So sorry for forgetting your past post Iguana. My memory is poor, probably due to decades of damage by modern foods. Are the disks you speak of the dividing walls between the seeds inside the cassia bean pod? All I see is an extremely hard outer pod shell, inner dividing walls stuck to the shell, and small seeds in between the walls. Unless you had told me that cassia fistula were edible, I would never have guessed it, nor guessed which parts to eat (I would have guessed the seeds, as they look the most foodlike). I sucked on a few of the walls. They do dissolve. I don't care for the taste from the beginning (it's mildly bitter with a bit of excessive sweetness) and I didn't detect any smell. By sticking my nose right up to it I detected a mild and mildly unpleasant smell. So I guess my alliesthetic senses are telling me to not eat these. GCB advised to force oneself to eat the cassia fistula beyond what the senses indicate in the beginning, which for me was the first taste, to basically break the constipation log jam, so I did so to try it out.
I tried sucking on 4 of the little internal wall dividers last night until they dissolved in my mouth. No noticeable effects today.
What parts of these do the monkeys eat? I find it difficult to imagine that they would pick out the little wall dividers and ignore the seeds, but I have no info on this beyond what you've reported. How do the monkeys open them, by crushing them with their teeth?
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I tried a few more honeys, not because I expect any great benefits necessarily, though they are a calorically dense soft food, which addresses two of my health issues, but more out of scientific curiosity. Modern physicians, scientists and experts tell us that honey is just another sugar, yet for some reason wild honey doesn't seem to cause any obvious harm to hunter gatherers and traditional peoples. The experts claims it's only because the honey is restricted by season and difficult to get. I've seen HGs and even chimps gather wild honey and in each case they seemed unconcerned by the risk of falling and even the stings, so I doubt that difficulty was a great deterrent. The scientific research acknowledges that bee hive contents are the most highly valued food among HGs and some other primates and bears. I don't know much about the seasonality, perhaps someone else can fill me in on that.
I noted here -
http://www.rawpaleoforum.com/general-discussion/liquid-raw-honey/msg63389/#msg63389 - that some raw wild honeys can remain liquid after being jarred for some time whereas another variety of honey from the same producer can crystallize quickly. Some honeys crystallize into soft creams whereas others turn hard. The water content of the honey is apparently a factor here, and someone also mentioned that the fructose content is a factor.
The Heavenly Organics Wild Forest raw honey is rather dark and greenish in color and has a taste reminiscent of the smell of pine trees. They mention that it comes from forests that contain neem trees. Neem is well known as good for dental health and I did notice that despite being a very liquid honey it seemed to cause a tiny bit less dental crud the next morning than some other honeys.
Their White Himalayan honey was tastier and nicely thick, soft and smooth. I think it may be my favorite tasting honey so far. It seemed to cause the more usual amount of dental crud.
Y.S. Bee Farms Super Enriched Honey is dark like the Wild Forest honey, and still greener (although I'm color blind, so it could be brown as I have difficulty distinguishing green and brown). It also seems to cause a tiny bit less of the crud and have a forest-type taste that is also a bit medicinal. Perhaps the latter is because it's enriched with bee pollen, propolis and royal jelly, which are supposed to have medicinal benefits. While I'm not thrilled by the taste, it has some of the best texture and consistency--smoothness and soft thickness--I've come across, maybe the best.
Today I also tested the effect on blood glucose of the YS Bee Farms Super Enriched Honey with Bee Pollen, Propolis and Royal Jelly, which was almost exactly the same as other honeys:
Fasting BG before consuming the honey: 97 mg/dl
Ate 2 tbsps of the honey
1 hour postprandial BG: 208 mg/dl
2 hour pp BG: 112 mg/dl
3 hour pp BG: 101 mg/dl
Interestingly, I've been getting some fasting BG measurements around the 100 mg/dl level despite including significant carbs in my diet for months. If those levels were initially caused by peripheral insulin resistance from ZC/VLC, then it's supposed to return to lower levels by adding carbs back into the diet.