Ask me about food.
How Permies.com Works (lots of useful links)
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Mark Shepard wrote:
The biggest way that we ingest nuts is via pork. Our family of 4 will eat 2 entire hazelnut and chestnut finished pigs per year.
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Mark Shepard wrote:
Q: What do your kids like and dislike most, and how do you handle the different palates at your table?
Well, I know it may sound hard to believe, but our kids eat everything they're served... Probably the "stir-fry du-jour" or "mexican mess" is their go-to favorites.
At the table we eat what is served. Sometimes the boys sheepishly ask if we'll buy them some bread. (since we don't eat grains we don't bother to make bread) We'll go ahead and buy a loaf, but they rarely finish it before it molds. When you grow up not eating that stuff, it's not a part of your habit so you just don't eat it.
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Ask me about food.
How Permies.com Works (lots of useful links)
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Xisca Nicolas wrote: I think it is possible to eat a lot more fat and proteins than usually assumed,
when sugar and starch are not part of the diet.
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Cj Verde wrote:Not sure about RAW nuts but... although almonds are good for you they aren't nuts.
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
So what’s the deal? Why do nuts get a pass, while grains and legumes get condemned?
First of all, grains and legumes are generally seen as dietary staples. They form the foundation of meals. People don’t have a “small handful” of refried pinto beans (and not just because that’s an incredibly messy way to eat them) or “one or two” grains of brown rice. They eat plates of this stuff, they rely on them for protein and calories, and sure enough, cultures whose diets are based on (improperly prepared) grains and legumes often suffer the symptoms of widespread mineral deficiencies, like nutritional rickets.
Nuts, on the other hand, are an adornment to a meal or a snack in between. A condiment. They are not meals themselves.
Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/nuts-and-phytic-acid/#ixzz2ITQSrbh7
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Erik Shepard wrote:Being the kid, I think I can add a little to this.
Oh wait, did I mention it was grass-fed, hazelnut finished organic meat?
Cj Verde wrote:Well, almonds are actually seeds.
Aren't all nuts seeds?
Alex Brands wrote:
Aren't all nuts seeds?
wikipedia wrote: Some fruits and seeds that do not meet the botanical definition but are nuts in the culinary sense:
Almonds, Pecans, and Walnuts are the edible seeds of drupe fruits — the leathery "flesh" is removed at harvest.
Brazil nut is the seed from a capsule.
Candlenut (used for oil) is a seed.
Cashew is a seed.[4]
Chilean hazelnut or Gevuina
Horse-chestnut is an inedible capsule.
Macadamia is a creamy white kernel (Macadamia integrifolia and Macadamia tetraphylla).
Malabar chestnut
Mongongo
Peanut is a seed and a legume of the family Fabaceae.
Pine nut is the seed of several species of pine (coniferous trees).
Pistachio is the seed of a thin-shelled drupe.
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Erik Shepard wrote:
Being the kid, I think I can add a little to this. It is very true that my brother and I readily consume pretty much anything. I think that the statistic my dad gave of meals being 1/4 protein is usually the low end. Often we'll just have a sausage patty for breakfast, or just a beef burger or porkchops for dinner (Oh wait, did I mention it was grass-fed, hazelnut finished organic meat?). I think a better stat would be "anywhere from 25-75% protein".
The ONLY food dislikes:
The huge quantities of our market produce rejects (especially shittakes and asparagus) gave me and my brother an ... ... unappetizing relationship with these foods. Just imagine 3 meals a day of asparagus for the length of the season. Even the pigs stop eating it. Not kidding either! To this day, I am not overly fond of either of the above foods. I am working on it, and enjoy them far more than I used to, but still... you want a meal with ASPARAGUS?!? WHY? So, if you don't want your kids to dislike a certain food, do your best to not feed them extensive quantities of it!
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
Joshua Simon wrote:Hey Mark I meant to ask you this at the course. What types of groundcover are in your Forrest garden? Also how do you manage your wood lot?
Ask me about food.
How Permies.com Works (lots of useful links)
Leila Rich wrote:
Joshua Simon wrote:Hey Mark I meant to ask you this at the course. What types of groundcover are in your Forrest garden? Also how do you manage your wood lot?
This is an old thread, but other people may well be able to give you ideas
Joshua Simon wrote:Marks last response was on July 21st. You consider that old?
Ok thanks
Our projects:
in Portugal, sheltered terraces facing eastwards, high water table, uphill original forest of pines, oaks and chestnuts. 2000m2
in Iceland: converted flat lawn, compacted poor soil, cold, windy, humid climate, cold, short summer. 50m2
I think I'm turning Japanese. I really think so. This tiny ad thinks so too:
Switching from electric heat to a rocket mass heater reduces your carbon footprint as much as parking 7 cars
http://woodheat.net
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