Turkey Tracks: New Books on Food Issues

Turkey Tracks:  January 2, 2013

New Books on Food Issues

 

I’ve been waiting for this one to be published:

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Denise Minger is the fiery and very funny young woman who took on T. Colin Campbell of The China Study fame and showed that he is so blinded by his vegan belief system that he is not “seeing” what his data is really telling him about meat protein.

T. Colin Campbell, you might recall, is the bona fide scientist who thinks that meat causes cancer.  Only his data does not support that conclusion.  And, you might also recall from earlier posts on this blog that one of the main critiques of The China Study is that the Chinese doctors did not come to the same conclusions that Campbell did about meat.  Indeed, in the very middle of the film (I will not call it a documentary as it is really an emotional and unscientific appeal to a belief system), the Chinese doctor filmed says that “meat and vegetables” support health.

The takaway here, as Minger notes early on in the book, is that we have to consider WHO is telling us what to eat and to consider their agendas a part of our vetting process.  Sometimes “experts” are not so expert.

Minger, as a teenager, spent a year being a raw food believer and learned the bitter lesson that one’s body needs nutrient dense food.  In that year, as she recounts in her book, she got 16 cavities and her dentist said he had never seen a mouth so badly hurt in one so young.  So, it will be interesting to see how she positions herself around “what to eat.”

She is very clear that there is no “one size fits all” diet that is magic.  We each have to know our bodies and figure out what gives us good health.  Still, she does list some foods that cause a lot of people trouble, and grains are in that mix.  But I will do a more formal review of this book when I finish it.

Michael Pollen’s book Cooked was the gift of Gina Caceci, who knows me well.

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Apparently Pollen spends some time writing about Sandor Ellis Katz’s lacto-fermented foods (Wild Fermentation).  And, with Katz, of course.  (I have several blog posts on lacto-fermenting foods and on Katz.)  Recently I read a Dr. Joseph Mercola post that said the lacto-fermented foods have the power to detox the body.  I don’t doubt it.

Thanks you, Gina!

 

 

 

 

 

 

xxxx

Turkey Tracks: Uploading Videos on the MAC

Turkey Tracks:  January 2, 2014

Uploading Videos on the MAC

 

The learning curve with the MAC continues, and I continue to LOVE this MAC.

I was having trouble with uploading one of my videos on WordPress–and I erased the video from my camera so could not use the PC laptop to upload the video.  (My neatness “moves” often get me into trouble.)

So, I called Archangel Computers and Dan Osier spent the time necessary to figure out how to upload the turkey video on the “Winter Turkeys” blog post.

It’s so cool.  Dan uses a program that allows him to see and manipulate my screen, and I can watch him while he goes about figuring out something or while he teaches me something.

What a very, very nice way to interact!

And you can scroll back, or search, and see the video.

I warn you, it’s not a great video, but as the winter deepens, the turkeys become tamer, and I will strive to get a really good video of one of the males displaying.

 

Turkey Tracks: Happy New Year!

Turkey Tracks:  January 1, 2014

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

2014!

How did that happen?

Where did 2013 get to in such a hurry?

The older I get, the faster time flies–which must mean I am enjoying my life.  Or, maybe, that I am in a fog.  The latter is certainly true for parts of 2013 for sure as I dealt with the loss of John and learning to pick up the reins of a life now lived without a partner and located in a challenging geography that speaks to my heart and soul.  Maine and my property here on a hillside makes me feel alive and useful.

I am so blessed though.  I have such good, good friends and family, and I live in a place where community is so strong.

I want to take a moment and thank all of you for reading my blog, for “replying” when you feel moved to do so,” and for all your unending support.  I have been especially blessed this year with the strengthening of many relationships from all across my life–some of whom I thought lost, some of whom I didn’t realize I still had, some of whom I never knew I had and maybe didn’t until my 1963 classmates of Bellevue High School of Bellevue, Nebraska, home of Strategic Air Command (SAC)’s Offutt Air Force Base planned and held their 50th reunion.  (I didn’t attend, but did reconnect with so many of these very special people.)

My goal with this blog continues to be to SHARE:  information, research, experiences, passions, recipes, fiber arts, opinions about books and movies, and on and on.  I like to say that, especially for younger readers who are so busy with their lives, I am reading and sifting and sorting information so you don’t have to do those beginning tasks, so that YOU can choose where you want to obtain a deeper knowledge that you can know has some basis in fact or science.  I am trying to share in a way that allows us all to acquire more knowledge about the world we all share, the food we all eat, the stories we tell ourselves–good and problematic–that make us “us,” and the way the structure under which we live is functioning (or not).

And I never want to leave out, but to honor, the spirit, the life force, the mystery that undergirds and unites all life.  Not understanding how basic those connections are is a big part of how we have gotten to the place where we now struggle.

My very best wishes to each and every one of you for 2014, yes, but for…always.

 

Turkey Tracks: Clue 5 of “Celtic Solstice”

Turkey Tracks:  January 1, 2014

Clue 5 of Celtic Solstice

I’ve finished Clue 5 of Bonnie Hunter’s 2013 Mystery Quilt “Celtic Solstice.”

It’s very cute:

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And the pile of “Clues,” or units that will go into the quilt is growing:

This quilt will finish, if I’m recalling right, at about 75 by 75, so I think there will be a few more “clues.”

I’m ready for next Friday’s Clue 6.

http://quiltville.blogspot.com/2013/12/mystery-monday-link-up-part-5.html