Hi Phil,
Of course I did not mean coconut oil, but coconuts.
Yes, I know you meant coconuts, Hanna, thanks. Coconut water makes me nauseous and I don't like the idea of just throwing it out so as to eat the coconut meat, which I seem to handle relatively well, although I suppose I could try diluting it with water. Plus coconuts have to be shipped quite a distance (think less fresh and use of fossil fuels) and I also find it a hassle to have to open coconuts and separate the meat from the pith, so I don't think I'll ever make them a staple food, though I occasionally buy one (about once a year). It was my idea to try coconut oil again, because I can eat a tiny amount at a time, it preserves well and it provides another fat option. Fats are important to my diet because I don't eat much carbs. I doubt that I'll make coconut oil a regular part of my diet, though, for some of the above and other reasons (like expense--animal fats are much cheaper).
Interestingly, I was curious as to whether adding Maine wild blueberries, which I seem to handle better than any other fruit, to coconut oil might make coconut oil more digestible for me, as some sugars seem to settle my stomach. So today I made a sort of akutaq (Yupik word meaning "mix them together" that refers to soft and/or liquid fats mixed with meat, fish and/or berries) with lard, coconut oil, a little lemon fish oil, and some Maine wild blueberries. It seemed to work even better than I expected. I was able to eat much more coconut oil this way than I normally can, and didn't experience any of the usual nausea.
And just a warning to prevent another disaster: Cassia fistula can cause abdominal pain, even if eaten instinctively.
Thanks for the warning, that might explain why I've never seen anyone recommend it outside of Instinctos.
I would not eat it regularly, because it is rich in anthraquinones, which are carcinogenic and otherwise detrimental.
Yes, anthraquinones is apparently the specific type of quinones in cassia fistula, if I understand what I read on it. I thought about using that term, but didn't want to possibly complicate things by using a different term than Alphagruis used. I didn't know that a carcinogenic link had already been found. Do you have any sources you can refer me to, as I couldn't find any on long-term side effects of cassia fistula consumption?
Fruits like papaya are very easily digestible and contain almost no acid.
Yeah, and papaya seem low in sugar and I seem to handle them better than most fruit. One problem is they are one of the few fruits that taste bad to me. However, if it works for me like a laxative, then I would eat it. It hasn't in the past, but maybe I didn't eat enough. It's worth another try.
All citrus is off my list except as a limited flavoring. Ideally, any fruit I eat should:
- not give me significant negative symptoms (not spike my BG, not digest poorly, not produce white scum on my teeth, not give me acne breakouts and dry skin, etc.)
- be grown locally and be fresh and organic
- taste good to me
- preferably be an old species, particularly wild, that hasn't been hybridized a lot
Wild Maine blueberries and wild tart local berries are the only fruits that come close to fitting all these bills so far, and even with these I have to limit how much I eat at a time (though eating them with fat seems to increase by a little bit how much I can handle--despite how others say eating fats with fruits makes things worse for them). I seem to handle black and red grapes OK too, but I think it's mainly because I limit them to a handful or so, and they don't fit as many of the above ideal characteristics.