
If you'd like to add your own review, please have the first sentence be "I give this _______ X out of 10 acorns."
No one has ever gotten food poisoning and such from any food from my kitchen, and I am not fussy about germs. Just know your food..... that's all it takes.
[img]http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n52/havlik1/permie%20pics2/permiepotrait3pdd.jpg[/img]
"One cannot help an involuntary process. The point is not to disturb it. - Dr. Michel Odent

[img]http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n52/havlik1/permie%20pics2/permiepotrait3pdd.jpg[/img]
"One cannot help an involuntary process. The point is not to disturb it. - Dr. Michel Odent
From Food Renegade:
Most modern milk comes from more recent breeds of cattle producing milk abnormally high in A1 beta casein. A1 beta casein is a slightly different milk protein than the ancestral one common to more traditional breeds of cattle, sheep, goats, and even humans, known as A2 beta casein. Mountains of scientific research have been done on the subject of A1 beta casein, the way our bodies digest it, and the slew of mental and physical disorders it can cause. (For a more complete look at the research, I highly recommend you read Devil in the Milk).
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1603581022?ie=UTF8&tag=g0c0d-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1603581022
[img]http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n52/havlik1/permie%20pics2/permiepotrait3pdd.jpg[/img]
"One cannot help an involuntary process. The point is not to disturb it. - Dr. Michel Odent
Do you think that the harm done by following a low-fat diet can be undone?
And mini Jersey's are tooooo cute.

heninfrance wrote:
Jami - the mini cattle thread - on what area of the forum? My eyes are failing me today (lack of sleep for baby I think!)

On NT - yikes you have to be mega organised don't you!!! I need to make whey, yoghurt, buttermilk etc etc before I can even start lots of the recipes. Plus lots of specialist ingredients that I'm not sure where to find here in France. Still I'm willing to give it a go. Going back to the UK to visit at the end of the month so I'm building a shopping list
"When you want to climb a tree you don't begin at the top"
Find me running the NW Restoration group page on Facebook - a communal effort to share information about permaculture, ecological restoration and sustainability in the great Northwest!
Kathleen Sanderson wrote:
I found a cheese-making forum that will hopefully help me figure out how to make some of the hard cheeses that I haven't had much success with.
Kathleen
www.biodinamika.org
Missoula Massage


good for you.
so I'm in awe of those of you who can get it working.
I got some dried starter off the internet. But now if I ever need any I would use Craig's list or something to find others in my area with starter. I only use rye in my starter because it's suppose to be better at capturing the wild yeasts. Did you try rye flour? Also fresh milled flour is suppose to help the process too. I hate to see a crying smiley.
Alison Freeth-Thomas "heninfrance" wrote:
Ah that illusive sourdough. I've had 5 attempts at making a starter now and all have failedso I'm in awe of those of you who can get it working.
Find the book 100% rye here if you want the secrets to rye sourdough, I also made 5 attempts and was about to give up, this taught me about 5 things I needed to know to make it work. http://ryebook.nourishingdays.com/ $6 for a nice pdf copy.Alison Thomas wrote:Ah that illusive sourdough. I've had 5 attempts at making a starter now and all have failed
so I'm in awe of those of you who can get it working.
You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves. -Mary Oliver
| I agree. Here's the link: http://stoves2.com |