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Reply #60 posted 09/13/09 5:23am

Moonbeam

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Christopher said:

Imago said:

[img]



What's your take? Mushrooms are good? Or vile fungus better left to dark and creepy crevices beneath rotted timber?

so fucking disgusting the smell texture and taste. yuck!


Shroomsy is not impressed!
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Reply #61 posted 09/13/09 6:08am

IshmaelB

Mycophobia - An abnormal, persistent fear of mushrooms reading


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Reply #62 posted 09/13/09 6:09am

IshmaelB



DIG THIS:

“About 600 million years ago, the branch of fungi leading to animals evolved to capture nutrients by surrounding their food with cellular sacs — essentially primitive stomachs. As these organisms evolved, they developed outer layers of cells — skins, basically — to prevent moisture loss and as a barrier against infection. Their stomachs were confined within the skin. These were the earliest animals.

“I have long proposed that mycelia are the earth’s ‘natural Internet.’ … recently scientists in Great Britain have published papers about the ‘architecture’ of a mycelium — how it’s organized. They focused on the nodes of crossing, which are the branchings that allow the mycelium, when there is a breakage or an infection, to choose an alternate route and regrow. There’s no one specific point on the network that can shut the whole operation down. These nodes of crossing, those scientists found, conform to the same mathematical optimization curves that computer scientists have developed to optimize the Internet. Or, rather, I should say that the Internet conforms to the same optimization curves as the mycelium, since the mycelium came first.” - Paul Stamets
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Reply #63 posted 09/13/09 12:12pm

heartbeatocean

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ZombieKitten said:

heartbeatocean said:

Well, I lived with a holistic healer/nutritionist for 10 years. She scared me away from them, so I avoid them completely. She said you should never introduce fungus into the body because fungus growing in the blood (which feeds off sugar BTW) is the root cause of all disease.

I think those are a different kind hmmm


it's a theory developed by a Dr. Young in Utah, that the root of all disease comes from fungus and yeast in the blood. He had a process of looking at blood samples under a microscope. She did that for me and you could see large growths of it between the blood cells. eek The diet called for avoidance of all mushrooms and anything with yeast. This also included a complete elimination of corn and peanuts, as they are known to carry fungus. Then eliminating sugar, because that's what the particles feed off of to live.
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Reply #64 posted 09/13/09 3:39pm

tackam

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heartbeatocean said:

ZombieKitten said:


I think those are a different kind hmmm


it's a theory developed by a Dr. Young in Utah, that the root of all disease comes from fungus and yeast in the blood. He had a process of looking at blood samples under a microscope. She did that for me and you could see large growths of it between the blood cells. eek The diet called for avoidance of all mushrooms and anything with yeast. This also included a complete elimination of corn and peanuts, as they are known to carry fungus. Then eliminating sugar, because that's what the particles feed off of to live.


I have good news for you. That's complete bullshit. I don't know what she showed you under the microscope, but that wasn't it. We have a very thorough understanding of blood components, and fungus isn't one of them. Plus, stuff doesn't just randomly migrate, alive, from your digestive tract to your bloodstream. It has to either be an extremely tiny molecule (smaller than yeast, which is the smallest fungus), or have a specific transport mechanism. Not that it's impossible to have a fungal infection in the blood, but it's rare, and it doesn't happen by eating mushrooms.

Also, if you didn't have sugar in your blood, you would die. Cells need glucose to survive. If you don't eat sugar in one form or another, your body will make it and put it in your blood anyway.

What your friend taught you is nutty and anybody with a rudimentary understanding of physiology should have been able to tell her that.

Mushrooms are actually good for immunity. Some of them can help fight cancer. They're pretty amazing.
[Edited 9/13/09 16:14pm]
"What's 'non-sequitur' mean? Do I look it up in a Fag-to-English dictionary?"
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Reply #65 posted 09/13/09 3:40pm

tackam

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PANDURITO said:



"I'm not a woman. I'm not a man. I am something that you'll never understand"


wave A mushroom?


That's fucking genius. falloff
"What's 'non-sequitur' mean? Do I look it up in a Fag-to-English dictionary?"
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Reply #66 posted 09/13/09 5:41pm

kimrachell

veronikka said:

I can't have them alone, they need to be mixed in with other food! and thinly sliced, I don't like feeling them too much as I chew them


yeahthat
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Reply #67 posted 09/13/09 5:53pm

delilah1

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Reply #68 posted 09/13/09 8:57pm

heartbeatocean

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tackam said:

heartbeatocean said:



it's a theory developed by a Dr. Young in Utah, that the root of all disease comes from fungus and yeast in the blood. He had a process of looking at blood samples under a microscope. She did that for me and you could see large growths of it between the blood cells. eek The diet called for avoidance of all mushrooms and anything with yeast. This also included a complete elimination of corn and peanuts, as they are known to carry fungus. Then eliminating sugar, because that's what the particles feed off of to live.


I have good news for you. That's complete bullshit. I don't know what she showed you under the microscope, but that wasn't it. We have a very thorough understanding of blood components, and fungus isn't one of them. Plus, stuff doesn't just randomly migrate, alive, from your digestive tract to your bloodstream. It has to either be an extremely tiny molecule (smaller than yeast, which is the smallest fungus), or have a specific transport mechanism. Not that it's impossible to have a fungal infection in the blood, but it's rare, and it doesn't happen by eating mushrooms.

Also, if you didn't have sugar in your blood, you would die. Cells need glucose to survive. If you don't eat sugar in one form or another, your body will make it and put it in your blood anyway.

What your friend taught you is nutty and anybody with a rudimentary understanding of physiology should have been able to tell her that.

Mushrooms are actually good for immunity. Some of them can help fight cancer. They're pretty amazing.
[Edited 9/13/09 16:14pm]


whateva, smartypants shrug You need to write a letter to this guy:

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Reply #69 posted 09/14/09 12:16am

novabrkr

If they're good enough for Mario, they're good enough for you.

Mushrooms are good in small amounts, but you don't really want to eat.that stuff on a daily basis for a very long time. Especially during the autumn people will usually pick up huge amounts of them in the forests and just keep on eating the same stuff for weeks, which is not the best of ideas.

Can't go wrong with a pie:


(btw, categorizing mushrooms as "neither plants or animals" is just pretty typical pseudo-scientific nonsense that's commonly taught to kids at schools - they don't fit within the strict criteria of how plants breed and nourish themselves, but categories and classification efforts themselves shouldn't overrule how people in general relate to phenomenons)
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Reply #70 posted 09/14/09 1:02am

PANDURITO

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novabrkr said:

people will usually pick up huge amounts of them in the forests and just keep on eating the same stuff for weeks, which is not the best of ideas.

Why not?
That's how men have survived throughot History.
What's not natural is eating out of season food as we do now.

Of course, it's easier to say so when you live in a mediterranean country mr.green
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Reply #71 posted 09/14/09 5:02am

MoniGram

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I love mushrooms!
Proud Memaw to Seyhan Olivia Christine ,Zoey Cirilo Jaylee & Ellie Abigail Lillian mushy
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Reply #72 posted 09/14/09 5:13am

novabrkr

PANDURITO said:


Why not?
That's how men have survived throughot History.
What's not natural is eating out of season food as we do now.


Because the modern man is pampered beyond redemption. Varying your diet in general is pretty good for you though, and mushrooms just in general aren't the type of thing I could see myself eating on a daily basis. More of a season food , yes - pizza toppings and such things are of course

White bread, some butter, sliced champignon (not from a can) and ground pepper is something I eat on a more regular basis though. That's pretty good.
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Reply #73 posted 09/14/09 9:33pm

IshmaelB

MoniGram said:

I love mushrooms!

Hear, hear!
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Reply #74 posted 09/14/09 9:37pm

ZombieKitten

novabrkr said:

PANDURITO said:


Why not?
That's how men have survived throughot History.
What's not natural is eating out of season food as we do now.


Because the modern man is pampered beyond redemption. Varying your diet in general is pretty good for you though, and mushrooms just in general aren't the type of thing I could see myself eating on a daily basis. More of a season food , yes - pizza toppings and such things are of course

White bread, some butter, sliced champignon (not from a can) and ground pepper is something I eat on a more regular basis though. That's pretty good.

cooked or raw?
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Reply #75 posted 09/15/09 12:38am

novabrkr

ZombieKitten said:

novabrkr said:



Because the modern man is pampered beyond redemption. Varying your diet in general is pretty good for you though, and mushrooms just in general aren't the type of thing I could see myself eating on a daily basis. More of a season food , yes - pizza toppings and such things are of course

White bread, some butter, sliced champignon (not from a can) and ground pepper is something I eat on a more regular basis though. That's pretty good.

cooked or raw?


Raw!
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Reply #76 posted 09/15/09 12:50am

ZombieKitten

novabrkr said:

ZombieKitten said:


cooked or raw?


Raw!


hmmm
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Reply #77 posted 09/15/09 12:56am

AnckSuNamun

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rose looking for you in the woods tonight rose Switch FC SW-2874-2863-4789 (Rum&Coke)
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Reply #78 posted 09/15/09 7:19pm

evenstar3

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novabrkr said:


Can't go wrong with a pie:



drool
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Reply #79 posted 09/15/09 7:26pm

dreamfactory31
3

i love mushrooms
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Reply #80 posted 09/15/09 7:38pm

july

I just don't like the way morels look. But I like basic white mushrooms on pizza and in pasta or salads. I was just fronting. doh!
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Reply #81 posted 09/15/09 8:18pm

Moonbeam

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Mushroom-haters, unite! mad
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Reply #82 posted 09/16/09 4:58pm

XxAxX

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Imago said:





So I took this picture recently with my camera and marveled at something so simple but beautiful. It's vibrant color, the way it juts out of the ground, it's little spot in the sun in the backyard...it was just a little patch of heaven, really.

Then I got to thinking. I used to be repulsed by mushroom. Since I learned in grade school that it was neither plant nor animal, I always feared it. How do you ingest something that is neither plant nor animal that also happens to live off of rot and death. ill

I have since come around to loving mushrooms. They make a far tastier replacement for meat in curries than tofu, and they're all natural--no processing to achieve a good healthy batch of these things.



What's your take? Mushrooms are good? Or vile fungus better left to dark and creepy crevices beneath rotted timber?


thumbs up! to mushrooms. 'cause, what else would the little wee folk use for umbrellas when it rains?
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Reply #83 posted 09/16/09 5:12pm

BlackAdder7

XxAxX said:

Imago said:





So I took this picture recently with my camera and marveled at something so simple but beautiful. It's vibrant color, the way it juts out of the ground, it's little spot in the sun in the backyard...it was just a little patch of heaven, really.

Then I got to thinking. I used to be repulsed by mushroom. Since I learned in grade school that it was neither plant nor animal, I always feared it. How do you ingest something that is neither plant nor animal that also happens to live off of rot and death. ill

I have since come around to loving mushrooms. They make a far tastier replacement for meat in curries than tofu, and they're all natural--no processing to achieve a good healthy batch of these things.



What's your take? Mushrooms are good? Or vile fungus better left to dark and creepy crevices beneath rotted timber?


thumbs up! to mushrooms. I have a hat that looks like a mushroom. When I meet fellow orgers on municipal transit, I ask them if they like my mushroom hat. I use mushrooms as a soothing treatment for my eyes, when they are tired. I wrote to President Obama asking for the declaration of July 12th to be National Mushroom day, but I haven't heard back from him yet


whofarted good luck with that!
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Reply #84 posted 09/16/09 7:48pm

TonyVanDam

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I vote yes only for mushrooms on pizza AND in my pasta sauce! biggrin
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