And of course Waysider remembers the familia we were given every week in gallon bags. This happy mixture contained a number of less savory ingredients mentioned above, specifically steel cut oats and lots of healthful flax seeds and raisins. If someone on the "manna" food crew for a particular week was more inventive (and could get away with it) it might contain almonds, walnuts, cinnamon or even once or twice coconut. My personal suggestion would have been chocolate chips. I don't think carob would have been as good. I am surprised no one thought to include mung bean sprouts in the mix.
I seem to remember that at one point raspberry leaf tea was highly recommended for pregnant women, but have no personal experience with that.
Looking back, I think if we had been better fed we might have been less disgruntled and actually got more work done in the garden or wherever we were assigned. It's possible to cook and consume healthful, nutritious food that doesn't taste like it was fished out of the compost bin. I do it every day. Why didn't they use real seasonings, like garlic and rosemary, or cumin or anything but kelp or some kind of other weird stuff?
To clarify: "Manna" was the name of the food program for Fellow Laborers of Ohio. We were not surprised to learn the translation of the word "manna" is "What Is It?"
I seem to remember that at one point raspberry leaf tea was highly recommended for pregnant women, but have no personal experience with that.
I am not a woman, nor do I play one on T.V. Both my first wife and sister, however, swore by raspberry leaf tea during their pregnancies. Raspberry leaf tea does not typically induce labor. My sister was a bit overdue. She drank a cup of the tea and went into labor within a few minutes. She doesn't think the tea caused the labor but she thinks the tea helped to restore a healthy "balance" in her body so that she could go into labor. My first wife simply said raspberry leaf tea helped her feel better overall.
Now it is time again where East meets West here in Kitchen Stadium. I can imadine Mark Dacacos introducing the Iron Chefs to these secret ingedients. Womder how Bobby Flay and company would have been "creative"?
....I seem to remember that at one point raspberry leaf tea was highly recommended for pregnant women, but have no personal experience with that....
....Both my first wife and sister, however, swore by raspberry leaf tea during their pregnancies. Raspberry leaf tea does not typically induce labor. My sister was a bit overdue. She drank a cup of the tea and went into labor within a few minutes. She doesn't think the tea caused the labor but she thinks the tea helped to restore a healthy "balance" in her body so that she could go into labor. My first wife simply said raspberry leaf tea helped her feel better overall.
i don't know much about raspberry leaf tea.....but let me tell you something about fenugreek tea. My wife heard that it helped in baby delivery. Not sure if that had anything to do with it - but lemme tell ya - at the birthing center - from start to finish - it seems like our daughter shot out of Tonto like greased lightning!
Somebody in the first or second Corps got the idea that it might be fun to "run down the road and back". Get a little fresh air. Start the day with a little physical stimulus. Next thing you know, there's a whole survival program where people are hitch-hiking cross country, getting raped, run over by semi trucks, cutting their own toes off due to frost bite and so on. Leave it to The Way to take something innocuous and turn it into a nightmare.
At least in fellow laborers, we got to "run with the cows" Not as cool as running with the bulls but still.....
Way, I grew up on a farm. Â Milking Cows was not a lot of fun, but it had to be done twice a day.
Seriously, I still get millet occasionally. Think of it as a bland carrier for more important stuff like cheese, garlic, onion, etc.
How about powdered kelp?
My mother made wilted lettuce when I was a kid. I hated it then and I hate it now. I do sautee greens occasionally, kale to be exact. However, I fry bacon first, then sautee onions and garlic in the bacon fat, then add the kale until slightly wilted, stirring to be sure it gets coated with bacon grease, and then crumble the bacon on top.
Not a familia treat, but it beats wilted lettuce, which I wouldn't feed to a hog.
Whatever makes you happy! Costco sold packages of dried seaweed, rice paper thing, as a snack. It was popular with some of the Asian members. I liked it but most Westerners thought it was awful, especially because it was green, and as Americans, we must consume salt, sugar and fat in large amounts to keep our generous figures!
Whatever makes you happy! Costco sold packages of dried seaweed, rice paper thing, as a snack. It was popular with some of the Asian members. I liked it but most Westerners thought it was awful, especially because it was green, and as Americans, we must consume salt, sugar and fat in large amounts to keep our generous figures!
WG, you are so funny!! Â I've eaten Dried Seeweed before, and loved it. Â God forbid we Americans, eat healthy food. Â I wouldn't want to put Mickey D, Taco Bell, and other fast food places out of business. Nosireeee!!!!
Sky, my goodness! Â He claims to run his classes "from full authority of God". My, did God come, and personally tell him to run his classes?? Sky, I do not know this man, but some of his classes remind me of classes I took from TWI. Personally, I am not interested in whatever he is selling.
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waysider
Remember liquid lecithin? You were supposed to consume a couple tablespoons a day to increase your state of alertness. Maybe if we had gotten more than 5 hours sleep a night we wouldn't have been so c
waysider
Good Lord! That's one I forgot all about. Put wheat germ on anything that isn't moving. And then all 50 of us would meet every morning at 5:30 in one of the basements. One spark, at the wrong momen
waysider
Millet! How did I forget that one? There is just nothing quite as refreshing, after a long, hot day of work, as a steaming hot lump of millet. Top that off with some wilted lettuce and you've got your
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skyrider
Knowles breathing...........
Everytime I hear of knowles breathing.....I associate Mich@el Gud0rf as "the instructor" on these techniques and guru of the benefits.
He was my roommate at hq.........and took LONG NAPS EVERYDAY.
He now has his OWN leadership training......
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wrdsandwrks
Only $58.00 a jar!
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Watered Garden
And of course Waysider remembers the familia we were given every week in gallon bags. This happy mixture contained a number of less savory ingredients mentioned above, specifically steel cut oats and lots of healthful flax seeds and raisins. If someone on the "manna" food crew for a particular week was more inventive (and could get away with it) it might contain almonds, walnuts, cinnamon or even once or twice coconut. My personal suggestion would have been chocolate chips. I don't think carob would have been as good. I am surprised no one thought to include mung bean sprouts in the mix.
I seem to remember that at one point raspberry leaf tea was highly recommended for pregnant women, but have no personal experience with that.
Looking back, I think if we had been better fed we might have been less disgruntled and actually got more work done in the garden or wherever we were assigned. It's possible to cook and consume healthful, nutritious food that doesn't taste like it was fished out of the compost bin. I do it every day. Why didn't they use real seasonings, like garlic and rosemary, or cumin or anything but kelp or some kind of other weird stuff?
To clarify: "Manna" was the name of the food program for Fellow Laborers of Ohio. We were not surprised to learn the translation of the word "manna" is "What Is It?"
We asked that twice a day.
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Broken Arrow
I am not a woman, nor do I play one on T.V. Both my first wife and sister, however, swore by raspberry leaf tea during their pregnancies. Raspberry leaf tea does not typically induce labor. My sister was a bit overdue. She drank a cup of the tea and went into labor within a few minutes. She doesn't think the tea caused the labor but she thinks the tea helped to restore a healthy "balance" in her body so that she could go into labor. My first wife simply said raspberry leaf tea helped her feel better overall.
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Thomas Loy Bumgarner
Now it is time again where East meets West here in Kitchen Stadium. I can imadine Mark Dacacos introducing the Iron Chefs to these secret ingedients. Womder how Bobby Flay and company would have been "creative"?
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socks
There can be only One...
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Thomas Loy Bumgarner
for a secong thought you were talking about Highlander, lol.
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Twinky
When I was in rez (early 90s) it was kelp with everything.
Mealtime shakers on the table: salt, pepper, kelp. Everything had to have a sprinkle of kelp.
Oh. And fertile eggs. There was a craze for fertile eggs - because they had "life" in them. Gruesome.
You also had to have water with a meal - never tea or coffee which "interfered with digestion" (also costs more than plain tap water).
But sometimes (some months) you didn't have to have water with a meal or within 1/2 hour of a meal - because that interfered with digestion.
Never heard of half the things mentioned on this thread.
Postum? Figpep? Wheat berries?
Chicory was put in coffee to stretch the coffee. Wartime remedy when it was hard to get coffee.
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T-Bone
i don't know much about raspberry leaf tea.....but let me tell you something about fenugreek tea. My wife heard that it helped in baby delivery. Not sure if that had anything to do with it - but lemme tell ya - at the birthing center - from start to finish - it seems like our daughter shot out of Tonto like greased lightning!
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outandabout
I remember making cayenne "bombs." You take a piece of paper napkin, dump a bunch of cayenne into it, fold it around the pile and swallow.
And of course there were the raw potatoes that cured everything.
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Twinky
Outandabout, do I take it you're a fan of Red Hot Chili Poopers?
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Ham
You can still get a case of it for $78.00 U.S. dollars..
http://figpep.com/
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socks
"You take a piece of paper napkin, dump a bunch of cayenne into it, fold it around the pile and swallow."
That'll blow a hole in your stomach, for sure. Not a great idea.
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Grace Valerie Claire
Way, I grew up on a farm. Â Milking Cows was not a lot of fun, but it had to be done twice a day.
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Watered Garden
Waysider! Knock it off or I'll flatulate on you!
Seriously, I still get millet occasionally. Think of it as a bland carrier for more important stuff like cheese, garlic, onion, etc.
How about powdered kelp?
My mother made wilted lettuce when I was a kid. I hated it then and I hate it now. I do sautee greens occasionally, kale to be exact. However, I fry bacon first, then sautee onions and garlic in the bacon fat, then add the kale until slightly wilted, stirring to be sure it gets coated with bacon grease, and then crumble the bacon on top.
Not a familia treat, but it beats wilted lettuce, which I wouldn't feed to a hog.
Â
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Rocky
I still use granulated kelp. Here's the source: seaveg.com but they close the store during August because they are busy with the harvest.
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Watered Garden
Whatever makes you happy! Costco sold packages of dried seaweed, rice paper thing, as a snack. It was popular with some of the Asian members. I liked it but most Westerners thought it was awful, especially because it was green, and as Americans, we must consume salt, sugar and fat in large amounts to keep our generous figures!
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Grace Valerie Claire
WG, you are so funny!! Â I've eaten Dried Seeweed before, and loved it. Â God forbid we Americans, eat healthy food. Â I wouldn't want to put Mickey D, Taco Bell, and other fast food places out of business. Nosireeee!!!!
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Grace Valerie Claire
Sky, my goodness! Â He claims to run his classes "from full authority of God". My, did God come, and personally tell him to run his classes?? Sky, I do not know this man, but some of his classes remind me of classes I took from TWI. Personally, I am not interested in whatever he is selling.
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