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    I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.

    Bioenergetics Discussion
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    • ThinPickingT
      ThinPicking @Corngold
      last edited by

      @Corngold said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

      but nothing in the 21s century is organic. It seems nothing in the 20th century was organic

      If I trap you. Is your escape organic.

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        Corngold @ThinPicking
        last edited by

        @ThinPicking said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

        If you retreat to the middle of nowhere, build a bunker and start saying things like "bury me with". Your past probably has a clue or two in it.

        Well, again, nothing is organic, so saying or posting things is a nice way of getting attention or something else. I'm not inclined to believe everything that appears in this ether view of the world.

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          LetTheRedeemed @Corngold
          last edited by LetTheRedeemed

          @Corngold

          It's like he was going to make a good soup, but just deconstructed real food and made it autistic. If it works for him, fine but yeah, I won't be cooking that stuff.

          Ironically, I came across this tweet by his and I think it’s a great defense for him (it was for one of his recipe videos):
          “I regularly forget that this video exists, but I think it's a good visual aid for someone who needs inspiration. I made this when I was crunched for time and couldn't go back to the store, which is why the portions are small. Well-cooked zucchini pairs well with eggs, liver, and oysters. It's important to understand these are just ideas and not a ‘day of eating.’ The video emphasizes two things that I think are important: balancing carbohydrate with protein and calcium with phosphorus.”

          I think autistic people flooding any online health sphere can make it’s major proponents appear more autistic than they are.

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            Corngold @LetTheRedeemed
            last edited by

            @LetTheRedeemed
            Lol. A lot of this food could be casserole-ized or put in jello.

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            • ThinPickingT
              ThinPicking @Corngold
              last edited by

              That's certainly an easy ride. Maybe I'll return to that.

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              • ThinPickingT
                ThinPicking
                last edited by

                Roddy is not real. There are no lemons in life. Pull your bootstraps up.

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                  LetTheRedeemed @ThinPicking
                  last edited by

                  @ThinPicking 💪 🫡

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                    LetTheRedeemed @Corngold
                    last edited by

                    @Corngold agreed. I do the tastiest hamburger helper that’s not really a lot of work, but is a foundational food with these ingredients — it’s not even got cheese, just a ton of milk and it’s freakin magic. Use rice noodles and I’m going to town

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                      LetTheRedeemed @Corngold
                      last edited by

                      @Corngold frikassees and stews, French indigenous foods are basically Peaty, replace olive oil with butter, and it’s all a matter of how much time you have. Dairy galore and gelatinous meats.

                      daposeD C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • daposeD
                        dapose @LetTheRedeemed
                        last edited by

                        @LetTheRedeemed said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

                        @Corngold frikassees and stews, French indigenous foods are basically Peaty, replace olive oil with butter, and it’s all a matter of how much time you have. Dairy galore and gelatinous meats.

                        The French do radish slices on salted buttered toast. Devine inspired deliciousness. I’ve asked, isn’t this carrot salad adjacent? No one ever bites on the idea. Root vegetable with fat. Mmm eh…

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                          Corngold @dapose
                          last edited by

                          @dapose yes, both of you guys are right imo. Reading about Mediterranean food tells me this, but really most traditional European foods too. Pufa was natural in fish/meat and no industrial processing. I'm curious why Scandinavians loved Equatorial spices so much? Maybe vitamins and minerals that weren't as available in the north? I've read nutmeg actually treated plague which is why it was so expensive and desirable.

                          L VehmicJurymanV 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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                            LetTheRedeemed @Corngold
                            last edited by

                            @Corngold solid comment. Also, if you ask Mediterranean, who are aware of the blue zone hype in America, they kind of despise it, because dairy in general, and butter and Ruminant animal fats Our staples of their diet outside of lent.

                            I think the Nordic regions are such big spice, traders, because a proper sausage is cured partly with spice, And add so much flavor it’s incredible.

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                              LetTheRedeemed @dapose
                              last edited by LetTheRedeemed

                              @dapose A while back, I read someone mentioning how popular carrot salads are in France, ironically. They even sell it prepackaged in the fridges at checkout isles.

                              If you ever get to flip through a French region by region cookbook with pictures of the villages that the food comes from, you might get the idea that it’s as close to heaven on earth as one could be 🙂

                              And just like the rest of Northern Europe, French food is offal and dairy Dense.

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                                Corngold @LetTheRedeemed
                                last edited by

                                @LetTheRedeemed said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

                                If you ever get to flip through a French region by region cookbook with pictures of the villages that the food comes from, you might get the idea that it’s as close to heaven on earth as one could be

                                Jacques Pepin is a great resource for French cooking. So many dishes have wine, butter, leeks, garlic, onion. A lot classier than Marco Pierre White and his Knorr cubes. lmao.

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                                  Corngold @LetTheRedeemed
                                  last edited by

                                  @LetTheRedeemed said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

                                  @Corngold frikassees and stews, French indigenous foods are basically Peaty, replace olive oil with butter, and it’s all a matter of how much time you have. Dairy galore and gelatinous meats.

                                  I've wanted to investigate an hypothesis:

                                  Olive oil is best consumed and digested in the native climate where it is produced, by people indigenous to that area. Because of greater sunlight and length of day, metabolic rate may be higher (historically anyways). Just an idea, and I'm not sure how much weight is behind "genetic / hereditary nutrition."

                                  GardnerG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • GardnerG
                                    Gardner @Corngold
                                    last edited by Gardner

                                    @Corngold said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

                                    Olive oil is best consumed and digested in the native climate where it is produced, by people indigenous to that area. Because of greater sunlight and length of day, metabolic rate may be higher (historically anyways). Just an idea, and I'm not sure how much weight is behind "genetic / hereditary nutrition."

                                    Interestingly, metabolic rate is lower in warm sunny countries. Indeed , Inuits are known to suffer hyperthyroidism pretty often. Ray mentioned how beying hypothyroid can be beneficial in hot climate.

                                    Here's why:
                                    Heat Dissipation:
                                    In warm climates, the body has to work less to maintain a stable internal temperature. It doesn't need to expend as much energy on thermoregulation (keeping the body warm), therefore metabolic rate decreases.
                                    Less Energy for Thermogenesis:
                                    Thermogenesis is the process of generating heat to maintain body temperature. In warmer climates, the body relies less on thermogenesis, a process that increases metabolic rate, thus lowering the overall metabolic rate.
                                    Research Support:
                                    Meta-analyses of published BMR studies have shown a negative correlation between mean annual temperature and basal metabolic rate (BMR).

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                                      Corngold @Gardner
                                      last edited by

                                      @Gardner
                                      Yes I had it backwards.
                                      But what about fat source? Wouldn't this mean pufas / butter / mufa is better in warm climate?

                                      daposeD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • daposeD
                                        dapose @Corngold
                                        last edited by dapose

                                        @Corngold said in I’ve got a problem with Danny Roddy.:

                                        @Gardner
                                        Yes I had it backwards.
                                        But what about fat source? Wouldn't this mean pufas / butter / mufa is better in warm climate?

                                        Not Pufa but similar to pufa is vitamin A. Ray talked about needing more A once it gets warm. I found this very helpful in the summer as I work outside. Danny talked about feeling very cold the first times he tried a lot of vitamin A.
                                        I think Ray recommended eating more Liver in the warm season to be more specific. Butter is always perfect really.

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                                        • VehmicJurymanV
                                          VehmicJuryman @Corngold
                                          last edited by

                                          @Corngold Spices are antimicrobial

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                                            Corngold @VehmicJuryman
                                            last edited by

                                            @VehmicJuryman what's your point

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