Msg?

In article ,
HumBug! wrote:


That's not actually true. Many, many cases of Coeliac disease go
undiagnosed. Mine wasn't diagnosed until I was 35. My symptoms were
initially diagnosed as "IBS".

Miche

--
Electricians do it in three phases
 
Brooklyn1 wrote:


I feel the opposite -- once I start eating whole-wheat pasta, I find
that after awhile I prefer it.

I'm lucky in that not only can I buy dried, whole-wheat pasta (TJ's
being perfectly acceptable), I can locally buy both fresh flat whole-wheat
pasta, and fresh extruded whole-wheat pasta.

For some dishes I do want refined-wheat pasta, but maybe only 10%
of the time. I do lean a little bit in that direction when having
dinner guests.

Steve
 
> On Jan 4, 1:14?pm, Andy wrote:

Who's talking about the USA?

And read my post again -- it's in the tomatoes and cheese. MSG occurs
naturally in a lot of foods.


After you.

Miche

--
Electricians do it in three phases
 
On Tue, 11 Jan 2011 14:17:02 -0600, Omelet
wrote:


I know where to find all the colors of regular rice now. Going on the
lookout for black rice pasta. ;) What do you serve with black rice,
black beans? Are black soy beans the same as plain old black beans?

--

Never trust a dog to watch your food.
 
Miche wrote in
news:[email protected]:





AndyPandy chooses not to acknowledge that anyone or anything exisits
outside of the good ol' USofA.

Like many in this group.






Friends and I were only talking about this issue a short while back. The
'younger' friends were quite shocked to hear that I used to have a
container of MSG in my spice rack back in the 80's. I'llk have to have a
look in the supermarket next time and see if they've brought it back in.

It was quite the hoo-haa back when the MSG witchhunt was on. Chinese
restaurants putting up *huge* signs saying "We have no MSG in our
food".... all because a few people got headaches from it!! I'd been using
it for decades and never had a problem, and no-one who ate my food ever
had a problem either.


--
Peter Lucas
Hobart
Tasmania

First Law of Leftist Debate.......
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.
 
"Bryan" schrieb :



"Man" and "Andy" in the same sentence ? You're trying to talk to a piece
of feces here. The fat little turd in his LA-Z chair may be anything; but it
sure isn't anything even remotely related to "man".

Second mistake : "Brain" and "Andy" are mutually exclusive.

Cheers,

Michael Kuettner
 
sf wrote:

I used to think I was one of the people who get
headaches due to MSG. When I finally diagnosed
the cause, it was bean protein, especially tofu.
It took me nearly 40 years to figure this out.
Because tofu is commonly used in Asian restaurants,
I was getting the headaches from eating their food
and I assumed that the MSG scare stories were true.

About a tablespoon of tofu is enough to give me
a headache. I avoid it like the plague these days.
The headaches it gave me are genuine migraine headaches,
as evidenced by the "fortifications" hallucination,
which I have seen twice. That's definitive for the
diagnosis of migraine. I'm lucky I can avoid migraines
solely through management of my diet. Many people
can't do that, and suffer terribly. I almost never
get headaches, and when I do I try to track down
their cause. Withdrawl from caffeine can do it to me.

It's been over 10 years since I had a migraine headache.
I've known people who have been plagued by them their
whole adult life. I'd suggest trying a rotation diet
if that happens to you.
 
In article ,
sf wrote:


This is my point, though. All the foods I named above are sources of
MSG, naturally. None added.

Miche

--
Electricians do it in three phases
 
On 1/3/2011 5:47 PM, DebbieDreamer wrote:

My guess is that the MSG scare started in the 60s when The Reader's
Digest printed an article on the so-called "Chinese Restaurant
Syndrome." Any research I've seen is pretty old and it's basically
states that very few persons will have this reaction. OTOH, there's all
kinds of stuff in Chinese food so the original studies may be flawed
anyway. It could be that there's toxins in the rice stemming from
fungus, at least that's what I've read. My feeling is that if it tastes
good and doesn't kill you, it's good eats.

What's weird is that people will carry on about MSG and still have no
problem with guzzling alcohol drinks whose long term toxic effects are
well documented and is responsible for tens of thousands of deaths each
year. Go figure.
 
Goomba wrote:

By mistake instead of cottage cheese I picked up sour cream... I'm not
sure how I'll use it but I've been sneaking big licks, yummy! I don't
like low fat cottage cheese either. I'm glad this is full fat sour
cream, a full quart... I wish I had a mountain of strawberries.
 
On Tue 11 Jan 2011 01:33:08p, sf told us...


Don't think so. The usual black beans you see are black turtle beans.

--

~~ If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. ~~

~~ A mind is a terrible thing to lose. ~~

**********************************************************

Wayne Boatwright
 
Goomba wrote:

There are so many lowfat cheeses in the world they cannot be all bad.
I like TJ's reduced fat "Celtic Cheddar". Also, TJ's goat cheddar
is about as low fat as the reduced-fat cow cheddar.

Some varieties of cheese are naturally low fat, including mozzarella.

Steve
 
On Tue, 04 Jan 2011 15:10:56 -1000, dsi1 wrote:

My SIL used to get headaches after eating Chinese food. They ate a
lot of Chinese food (she made it at home too). When she stopped using
MSG in the Chinese food she made at home, her headaches stopped there
- but continued to happen after eating Chinese food in a restaurant.
It's easy to conclude the headache trigger was MSG.

--

Never trust a dog to watch your food.
 
sf wrote:

I've gotten red and black rice at a specialty shop. I haven't tried
them yet.


I've had white rice and black beans. It would be poetic to combine
black rice with white beans.


No. Black soy beans are the lowest carb legume I know of. They are
popular among low carbers for that reason. They have more flavor that
uncolored soy beans but less flavor than most types of beans. Pretty
mild tending toward bland but that describes many types of beans. More
so than most. Black soy beans have the same sort of texture and mouth
feel as other types of beans and they are a good source of vegitable
protein and fiber without having as much digestible carb as any other
type of bean.

Mixing black soy beans into rice would work just fine but it loses the
point of their being an option for folks trying to keep their carb count
under 50 grams per day. Not an issue for anyone not a low carber.
 
In article ,
sf wrote:


I'd be interested to know if she reacts to Chinese food bought from a
restaurant that does not add MSG to its food.

Miche

--
Electricians do it in three phases
 
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