Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-24 Thread Peter Converse
Hi Garrick,

Great tip! Do you have a ratio of beans to seeds that seems to work well for 
you?

Peter
  - Original Message - 
  From: Garrick 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
  Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions


  I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make them more 
digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise, coriander, celery, cumin, 
fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I grind them in an electric coffee mill. My 
favorite beans are chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate 
with a very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a disgusting 
greasy mess



  The Apiaceae or Umbelliferae (both names are allowed by the ICBN) is a family 
of usually aromatic plants with hollow stems, commonly known as umbellifers. It 
includes angelica, anise, arracacha, asafoetida, caraway, carrot, celery, 
centella asiatica, chervil, cicely,coriander/cilantro, cumin, dill, fennel, 
hemlock, lovage, Queen Anne's Lace, parsley, parsnip, sea holly, the now 
extinct silphium, and other relatives. It is a large family with about 300 
genera and more than 3,000 species. The earlier name Umbelliferae derives from 
theinflorescence being generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the 
same root as the word umbrella. The botanical subspeciality that studies 
Apiaceae is sometimes called sciadophytography.




  On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N



http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html


Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread Ode Coyote



 Soaking the beans sprouts them and sprouts are mo bettah veggies.
The water is gassy and if not changed, will rot the beans as they sprout.
If that water is toxic to the beans?

Soaking them isn't anything like cooking them.
 I've eaten many a small bean plant from thinning the garden and don't 
recall any gas from it.


ode


At 08:29 PM 7/22/2010 -0400, you wrote:

You are throwing out good stuff when you discard the soaking water. I have 
never done it but I do soak the beans overnight.




On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 8:21 PM, needling around 
mailto:ptf2...@bellsouth.netptf2...@bellsouth.net wrote:

It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each time.
PT




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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread Ode Coyote



  I was in Seattle years ago, cooking beans in a pressure cooker and we 
decided that baking soda was a good idea...then..that vinegar was tasty.


WHAT A MESS  !!  Bean sludge EVERYWHERE !!
..and these guys were organic chemistry majors.

DOH !!

One OR the other, people.
 And makes a decent ceiling texture sprayer of high velocity super hot 
lumpy bean paint. [With pretty green parsley speckles ]


 Chicken mush paint?  ...don't ask.

  BAM!!! Cooker blows itself off the  stovespin spin spin.
 I never thought I'd be mopping a ceiling AND the walls and floor.
Don't put too many chickens in a pressure cooker... they cluck like a 
shotgun, real loud and a huge pattern.


Ode



At 07:33 PM 7/22/2010 -0500, you wrote:
Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, and 
it makes them

more tender.

Janet

needling around wrote:

It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each time.
PT
- Original Message -
*From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
*Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
methane emissions

I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
disgusting greasy mess



The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
/wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
/wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
/wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
/wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
/wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
/wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
/wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
/wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
/wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
/wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
/wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
called /sciadophytography/.



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N


_http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread Garrick
Chickpeas will get into pre-sprouting state. Chickpeas need more cooking
than most beans. It seems phytic acid is reduced just by soaking and without
water being discarded. Most beans will be good and soft in 30 minutes or
less if they have been soaked 12-24 hours

All people getting food stamps should be forced to attend a bean cooking
class

I see more bean eating as the economy goes downhill





g





On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 6:40 AM, Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.netwrote:



  Soaking the beans sprouts them and sprouts are mo bettah veggies.
 The water is gassy and if not changed, will rot the beans as they sprout.
 If that water is toxic to the beans?

 Soaking them isn't anything like cooking them.
  I've eaten many a small bean plant from thinning the garden and don't
 recall any gas from it.

 ode






Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread Marshall Dudley
That is the mixture they used to use in those old fire extinguishers 
that you turn upside down to start (without the beans of course).


Marshall

Ode Coyote wrote:



  I was in Seattle years ago, cooking beans in a pressure cooker and 
we decided that baking soda was a good idea...then..that vinegar was 
tasty.


WHAT A MESS  !!  Bean sludge EVERYWHERE !!
..and these guys were organic chemistry majors.

DOH !!

One OR the other, people.
 And makes a decent ceiling texture sprayer of high velocity super 
hot lumpy bean paint. [With pretty green parsley speckles ]


 Chicken mush paint?  ...don't ask.

  BAM!!! Cooker blows itself off the  stovespin spin spin.
 I never thought I'd be mopping a ceiling AND the walls and floor.
Don't put too many chickens in a pressure cooker... they cluck like a 
shotgun, real loud and a huge pattern.


Ode



At 07:33 PM 7/22/2010 -0500, you wrote:
Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, 
and it makes them

more tender.

Janet

needling around wrote:

It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each

time.

PT
- Original Message -
*From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
*Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
methane emissions

I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
disgusting greasy mess



The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
/wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
/wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
/wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
/wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
/wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
/wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
/wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
/wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
/wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
/wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
/wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
called /sciadophytography/.



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N


_http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_ 



Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







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Re: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread Dan Nave
Soaking beans and throwing away the soak water, or dumping the liquid
out of a can of kidney beans before using for instance certainly
reduces the amount of gas produced.  While the amazing rectum may know
the difference between liquid and gas, it may not always be able to
properly quantify the volume of either...

At this point it seems appropriate to recommend viewing the following
youtube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33VY7Db5iIA

Go ahead, you'll probably like it...  ;-))

Dan


On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 7:50 PM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:
 I have tried the soaking, baking soda and iodine methods but they did not 
 help.
  - Steve N

 - Original Message -
 From: Garnet_LDN garnet_...@austin.rr.com
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Thu Jul 22 19:33:53 2010
 Subject: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane 
 emissions

 Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, and
 it makes them
 more tender.

 Janet

 needling around wrote:
 It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water
 each time.
 PT

     - Original Message -
     *From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
     *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
     *Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
     *Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
     methane emissions

     I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
     them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
     coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
     grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
     chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
     very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
     disgusting greasy mess



     The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
     the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
     a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
     stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
     /wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
     /wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
     /wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
     /wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
     /wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
     /wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
     /wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
     /wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
     /wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
     /wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
     /wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
     extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
     large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
     3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
     derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
     generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
     as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
     subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
     called /sciadophytography/.



     On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
     stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

         My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

         -       Steve N

         
 _http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_

         Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







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 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
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Re: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-23 Thread needling around

Everybody needs a laugh a day!
PT

- Original Message - 
From: Dan Nave bhangcha...@gmail.com

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Friday, July 23, 2010 1:23 PM
Subject: Re: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut 
methane emissions



Soaking beans and throwing away the soak water, or dumping the liquid
out of a can of kidney beans before using for instance certainly
reduces the amount of gas produced.  While the amazing rectum may know
the difference between liquid and gas, it may not always be able to
properly quantify the volume of either...

At this point it seems appropriate to recommend viewing the following
youtube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33VY7Db5iIA

Go ahead, you'll probably like it...  ;-))

Dan


On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 7:50 PM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.com 
wrote:
I have tried the soaking, baking soda and iodine methods but they did not 
help.

- Steve N

- Original Message -
From: Garnet_LDN garnet_...@austin.rr.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Thu Jul 22 19:33:53 2010
Subject: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane 
emissions


Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, and
it makes them
more tender.

Janet

needling around wrote:

It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water
each time.
PT

- Original Message -
*From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
*Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
methane emissions

I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
disgusting greasy mess



The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
/wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
/wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
/wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
/wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
/wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
/wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
/wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
/wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
/wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
/wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
/wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
called /sciadophytography/.



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

- Steve N

_http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions








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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread Dan Nave
Somehow, I don't think it was the curry, or the spice that was acidic...

Dan

On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 6:19 PM, Sandee George oha...@juno.com wrote:
 Ode you are too precious    Why didn't you use your gel - works like a
 peach 
 Take good care
 REgards
 Sandee


 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
  Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org

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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread Garrick
I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make them more
digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise, coriander, celery,
cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I grind them in an electric coffee
mill. My favorite beans are chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are
the ultimate with a very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
disgusting greasy mess



The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by the
ICBN/wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature)
is a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow stems,
commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica /wiki/Angelica,
anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha /wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida/wiki/Asafoetida
, caraway /wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
/wiki/Celery, centella
asiatica /wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil,
cicely/wiki/Cicely
,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro /wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin,
 dill /wiki/Dill, fennel /wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock,
lovage/wiki/Lovage
, Queen Anne's Lace /wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley,
parsnip /wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now extinct
silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a large family with
about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than 3,000 species /wiki/Species.
The earlier name Umbelliferae derives from theinflorescence/wiki/Inflorescence
 being generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root as
the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical subspeciality that
studies Apiaceae is sometimes called *sciadophytography*.



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.comwrote:

  My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

 -   Steve N

 *
 http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html
 *http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

 Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread needling around
It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each time.
PT 
  - Original Message - 
  From: Garrick 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
  Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions


  I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make them more 
digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise, coriander, celery, cumin, 
fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I grind them in an electric coffee mill. My 
favorite beans are chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate 
with a very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a disgusting 
greasy mess



  The Apiaceae or Umbelliferae (both names are allowed by the ICBN) is a family 
of usually aromatic plants with hollow stems, commonly known as umbellifers. It 
includes angelica, anise, arracacha, asafoetida, caraway, carrot, celery, 
centella asiatica, chervil, cicely,coriander/cilantro, cumin, dill, fennel, 
hemlock, lovage, Queen Anne's Lace, parsley, parsnip, sea holly, the now 
extinct silphium, and other relatives. It is a large family with about 300 
genera and more than 3,000 species. The earlier name Umbelliferae derives from 
theinflorescence being generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the 
same root as the word umbrella. The botanical subspeciality that studies 
Apiaceae is sometimes called sciadophytography.




  On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N



http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html


Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread Garrick
You are throwing out good stuff when you discard the soaking water. I have
never done it but I do soak the beans overnight.



On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 8:21 PM, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.netwrote:

  It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each
 time.
 PT



Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread Garnet_LDN
Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, and 
it makes them

more tender.

Janet

needling around wrote:
It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water 
each time.
PT 


- Original Message -
*From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
*Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
methane emissions

I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
disgusting greasy mess



The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
/wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
/wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
/wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
/wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
/wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
/wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
/wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
/wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
/wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
/wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
/wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
called /sciadophytography/.



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N


_http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions








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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread needling around
No actually you are not, you are throwing out the phytic (not sure of the 
spelling) acid that binds up some valuable nutrients from everything I have 
read.
PT
  - Original Message - 
  From: Garrick 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:29 PM
  Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



  You are throwing out good stuff when you discard the soaking water. I have 
never done it but I do soak the beans overnight.




  On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 8:21 PM, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net 
wrote:

It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water each 
time.
PT 




Re: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-22 Thread Norton, Steve
I have tried the soaking, baking soda and iodine methods but they did not help. 
  - Steve N

- Original Message -
From: Garnet_LDN garnet_...@austin.rr.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Thu Jul 22 19:33:53 2010
Subject: EXTERNAL:Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane 
emissions

Adding baking soda to the soaking water is suppose to help with gas, and 
it makes them
more tender.

Janet

needling around wrote:
 It also helps to soak the beans several times discarding the water 
 each time.
 PT 

 - Original Message -
 *From:* Garrick mailto:zzen...@gmail.com
 *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com
 *Sent:* Thursday, July 22, 2010 8:10 PM
 *Subject:* Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut
 methane emissions

 I use seeds from the Umbelliferae family in beans and they do make
 them more digestible and less or zero gas. I have used anise,
 coriander, celery, cumin, fennel, dill seeds in beans. First I
 grind them in an electric coffee mill. My favorite beans are
 chickpea, pinto and black beans. Chickpeas are the ultimate with a
 very good protein profile. I never make humus which is a
 disgusting greasy mess



 The *Apiaceae* or *Umbelliferae* (both names are allowed by
 the ICBN /wiki/International_Code_of_Botanical_Nomenclature) is
 a family of usually aromatic plants /wiki/Plant with hollow
 stems, commonly known as *umbellifers*. It includes angelica
 /wiki/Angelica, anise /wiki/Anise, arracacha
 /wiki/Arracacha, asafoetida /wiki/Asafoetida, caraway
 /wiki/Caraway, carrot /wiki/Carrot, celery
 /wiki/Celery, centella asiatica
 /wiki/Centella_asiatica, chervil /wiki/Chervil, cicely
 /wiki/Cicely,coriander /wiki/Coriander/cilantro
 /wiki/Cilantro, cumin /wiki/Cumin, dill /wiki/Dill, fennel
 /wiki/Fennel, hemlock /wiki/Hemlock, lovage
 /wiki/Lovage, Queen Anne's Lace
 /wiki/Queen_anne%27s_lace, parsley /wiki/Parsley, parsnip
 /wiki/Parsnip, sea holly /wiki/Sea_holly, the now
 extinct silphium /wiki/Silphium, and other relatives. It is a
 large family with about 300 genera /wiki/Genus and more than
 3,000 species /wiki/Species. The earlier name Umbelliferae
 derives from theinflorescence /wiki/Inflorescence being
 generally in the form of a compound umbel, and has the same root
 as the word umbrella /wiki/Umbrella. The botanical
 subspeciality that studies Apiaceae is sometimes
 called /sciadophytography/.



 On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Norton, Steve
 stephen.nor...@ngc.com mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:

 My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

 -   Steve N

 
 _http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html_

 Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions







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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-21 Thread Ode Coyote



  Yup and I didn't do it twice.
Just the curry, I think...a lot of it.
It was pretty darned spicy too.
 Chicken for the gas and curry for the flame?
Point being, the curry didn't appear to cut down on the gas, but sure made 
me aware of it for several days after the gas was gone.


As luck would have it, 2 days later  I had my every 20 years med checkup 
and got to explain scabbyass...to a gay doctor.  [ DAYAM ! ]


Ode

At 07:18 AM 7/20/2010 -0700, you wrote:

That's disgusting!  What the h...@ll else did you eat???
- Original Message - From: Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 5:29 AM
Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions





  I like curry a bunch, but one time after eating a boatload of 
delicious curried chicken , it MADE be fart and the gasses were so 
corrosive they LITERALLY ate the skin off my buttcheeksBIG scab for WEEKS !


Ode

At 12:43 AM 7/20/2010 -0500, you wrote:


My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-21 Thread Dorothy Fitzpatrick
You kill me Ode! roflmao dee

On 21 Jul 2010, at 11:26, Ode Coyote wrote:

 
 
  Yup and I didn't do it twice.
 Just the curry, I think...a lot of it.
 It was pretty darned spicy too.
 Chicken for the gas and curry for the flame?
 Point being, the curry didn't appear to cut down on the gas, but sure made me 
 aware of it for several days after the gas was gone.
 
 As luck would have it, 2 days later  I had my every 20 years med checkup and 
 got to explain scabbyass...to a gay doctor.  [ DAYAM ! ]
 
 Ode
 


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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-21 Thread Sandee George
Ode you are too precious    Why didn't you use your gel - works  
like a peach 

Take good care
REgards
Sandee


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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread Jane MacRoss
Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissionsBeans are OK if 
prepared correctly - it's what you eat with them that causes the wind.

Jane 

http://www.eamega.com/HighFieldHealth
~The Highest Field of Energy Healing you now!~
  - Original Message - 
  From: Norton, Steve 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 3:43 PM
  Subject: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions


  My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

  -   Steve N


  
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html


  Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



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18:36:00


Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread Ode Coyote



  Sprouting them a bit before cooking seems to help.
Ode

At 06:31 PM 7/20/2010 +1000, you wrote:
Beans are OK if prepared correctly - it's what you eat with them that 
causes the wind.


Jane


http://www.eamega.com/HighFieldHealthhttp://www.eamega.com/HighFieldHealth
~The Highest Field of Energy Healing you now!~
- Original Message -
From: mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.comNorton, Steve
To: mailto:silver-list@eskimo.comsilver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 3:43 PM
Subject: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions


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No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.comwww.avg.com
Version: 8.5.441 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3016 - Release Date: 07/19/10 
18:36:00



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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread Ode Coyote



  I like curry a bunch, but one time after eating a boatload of delicious 
curried chicken , it MADE be fart and the gasses were so corrosive they 
LITERALLY ate the skin off my buttcheeksBIG scab for WEEKS !


Ode

At 12:43 AM 7/20/2010 -0500, you wrote:


My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread Bob Banever

That's disgusting!  What the h...@ll else did you eat???
- Original Message - 
From: Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.net

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 5:29 AM
Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions





  I like curry a bunch, but one time after eating a boatload of delicious 
curried chicken , it MADE be fart and the gasses were so corrosive they 
LITERALLY ate the skin off my buttcheeksBIG scab for WEEKS !


Ode

At 12:43 AM 7/20/2010 -0500, you wrote:


My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions



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Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread M. G. Devour
Oy, guys! There's such a thing as too much information!

Mike D.
(only half joking... sigh)

 That's disgusting!  What the h...@ll else did you eat???
 - Original Message - 
 From: Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 5:29 AM
 Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane
 emissions
 
 
 
 
I like curry a bunch, but one time after eating a boatload of
delicious 
  curried chicken , it MADE be fart and the gasses were so corrosive
  they LITERALLY ate the skin off my buttcheeksBIG scab for WEEKS !
 
  Ode
 
  At 12:43 AM 7/20/2010 -0500, you wrote:
 
 My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?
 
 -   Steve N
 
 http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-fo
 r-cows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.htmlhttp://www.i
 ndependent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-cows-and-sh
 eep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html
 
 Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions
 
 
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[mdev...@eskimo.com]
[Speaking only for myself...   ]



Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-20 Thread cking001
Oh, I dunno...
Great word pictures...

Chuck
If it's true that our species is alone in the universe, then I'd have
to say the universe aimed rather low and settled for very little.
George Carlin


On 7/20/2010 8:49:41 AM, M. G. Devour (mdev...@eskimo.com) wrote:
 Oy, guys!
 There's such a thing as too much information!
 
 Mike D.
 (only half joking... sigh)
 
  That's
 disgusting!  What the h...@ll else did you eat???
  - Original Message -
  From: Ode Coyote odecoy...@windstream.net
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 5:29 AM
  Subject: Re: CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane
  emissions
 
 
  
  
 I like curry a bunch, but one time after eating a boatload of
 delicious
   curried chicken , it MADE be fart and the gasses were so corrosive
   they LITERALLY ate the skin off my buttcheeksBIG scab for WEEKS !
  
   Ode
  
   At 12:43 AM 7/20/2010 -0500, you wrote:
  
  My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?
  


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CSCurry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions

2010-07-19 Thread Norton, Steve
My only question is: Will curry help when you eat beans?

-   Steve N

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/curry-spices-for-c
ows-and-sheep-could-cut-methane-emissions-2029761.html

Curry spices for cows and sheep could cut methane emissions