Guest guest Posted May 12, 2008 Report Share Posted May 12, 2008 Would you guys who make these mind sharing your recipes for them? I know you boil the bones with something acidy, right, like lemon juice or vinegar? But what else do you add for flavor? And for those who don't know, the reason these are good for you is they supply sulfate. The same with plain gelatin, or taking an epsom salt bath.--------Jackie In frequent-dose-chelation robin wrote: > PS. Bone broths are great, aren't they? Yer a man after my own heart Dave... ~robin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2008 Report Share Posted May 13, 2008 Posted by: " Jackie " jtrunt@... <mailto:jtrunt@...?Subject=%20Re%3A%20Bone%20broth%20soups> jackietutts <http://profiles.yahoo.com/jackietutts> Mon May 12, 2008 12:24 pm (PDT) >Would you guys who make these mind sharing your recipes for them? I know you boil the bones with something acidy, right, like lemon juice or vinegar? But what else do you add for flavor? Ya, you can do that. Add maybe 2 tbs of vinegar to water in a big pot, covering the bones of a chicken - along with whatever parts you have. Don't forget the feet and heads! They are key. I let it sit for an hour, and then cook it on really really low for about 24 hours. Sometimes, I have to let the free range chickens go longer, since their bones are so hard; I just go until the soften up. In the first hour or so of cooking, I generally skim off the stuff that comes to the top. Strain it when it's done. That's it! Store in the fridge for a short time, or you can freeze it for later. I actually make the broth plain, and then use that as the base for a soup or I use it to cook some grain (in place of water) and mix in some veggies. So, I don't add any flavor until later. >And for those who don't know, the reason these are good for you is they supply sulfate. The same with plain gelatin, or taking an epsom salt bath.------- Ummm - almost, but that's not quite right Jackie. The sulfate is used to make things like collagen, and those of us who are high in sulfate have the processing step form sulfate to collagen blocked. So, the bone broths supply the collagen directly. Andy talks about it here: http://onibasu.com/archives/am/134317.html >-Jackie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2008 Report Share Posted May 13, 2008 > The sulfate is used > to make things like collagen, and those of us who are high in sulfate > have the processing step form sulfate to collagen blocked. So, the > bone broths supply the collagen directly. Andy talks about it here: > > http://onibasu.com/archives/am/134317.html I've been making and sipping these soups everyday for about 5 years and my skin looks and feels as if I'm about 15 years younger than I am. That's saying a lot for someone who is very toxic and whose adrenals have seriously crashed. I credit the chicken feet especially. When prepared properly, your broth should be a very firm jello-like consistancy at anything a little cooler than room temp. As soon as you start cooking it the " jello " becomes fluid and soup-like but you just KNOW that collegen and lots and lots of minerals are in there. And yeah, I agree with Jada and Dave. I can recognize WAPF people from a mile away :-) (WAPF stands for the Weston Price Foundation, BTW) I just found another Yahoo group I'm checking into today for the first time: called WAPF Healthy Thyroid. http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/WAPF-NTHealthyThyroid/ I'm getting results from all these supplements but always imagine that surrounding ourselves with the whole FOODS gives us so much more, all those things we don't entirely know everything about hidden in the molucules of food. And then there's the love, which is big :-) ~robin, who's drinking hot soup right now for breakfast.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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