From “Pure” Vanilla to Beaver Glands

My mom sent me a link to Food Renegade which currently has a post about “pure Vanilla Extracts” which contain corn syrup:

Turns out, the FDA labeling rules for what constitute a “pure” extract are simple. According to the FDA, the label “pure” means that the vanilla flavor comes only from the extractives of the vanilla bean. In other words, the vanilla flavor is not artificially created using wood pulp or beaver glands. Also, to be called “pure vanilla extract,” the FDA requires the product to have been made from at least 35% alcohol and 13.35 ounces of vanilla beans per gallon. More alcohol is fine, and often results in a much richer flavor. But it can be no less than 35% alcohol.

Decoding Labels: McCormick Pure Vanilla Extract | Food Renegade

So this sort of labeling shouldn’t surprise anyone and it underscores the importance of being an educated consumer and reading product labels.  But what’s that about “beaver glands”?  Well beaver glands one source of “natural flavoring”:

Vanilla and raspberry [ice cream] flavors might be enhanced by “castoreum,” a mixture of the anal secretions and urine of beavers. It’s also found in perfume.

The FDA-approved product is categorized under “natural flavoring,” so you won’t know if you’re eating it.

11 Disgusting Ingredients That Aren’t Advertised In Food – Business Insider

It is probably wise for everybody to be wary of any product with “natural flavoring” in the list of ingredients.  As for the other 10 ingredients in the story above, I can say I ingest none of them because I do not consume any of those products.

DIY Vanilla

While researching cornstarch-free baking powder I came across this page on Corn Free Baking and Cooking which suggested making your own vanilla. I’ve since learned that there are 2 sources of corn contamination, corn syrup added to the product and corn derived alcohol. After reading up on how easy it is to make your own vanilla I decided I wanted to try it, using potato vodka of course (Monopolowa or perhaps something fancier). The recipes online do differ but the gist is that you put some vanilla beans in vodka and let them sit for a while with some occasional perturbation.

Continue reading ‘DIY Vanilla’ »

Baking powder without aluminum or corn starch

I was looking for a baking powder that was both free from aluminum and corn starch.  The only product I was able to find was Hain Pure Foods Featherweight Baking Powder.  I’ve ordered some online as no grocery store close to me carries it.  I like that it uses potato starch instead of corn starch.  That seems to be a good trade.  I’m looking forward to trying it out.

Hain Pure Foods: Gluten Free Featherweight Baking Powder

Recent research finds arsenic in chicken

The article asks “Arsenic in Our Chicken?” to which I would answer: seems likely.  I don’t think there will be any lack of research in the foreseeable future showing that factory farmed animals are full of chemicals, medications, and other toxins.

One study, just published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, Environmental Science & Technology, found that feather meal routinely contained a banned class of antibiotics called fluoroquinolones. These antibiotics (such as Cipro), are illegal in poultry production because they can breed antibiotic-resistant “superbugs” that harm humans. Already, antibiotic-resistant infections kill more Americans annually than AIDS, according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

The other peer-reviewed study, reported in a journal called Science of the Total Environment, found arsenic in every sample of feather meal tested. Almost 9 in 10 broiler chickens in the United States had been fed arsenic, according to a 2011 industry estimate.

Arsenic in Our Chicken? – NYTimes.com

More progress on Pink Slime

On March 28th The Daily Show did a story on Pink Slime, which I think is the measure these days that an issue has reached mainstream awareness.  It’s funny but more importantly covers the number of businesses that are now rejecting the use of Pink Slime as a filler in ground beef.  Of course, Pink Slime has been in ground beef for a decade since the first whistleblower came forward, and in the food supply longer than that.  Given the lack of oversight of the US food supply I’m left to wonder what the next “Pink Slime” is going to be.

The Hunger Shame – The Daily Show with Jon Stewart – 03/28/12

Also, thanks to the recent attention you can now find a somewhat informative page about Pink Slime on Wikipedia.

The problems with normal

Specifically I mean the problems with medical tests that have a range which defines normal and how that misses the conditions that are significantly affecting people’s health.  This issue came up in a talk I saw recently by Dr. Jacob Teitelbaum and again in the book “Adrenal Fatigue” by Dr. James L. Wilson.  I’ve also talked with a number of people who have reported that when going to doctors to address their health concerns all of their tests came back “normal”.  So I wanted to try and state what I see as being problematic with what normal means with regard to medical testing.

Continue reading ‘The problems with normal’ »

Endometriosis

I may have 1 or 2 nutritional test clients who have been diagnosed with Endometriosis. I’ve been reading up on how people have used dietary changes to address their symptoms. Here is what I have found:

It started with my desire to “cure” myself of endometriosis. I couldn’t imagine a lifetime of curling up on the bathroom floor each month in agony. I bought the book “Endometriosis: A Key to Healing Through Nutrition.” This information-rich tome scared the crap out of me. It was packed with science and the science was saying what I was eating might be causing my problems. I shut the book and put it on the shelf and popped some more pills when the pain came.

The Weston A. Price Diet– How it Has Changed My Life – Hartke Is Online!

I began my healing journey in 2001 after I was diagnosed with endometriosis. My first symptoms of Endometriosis however, began when I was only 12 years old – I got “killer” cramps with my early periods that did not respond to any over-the-counter pain medication.

My Healing Journey: Endometriosis – My Starting Symptoms

Orthodox treatment includes estrogen-blocking drugs, such as Danocrine, and laser treatment of the endometrium. Unfortunately Danocrine can provoke many side effects, including weight gain, fatigue, dizziness, headaches, acne, increased facial hair, pelvic and back pain, breast problems, cramps, hot flashes, depression, rashes and allergies. When laser treatment is not successful, the only remaining surgical option is hysterectomy. In fact, the leading cause of hysterectomy is excessive bleeding, often associated with endometriosis.

Wise Choices, Healthy Bodies: Diet for the Prevention of Women’s Diseases – Weston A Price Foundation

Thoughts on weight change

Succinctly: Losing weight is not intrinsically healthy; Gaining weight is not intrinsically unhealthy.

I realize that desire to lose weight is one of the key motivators for people to address their health. However, I think it is important to talk to people about their desire to lose weight and suggest reframing those thoughts into a healthier outlook. Often, losing weight isn’t actually the real goal it has just been conflated with the real goal. The real goal is often to become thinner/smaller, healthier, or both and I think it is helpful to acknowledge this. For people I talk with I suggest that the goal should be getting healthier/fitter/stronger and letting the body figure out it’s optimal weight and size. I also suggest, to those who seem to be motivated by improving their physical appearance, that healthy people are perceived as more attractive than unhealthy people. I think many of us have had experiences of being around people who were vibrant and fun and have bigger than average bodies and those who have smaller than average bodies who are listless and dull.

I’m not making a claim that gaining weight is always a sign of improving health or that losing weight is always a sign of declining health.  I’m merely suggestion that that could be the case.  People get excited about losing weight and assume they are getting healthier.  But if they are starving themselves they are, indisputably, not getting healthier.  Also a person who increases their exercise and improves their diet may gain weight as they increase bone and muscle mass, even if they are burning fat.  If these people focus on the number on their scale they may feel down about “not making progress.”  It may be helpful for some people to tell them to take their measurements (waist, hips, bust) as that may be a more accurate measure of how their body size is changing, which is what many want in the first place.  As people’s bodies optimize in response to improved health they may well find they lose weight and size but this should be seen a sign of improving health rather than better health being seen as an effect of losing weight.

Study shows NAET is an effective treatment for Autism

A randomized control trial shows Nambudripad’s Allergy Elimination Techniques (NAET) is an effective treatment for autism.  I think the most impressive result was that 23 of the 30 autistic children in the experimental group (23 of 26 who completed the treatment) were able to leave special education classes and return to normal school classes while 0 of the 30 children in the control group were able to do so.

Here are the impressive results:

56 children (26 in the NAET-treated group and 30 in the control group) completed the study. After one year, the children receiving NAET treatments exhibited clinically dramatic and statistically significant improvements in performance compared to the control group, as demonstrated by the mean 68.4% decrease in the total ARI-ATEC Score (compared to the mean 0.8% decrease in the control group; p<0.0001) and the 64% to 82% mean decreases on the 4 ARI-ATEC subtests (all p<0.0001). Similarly, the CARS rating improved by an average of 47.4% among the NAET-treated children, compared to only 0.4% in the control group (p<0.0001); the NST Score improved by an average of 65.5%, compared to a mean improvement of 0.0% (p<0.0001); and the total ASRS Score decreased by an average of 85%, compared to 2.3% (p<0.0001). In addition, NAET treatment also produced statistically significant improvements in each of 30 of the 35 symptoms assessed using the ASRS.

Clinically, 23 of the 30 children in the treatment group were able to return to regular school classes with their healthy, non-autistic peers after treatment while all of the children in the control group continued to require special education.

Dr. Wright, MD – Why Stomach Acid Is Good for You

I read “Why Stomach Acid Is Good for You” and I found it to be a life-altering book.  I may write a full book review but to get some of the main ideas here is a quick 9 minute video on the main points:

  • many people have too little, not too much stomach acid
  • too little stomach acid leads to malnutrition, which leads to other issues
  • medications for heartburn treat symptoms but may exacerbate underlying causes
  • stomach acid output can be measured/tested but almost never is
  • heartburn/acid indigestion/acid reflux/GERD as well as problems arising from nutrient deficiencies can often treated successfully with hydrochloric acid, pepsin, and vitamin b12 supplements
Low Stomach Acid – Dr. Wright, MD – YouTube