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Maybe it depends upon the nut. Raw hazelnuts with skin intact taste quite
sweet to me -- not bitter. Or perhaps Aboriginals have weak digestion.
Allergic reactions and choking aside, I've yet to hear of death by raw
hazelnut. In any event, I don't plan on doing or not doing something based upon
what the Aboriginals do or did. Also, if I had such trouble with a
particular food that I had to go through all sorts of special preparations such as
soaking, drying, in order to tolerate it or to make it palatable -- I
probably wouldn't bother because I have a robust lazy streak. As for raw
hazelnuts or any other commonly eaten tree nut such being toxic or poisonous
unless soaked, dried etc -- people would be dropping dead right and left of nut
poisoning.
In a message dated 6/5/2012 2:52:37 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
Many Aboriginals knew the bad effects of eating unsoaked nuts. It was
the custom to find a tree bough overhanging a fast moving stream from which
they would lash and suspend a bag filled with gathered nuts. They would
come back for the bag in 3 days. The constantly moving waters would wash
away the phytates, or "bitterness". The soaked nuts would then be laid
out to dry in the sun, a primitive form of roasting. Pretty ingenious if
you ask me.
Batsheva
________________________________
From: Adrienne Smith <[log in to unmask]>
I eat lots of raw hazelnuts with the skin intact. The skins contains
most
of the beneficial proanthocyanidin (polyphenols). There are also
benefits
to phytic acid. If raw nuts agree with your digestion and you have no
allergies -- enjoy em I say.
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