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Author Message
25 new of 610 responses total.
i
response 379 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 02:15 UTC 1999

Not beans.  This food is not usually considered high in protein.
keesan
response 380 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 03:05 UTC 1999

Half the carbohydrates are sugar, some sort of fruit?  What sort of unrefined
fruit comes in tablespoons?  No sugar added jam?  Apricot jam?  High in
vitamins A and C.  
i
response 381 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 15:03 UTC 1999

Not apricot nor jam.  Note how i talked around the "refined" issue in
#375.  I'd call it a fruit.
keesan
response 382 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 02:06 UTC 1999

Dried fruit?  Dried tomatoes?  Is sugar-added not considered refined?
i
response 383 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 21:18 UTC 1999

Not dried anything.  I wouldn't call sugar-added "refined"....but no
sugar has been added to this food.
keesan
response 384 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 18:28 UTC 1999

Fruit?
i
response 385 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 01:30 UTC 1999

I'd call it a fruit.
keesan
response 386 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 02:01 UTC 1999

Tomato?  Pepper?  Eggplant?
(Solanaceae)
i
response 387 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 12 02:47 UTC 1999

Tomato paste.
keesan
response 388 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 04:27 UTC 1999

Dried fruit, like I said.  We like ajvar, which is Macedonian or Bulgarian
and is a combination of cooked peppers, eggplant and tomato with spices, sort
of boiled down to thick.  Available at big market in spicy or less spicy.
If anyone else is reading this item please come up with a mystery food (and
if you want me to guess at it I do better at single ingredient stuff).
Or I will enter something interesting from an ethnic food store again.  We
just ran out of peanut oil and went shopping.

What does one do with only 2 tbps tomato paste?
i
response 389 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 21:03 UTC 1999

I don't think of tomato paste as a dried fruit because it's not dry.

I'd guess they figure 2T is the amount each person gets from the little
can of tomato paste after you mix it into a pot of spaghetti sauce and
serve it to your family.
keesan
response 390 of 610: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 03:34 UTC 1999

Jim's contribution, nutritional values are from a nutrition book:
1 cup, 175 g, 586 kcal, 20.5 g protein, 128 g carb, 15.6 g fiber, 4.2 g fat
of which .81 sat 1.4 mono 1.51 poly-unsaturated, no chol

calc 200, iron 6.7  Magn 315 Phos 494 Pota 784 Sodi 4 Zinc 4.4 (mg)

VT-A 0 Thia 1.05 Ribo .26  Niac 7.7 V-B6 .37 Fola 52 Vt-C o (mg)
(Vt-A is in RE)

We have some of this product but packaged without nutrition label.
The amount I would use for two of us is about one cup ( 2 servings).
Oh, H2O (%) 11.  For comparison chocolate milk is 82% water, meat about 50%,
yellow cake with chocolate frosting (2 layer cake) 23%, and chocolate chip
cookies home recipe only 3% and macademia nuts 2%.  Lettuce 96% water.
lilmo
response 391 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 13 01:48 UTC 1999

some kind of bulk dry breakfast cereal?
keesan
response 392 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 13 03:30 UTC 1999

We are trying to remember just what Jim's entry was.  You are close as far
as 'cereal' and 'bulk' but it needs further cooking to be eaten for breakfast,
and is generally mixed with a few other ingredients.  Not just dumped into
a bowl and milk added, or simply boiled.
lilmo
response 393 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 13 22:53 UTC 1999

is it oatmeal?
keesan
response 394 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 14 16:54 UTC 1999

No, we make oatmeal by simply boiling it.  This is not oatmeal, but it is used
similarly to a cereal=grain though technically not a grain (graminae - grass).
lilmo
response 395 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 15 21:57 UTC 1999

Can I guess again, or do I need to let someone else have a try; I think I know
what it is...
keesan
response 396 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 26 02:07 UTC 1999

Of course you can guess again, this was a dead item without your input!  Sorry
I have been too busy with computer viruses to get back to here sooner.
lilmo
response 397 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 27 00:19 UTC 1999

CORNmeal !!!  It's not a grain, but it's treated that way, often.  You might
use it to make mush, cornbread, etc.  :-)
keesan
response 398 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 27 23:15 UTC 1999

Corn is definitely a member of the graminae and thus a grain, albeit
processed into meal.  Wheat flour is also made from a grain, etc.  This is
something else made into flour that is not a true grain.  It can also be eaten
not made into flour.
lilmo
response 399 of 610: Mark Unseen   Apr 30 21:22 UTC 1999

Phooee.
keesan
response 400 of 610: Mark Unseen   May 2 14:56 UTC 1999

Think 'pancake'.  (Not phooee, not wheat, rye, corn, barley, millet, sorghum,
teff, rice, although these all make nice pancakes too).
i
response 401 of 610: Mark Unseen   May 7 05:05 UTC 1999

Potato flour?
keesan
response 402 of 610: Mark Unseen   May 7 22:33 UTC 1999

Nope, and not sweet potato or cassava flour.  BIG HINT:  the name sounds like
a grain even though this is not a grain.
(Not acorn flour, not breadfruit flour)
omni
response 403 of 610: Mark Unseen   May 8 06:36 UTC 1999

  How about buckwheat?
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