Guest guest Posted June 6, 2009 Report Share Posted June 6, 2009 I bought a dehydrator to help me keep up with all of my CSA veggies this summer (small apartment, little freezer space) and would love to use it for more than just preserving food. I'm especially fond of the occasional cracker and understand these can be made in a dehydrator. In my research I'm finding most of them either contain oil or are VERY heavily based on nuts. I don't mind a few nuts and seeds but most of these seem to have way too much of those. Does anybody make a very low fat bread or cracker in the dehydrator? I'd love to try some. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2009 Report Share Posted June 6, 2009 Hi Debbie I dry wedges of whole wheat pita bread, and strips of corn tortillas for fat free chips. Works great, and no burning or oil! Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2009 Report Share Posted June 7, 2009 No, because the enzyme theory has been debunked about 100,000,000 x From Dr. Fuhrman, but nearly identical to what McDougall, Esslysten etc say. " The enzymes needed for proper digestion is supplied by our body, not by the food eaten. Our body has the ability to analyze the food and secrete the precise proportion and amount of enzyme needed for that particular food. We have to rely on the body's genius to get just the right amount, not too much and not too little. Enzymes in plants are put there for the plants needs, not ours, but some plant enzymes do have nutritive benefits, not functional benefits. Some nutrients, photochemical and enzymes which have photochemical benefits are lost or destroyed in high heat cooking but many are also made more absorbable by cooking. Water-based cooking as in soups, steaming, and cooking in a pressure cooker results in very little loss of nutrients and a significant increase in the absorption of phytochemicals. To fear eating a steamed vegetable, or vegetable/bean soup is entirely unfounded and without scientific support. Plaques of mucous do not build up on the wall of our guts from cooked foods. Actually, thousand of people undergo colonoscopies each day, never do we see any build up on the wall of the gut. I have performed my own scoping for years and have never seen any build up in people, nor did I find it in cadavers in medical school or in the morgue. However, certain alternative medicine practices are potentially harmful such as ingesting bentonite clay which can be adherent and solidify in the colon. I agree with the message of the raw food community that raw food is essential for good health and I agree that certain type of cooking is potentially harmful, especially fried foods, browned and burnt foods and baked goods. The disagreement comes when you claim that steaming a vegetable will hurt you, your diet should be 100 percent raw and nothing should be eaten cooked. Then you are diminishing the nutritional quality of your diet and overly restricting yourself without merit or benefit. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2009 Report Share Posted June 7, 2009 I don't know what the heck you're talking about. Who said anything about enzymes? I'd just like some ideas of how to use my dehydrator for things other than preserving food. Sheesh. mstrong56 wrote: No, because the enzyme theory has been debunked about 100,000,000 x Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2009 Report Share Posted June 7, 2009 That's a great idea, Carol! I've got a stack of tortillas in the refrigerator just waiting to be crisped up and I didn't even know it. Thanks! Debbie left coast carol wrote: Hi Debbie I dry wedges of whole wheat pita bread, and strips of corn tortillas for fat free chips. Works great, and no burning or oil! Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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