@Tyler: I'm glad you agree in that sense - in my opinion, it's important for me to help my parents and grandparents to enjoy happy lives, given my research and their passive interest. I love the spirit of goodsamaritan's
www.curemanual.com and I'd like to think I could bring ideal comfort to my extended family. At the moment, I have no family of my own, so I take care of my flesh and blood, who mean a lot to me. Maybe mitigating toxins for those desiring cooked fodder is a worthwhile endeavour, even if they are not projecting a skull and crossbones onto anything without its complementary enzymes and low levels of AGEs/ALEs. There are degrees of everything...I'd like to remind you that we live in a chaotic realm, where nothing is always quite what it seems, black and white etc. May I also assert that humans have been replicating their DNA for many, many generations on cooked food, even though there's a measure of toxicity that's escalating as food production has shifted into the industrial/commercial domain.
@Josh: I've been eating a fairly exclusive raw paleo diet (with very short term side experimentation) since last June, and having still not developed a real taste for everyday fat consumption (in chunky, bulk quantity), as well as maldigestion, I'm inclined to be somewhat pioneering in preparation. Like I said, if I mince the fat beforehand, I find it's better absorbed - rendered from scratchings or not. The raw rendering is a nice way to create a dip for slightly dried meats (in a pemmican stylee) or something to mix with grated frozen heart/liver to create a pseudo-pate. In my opinion, if you struggle to eat something that you know is ideal (that said, I should have the appetite of a wolf for whole organs by now!), you prepare it in a more intelligent way as a means to gradually introduce oneself to the nature of that food - you know, establish a little rapport...For me, chewing chunks of fat that haven't been a bit melted is like chewing on cardboard - that includes cuts from all over the animal, including the creamy marrow. Also, I hate those nasty bone bristles in unmelted marrow.
@alphagruis: Voila! Par example...
http://inhumanexperiment.blogspot.com/2009/10/fats-and-ages-pufas-are-even-worse-than.html (Juissance!) This is of course just a blog post commentary on studies, but it makes one wonder about AA oxidation in high meats...Does anyone know how dietary AA is metabolised, given that it's a PUFA?