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Natural Health & Nutrition *Public* Discuss herbs, homeopathy, home remedies, etc., and healthy eating. A public forum. Please Note: A variety of opinions and ideas are shared on GCM. Personal experiences, suggestions, and tips found here are in no way intended to substitute for medical counsel from a healthcare professional. Always use your own good judgement and seek professional advice when in doubt about a health concern. |
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05-15-2012, 07:08 PM | #31 | ||
Climbing Rose
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 1,497
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Re: Can we talk about CORN?
Quote:
There's nothing inherently wrong with corn, but the problem is that it's somewhat difficult to find corn that isn't a GMO and organic... but you CAN find it, you just have to look a little harder, and it's delicious too! Also, it's a pretty popular myth (but it is a myth nonetheless) that "humans can't digest corn, so they just poop it out". It's only the outer casing of corn kernels that pass right through your digestive system. As for the rest of it, corn is a fairly nutritionally sound food. It's a good source of B-vitamins, magnesium, and folic acid (among other things I'm sure) and it's also got a lot of fiber in it, so it keeps you full-feeling for a while. I think that maybe a lot of our "fear" (for lack of a better term) about corn is due to the fact that most corn isn't grown or used for the purpose of being a "unaltered veggie side dish". We eat a lot of corn, but it's not yummy grilled corn of the cob, it's things loaded with corn syrup, Doritos or other "corn chips", beef that's been fattened up on corn, etc... Corn isn't the problem, it's the way we use it. It's like potatoes. There's nothing wrong with potatoes, but the only way Americans ever seem to eat them is french fried or in chip form, and so we associate them as "junk food" when it's really not. ---------- Post added at 07:08 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:53 PM ---------- Quote:
You know, I did watch Food Inc. I think it was pretty well done, but I do not think the documentary is above all repute nor the "end all be all" source for nutritional eating and statement of why we have the food culture that we do. It is not as in depth as people make it out to be. It touches lightly on a broad spectrum of topics rather than focusing in depth on a single issue. It's also highly one sided (although, granted, the film makers were declined interviews from the "other side" (executives/scientists from Monsanto for example) so it's not one-sided by choice). I think that, for what it's worth, it's a great introduction to the state of our modern food supply for someone who might not have much previous knowledge, but it is not a great reference source. I think that if you're interested in the topic of corn farming, specifically, King of Corn is a much better documentary. However, there again, just like Food Inc., there's a lot of information that was left out in order for the film to make a more sensationalistic point, and thus be more "entertaining" for a broader audience. I guess I really just don't feel documentaries are a good source of comprehensive information. They have to be entertaining or no one will watch them, and they're not going to be so entertaining when they rationally explain the benefits and negatives of both sides of any given argument.
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Mom to Lucas Oliver born April 7th 2011 ENTJ Last edited by AnotherNamedKate; 05-15-2012 at 07:16 PM. |
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05-15-2012, 08:43 PM | #32 |
Rose Garden
Not Sharing Exuberantly Anymore
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 9,507
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Re: Can we talk about CORN?
this is a subject i'm very interested in - on both sides as a farmer and a consumer. ok i'm not a farmer but my dad is a conventional farmer. we raise grassfed beef and we don't really like dirt farming but it's a part of our life, kwim?
dad grows beans, lentils, wheat and canola mostly. I know that canola is mostly gmo and it kinda freaks me out about the herbicide resistance etc...but for the majority of crops grown in western canada, they aren't gmo. (Robin was right about differentiating between gmo and selective plant breeding - gmo is going inside the cells at a microscopic level and changin' things that shoulda-never-bin changed!) But corn IS mostly gmo. Anyway. I don't know what I'm trying to say. I guess that (coming from a Traditional Foods Diet perspective) I agree with previous posters that said that corn isn't bad in itself, but the way it's being used is bad. And () for more discussion. |
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05-16-2012, 01:03 PM | #33 |
Rose Garden
E's newborn feet; G's 3-yr-old feet
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: South Louisiana
Posts: 8,478
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Re: Can we talk about CORN?
This is a topic where my guiding principle comes into play I want what I put into my body to be as close as possible to the form God gave it to us! Whole foods, non-GMO, no chemicals, etc. Although I'm a fan of cooking most things first (some people with this approach eat only raw, I am not one)
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