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Author Message
25 new of 610 responses total.
keesan
response 541 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 23:13 UTC 1999

Butter:  1 tbsp is 14.2 g, of which 16% is water, 100 kcal energy, 1 g
protein, 92 g fat, two thirds of that saturated.  It contains some calcium,
iron, phosphorus, magnesium, potassium, lots of salt in the salted variety,
106 units of vitamin A (fat-soluble vitamin, none is found in olive oil), no
vitamin C, minute amounts of other vitamins.
In other words, not all the milk solids or even water are removed when making
cream into butter and buttermilk.  It is mostly, but not all, fat.
Lard has no water and almost no vitamins or minerals (a bit of zinc).
Margarine has vitamin A added, and sodium (salt).
Olive oil has a bit of iron.
You are right, butter is not half fat.
orinoco
response 542 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 18 00:32 UTC 1999

Not butter, nor peanut butter.  Nor haws neither, just for the record.
keesan
response 543 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 21 21:40 UTC 1999

Peanuts have no cholesterol.  This is some animal product, cheese spread?
happyboy
response 544 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 22 19:21 UTC 1999

ear wax?
orinoco
response 545 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 23 17:22 UTC 1999

It is an animal product, indirectly, but it isn't cheese spread or earwax.
i
response 546 of 610: Mark Unseen   Dec 31 01:15 UTC 1999

Looks like a dairy product.....
orinoco
response 547 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 22:48 UTC 2000

<nods>
lilmo
response 548 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 5 21:36 UTC 2000

thank you for the correction, keesan
i
response 549 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 03:49 UTC 2000

Sour cream?
orinoco
response 550 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 05:40 UTC 2000

Closer in terms of texture, but still no.
i
response 551 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 11 02:30 UTC 2000

A "lite" cream cheese?
orinoco
response 552 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 11 04:32 UTC 2000

nope.  this is proving harder than I expected....I'll give a hint as soon as
I can think of one.
i
response 553 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 05:59 UTC 2000

Yogurt?
orinoco
response 554 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 23:47 UTC 2000

Not yogurt.  But it is a dairy product that has had something done to it. 
It is not eaten as it comes, but rather is used as an ingredient, or has what
was done to it reversed.
happyboy
response 555 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 23:52 UTC 2000

powdered milk?

keesan
response 556 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 23:52 UTC 2000

Condensed milk?  (add water)
orinoco
response 557 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 01:11 UTC 2000

Keesan has it.  
keesan
response 558 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 20:21 UTC 2000

Would anyone else like 'it'?  I have already entered lots of foods.
Happyboy, do you have anything you would like to enter?  You came pretty
close to the answer.  (Or do people really want to be guessing things like
preserved mangosteen, as we have very few other foods with nutrition labels).
happyboy
response 559 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 20:31 UTC 2000

you do it!
you do it!
keesan
response 560 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 18 20:11 UTC 2000

If happyboy does not want to be 'it', any other volunteers?  People tend to
have a tough time guessing the only sorts of food that we have around with
labels on them (dried seaweed, pumpkin seeds, pomegranate syrup).
keesan
response 561 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 23:40 UTC 2000

No volunteers?  This time I will post an easy one.  As usual, it is a single
ingredient rather than a mixture, and this time it is something that you can
buy in a supermarket or even probably a small grocery store.  Since we buy
everything in bulk (or pick it ourselves) the nutrition info is from a book:
1 cup  234 g  85% water (in prepared form) 145 kcal 6 g protein 25.2 g carb
9.23 g fiber 2.4 gg fat (sat .44, mono .84 polyunsat 1)
cholesterol none, calcium 20 mg, iron 1.59 mg, Mg 56 mg, potassium 132 g
sodium 1 mg (without salt added), zinc 1.15 mg, A 1.15 RE, no C, reasonable
amounts of B vitamins
lilmo
response 562 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 22:40 UTC 2000

soybeans?
keesan
response 563 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 18:24 UTC 2000

Soybeans have more fat:10 grams per cup cooked. 235 kcal (double, probably
due to the fat) and 19.8 g protein.  Not soybeans but your'e sort of in the
right category, something dry that you cook.
happyboy
response 564 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 19:08 UTC 2000

oatmeal?
keesan
response 565 of 610: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 20:39 UTC 2000

You are IT!  (No backing out this time, you guessed right).  This must be a
new record for fast guessing.  
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