Not sure about Corn, but while we are asking random questions "Why do we play in a recital, but recite in a play?"
Corn - does it have any nutritional value?
Or is it just a beautiful and tasty vegetable enjoyed with butter?
-EarlJam
Last edited by JBDuke; 03-06-2009 at 08:05 PM. Reason: inappropriate content
Not sure about Corn, but while we are asking random questions "Why do we play in a recital, but recite in a play?"
Same deal with peanuts? Strange. Maybe we're not genetically designed to eat corn or peanuts.
I just looked at my Jif peanut butter and it has sugar and hydrogenated oils added. (I keep peanut butter in my office for hunger emergencies.) Guess I'll have to look for a peanut butter that's unadulterated. Or unfooledaround with, as those juice people say.
Corn is loaded w/antioxidants, for a grain. It also has bunches of niacin, but it lacks the needed amino acids needed to free it for use. If you get traditionally prepared corn products that are treated with lime (not the fruit, but rather the chemical ... CaO), the niacin can be used. It's a classic example of how culture affects our health (the corn example is usually found in a nutritional anthropology class).
Cheers,
Lavabe
Last edited by Lavabe; 01-15-2008 at 04:15 PM. Reason: clarity
This is a sideswipe from the Trader Joe thread. IMO, the TJ peanut butter is a major reason to shop there. I buy the crunchy salted 1 lb. jar for $1.69. There is nothing in it but peanuts and salt and it is good. That is a great price. Adams and Scudders offer the same type of pb, but not at that price. Everyone else adds sugar.
Oh, my wife likes to pour off the oil -- I'd prefer she didn't cuz I stir it back in -- but even when she does, there is never a taste problem. Good stuff at a good price. You can get smooth or unsalted, if you prefer.
When did they start putting corn in Snickers bars?
1. goes great with lima beans(wasn't that a thread several months ago ).
2. makes a GREAT chowder with potatoes, chicken, carrots and some cheddar cheese sprinkled liberally on top(my wife has a wonderful recipe)
This thread reminds me of a riddle:
With what food do we take off the outside, cook the inside, then eat the outside and throw away the inside?
And here, I was expecting a thread on the dramatic rise in the price of corn. Did you realize it's gone from about $3.25/bushel in May 2007 to over $5/bushel today? That's CRAZY for corn.
The University of Iowa predicted a US yield of around 12Billion bushels in the 2007 growing season. Whoa.
I read this quote and then went and looked at the peanut butter jars in my house (obviously I need to get a life). The organic, nothing-but-peanuts PB I have (not Trader Joes, brand) shows that it has 1 gram of sugar per 2 tbsp serving - I guess that is what occurs naturally in peanuts. The Peter Pan shows 2 grams per 2 tbsp serving. While that is twice as much, it is still a very small amount. Small enough to make me wonder why it is added at all, or why someone would pay a premium price to get the no-sugar-aadded version. We're talking about a tiny amoung of sugar her (1/4 teaspoon).