Guest guest Posted March 24, 2002 Report Share Posted March 24, 2002 A well renowned chef in London has put me into eating beetroot leaves. I too find these agreeable but of course I am left with the beetroots. Today I put a beetroot through the blitzer as we call it this side of the pond. No doubt a blender or grinder, the other side. To pure raw foodists, is this blitzing of beetroots for ingestion a good thing? PG muktabhimani [no_reply ] 24 March 2002 18:31 rawfood [Raw Food] Re: Raw Grain " Grain Damage " is not a mysterious book. It is very well known among the raw foodists I know. If soaked grains agree with you, then eat them....do what you want. I am simply passing on information. I respect Dr. Graham's writings and believe that if you have questions concerning the raw lifestyle, his books are a good source of information. He has been a raw food vegan for a long time. If you read his books and disagree with what he says, fine. At least you came away with a different viewpoint. I also wouldn't rely on Amazon.com to supply raw food books. Try rawfood.com or livingnutrition.com. rawfood, kimchee_20877 <no_reply> wrote: > I've noticed some references to a book about ill effects of eating > grains. I couldn't find the book on Amazon.com. > > I've enjoyed eating raw grains since 1996, soaked in warm milk or > water, of course. The grains are specialized mixtures from South > Korea, the Oh Haeng company, and are known here as 'Seng Shik'. When > I've held to the more-or-less exclusive raw grain diet, supplemented > by other raw foods (e.g., vegatables, nuts, fruit), I've never felt > better, had more energy, lost more weight, etc... > > What is the scientific basis of this mysterious 'Grain Damage' book? > > Thanks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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