galeteia
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 1,794
Date: 8/9/2006 3:51:49 PM
Author: rainbowtrout
I'm with the moderation crowd. I mean honestly, tons of people living in Asia have been eating soy for a very long time and to my knowledge it doesn't give them higher rates of breast cancer...
And I read a long time ago in SciAm that the mutation for the lactose operon is the single fastest spreading mutation in the human race. Generally only positive mutations spread...so I imagine being able to eat dairy must have SOME advantages!
And to say all grains are bad for you irritates me....honestly, how do we come to the conclusion that wheat bread is BAD for you?? (unless you have a gluten allergy, which I think is fairly rare)
Actually, I believe it's a lot more common than people think. It seems to be getting a lot worse lately-- I've met tons of people in the last 5 years who have gluten intolerances, sensitivities or allergies, or Celiac or Crohn's disease. I knew a few families who were so allergic to gluten they couldn't even eat french fries cooked in oil that had been used for battered foods. Although there is no proven correlation between Crohn's disease and diet (according to the wikipedia) and it is supposedly rare "affecting fewer than one person in 10,000 in Europe and North America" I knew two people who had it... in a town of 7,000. Both had to avoid gluten like the plague. They weren't related. Unless we wound up with a super-high concentration of it, maybe those stats are outdated?
Neither my housemate or I do well with gluten-rich foods, especially refined flour. We were fine with it until we started university, and after four years of student staples like bread and pasta, our bodies just won't tolerate it anymore. If I eat even a whole-grain bagel, I'm clutching my middle wishing my innards would just hurry up and kill me and get it over with. Her symptoms are even worse. *wince* I'll spare you the details.
I agree with you, Rainbowtrout, that saying 'all grains are bad for you' is going overboard. There are plenty of unrefined grains out there... like quinoa. I can't do wheat anymore at all, but I can eat wholegrain rice like brown, wild, or basmati rice. Rice flour and white rice (sushi! I miss you so!
I think extremism doesn't work well for food. Up here in Canada, the Milk Marketing Board actually blocked soy from being added to the Canada Food Guide as an alternative to dairy back when I was in highschool. Scary. It's a business, so people are told that milk is necessary and good for everyone, and that's just not true. People need to figure out what works best for them.
ETA: Another tidbit; I read that the new information about soy being hazardous for people's health was linked to how much of a certain kind of fat they had. So soy was not good for obsese North Amercians, but fine for those without significant fat stores.