond cheese plant north of Belleville, Ont; you could watch through the window as they messed around with the curds and whey.
I thought the queen never left the hive unless there were two queens. Oh, well, I'm not an apiarist. I just love honey and bees. lolI think they do it in mid-air (Gawd, I guess they do EVERYTHING on the fly) so I don't think you'd find any of the body parts in the beehive. At least, I don't think so...never checked!
It wouldn't surprise me in the least. It's artificially saturated or hydrogenated veggie fat. It isn't easily broken down by the body's enzymes and I think I read somewhere where it releases free radicals into the body, too. Les calls it yellow grease.Cooking with margarine turns it into plastic.
Yeah. We used to hit Armstrong Cheese when we went through Armstrong, BC. That was before that giant jackass Saputo bought it, moved it to AB, and screwed up the flavor. Used to be local range fed cow milk that Armstrong used, but I bet now it's grain fed cow milk.
It wouldn't surprise me in the least. It's artificially saturated or hydrogenated veggie fat. It isn't easily broken down by the body's enzymes and I think I read somewhere where it releases free radicals into the body, too. Les calls it yellow grease.
Yep, and when you add in the artifical colours, stabilizers, and flavourings you have a real greasy chemical mixture totally unfit for human consumption. But hey, as long as the manufacturer paid for their "Heart Smart" logo on it, people will buy it, right? And they call this stuff "food?"
Yep, and make sure you heat those yolks right up so you can transform the fat in them right into artery-clogging bad fat. (Or maybe just poach or boil them, which means the yolks can only get as hot as boiling water - about 200 or 300 degrees (F) lower than a hot frying pan. And guess what? The fats don't turn lethal on ya'! Just make sure the chickens were fed something other than growth hormones, ground up animal parts & rendered blood, and of course, those super bug-producing antibiotics. Woo, those fried eggs are sounding worse all the time!
beans will give you a good run for your money
Two docs when I asked them which was better between margarine and butter, both said margarine and of all the different brands Becel is supposed to be the best.
Which Becel? Original, Olive Oil, etc etc....
Which Becel? Original, Olive Oil, etc etc....
The average doctor (not the naturopaths) doesn't get a lot of training in nutrition...a few days at best, out of all those years in school. A doctor would be about the last person I'd listen to on food and nutrition, unless - once again - he/she is a trained naturopath...that's different...they do understand food and its impact on health. You still have to make your own decisions of course, but it's always good to gather good advice when doing so.
Never mind the pretty labels...you can take perfectly good olive oil and wreck it by overheating it. And a processed 'food' (like margarine) is very processed.
I tend to ask the dieticians that I know. Most of the GPs that I know do not, as you've said, have any special knowledge about nutrition. Some even drink alcohol!
I tend to ask the dieticians that I know. Most of the GPs that I know do not, as you've said, have any special knowledge about nutrition. Some even drink alcohol!
They never said and I never asked not realizing there was more than one kind (I never buy it, just make sure to get "non hydrogenated") Olive oil is actually good for you, the best cooking oil, but you have to be careful not to burn it.
...or worse. The day I saw an internal specialist munching on a Wendy's Baconator and a large order of fries with a giant diet cola, I knew there was something wrong with the picture.