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Date: | Sun, 12 Mar 2000 20:25:09 -0800 |
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>> > >Where do we draw the line?
>>
>> > that is the thing ,there is no line , there is
>> only a learning process
>>
>> It seems you are avoiding my question. I would like
>> to know where you would
>> draw the line.
For me it is an evolution that i went thru from more processed to less .
from artificial to natural . So my line of what is acceptable is going in a
certain direction and is moving all along.
for example not only i questionned the neolithic revolution but i continued
by questionning the cooking, then the need for seasonning and altering the
natural form of the food etc...
for our purpose i will agree that the eggs that you found are an improvment
on the "normal eggs" raised on by products of the meat grain and oil
industry. I am just for my self beyond that line of improvment ,my line
about eggs are to eat only organic eggs raised by a friend who are truely
free range ( the friend too but i meant the hens). My line in general is to
by pass as much as possible ( and i went
quite far on that ) the big scale producing of food.
because i don't see how good quality can come from that .
i realise too that a small scale farm eggs can be worse that the brand you
found
,but i know for sure that it can easely be better and at least when it is
local i can help to raise the quality.
>>
>> It is your opinion, as I understand it, that these
>> Eggland eggs are not
>> suitable to a paleo diet because the hens are not
>> allowed to eat bugs as
>> hens would do under paleo condition
no i will say that because they have a certainly more natural fatty acid
profile they are moving in the paleo direction but that is still far from
being close to a wild egg eaten in the paleolothic time.
So I must ask
>> you the next question:
>> what if we fed bugs to the hens, but the bugs were
>> raised on a
>> vitamin-enriched non-paleo diet? Would you then
>> reject the eggs of hens who
>> ate bugs who ate a vitamin enriched diet?
that will be an other step toward a more natural diet but because i can find
and INCITATE better production, i will not be interested to help out this
kind of business. ( that is my bottom line with farmed animals , i will not
contribuate to industrial raising no matter how " intelligently
opportunistically " it is done.
How many
>> steps down the food chain
>> do you recommend we go? Where do you draw the line?
>>
>> Personally I like these Eggland's Best eggs because
>> like most paleo dieters
>> I am interested in finding ways to get more Omega 3
>> in my diet and these
>> eggs have three times the Omega 3 found in ordinary
>> eggs. That additional
>> Omega 3, among other things, makes these eggs very
>> suitable for paleo-eaters
>> like me. What is wrong with my reasoning?
nothing, you are heading in the right direction , enjoy , but why
stopping there? Omega 3 is just one tiny aspect.
>>jean-claude
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