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Date: | Wed, 18 Jul 2001 00:55:00 -0500 |
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Prema,
If sense of smell were all there was to selecting the "right" foods, then people who crave chocolate, and other addictive foods, would be the healthiest people around. How about the smell of coffee in the morning?
If you burn rice in a pressure cooker, try using an Ohsawa pot in the pressure cooker. I have never burned anything cooked in an Ohsawa pot, even when it was cooked for twice as long as it should have been.
Don
Prema Qadir wrote:
> Roman,
>
> I just read the following statement, at the Instinctive Living Website
> <http://INSTINCTIVE-LIVING.COM/ex3.html>:
>
> "This experiment helps you to feel the difference between an instinct and
> intelligence. The sense of smell seems to be the best possible instrument to
> choose the right food at the right moment."
>
> My sense of smell is dysfunctional. Sometimes, I can't smell when
> my brown rice is burning in the pressure cooker, for example. So, I've
> resorted to using a rice cooker.
>
> If my sense of smell is dysfunctional, then how can I make instinctive
> eating choices?
>
> Is there any way to improve my sense of smell? I'd like that!
>
> forward!
> trust, prema
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