CF, you are talking about the nursing, aren't you?
No, the OP.
CF, you are talking about the nursing, aren't you?
The most important culprit is almost certainly the overconsumption of protein. High-protein foods such as meat, eggs and dairy make excessive demands on the kidneys, which in turn leach calcium from the body. One solution, then, isn't to increase our calcium intake, but to reduce our consumption of protein, so our bones don't have to surrender so much calcium. Astonishingly, according to this newer, more critical view, dairy products almost certainly help to cause, rather than prevent, osteoporosis.
Then what do you drink to help all that chocolate fondue go down so you can have more?
Cows are evil. Sure, they look all placid and defenseless, but that's just their mind-control making us think that. They're trying to take over the world, and milk is just one of their many insidious plots.Milk is intended for baby cows, not adult humans. Personally, I can't stomach the stuff, and just the thought of it makes me want to retch. It's bad, bad, bad stuff I tell ya'; cow poison!
You know, there have been a lot of studies recently demonstrating beer to be a supremely healthful and beneficial beverage, in moderation. As long as it's good beer, and not mass-produced American swill, that is. (Or some of that cheap low-end Australian, German, or British swill, either. Like Budweiser, beers like Heiniken, Stella and Fosters have been demonstrated to make you less intelligent, as hundreds of thousands of chavs have amply demonstrated.)Maybe I should give up liquids and coffee (which is one), since there is nothing left, except for juice.
Then what do you drink to help all that chocolate fondue go down so you can have more?
Red wine.
You either don't eat chocolate fondue in normal quantities or are an alcoholic...
Normal quantities? Define, please.
Chocolate and red wine are fabulous together. Red wine (try a cabarnet) is wonderful in chocolate fondue.
I'm ... But I need large quantities of milk to help the ingestion of melted chocolate (on fruits/cake). ......
Personally, I tend to prefer goat's milk for most things, but it's expensive and hard to find. (It's actually healthier than cow's milk.) The taste takes a little getting used to for those used to cow's milk, but I find it's actually preferable. It's a bit lower in milkfat, so it won't work as well for certain types of cooking.
Of course, if I were a choco-alcoholic, I would pour the cabernet into the chocolate fondue, and dip chocolate-covered marshmallows in the fondue while drinking champagne.
Normal quantities? Define, please.
Chocolate and red wine are fabulous together. Red wine (try a cabarnet) is wonderful in chocolate fondue.
And this is why the Baileys fondue was invented. Chocolate and Baileys with marshmallows dipped in it. Does life get any better?
Cabernet? No. Not for a sweet dish like a fondue. Maybe with a high-liquor bitter chocolate. With sweeter chocolate dishes, i'd recommend a fine port.
Cabernet? No. Not for a sweet dish like a fondue. Maybe with a high-liquor bitter chocolate. With sweeter chocolate dishes, i'd recommend a fine port.
On other other hand, goats cheese is just plain nasty.