You only use a small amount of acid in order to be able to drink the water afterwards? Thats smart. Im going to try that next.
Lime/lemon squeezed into some water (which a Naturopath had recommended to me to consume before meals to improve digestion) tasted better to me than I expected the first time I tried it and it didn't take long to develop a taste for it. Now it tastes sweet to me, especially if I use Meyer lemons (a sweeter variety). I can now even drink straight lemon juice or eat a lemon if I wish, and enjoy it. I suspect that our ancestors enjoyed foods that were more tart and bitter than most moderners do (some bitter foods now also taste sweet to me, BTW).
...So non essential means non essential because the body creates itself. Maybe these amino acids are so important to our body's that the body creates them itself. Where as essential amino acids are ok to go a day or two with out. In fact they me be prove beneficial to fast from.
You may be right. It's that way with the so-called "essential fatty acids"--they turned out to be less important than the so-called "nonessential" fats DHA and arachidonic acid. The latter are so crucial, the body makes its own in times of scarcity, whereas it doesn't bother to produce essential fatty acids because they are so plentiful in nature (and even more so nowadays).
The consumption of the amino acids found in the gelatin of connective tissues has declined and they have been found to produce health benefits:
"In the industrialized societies, the consumption of gelatin has decreased, relative to the foods that contain an inappropriately high proportion of the antimetabolic amino acids, especially tryptophan and cysteine.
The degenerative and inflammatory diseases can often be corrected by the use of gelatin-rich foods."
- Ray Peat, Gelatin, stress, longevity, http://raypeat.com/articles/articles/gelatin.shtml
Glycine: a new anti-inflammatory immunonutrient. Wheeler MD, Ikejema K, Mol Life Sci. Enomoto N, et al.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11212343
Samonina, G, et al. Protection of gastric mucosal integrity by gelatin and simple proline containing peptides, Pathophysiology, April 2000, 7, 1, 69–73.
Koyama, et al. Ingestion of gelatin has differential effect on bone mineral density and bodyweight in protein undernutrtion, Journal of Nutrition and Science of Vitaminology, 2000, 47, 1, 84–86.
Some RPDers report being very sensitive to various foods. Gelatin was found to reduce food sensitivities (Pottenger, FM, Hydrophilic colloid diet, Health and Healing Wisdom, Price Pottenger Nutrition Foundation Health Journal, Spring 1997, 21, 1, 17.).
When humans are healthy and robust, they can consume more bone and connective tissues than today's soft moderners realize. Take the example of Saiti dan Garba of Nigeria who eats "bones raw and draws out the juicy marrows of sheep" and "said that sheep bone is tenderer for chewing" (
http://www.rawpaleodietforum.com/infonews-items/nigeria-'i-eat-raw-meat-so-what'/msg15178/#msg15178).
Via the evidence of Stone Age human remains we know that our ancestors had much larger and more robust teeth, jaws and bones and so likely consumed more bone and connective tissue than even the most robust people of today. So presumably we have some genetic adaptation to eating some of those foods. As human teeth, jaws and bones shrunk, people developed other ways of continuing to consume bones and connective tissues, such as utilizing soaking, acids and fermentation and eventually cooking. Industrialized societies recently largely abandoned consumption of these ancient foods and now often wastefully dispose of much of them. Why assume that we can exclude this part of our Paleo dietary template without any negative consequences? Wouldn't that just be wishful thinking?
One idea I had so far was to see how much protein the broth is extracting would be to boil a batch down at some point into pure gelatin and see how much you get.
Have you gotten any thick gelatin from your raw broths? I've yet to try it and I don't have Sandor Katz's book for his fermentation technique.