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| I am looking for the recipe of the Hunza diet bread. |
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by Susie(gurneys@gte.net) onThu, May 17, 01 at 7:21
| I received an unsolicited e-mail advising of the benefits of the Hunza Bread Diet. Instead of sending $7, I searched for info on the net. I found the recipe at: http://www.breadrecipe.com/AZ/HnzBrdII.asp I also found some info that it was a "diet scam". I'm always looking for new bread recipes, so I will probably try it - but as a diet, it sounds like a lot of bread to eat each day. Good luck. |
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- Posted by Mag One(greenlady@zensearch.com) onThu, May 17, 01 at 10:37
| This is from another post here. It was copied from another website. HUNZA DIET BREAD RECIPE * 4 cups of water Hunza Diet Bread has a taste that is very satisfying and chewy all on |
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- Posted by posygrl(szidonrh@webtv.net) onMon, May 21, 01 at 13:01
| I bought all the ingredients!! made 1/2 recipe. I wonder where I went wrong?? It is SOOO sweet, how can this be called diet bread with honey, molasses, sugar? I used millet flour and did add walnuts and dates, wish I had cut down adding the sugar, any comments that would help me? It sounded so good, wonder what I did wrong? and all those special ingredients I bought! |
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- Posted by Mag One(greenlady@zensearch.com) onTue, May 22, 01 at 10:15
| Mine didn't seem all that sweet. I didn't add any extra fruit, though. I guess you could cut the honey and molasses each by half. I talked to my nutritionist about the recipe, and she said it was a good one. I guess I'm lucky, the only thing I didn't have was the honey, which I usually don't use, and I was out of millet flour and had to go get more. The honey, sugar and molasses are for energy, and without them you would get hungry really fast after eating some. I personally think they are the "secret" to the appetite suppressing ability. It doesn't work as well for me as it does some other people I've been in touch with, but like any diet thing, it isn't the same for everybody. Keep trying with it, it took a while for it to start working for me. Good luck!!! |
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- Posted by Carol R. Evans(Carolx79@aol.com) onWed, May 30, 01 at 10:31
| I found this recipe very filling and I think it does work, it does not address the physiological problem of eating whether you are hungry or not.That you must work on mentally I guess. |
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- Posted by Rosanne Simmons(rlsimmons@juno.com) onMon, Jun 11, 01 at 22:45
| I wondered about all that sugar, (honey and molasses) sounds awfully sweet to me. Glad I found your comments. I think I will try it but will cut the sugary stuff down by quite a bit. Thanks! |
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- Posted by Cathy(bunnyhugger@worldnet.att.net) onMon, Jun 18, 01 at 14:56
| How important is the canola oil? I've heard some real bad stories about canola oil and won't use it anymore. |
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- Posted by Maggie G(greenlady@zensearch.com) onMon, Jun 18, 01 at 18:22
| The canola oil is important to the recipe. This was the answer to the same concern about canola oil, from a website that I get sent to Disney for trying to post. The canola oil story is a HOAX!! And that's all there is to it. Any "warnings" from an e-mail are 99 percent certain to be lies and hoaxes. Don't buy into it. "What we have here is a bit of truth about a product's family An appreciation of what this scare is based upon begins with a better understanding of what canola oil and how it came into being. The rape plant (Brassica napus) is a member of the mustard family, as claimed in the e-mail. However, before associations between rape and mustard gas set in too strongly, it should be noted turnip, cabbage, watercress, horseradish, and radish are also members of this family of Rapeseed oil has been used for cooking for centuries in Europe, India, China, and Japan. As modern science is finding out, its previous use wasn't necessarily a guarantee of safety. Cooking at high temperatures with unrefined rapeseed oil now appears to be related to an increased risk of lung cancer because at high temperatures cooking oil gives off chemicals capable of causing mutations in cells. Unrefined rapeseed oil is particularly notable for this, but other oils also have this association. Those intent upon doing large amounts of wok cooking with any sort of cooking oil should therefore lower their frying temperature from the 240°C to 280°C called for in Chinese cooking to 180°C. Rapeseed oil naturally contains a high percentage (30-60%) of erucic acid, a substance associated with heart lesions in laboratory animals. In 1974, rapeseed varieties with a low erucic content were introduced. Scientists had found a way to replace almost all of rapeseed's erucic acid with oleic acid, a type of monounsaturated fatty acid. (This change was accomplished through the cross-breeding of plants, not by the techniques commonly referred to as "genetic engineering.") By 1978, all This light, tasteless oil's popularity is due to the structure of its fats. It is lower in saturated fat (about 6%) than any other oil. In other words, it's a healthy oil. One shouldn't feel afraid to use it because of some Internet scare loosely based on half-truths and outright lies." |
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