Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Organic & Natural


Go organic or not? What's all the hullabaloo about? You know Donna and I have been natural, organic food consumers from the very beginning of our marriage. When we first got married we lived on a farm, milked a cow, and grew our own vegetables. 

Yes, we really milked a cow. She was our landlord's cow, and he allowed us to care for her and milk her every morning and every night. She was beautiful. A huge Holstein who, every time she gave birth, consistently had twins. So, consequently, she produced a lot of milk. It was so good. We made our own butter in the blender-yes, you can make butter in the blender, yogurt, ice cream, yogurt cream cheese, etc. We drank the milk fresh from the cow, and we are still here.:)

Why am I mentioning all this? The debate about natural and organic and chemically treated foods, raw milk versus homogenized, meat from naturally fed animals raised on a farm that allows animals to graze in fields versus meat from animals kept in confinement and sent to slaughter houses, and so on, has been ongoing for decades: Chemical versus natural, organic. In other words---Man's choice made by what science and commerce dictates, or food raised by the design of God. 

Food is our life source for survival. It is just not something to fill a void or satisfy taste buds with adulterated empty calories using high fructose corn syrup and myriads of chemicals per bite. It was meant to nourish our very being. With good natural food, healthy water, exercise, and positive thoughts, our life being can be filled with vibrancy. When we can satisfy our taste buds with unadulterated food that is live, fresh, and in its natural state, taste buds change and recognize what healthy eating should be. Go natural! 

Eat healthy and organic especially in the summer weather when fresh foods are abundant. If you don't or can't have a garden where you live, choose to shop at your local farmer's market and roadside stands. In the winter, shop organic and eat simply. Many varieties of squash are abundant and nutrient rich. Don't just use pumpkins for carving at Halloween. Enjoy them at your dinner table. 

Make a meal of a watermelon, or fresh, raw vegetables all by themselves when in season. Don't make them a side dish. Savor every mouthful. Enjoy a meal like that with friends, and take time to chew well. You will probably eat less and be satisfied more.

Eat natural,

The following articles were recently posted online. Hope you find them interesting. 



NUREMBERG — Can mineral water, which comes up from the depths of the earth and must simply be filled into bottles, be called "organic"?

Absolutely, says the German firm Lammsbräu. It bottles water from its own springs with labels bearing a house-designed "bio" (organic) seal and sells it under the name of BioKristall. And now the Nuremberg Court of Appeals has given its stamp of (legal) approval. Judge Manfred Schwerdtner ruled that the Lammsbräu water was "different from many other mineral waters," and therefore the description of it fulfilled consumer expectation. The word bio in the name did not suggest some form of state licensing was behind the product, although the court ruled that the company seal, in its resemblance to an existing German eco-seal, could confuse consumers and would have to be changed. Read More...

The ideal — as we're reminded and reminded and reminded — is to go organic, to trade processed foods for fresh foods and the supermarket for the farmers' market. Organic foods of all kinds currently represent only about 3% of the total American market, according to the most recent numbers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), but it's a sector we all should be supporting more.

That sounds like a great idea, but we'll pay a price for it. Organic fruits and vegetables cost 13¢ to 36¢ per lb. more than ordinary produce, though prices fluctuate depending on the particular food and region of the country. Milk certified as hormone- and antibiotic-free costs $6 per gal. on average, compared with $3.50 for ordinary grocery-store milk.
What's more, while grass-fed beef is lower in fat, and milk without chemicals is clearly a good idea, it's less obvious that organic fruits and vegetables have a nutritional edge to speak of. A 2009 study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition led to a firestorm in the food world. It found no difference between organic and conventional produce with regard to all but three of the vitamins and other food components studied, and conventional produce actually squeaked past organic for one of those three.(See the results of a farm vs. supermarket taste test.)

"We draw these bright lines between organic and conventional food," says McWilliams. "But science doesn't draw those lines. They crisscross, and you have people on both sides of the argument cherry-picking their data." For consumers trying to stay healthy and feed their families — and do both on budgets that have become tighter than ever — the ideological back-and-forth does no good at all. What's needed are not arguments but answers.

The Wages of Eating
The biggest reason not to ignore the food purists is that in a lot of ways they're right. Our diet is indeed killing us, and it's killing the planet too. Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta released a study revealing that nearly 27% of Americans are now considered obese (that is, more than 20% above their ideal weight), and in nine states, the obesity rate tops 30%. We eat way too much meat — up to 220 lb. per year for every man, woman and child in the U.S. — and only 14% of us consume our recommended five servings of fruits and vegetables per day. Our processed food is dense with salt and swimming in high-fructose corn syrup, two flavors we can't resist. Currently, enough food is manufactured in the U.S. for every American to consume 3,800 calories per day — we need only 2,350 in a healthy diet — and while some of that gets thrown away, most is gobbled up long before it can go stale on the shelves.Read more...

Water: How Scarce Is This Precious Commodity?


We have been lecturing about water since the 70's. Donna and I have come to appreciate just how precious this most needed natural resource is to every human being on the planet. We have, also, come to discover just how scarce in the grand scheme of things water is, too.

This is an incredible artistic model of the earth effectively displaying the very, very small amount of of potable, drinkable, water available to every single living thing on our planet. Makes you stop and think, doesn't it? It is not  that much, is it?

And, yet, this is how much water it takes to make just one hamburger. Just keep in mind  the McDonald's Golden Arches and the increasing numbers daily


We can live without meat, fuel,  gas, etc. if we had to. Generations before us did.  All those things use an incredible amount of water to produce. So many things we produced commercially and in manufacturing uses water, and lots of it.  The production of bottled, reverse osmosis water uses a great deal of extra water to produce the incredible number of bottles that are sold.

This is so unnecessary in view of the fact that ...We can't live without water! The generations that will follow need us to wake up and be more conservative and caring about water, the environment, and the effects of commercial enterprises on our precious water supply.

Live naturally,
Stephen

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Had to Share with you: Watermelon Carving

You know when you can eat naturally and raw, and, yet, present it beautifully to your family or guests, that makes raw elegant.

Watermelon season is nearly upon us. Watch this.... It will amaze you! Then go out and try it. If nothing else, you can eat your mistakes. :)

Enjoy vegetables and fruit and enjoy raw as much as possible. It's the way it was meant to be eaten!

Have a beautiful Saturday,
Donna

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

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