michaeldavid said:Okay, point taken. But I wonder if sugar alone couldn't realistically be taxed. I believe this might have a significant educative effect.
mpe said:Not that meaningful a metric, since burgers can vary greatly in what's in them.
mpe said:Assuming we actually know what actually is "healthier" for humans.
mpe said:How many cookery programs are using recipes which predate 1980?
Yorksman said:mpe said:Assuming we actually know what actually is "healthier" for humans.
I think there is quite a lot in the pubished literature about this.
mpe said:Quite a bit which predates the start of the "low calorie, low fat, high carbohydrate" craze. Possibly even some going back as far as classical Greek and Roman times. Didn't stop "experts" 30-40 ago assuming that our ancestors were fools when it came to diet.
Yorksman said:gezzathorpe said:Are you on commission or have you just got the 'hots' for Ching-He? 8) 8) 8)
Not at all sir. I am just as partial to Manjula's cooking as to Ching-He Huang's, despite the considerable age difference.
Here she makes a wholewheat gobi paratha: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btY8c82RWgI
gezzathorpe said:It's quite easy to adapt a recipe without destroying it. For example, paella, byriani, jambalaya to name a few.
That is essentially what I do and, just to show no sex bias, my favourite meal of late is the Hairy Biker's Southern Style Chicken and Prawn Jambalaya but with brown rice and other ingredients tweaked to better suit diabetes.
The attraction of the indian or chinese cooking is that the spices perk up the simplest of ingredients. Chole for example is mainly chickpeas with tomato. The spices transform an otherwise bland meal.
gezzathorpe said:Hi, how's the chinese cooking going vis a vis bGs etc.?
Yorksman said:gezzathorpe said:Hi, how's the chinese cooking going vis a vis bGs etc.?
If you are careful with what you eat, it's great. I'm mostly in the 4s and 5s and rarely go above 6.5.
The sort of dishes are things like Bang Bang Chicken, Ginger Prawns with Oyster Mushrooms or Stir Fried Crab with Ginger. A bit of oil, sweetness from fresh veg and, my favourite at the moment, wholewheat noodles. All the sauces are thin though, none of that gloopy stuff from takeaways.
The main benefit I think is that you have a range of tastes and textures. If I eat anything that I used to eat, I feel like I need more, because it lacks something. I was in Austria in July and brought back something I saw on the Hairy Bikers, Styrian Pumpkin Seed Oil. A little bit of that and a few drops of a balsamic vinegar on any salad completely lifts it. Cutting things like tomatoes and onion very very thin, that dressing, and a bit of tuna, and its a super salad. But you actually feel like you have eaten something very tasty whereas with burger and chips you eat one and feel like you need another. Then, when you do, you feel queezy.
Bang Bang Chicken:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/bangbangchicken_82544
Yorksman said:gezzathorpe said:Hi, how's the chinese cooking going vis a vis bGs etc.?
If you are careful with what you eat, it's great. I'm mostly in the 4s and 5s and rarely go above 6.5.
Bang Bang Chicken:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/bangbangchicken_82544
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