ShihTzuTylenol
does this look slutty?
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2009
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- grungenofhorrors.blogspot.com
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Dehydrated water. Just add water.In fact, better not consume anything but deoinized water![]()
Interesting thast my tastes for milk naturally evolved that way, anyway, as I got older. I drink skim nowadays (or should I say that I *USE* skim - I seldom drink milk, actually), but when I was a kid I didn't even consider it a viable option.This is why whole milk is for growing kids, semi-skimmed for healthy adults, and skimmed for the elderly is recommended.
I still drink whole milk. If it gives me cancer, i can blame it on smoking![]()
It doesn't taste like milk at all.
People say exactly the same thing about diet vs. regular soda if they only drink regular.
You can get used to anything. To me whole milk tastes like syrup now.. as does regular soda.
Actually, more than merely a "hard time" finding it - I think that, in most states, raw milk is considered to be illegal contraband.^I've enjoyed raw milk.
Raw milk has a certain je ne sais quoi that you won't find in pasteurized milk. In the United States, consumers have a very hard time finding it in most states.
Some comedian once remarked, "Pity those poor health and fitness nuts as they lie on their beds dying of nothing."
Actually, more than merely a "hard time" finding it - I think that, in most states, raw milk is considered to be illegal contraband.
@Youvlad:
It works the other way around, too. Sometimes a "meme" started in the fitness crowd becomes repeated so often, that even the Medicos believe it, and begin to dispense the meme as sound medical advice.
One example that immediately comes to mind relates to advice given about eating six small meals a day, in order to keep the blood sugar level and mitigate the risk of diabetes.
In fact, recent science has begun to seriously question this wisdom. They hypothesize that we humans mutated two different ways. One group---the equatorial group--did indeed evolve to eat many, smaller meals a day.
The other group, however--the ones who migrated closer to the poles--evolved in such a way that they can fast for long periods of time with no discernible effects on blood sugar levels. This group evolved this way due to the vast seasonal differences in the supply of food.
The new findings suggest that for people with Northern European blood,periodic fasting brings about more optimal health than eating "six, evenly-spaced, small meals a day", which can actually worsen biomarkers in that populace.
^Someone pointed out that I have misspelt your name repeatedly.
I apologize; I simply misread the "i" as an "l". I didn't do it on purpose.
