Jocelyn Campbell wrote:
Good point. Personally, I would not grow corn. I don't eat it. I was mentioning starches for the benefit of others--those who would miss bread and might be looking for the best grain option.
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Kate@LivingTheFrugalLife wrote:
Deppe is not a dilettante. She has done her homework - as a gardener, a botanist, and a nutritionist - on potatoes, corn, squash, beans and eggs. I very much doubt there is any better book out there on a growing the staple crops for a resilient diet in temperate climates. She does not claim that those five crops constitute a nutritious, complete diet. She claims, convincingly, that they can form a reliable, and nutritious foundation for a sustainable diet.
Idle dreamer
paul wheaton wrote:
I would like to suggest that we consider wild foods that are harvested with knowledge. And we can consider stuff we have helped produce that were produced with knowledge.
Idle dreamer
flaja wrote:
Where on earth are you located? Does your butcher deliver? Here in Florida I am doing good to find non-organic hamburger (20% or more fat) for less than $2 a pound. Ground chuck is easily $3 a pound.
Ludi wrote:
Try collards, they are a staple southern green. And as high in calcium by weight as milk, if I remember correctly. Will grow all year and are delicious.
flaja wrote:
Eating nothing but wild food would certainly cause starvation for many because the earth's natural carrying capacity could not feed 6 billion people.
Idle dreamer
Len wrote:
I have made bread from nuts that rivals most store bought bread.... though it doesn't taste as good as the wheat and rye breads I make at home.
flaja wrote:
I can be bitten and have a mark a year later.
Idle dreamer
paul wheaton wrote:
I would like to suggest that we consider wild foods that are harvested with knowledge.
flaja wrote:
Doesn’t the very definition of wild food mean it is something for which you don’t have a record of what the food has been exposed to?
Idle dreamer
flaja wrote:
Who can afford bread made from nuts?
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flaja wrote:
Doesn’t the very definition of wild food mean it is something for which you don’t have a record of what the food has been exposed to?
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paul wheaton wrote:I guess I am missing your point. The thread is about food for a year. The folks that lived in montana 300 years ago managed to go many years on food that was wild or that they cultivated. I don't remember anything about records.
flaja wrote:
Who can afford bread made from nuts? I bought a bag of almonds just before Christmas from Sam’s Club. I went back last week to buy another bag and the cost has gone from $7 a pound to $9 a pound. Pecans and walnuts are about the same. I couldn’t fathom making bread from nuts.
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flaja wrote:Don’t get so hung up on starches. Other than some vitamins and minerals something like potatoes provide nothing other than starch, i.e. calories. Your body needs both fat and protein.
The body needs protein and fat. Your body doesn't actually need starches or carbohydrates at all.Emerson White wrote:Your body needs all three
Warren David wrote:
but the fact of the matter is we do not need carbs.
Idle dreamer
flaja wrote:
Who can afford bread made from nuts? I bought a bag of almonds just before Christmas from Sam’s Club. I went back last week to buy another bag and the cost has gone from $7 a pound to $9 a pound. Pecans and walnuts are about the same. I couldn’t fathom making bread from nuts.
You can try and twist it
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craftylittlemonkey wrote:
Starchy carbs maybe but plants are carbs and we do need those.
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paul wheaton wrote:
Posts that suggest that anybody on permies.com is less than perfect will be deleted.
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craftylittlemonkey wrote:
Ludi, oddly enough I have been conversing online with a woman of Inupiaq descent lately. The traditional diet leads to a great instance of osteoporosis and heart disease, constipation and chronic disease.
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
It's not just an opinion. It's a medical fact. That's why I posted it. We do not need to eat carbs. It's useful information seeing as it is pertinent to the topic being discussed.craftylittlemonkey wrote:
Well, I don't think what I said was trying to "twist" anything. It's opinion, just as your statement is.
Pakanohida wrote:
Organic ground beef is $3/lb here.
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