is simply a statement of food prejudice. You don't like there, therefore they're worthless.
The starches/sugars in a plain baked potato are very blood sugar reactive, truly. The glycemic index of foods measures the blood sugar/insulin reaction to 50g of carbs from foods (more info here). On a scale where the body's reaction to 50g of pure glucose is 100, enough plain baked potato to provide 50g of carbs scores 85 or so (they vary). Table sugar is 59 and potato chips are 51.
Eh? It's a part of managing my health to know that sort of thing. At the moment, also the health of my fetus. I have a very strong family history of diabetes.Ysabella, seriously, you need to get out more.....
The short answer to that is that it takes ten calories of wheat to produce one calorie of meat (according to this recent Economist article on wheat), but of course, that doesn't go into the whole protein/fats/carbohydrates/fiber nitty-gritty. I'm sure it also takes less effort, calorie for calorie, to grow sugar beets than raise cattle, but somehow I suspect that an all-sugar diet isn't going to do anyone any good.We need to address the resource and energy claim...
How much grain must a person eat to gain the same benefits as from eating meat? Compare the energy/calories from one cow to how many acres of grain that must be grown to equal it.
Unless that was rather subtle joke, the only way that even remotely begins to make sense is if you refuse to accept that predators are animals as well. Most predators require a diet comprised (almost) entirely of animal matter to survive, so preventing predators from killing will doom many species to extinction. Moreover, removing predators from an ecosystem is a short and speedy way to screwing up that ecosystem entirely. My favorite example is what happened after grey wolves were eradicated from Yellowstone National Park in 1926 (I volunteer as a tour guide at a wolf sanctuary, so this is a particular area of interest to me). Wolves are an "apex predator" - they're at the top of the food chain, and I like to extend that metaphor by pointing out that when you remove the top link by which a chain is suspended, the whole chain will come crashing down. Without the wolves around to keep them in check, the local elk and bison herds expanded, resulting in overgrazing; you would have been hard-pressed to find a mature willow or aspen in Yellowstone between 1930 and 1990. Removal of the predators didn't allow the elk and bison to live full and happy lives either; because they overgrazed in summer, many would starve to death when winter rolled around (leaving carcasses littering the landscape, yay).I also think that the fact [animals] get torn apart by predators is awful too. Personally I find all these TV programmes showing animals being torn apart is extremely upsetting. I think it's wrong we don't intervene.
Eh? It's a part of managing my health to know that sort of thing. At the moment, also the health of my fetus. I have a very strong family history of diabetes.
The short answer to that is that it takes ten calories of wheat to produce one calorie of meat (according to this recent Economist article on wheat), but of course, that doesn't go into the whole protein/fats/carbohydrates/fiber nitty-gritty. I'm sure it also takes less effort, calorie for calorie, to grow sugar beets than raise cattle,
http://www.hormel.com/templates/knowledge/knowledge.asp?catitemid=132&id=1011Carbohydrates account for 65 to 90 percent of the calorie content of grain. Protein usually accounts for 7 to 15 percent of the calories and the fat content, contained wholly within the germ, makes up the remainder of the calories.
Grains are a "rich" source of protein, but the protein lacks some of the essential amino acids that are only obtained from animal sources.
http://www.krispin.com/protein.htmlA healthy man, 175 lbs./79.54 kilos, exercising regularly with no health problems would need 72 (71.59) grams of protein per day. That works out to about 24 grams per meal.
LEAN MEAT, FISH, POULTRY - 25-30 grams per 3 1/2 OZ.
OATMEAL, COOKED - 5 grams per CUP
Amazing what you can "prove" when you cherry-pick your data like that.I don't like beans enough to eat them as much as I'd have to, and then how much raisins to get me enough iron. Ick.
Gimme my steak!
See, I personally took the if-I-can't-kill-it-myself-I-shouldn't-eat-it argument to heart, and got me a shotgun and started huntingWhich may not have quite been the intended outcome of those making the argument.
I couldn't really say. There are no bad foods, per se, so I wouldn't say 'potatoes are bad,' but there are bad diets/bad habits. If you're eating potatoes to the exclusion of other things, all the time, more variety would be better for your long-term health. If you're just on a potato kick this week or this month, there's no harm in that.I don't have diabetes. I got tested about a year ago because I had high blood pressure. I eat a huge quantity of oven baked "fries", either ones that I make myself from "King Edwards" variety of potato prepared in olive oil, or ready frozen from the supermarket prepared in sunflower seed oil. I have no idea what varity of potato they use as they never specify on the bag. I also put a large quantity of vinegar on.
So will this be bad for my health?
Cherry pick nothing. Read the entire page that I provided and didn't cherry pick from. And then give me your best sources instead of just saying there are better. Give me your suggested daily diet. I didn't find anything appealing that would get me anywhere near a suitable diet of protein, iron, and amino acids. You say it can be done. Show me how. NO MEAT, not even fish. I don't want to be downing a bunch of supplements either.Amazing what you can "prove" when you cherry-pick your data like that.
You do realize that there are other vegetable protein sources that are much higher in protein than grains right? And that some of them have an even higher percentage than meat, with a nearly identical amino acid profile? And that according to the WHO and FDA, amino acids from soy are rated as more bio-available than animal sources?
And you are aware that Americans in general get many times the amount of protein that they actually need? And that high protein intake (from animal sources) is linked to osteoporosis?
Similar for iron. Raisins are not the only, nor even the best, source.
The "vegetarians have a hard time getting protein/iron" nonsense has been long-since debunked. The only issue with a purely vegan diet is obtaining sufficient vitamin B12.
Bear in mind, though, soy has drawbacks for some people. Some soy products contain plant estrogens, which can be a problem; it's recommended especially to watch children's intake of those. Also, soy isoflavones are goitrogenic - they have an anti-thyroid action. I have hypothyroidism and have to take thyroid supplements for life, so I have to bear this kind of thing in mind. I mean, the odd miso soup won't hurt anything, but if I decided to start drinking soy milk every day, I'd have to tell my doctor and titrate my meds to account for it.You do realize that there are other vegetable protein sources that are much higher in protein than grains right? And that some of them have an even higher percentage than meat, with a nearly identical amino acid profile? And that according to the WHO and FDA, amino acids from soy are rated as more bio-available than animal sources?
On the other hand, Americans also tend to eat 300+ grams of carbs in a day, way more than anybody needs (well, I'm sure Lance Armstrong can burn more than that). And a lot of 'em are simple sugars. Vegetarianism will not automatically make the diet better, as lots of simple sugars are in animal-free products. High-fructose corn syrup is animal-free, but it's still crap.And you are aware that Americans in general get many times the amount of protein that they actually need? And that high protein intake (from animal sources) is linked to osteoporosis?
And some plants can block iron absorption. Soy has iron, but it has phytates too.Similar for iron. Raisins are not the only, nor even the best, source.
I would say, that depends on the individual. Some will thrive on a vegan diet, and some will not.The "vegetarians have a hard time getting protein/iron" nonsense has been long-since debunked. The only issue with a purely vegan diet is obtaining sufficient vitamin B12.
And you are aware that Americans in general get many times the amount of protein that they actually need? And that high protein intake (from animal sources) is linked to osteoporosis?
http://www.vitacost.com/science/hn/Concern/Osteoporosis.htmThese conflicting findings may occur in part because dietary protein produces opposing effects on bone. On one hand, dietary protein increases the loss of calcium in urine,17 18 which should increase the risk of osteoporosis. On the other hand, normal bone formation requires adequate dietary protein, and low dietary protein intake has been associated with low bone mineral density.19 Current research shows that finding the line between too much protein and too little protein remains elusive, though extremes in protein intake—either high or low—might possibly increase the risk of osteoporosis.
Oh what a load of cobblers.People hunger for high quality protein to the extent of eating dead humans, even if they have to murder to get it. I thought that point was obvious. Doesn't cannibalism make animal rights activism look really, really foolish?
I`ve been a vegetarian on and off for years, not a particularly devout one, and Iv`e noticed that vegetarians tend to be quiet reasonable people, who do not as a rule try to force meat eaters to comply with their diet, whereas on the other hand there are some, quite a lot actually, hardened carnivores who are Royal pains in the arse.
Worldwide, there are SOME people in a CERTAIN Country who would perhaps benefit from being able to eat something that didn`t once have a face, then they might be able to reduce their OBESITY problem, and stop annoying us every year when they come to visit us by bellowing like bull seals when they get their FAT ARSES stuck in normal sized cafe seats or managing to get their lumbering bulk wedged in station turnstyles, griping all the time about how small everything is in England.
So nothing. You don`t get vegetarians very often waving a tofu burger under your nose going `COME ON, HAVE SOME OF THIS!` though, do you?That's nice, I've met more than a few Vegetarians that are "royal pains in the arse". So what?.