Anyone have an idea why salted meat wouldn't cure/prevent scurvy?
I've cultured grain sprout water, and I've cultured cabbage. I didn't use salt. The cultures grew tart tasting and are said to have lots of bioavailable C.
Salt cuts tart taste, both in recipes and cuisines, and in Chinese Five Phase Theory, Ayurverda, Tibetan medicine etc.
Scurvy is said to be a lack of ascorbic acid, that's where the name scurvy came from, ascorbic.
Salt preserves things by making an inhospitable in environment (the foods it preserves) for pathogens, bacterias, etc.
Lactobacteria from cultured cabbage, carrots, beets or this sprouted grain water help prevent scurvy. Maybe all bacteria help prevent scurvy. Raw meat may grow different bacteria, but they are bacteria none-the-less. Maybe it's just that bacteria prevent scurvy.
I somehow doubt that Captain James Cook cured his sailors' scurvy with salted kraut. Anyone find evidence that he salted his kraut?
Salt is also said to leach minerals out of people's bones into their bloodstreams for disposal of them (calcium etc). I've been hearing that for decades before I knew AV existed.