Avoid grains, confirmed
Last Post 16 May 2012 07:58 AM by cranberrycat. 29 Replies.
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John
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03 Nov 2011 08:50 AM
    Here's another report on why one should consider avoiding grains.
    (And puzzling why Zone foods contain grains?
    .

    Eight Reasons Wheat Is Making You Gain:
    Doctor Says Whole Wheat Packs on Belly Fat - And Has a Lot in Common with Opiate Drugs
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    Hollis Templeton, Mclatchy-Tribune News Service.
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    11-02-11
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    It's been drilled into our heads that whole grains are heart-healthy and essential to a diet that keeps us slim and satisfied. But the wheat toast you opt for over a muffin or bagel in the a.m. may not be as smart of a dietary decision as once thought. In his new book "Wheat Belly," preventative cardiologist William Davis, MD, argues that the world's most popular grain, found in everything from lager to licorice to lunch meat, is destructive to weight loss - and overall health.
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    According to Davis, the compounds found in wheat are responsible for appetite stimulation, exaggerated rises in blood sugar, and the release of endorphin-like chemicals that get the brain hooked on breads, pastas and crackers, while increased wheat consumption can also be linked to higher incidences of celiac disease, diabetes, heart disease, arthritis and schizophrenia.
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    If you think this talk about wheat sounds like a new spin on the gluten-free fad, it's not so simple. While wheat is the dominant source of gluten in the human diet - gluten is what gives dough the ability to be stretched, rolled and shaped into bagels, pretzels and pizza crusts and is the culprit underlying inflammatory damage to the intestinal tract in those with celiac disease - it also contains a unique carbohydrate called amylopectin-A, which sends blood sugar soaring higher than table sugar or a candy bar ever could.
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    This isn't your great grandmother's wheat - or waistline - we're talking about. Amounts of wheat's destructive compounds have increased over the past 50 years as the grain has been hybridized and crossbred to be resistant to drought and fungi, produce higher yields per acre, result in better baking consistency, and cost less to produce. Not surprisingly, the increase in wheat in the American diet parallels obesity rates that have nearly tripled since 1960.
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    We took a close look at "Wheat Belly," chatted with Davis, and discovered eight ways that wheat could be wrecking havoc on your weight loss efforts and how going wheat-free can help you slim down.
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    1.) Whole wheat is marketed as healthy
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    Studies performed during the 1980s show that when processed white flour foods are replaced with whole grain flour products, there is a reduction in colon cancer, heart disease and diabetes. While the science here can't be disputed, the logic is faulty, says Davis: "If something bad for you (white flour) is replaced by something less bad (wheat flour), and there is an apparent improvement, then plenty of the less bad thing is (considered) good for you. What was not asked: What about the effects of total removal? That's when far greater health benefits are witnessed." Davis compares this misguided nutritional advice surrounding whole grains to substituting hydrogenated fats for saturated fats, margarine for butter, and high-fructose corn syrup for table sugar.
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    Many of Davis's overweight patients report eating plenty of fruits, vegetables and whole grains and avoiding junk food, fast food, and sugary soft drinks, some adhering strictly to dietary guidelines and many exercising for an hour every day. Still, they continue to gain weight.
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    Until they cut out wheat, that is. Davis says he's witnessed the wheat belly weight loss effect thousands of times, watching patients replace processed, wheat-based foods with vegetables, nuts, meat, eggs, avocados, olives and cheese, and drop 50 to 100 pounds in one year. Among 30 patients he recently placed on wheat-free diets, the average weight loss was 27 pounds over the course of 6 months.
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    Whether patients on wheat-free diets consume non-wheat carbohydrates, like quinoa and millet as well as non-grain carbs such as fruit depends on the individual's carbohydrate tolerance, says Davis.
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    "For an established diabetic looking to become a non-diabetic, for instance, I would advise complete avoidance of these blood sugar-increasing foods since diabetes, by definition, is a disease of high blood sugars," he says. "On the other hand, a young, slender, athletic female usually can include these carbohydrate sources and do just fine." Still, most people fall somewhere in between, doing well with portion sizes of non-wheat carbohydrates of a half-cup or less, says Davis.
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    2.) Bread breeds belly fat
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    Where there's glucose, there's always insulin, the hormone that allows entry of glucose into the cells of the body, where it's converted to fat. It works like this: When you eat wheat, your body gets a huge helping of a blood sugar-spiking carbohydrate called amylopectin-A. To move the sugars from the wheat into your cells where they can be used for energy - or stored as fat, the pancreas responds by releasing insulin. The higher your blood sugar is after eating, the more insulin that is released - and the more fat that is deposited in the abdominal area. When belly fat builds up, it floods the body with inflammatory signals that cause energy-requiring tissues, like muscle, to stop responding to a proportional amount of insulin. As a result, your pancreas churns out more and more insulin to help metabolize the carbohydrates you eat. Years of running your body through this high-blood sugar, high-insulin cycle result in the growth of visceral fat, or what Davis has deemed a wheat belly.
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    3.) Carbs create cravings
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    If you've ever noticed that eating a grain-heavy breakfast at 7 a.m. leaves you scrounging for a snack by the time you reach your desk, you've
    experienced the effects of amylopectin-A. The surge in glucose and insulin and subsequent drop in blood sugar that follow wheat consumption set you up to be hungry approximately every 2 hours, regardless of whether or not your body really needs to eat, says Davis.
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    Davis suggests snacking on hearty portions of very low or no-carb foods, even those that are high in fat or calorically dense such as nuts and
    cheeses.
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    4.) Wheat eaters eat more
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    Thanks to an appetite-revving wheat component called gliadin - and that all-day cycle of cravings for wheat and non-wheat-containing foods alike it's no surprise that, on average, those who consume wheat eat more overall. According to Davis, wheat eaters generally consume an extra 400 calories per day. Over the course of a year, the equivalent of 42 pounds of weight gain.
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    "On the other hand, (people who follow wheat-free diets) naturally consume 350 to 400 fewer calories per day because they aren't craving food every 1.5 to 2 hours," says Davis, adding that by picking wheat-free foods you'll also reduce your exposure to sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup, artificial food colorings and flavorings, cornstarch and so on.
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    5.) Wheat messes with estrogen
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    Grow yourself a wheat belly and you won't just need a bigger belt; you may also need a man bra. In males, visceral fat spurs the production of estrogen, which results in the growth of breast tissue and leads to what scientists call gynecomastia, or what your friends probably call "man boobs."
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    For women, a surplus of estrogen caused by excess belly fat raises the risk for breast cancer. In a Journal of the National Cancer Institute analysis of nine breast cancer studies that included a total of more than 2,400 women, breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women with excess visceral fat was double that of slender premenopausal women who did not have excess belly fat. Other studies suggest that excess belly fat can increase a women's risk for breast cancer as much as four-fold.
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    6.) Your brain becomes addicted
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    When you grab a coffee or pour a glass or two of wine, you're looking for a certain fix. But when you eat wheat, you consume it for its
    nutritional value - or so you think.
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    What makes wheat the real bad guy is its addictive property, which it doesn't share with other grains, like millet and flax, says Davis. Wheat
    stimulates your appetite so you want more and more of it and when you stop eating it, your body goes through withdrawal symptoms. In fact,
    wheat's effect on the brain is the shared with that of opiate drugs.
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    Researchers at the National Institutes of Health found that polypeptides in gluten have the ability to penetrate blood-brain barriers. Once they gain entry into the brain, wheat compounds bind to the brain's morphine receptors, the same receptors to which opiate drugs bind, producing a sense of reward or mild euphoria.
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    7.) Eating wheat zaps energy
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    "When you take wheat out of the diet, you see incredible turnaround in health far more than you'd ever predict," says Davis. "When someone
    gives up wheat, there's a very frequent and marked increase in energy and sleep quality," he says. While there's not a lot of research on the topic, Davis speculates that the connection can be explained by the absence of sharp swings in blood sugar and resulting energy slumps.
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    Swapping processed, wheat-based foods for veggies, fruit, nuts and dairy may also be precursors to better sleep, more energy and more stable moods.
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    8.) "Gluten-free" foods are not the answer
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    Even if you don't have a wheat allergy, perhaps you've picked up gluten-free cookies, pasta or cereal because they just sound healthier. Truth is, many gluten-free foods are made by replacing wheat flour with corn starch, rice starch, potato starch, or tapioca starch, which hike up blood sugar even more than the amylopectin-A in wheat. This is especially hazardous to weight loss, since gluten-free foods, although they don't trigger a neurological response like gluten does or stimulate your appetite like gliadin does, still trigger the glucose-insulin response that packs on pounds.
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    Davis suggests removing wheat from your diet and enjoying larger portions of other healthy foods, like baked chicken, green beans, scrambled eggs or salad. If you're worried about not getting enough fiber, increase your consumption of vegetables and raw nuts and fiber intake will actually go up, says Davis. In fact, two slices of whole grain bread containing 138 calories contains about the same amount of fiber as 138 calories of nuts (about 24 almonds).
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    If you're itching to try a wheat-free diet, try a gradual withdrawal from grains, suggests Davis. First, eliminate wheat from your dinner for 1 to 2
    weeks, then get rid of it at lunch for a week or two. Finally, try going wheat-free at breakfast, when it's often hardest to let go of cereal and other grain-based breakfast foods.
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    "Or go 'cold noodle,' advises Davis. "You'll be confronted with pain upfront, but you'll emerge feeling much better."
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    Distributed by MCT Information Services
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    (C) 2011 Mclatchy-Tribune News Service.. All Rights Reserved
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    ~john --> Happily married 26 years --> 07 Feb 1986
    <>< <>< <>< <>< PTL Col 3:23-24 ><> ><> ><> ><>
    Live the healthiest life you can enjoy, not the healthiest life you can tolerate.
    cranberrycat
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    04 Nov 2011 08:24 PM
    Good article, John!

    (And, also a great question to ponder...)
    Cranberrycat

    We don't own the earth; we borrow it from our children.


    Debbie
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    26 Mar 2012 02:11 PM
    Important to note, people, that it is not wheat, per se, that is bad for you. It is the modern genetically altered, genetically modified, and hybridized-to-death wheat currently grown in this country. This is an example of scientists messing with Nature, and screwing things up in the process. I am no Luddite, but blindy seeking the financially advantageous alterations has unknowingly caused physically harmful alterations. The fools refuse to consider that they are messing around with systems way more complex than they can possibly fully comprehend. Go figure, wheat that is bad for you. I wonder if one can purchase anywhere heirloom wheat flour or heirloom wheat seeds (aka wheat berries). When will this madness end?? When Con Agra is no longer in business, ditto for Archer Danials Midland and the rest of them.
    Desiree
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    28 Mar 2012 06:36 PM
    I can personally confirm what this article says.....I've battled reactive hypoglycemia for 10 or so years until starting the zone diet.
    I battled severe blood sugar spikes and drops and it was ruining my life. When I started the zone 5 or six weeks ago I also took out bread and grains. I've been eating only proteins, fruits and veggies, beans, nuts, healthy fats. Wow! How my life has changed. I used to have to test my blood sugar 10times a day; now I only need to occasionally but every time I do, my blood sugar is perfectly normal......
    And even though I was in a normal weight category, 128lb female, my belly fat had been increasing yearly despite "eating healthy" and less than 1600 calories/day. Since starting zone and elimination of grains I've dropped 5 lbs and one dress size. Despite actually eating a couple of more blocks than i should by calculations. Most importantly, I feel soooooooo much better. I feel alert and stable.
    I look at wheat like poison now because I see how badly it effected my insulin response. If I didn't change I believe silent inflammation was going to catch up to me in a bad way because I was on an insulin-cortisol roller coaster all day everyday. It's very unfortunate that doctors and nutritionists couldn't tell me the right way to eat despite my complaints. In fact when I saw the diets the recommended over the years I always said to myself "no wonder people are diabetic". However I never made the right connection with whole grains being so bad for my blood sugar. Now I know. If anyone out there has blood sugar issues, get off grains for sure. It's hard at first, I did get headaches for a couple of weeks but at least I wasn't loopy anymore. The headache are gone :)
    Good luck and good health to all.
    John
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    28 Mar 2012 06:42 PM
    [quote]
    Posted By Debbie on 26 Mar 2012 03:11 PM
    Important to note, people, that it is not wheat, per se, that is bad for you. It is the modern genetically altered, genetically modified, and hybridized-to-death wheat currently grown in this country. This is an example of scientists messing with Nature, and screwing things up in the process. I am no Luddite, but blindy seeking the financially advantageous alterations has unknowingly caused physically harmful alterations. The fools refuse to consider that they are messing around with systems way more complex than they can possibly fully comprehend. Go figure, wheat that is bad for you. I wonder if one can purchase anywhere heirloom wheat flour or heirloom wheat seeds (aka wheat berries). When will this madness end?? When Con Agra is no longer in business, ditto for Archer Danials Midland and the rest of them.
    [/quote]
    Also, whether you believe in evolution or God created - man, when he/she did start eating grains, the grains were fermented.
    The problem is, aside from the fact that grains are no where near their natural state in our food, today - is that they are also not fermented.
    And the process for fermenting, today, is really not worth the effort ...

    ~john --> Happily married 26 years --> 07 Feb 1986
    <>< <>< <>< <>< PTL Col 3:23-24 ><> ><> ><> ><>
    Live the healthiest life you can enjoy, not the healthiest life you can tolerate.
    Mary Kay
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    12 Apr 2012 09:07 AM
    Great information. Where does that put oatmeal? Good or bad for you.
    "This is the day that the Lord hath made. We will rejoice and be glad in it."
    John
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    12 Apr 2012 11:07 AM
    I do not know, scientifically; however, Steel Cut Oats is just about the only grain I will have on a regular basis.

    ~john --> Happily married 26 years --> 07 Feb 1986
    <>< <>< <>< <>< PTL Col 3:23-24 ><> ><> ><> ><>
    Live the healthiest life you can enjoy, not the healthiest life you can tolerate.
    John
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    12 Apr 2012 11:08 AM
    And according to Dr. Sears it is a Favorable grain.
    BUT ONLY Steel Cut Oats.

    ~john --> Happily married 26 years --> 07 Feb 1986
    <>< <>< <>< <>< PTL Col 3:23-24 ><> ><> ><> ><>
    Live the healthiest life you can enjoy, not the healthiest life you can tolerate.
    cranberrycat
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    12 Apr 2012 01:14 PM
    I will add to what John said, and this is what I have heard in other discussions...
    Steel cut oats makes the cut in the Zone as a favorable grain due to its GLA content. Otherwise, its glycemic load is on the upper limits of favorable, still favorable but higher density carbohydrate than other veggies/fruits.

    Cranberrycat

    We don't own the earth; we borrow it from our children.


    Bozena
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    27 Apr 2012 01:45 AM
    What about rye?
    John
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    27 Apr 2012 04:06 AM
    [quote]
    Posted By Bozena on 27 Apr 2012 02:45 AM
    What about rye?
    [/quote]
    .
    (I like Rye, too.)
    It is a grain, and in Zone, unfavorable as is Most grains.
    Except Steel Cut Oats.

    ~john --> Happily married 26 years --> 07 Feb 1986
    <>< <>< <>< <>< PTL Col 3:23-24 ><> ><> ><> ><>
    Live the healthiest life you can enjoy, not the healthiest life you can tolerate.
    Sue
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    27 Apr 2012 07:53 AM
    Barley is also considered favorable (1/2 Tablespoon dry = 1 block). According to Dr Sears, rye is a slightly better unfavorable choice than wheat, but still unfavorable. .
    Sue Knorr

    Lost 100 lbs 18 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil.

    Consultant of Zone Labs
    maureen
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    27 Apr 2012 03:23 PM
    What about flax seed cereal?
    maureen
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    27 Apr 2012 03:26 PM
    What about flax seed cereal?
    Sue
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    27 Apr 2012 07:02 PM
    Consider it to be unfavorable carbobydate and eat it in moderation. The Zone guideline for unfavorable carbohydrate is to keep it to less than 25% of all the carbohydrate in the meal.
    Sue Knorr

    Lost 100 lbs 18 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil.

    Consultant of Zone Labs
    maureen
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    28 Apr 2012 12:50 PM
    what would be a good wheat free cereal, if there is any. thanks.
    maureen
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    28 Apr 2012 12:51 PM
    what would be a good wheat free cereal, if there is any.
    cranberrycat
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    28 Apr 2012 02:20 PM
    Steel cut oats!
    Cranberrycat

    We don't own the earth; we borrow it from our children.


    James
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    14 May 2012 03:01 AM
    Hi,
    Thanks for sharing this unique information.. Really very much helpful and informative...
    Paj
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    14 May 2012 07:57 AM
    How do you know-when looking at the Oats-if they are Steel Cut or something else more processed? I have seen ONLY two 'Biological' boxes of Oats here in Italy to purchase, and no where on the package does it tell you what kind they are-not even cooking time to understand the difference. I don't even know how to describe in Italian 'Steel Cut'. Perhaps if they are not instant, they are Steel cut?
    Thanks for you help.
    Paj
    Sue
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    14 May 2012 10:58 AM
    Steel cut oats look like chopped kernels of oats. Here's a link to a photo: http://www.google.com/imgres?q=photo+of+steel+cut+oats&hl=en&sa=X&rlz=1T4SKPB_enUS324US324&biw=1280&bih=570&tbm=isch&prmd=imvnsze&tbnid=vtKPeNaIvkFYYM:&imgrefurl=http://www.myyogaonline.com/community/blog/nutritional-benefits-of-steel-cut-oats&docid=0g59BE2x3xE8qM&imgurl=http://cdn3.myyogaonline.com/images/blog/medium/319-nutritional-benefits-of-steel-cut-oats.jpg&w=368&h=276&ei=ESuxT_nvB6e36QGnsO2_CQ&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=220&vpy=258&dur=6739&hovh=194&hovw=259&tx=94&ty=219&sig=112953911061270596157&page=1&tbnh=119&tbnw=156&start=0&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:14,s:0,i:104
    Sue Knorr

    Lost 100 lbs 18 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil.

    Consultant of Zone Labs
    Paj
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    14 May 2012 03:07 PM
    Thanks Sue! I googled a photo of them; wow, I have never seen these before!!! I'm not sure if we have them here-or maybe they call them a different way. I will try to look up what they might call them and see if I can get some to try. So, if I have been preparing, I guess, rolled oats all this time and adding protein powder to them for the protein, is it still good?

    Thank you for the info.
    Paj
    cranberrycat
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    14 May 2012 03:21 PM
    Paj, do you have oat groats at all? Oat groats are hulled oat grain, basically the inedible portion is removed, but these are still minimally processed oat grains.

    Steel cut oats might also be called "Irish Oats" or "Scottish Oatmeal".
    Cranberrycat

    We don't own the earth; we borrow it from our children.


    Sue
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    14 May 2012 07:36 PM
    Paj, how "good" or "bad" it is for you depends on how sensitive you are to carbohydrates. Rolled oats are unfavorable carbohydrate. They stimulate the blood sugar too much too qwuickly. This makes it unlikely you will be staying in the Zone if you eat several blockes at a time, even if you balance those blocks with the appropriqate amounts of protien and monounsaturated fat.
    Sue Knorr

    Lost 100 lbs 18 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil.

    Consultant of Zone Labs
    Paj
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    15 May 2012 02:47 AM
    Here I thought I was eating good Oatmeal!! The ones we have are 'Biological' and have some pieces of outer 'skin' mixed in-that is like a hard shell? Seems a little more 'natural' than the oatmeal you would find in the Quaker Oats container from the States. I will try to inquire at the health food store to see if they have another imported type of oatmeal. Maybe if I tell them the Irish or Scotish Oatmeal-they might understand the difference I am seeking? Thank you for that info. People don't usually eat oatmeal here-it is kind of new and more for adding to things like biological products you find (cookies, trial mix, flour, etc.). So, only people really into Biological products and althletes would buy or eat them-which is probably why we have such limited amounts of these 'special, foreign products'; I've NEVER heard of any Italian eating oatmeal cereal for breakfast like me!
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