[PREP] millions of acres of free food

vlad

Inactive
Mother Nature provides. You just gotta know where to look.

[EDITED TO REMARK
nice illustrations in the article didn't print.
I dunno why. I clicked on SELECT ALL, COPY, PASTE.]

http://www.spmesquite.com/articles/ancientfoods.html

Your source for mesquite current events and press, mesquite services, products, and a wealth of information.


Science Times
The New York Times

To Preserve Their Health and Heritage, Arizona Indians Reclaim Ancient Foods

Desert's bounty cuts overweight and diabetes


Both fruits and pads of the prickly pear cactus are rich in slowly absorbed soluble fibers that help keep blood sugar stable.

By Jane E. Brody


Going back to one's roots could soon take on a more literal meaning for the Indians of the American Southwest, as well as for peoples elsewhere in the world who are poorly adapted to rich, refined foods.

For the sake of their health, as well as their cultural heritage, the Pima and Tohono O'odham tribes of Arizona are being urged to rediscover the desert foods their people traditionally consumed until as recently as the 1940's.

Studies strongly indicate that people who evolved in these arid lands are metabolically best suited to the feast-and-famine cycles of their forebears who survived on the desert's unpredictable bounty, both wild and cultivated.

By contrast, the modern North American diet is making them sick. With rich food perpetually available, weights in the high 200's and 300's are not uncommon among these once-lean people. As many as half the Pima and Tohono O'odham (formerly Papago) Indians now develop diabetes by the age of 35, an incidence 15 times higher than for Americans as a whole. Yet, before World War II, diabetes was rare in this population.

Similar problems have been found among Australian aborigines, Pacific Islanders and other peoples whose survival historically depended on their ability to stash away calories in times of plenty to sustain them during droughts and crop failures. The Pima and Tohono O'odham Indians seem unusually efficient at turning calories to body fat; nutritionists say they gain weight readily on the kinds and amounts of foods people of European descent can eat with no problem.


One tablespoon of buds from the cholla cactus has as much calcium as eight ounces of milk. The buds are rich in soluble fiber that helps regulate blood sugar.


Preliminary studies have indicated that a change in the Indian diet back to the beans, corn, grains, greens and other low-fat high-fiber plant foods that their ancestors depended upon can normalize blood sugar, suppress between-meal hunger and probably also foster weight loss.

These findings may also prove valuable to non-Indians who are susceptible to overweight and diabetes, and perhaps also those prone to high blood pressure and heart disease. The benefits, which are also found in a few more familiar foods like oat bran and okra, stem from primarily two characteristics of native foods: their high content of soluble fibers that form edible gels, gums and mucilages, and a type of starch called amylose that is digested very slowly. The combined effect is to prevent wide swings in blood sugar, slow down the digestive process and delay the return of hunger.

Peaks in blood sugar increase the body's need for insulin and dips in blood sugar can trigger feelings of hunger. In the form of diabetes that strikes these Indians the overweight body becomes insensitive to insulin weight loss increases the body's sensitivity to insulin and slow digestion diminishes the need for insulin.

On the Arizona desert, the desirable food ingredients are found in edible parts of such indigenous plants as the mesquite (mes-KEET) tree, cholla (CHOY-a) and prickly pear cactus, as well as in tepary (TEP-a-ree) beans, choa (CHEE-a) seeds and acorns from live oaks. Tribal elders speak fondly of these one-time favorites, which in recent decades have been all but forgotten as hamburgers, fries, soft drinks and other fatty, sugary, overly refined fast and packaged foods gained flavor.


Acorns from live oaks are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of maintaining stable blood sugar levels. They can be eaten whole or ground into meal.


Even those Indians who still rely heavily on beans and corn are today consuming varieties that have little or none of the nutritive advantages found in the staples of their historic diet. For example, the sweet corn familiar to Americans contains rapidly digested starches and sugars, which raise sugar levels in the blood, while the hominy-type corn of the traditional Indian diet has little sugar and mostly starch that is slowly digested.

Similarly, the pinto beans that the Federal Government now gives to the Indians (along with lard, refined wheat flour, sugar, coffee and processed cereals) are far more rapidly digested than the tepary beans the Tohono O'odham once depended upon. Indeed, their former tribal name is a distorted version of the Indian word meaning "the Bean People."

When Earl Ray, a Pima Indian who lives near Phoenix, switched to a more traditional native diet of mesquite meal, tepary beans, cholla buds and chaparral tea, he dropped from 239 pounds to less than 150 and brought his severe diabetes under control without medication. In a federally financed study of 11 Indian volunteers predisposed to diabetes, a diet of native food rich in fiber and complex carbohydrates kept blood sugar levels on an even keel and increased the effectiveness of insulin. When he switched back to a low-fiber "convenience-market diet" containing the same number of calories, the volunteers' blood sensitivity to insulin declined.

Much Foliage, Few Beans

In addition to the potential health benefits of traditional desert foods, agricultural and economic factors strongly favor their production. Marty Eberhardt the director of the Tucson Botanical Gardens, pointed out that the plants that produce these foods are naturally adapted to growing under conditions of high heat and little water.


Government food programs replaced the tepary bean, which is rich in fiber, protein, iron, and calcium, with the pinto bean, which is far more quickly digested and also lower in protein.


Martha Burgess, education director of Native Seeds/ Search, a seed bank and research and education organization here that studies and promotes the use of native desert plant foods, said, for example, that "If tepary bean plants are given lots of water, they produce tons of foliage and few beans," adding, "But if the plants are starved of water, they put their effort into flowers and seeds and produce beans that can have as much protein as soybeans."

Under the direction of Dr. Gary Paul Nabhan, Native Seeds/Search, (the acronym stands for Southwestern Endangered Arid-lands Resource Clearing House) is studying the value of native desert foods for controlling diabetes among Indians and Hispanic Americans of the border region. Dr. Nabhan, an ethnobotanist, was recently named a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation grant to pursue his studies of the agronomic characteristics and health value of desert food plants.

The group, which is housed on the grounds of the Tucson Botanical Gardens, teaches health professionals about native foods and promotes their use through school and community programs, seed distribution and cooking instruction.

"We should be eating the foods that grow here naturally instead of spending so much to bring in packaged foods," Ms Eberhardt said. "People find themselves shin-deep in mesquite beans they don't know what to do with, and some of us feel guilty throwing them into the landfill."

Although most Arizonans consider mesquite, which occupies 70 million acres in the American Southwest, a pesky weed, it is loaded with nutritious pods that have a natural caramel-like sweetness. Carolyn J. Niethammer, the author of "American Indian Food and Lore" and "The Tumbleweed Gourmet," a cookbook published by the University of Arizona Press that features desert plants, said that mesquite pods were good sources of calcium, manganese, iron, and zinc. The seeds within them are about 40 percent protein, almost double the protein content of common legumes. Even during a drought, mesquite is a prolific producer of seed-filled pods.

Tribal elders speak fondly of one-time favorites that are highly nutritious.

The Value of Mesquite

Carlos Nagel, who heads Friends of Pronatura, an American affiliate of a Mexican conservation agency, remarked that " A healthy stand of mesquite produces as much food value through its pods as does a wheat field under cultivation, and the mesquite does it without capitalization, pesticides, fertilizer or irrigation and with minimal cultivation."


Mesquite pods were once a treasured part of the Pima and Tohono O'odham diet. The sweet pods are a good source of calcium, manganese, iron, and zinc. The seeds within are 40 percent protein. Mesquite flour from grinding the whole pods produces fructose, which can be processed without insulin, and soluble fibers, which are slowly absorbed, without a rapid rise in blood sugar.


Dr. Nabhan, who has participated in medical studies of mesquite and other desert foods, said that despite its sweetness, mesquite flour (made by grinding whole pods) "is extremely effective in controlling blood sugar levels" in people with diabetes. The sweetness comes from fructose, which the body can process without insulin. In addition, soluble fibers, such as galactomannin gum, in the seeds and pods slow absorbtion of nutrients, resulting in a flattened blood sugar curve, unlike the peaks that follow consumption of wheat flour, corn meal and other common staples.

"The gel-forming fiber allows foods to be slowly digested and absorbed over a four- to six-hour period, rather than in one or two hours, which produces a rapid rise in blood sugar," Dr. Nabhan explained. He likened this "slow-release" New World food to two Old World legumes, guar and carob, that are being used in Europe to help control blood sugar levels in people with diabetes.

Dr. Nabhan, who has scoured the Southwest for remnants of nutritious wild and once-cultivated plants, said, "Prior to World War II, mesquite was the single most important wild food staple for the native desert peoples and probably protected them from developing diabetes. However, such wild foods were discouraged by the force of civilization and they dropped out of native diets."

Mesquite pods and acorns from the Emory Oak, a nondeciduous oak of the arid Southwest, are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of maintaining stable blood sugar levels, Dr. Nabhan said. After falling from the trees, these small tasty oval nuts are naturally toasted by the hot desert sun. They can be shelled and eaten whole as a snack or ground into meal to make burgers and muffins.

Also rich in health-promoting fiber are the drought-hearty tepary beans, the only cultivated beans with heat-resistant enzymes that can withstand the 100 plus degrees of the Sonoran Desert, Mr. Burgess said. Teparies, rich in protein, iron and calcium, once sustained many Indians of the Southwest, as well as the famed Tarahumara Indian runners of Mexico. But when post-war government welfare programs began giving pintos to the Tohono O'odham and Pima Indians, they lost their incentive to grow teparies, which are better for them because they are digested more slowly.

Jell-O of the desert

Today Mr. Nagel is trying to reverse the trend. In a cooperative program with Mexican farmers, he is fostering cultivation of a variety of tepary beans, which are already being grown commercially by Pima Indians in Sacaton, Arizona.


Seeds are rich in high-quality protein. Both greens and seeds have large amounts of calcium. Raw greens are high in vitamins A and C and iron.


Amaranth, known to some gardeners as pigweed, is another nutritious drought-tolerant plant that thrives in the desert, producing both greens and seeds that once nourished the Indians. The seeds are rich in high-quality protein, and both the seeds and greens are loaded with calcium. Mrs. Burgess said that amaranth is but one of many edible weeds commonly discarded by home gardeners, who fail to appreciate their nutritive and culinary value.

Mrs. Burgess is also enthusiastic about protein-rich chia seeds from a salvia plant that produces two seed crops a year. When mixed with water, the fiber in chia forms a gel that lowers cholesterol and keeps blood sugar stable. She tells Native American children that chia is "the Jell-O of the desert."

Cactus, the signature plants of the desert landscape, round out the nutritious native foods diet. Buds from the cholla are rich in calcium: One tablespoon has the calcium equivalent of eight ounces of milk. Cholla buds and the fruits and pads of the prickly pear are also rich in soluble fibers that help to normalize blood sugar.

Dr. Nabhan said that 20 other native desert foods were now being analyzed for their fiber and starch content and he predicted the availability of an ever-widening menu of nutritious ingredients.

Among the main remaining hurdles is the need to develop commercial sources of foods like mesquite meal and to convince diabetes-prone Indians that it is worth the trouble to prepare and consume their traditional foods. Native American interns are assisting in the effort, which is being pursued in school lunchrooms and classrooms and at reservation clinics and health fairs.

Still, Mrs. Burgess said, habits are hard to change. "The most frequent question from potential consumers is, "If I eat these foods can I then eat all the hamburgers and ice cream I want?" she said. "Everyone is looking for a quick fix."

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(none) All Content ©1999, 2000, 2001 San Pedro Mesquite Company
 
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narnia4

Inactive
Altough interesting, its important to remember that anyone who thinks they can live off "mother nature" (implied) is kidding themselves. I've eaten a few acorns and at least you won't get fat ------- in fact you'll starve. The "jello of the desert" tastes like a 3 day old dead jellyfish (in 100 degree heat), not to mention the work getting and preparing it.

In short, anyone reading this should be aware that food from the wild is a minor addition to a food storage program, not a significant part of one. If you don't believe me just try living off the wild, even in the south west (although its probably easier there than "up north" - not much "desert bounty" around here).
 

Tessa Blue

Veteran Member
Well, that's part of the problem, isn't it? We no longer eat to live; we live to eat! We're spoiled, plain and simple. We're also (as a nation) fat and unhealthy.

If desert food was all you had, I bet it would start tasting pretty darn good.

Oh, and the prickly pear cactus is good mixed with scrambled eggs. :)

That article was fascinating, vlad! Thanks for sharing...

Tessa Blue
 

O2BNOK

Veteran Member
Thanks, vald, for posting this.... the mesquite (bane of SW Texans) flour is what interests me... very cool.

xoxo
 

Libertarian

Deceased
narnia4 said:
Altough interesting, its important to remember that anyone who thinks they can live off "mother nature" (implied) is kidding themselves. I've eaten a few acorns and at least you won't get fat ------- in fact you'll starve. The "jello of the desert" tastes like a 3 day old dead jellyfish (in 100 degree heat), not to mention the work getting and preparing it.

In short, anyone reading this should be aware that food from the wild is a minor addition to a food storage program, not a significant part of one. If you don't believe me just try living off the wild, even in the south west (although its probably easier there than "up north" - not much "desert bounty" around here).

That's an interesting view. I suppose the Indians had Dominos to call for delivery since they couldn't survive (according to you) on desert fodder.

It may take a bit of work but so does any diet that doesn't depend on factory farming.
 

TRC

Inactive
>>EATING TO LIVE<<

Food gathering and preparation used to be a full time job. Then we were able to earn money from a "factory job" to pay others to gather/prepare our food. At some point (maybe sooner than we want), "factory jobs" that allow us to make money to pay others to gather/prepare our food will be gone and food gathering/preparing will be our ONLY job. TRC
 

phoenix7of7

Deceased
" ... It may take a bit of work but ..."

More like sun up to sun down.

The essential point to all of this is that even for those of us that are knowledgeable, experienced, and prepared - such a life will be damned hard. And that doesn't even take into account the marauders/predators.

The "noble savage" and "living off the bounty of mother earth" is delusion.
 

manybooks

Inactive
good article, thanks vlad.

<i> Acorns from live oaks are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of maintaining stable blood sugar levels. They can be eaten whole or ground into meal. </i>

<b><i>AFTER</b></i> being soaked in water to remove the tannic acid. Can't eat acorns raw just out of their shells.

In the area I grew up, the traditional Native method was to crush them, place them in baskets and leave them weighted down under water in a clear running stream for 24 hours. The water-soluble tannins would be gone and the meal could be made into cakes or bread.
 

Prairie Lady

Inactive
Acorns from live oaks are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of maintaining stable blood sugar levels. They can be eaten whole or ground into meal.

And you had better know how to pre-cook them first or they will kill you. Over a 2 weeks span, they will destroy your kidneys.
They are poisonous. First they are boiled a few times with the water poured off, then they are roasted and ground.

The indians didn't "evolve" in the destert. They were 1) driven here on the trail of tears 2)they passed through on their way north or south, 3)visited for hunting purposes 4)stayed along the rivers. You die without water.

The author has a very romantic idea of the desert. But really, before misleading folks he should have tried living off the land FIRST.

A near starvation diet will NOT save you from diabetes. He obviously knows little or nothing about the disease.

When the indians were "evolving" in the desert (according to the author..) They starved and they died! Diabetes wasn't even a well known disease then either.

I don't know who this guy is, but he's an idiot. If you listen to him, will be dead in short time.
Read some history books and learn that when the heards of buffalo died out, the people DIED! The prairies and plains are not the desert. He doesn't seem to know the difference between the two.

pl
 

narnia4

Inactive
Actually, its nice to see that some here can still dream, as when they were children.

Among other things, theres no comparison to an indian tribe of 100 or so, and used to gathering food over miles of open country, to lets say 8 million people in New York who couldn't tell a corn stalk from a wheat stalk if they tried. Even if you live in the county, like myself, there are HUNDREDS (at least) of people within a few miles. Any "free" stuff from "natures bounty" wouldn't last a week.

A nice dream and maybe a means of living for .088 per cent of people.

Also, if you're not on a "nature food" diet now, I can pretty much promise you'll have the runs the first week or two, another good reason to stock up on TP.

But its a free country, good luck to those who think it'll work.
 

dreamseeer

Membership Revoked
Oh ya'll.....don't get in such a tether. :D

Nobody is telling you to go eat this stuff.....it is always your choice.

I posted links for those interested.

I posted links for those who would just like to experience something new and different.

This is not a one size fits all world...

I think it would be wonderful fun to go down there and listen and learn something new.

Nobody that is sane is going to just jump on a band wagon and go off into the unknown without getting all the facts to make an informed decision.

One thing is right for sure....city dwelling, pre-packaged eating, pizza consumers would most likely get into intestinal trouble with such a sudden switch to a foreign food to their system.....no different than drinking the water in Mexico. :D

Lighten up some...its only information.

BTW....children still possess connection to their spirit....which is drummed right out of them by indoctrination of the institutions they are exposed to while growing up ....by the time they are adults....so don't knock the imagination of children...

You only belittle yourself.....and tell how far removed from that spiritual connection you have been programmed to leave.

Otherwise,,,,,if I missed the mark your what you meant...then by all means please explain yourself. :)
 

Tessa Blue

Veteran Member
Well... this is kinda sorta not EXACTLY thread drift...

dreamseeer, you may enjoy this link to native recipes. Some are wilderness survival recipes, some are not, but I'm certainly going to try a few of these out!

http://www.nativetech.org/food/indexregion.php

(And there's even a recipe using acorns! Yes, and I'll be sure to rinse and rinse and rinse. It'll be fun to practice!)

:D

Tessa Blue
 

Libertarian

Deceased
Prairie Lady said:
And you had better know how to pre-cook them first or they will kill you. Over a 2 weeks span, they will destroy your kidneys.
They are poisonous. First they are boiled a few times with the water poured off, then they are roasted and ground.

The indians didn't "evolve" in the destert. They were 1) driven here on the trail of tears 2)they passed through on their way north or south, 3)visited for hunting purposes 4)stayed along the rivers. You die without water.

The author has a very romantic idea of the desert. But really, before misleading folks he should have tried living off the land FIRST.

A near starvation diet will NOT save you from diabetes. He obviously knows little or nothing about the disease.

When the indians were "evolving" in the desert (according to the author..) They starved and they died! Diabetes wasn't even a well known disease then either.

I don't know who this guy is, but he's an idiot. If you listen to him, will be dead in short time.
Read some history books and learn that when the heards of buffalo died out, the people DIED! The prairies and plains are not the desert. He doesn't seem to know the difference between the two.

pl

Not to be contentious but people were living, and living fairly well, in the American Southwest for thousands of years before the "Trail of Tears" Believe it or not, it isn't all the Whiteman's fault. FYI, the Indians killed each other and drove off other tribes from good land long before we came over and did it better.
 

dreamseeer

Membership Revoked
Tessa Blue....thanks

I would also like to go visit the real deal to see the Indians themselves, experience other things of their traditions and listen to some tribal history and stories. :) see a pow-tow, talk to a medicine man.

sorry about the drift.
 
-
<center>:shk:</center>

I feel sorry for those who say it can't be done (living off the land). And I fear for their survival when the old super market is done and gone. As it will be on the day That TSHHTF.......

No......

Living off of the land; any land. Is done for reasons of survival - or being poor, one. It is not done for pleasure. And it is never easy. The food just does not come up and jump on your plate. Sometimes, it may be thinking that you are on it's menu instead.


[And speaking of being on the menu; By and large your greatest threat on "The Day After". Will be from Dog Packs......]

I have eaten Misquite, (and yes Oak acorn mush). I have seen the days (as a child) when if there was any meat on the table, it was because I shot it that day; or trapped it; or we grew it (vegetables).

The name of the game folks; is surviving after TEOTWAWKI. And first clue - "It is not a Game".

I would heartly suggest that you (and those you love) examine every art of finding food from the country-side that you can. And do it "Sooner - and not later."

Could I survive out in the deserts of the south west? Why Yes! I still could. And as well as the north woods, the sea coasts (which would be the easiest in the way of food harvesting.)

I'd like to have a knife and some fire making materials (LOL). And of course about a six foot chunk of welding cable to make snare wires with.

But, I could still do er. Question is, can you?

I do so hope that some of you make an effort (practice run) at trying. On the Job Training is a total *B*........
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Exactly how does one prepare the "fruits and pads of the prickly pear cactus?"

I've always wanted to know...
 

Tessa Blue

Veteran Member
Use the young pads - the bright green ones. The easiest way is to peel the skin (carefully, of course). You can also burn off the spines, but you'd probably want to peel it anyway.

Same with the fruit - just peel it. You can make juice or jellies with the fruit as well.

Oh... and the pads make great conditioner for hair.
:)
 

dreamseeer

Membership Revoked
Shakey............now THAT'S the right attitude!!! you da man! :D

Right here in Atlanta.....Kudzu everywhere......all edible.

I grow Amaranth.....everybody says oh, what a beautiful flowering plant.... they don't know, it's my food source.

I grow Nasturiums (completely edible).....everybody just thinks there are gorgeous flowers.... my food source.

The starving masses will scourer your pantry and take all of your boxed food but they will go right past your yard....think about it.

I don't poison ants in the yard..........food source.

Chipmunks, squirrels, raccoons.....food source.

well, I think you get the idea.

Humility but not starvation.

Sorry about the drift.

The old ways are the survival ways....

learn them or weep.
 

dreamseeer

Membership Revoked
Oh yeah...almost forgot....the seeds of sunflowers and of course Earth Worms.

as well as many tubers that produce plants in summer....you can dig up the tubers .....study your own state and learn now....there really isn't a lot of time left.
 

Satanta

Stone Cold Crazy
_______________
Made mesquite flour and baked bread from it a couple of years ago. Ground the little critters living in the pods up with 'em. Comes out a deep red and kinda stickiesh.

Good eatin'. Those were the times. ;)
 

old bear

Deceased
Yep. By the time the first whitemen landed the whole dang continent was completely empty.

Nary a soul.

They had all starved trying to "live off the land".

If only they had taken factory jobs they might have survived to show the Pilgrams how to cook the frozen turkey in the microwaves that they had.

Of course for some city kid who had never been of the sidewalks of New York to wander into the desert and start trying to learn what to eat, when to pick it and how to prepare it.................... Well it ain't going to happen.

That same kid could study how the old timers did it.

Then Get out and get his hands a bit dirty, and eventually he could learn.

The problem is that most of us are so hooked on all the modern things that we don't want to "live off the land" and we are not willing to put the years of effort into learning how.
Heck. I am not willing to do it. I like the internet and knowing what is going on half way around the world, even though knowing it does cause me a lot of stress most of the time.
 

RC

Inactive
TRC said:
Food gathering and preparation used to be a full time job. Then we were able to earn money from a "factory job" to pay others to gather/prepare our food. At some point (maybe sooner than we want), "factory jobs" that allow us to make money to pay others to gather/prepare our food will be gone and food gathering/preparing will be our ONLY job. TRC

Yes, eating wild foods may fend off starvation for a few days, so I'm always interested in learning more about the subject. But I have noticed two things:

1. You don't meett a lot of hunter-gatherers these days.
2. Many generations ago, my ancestors decided for some reason to give up the hunter-gatherer lifestyle and move on to other things.

I suspect there is a reason for these truths.
 

MtnGal

Has No Life - Lives on TB
http://www.edibleplants.com/books/bookcards.htm

Good place to start finding things in your backyard, trying them and transplanting into your own garden or area.

These cards are pocket size with photo pictures on one side and info on the otherside. They easily fit into your pocket to take on all your walks or outings..
 

timbo

Deceased
I tried those cards..........have to soak em a long time...like acorns.

Good thread....am enjoying the 'civilized' and 'uncivilized' of the members here.

Ne'er the twain shall meet I guess.

Former sarge of mine was a POW of WWII. Bunch of the guys cooked a horse's lower leg and he thought it was delicious. At the time.

Now he likes pizza and beer.

I never did get his recipe for lower horse leg. Prolly had to peel it.
 

Windy Ridge

Veteran Member
North American oaks are divided into two groups. The white oaks have acorns that mature in one year and have a low tannin content. The red and black oak group has acorns that take two years to mature and have a high tannin content that protects them from critters that like sweet acorns. The Emory oak is a white oak and "Oaks of North America" says the acorns are "sweet". The red/black oaks acorns are edible only if the tannin is washed out. The white oak acorns vary somewhat in tannin content. The "sweetest" ones can be eaten in quantity and even the less sweet ones can be eaten in small amounts.

Windy Ridge
 

Synap

Deceased
RE chia seed taste. I find chia seed with warm water to be sorta bland. A lot like oatmeal if ya don't add flavoring. Altho sometimes according to source unripe seed mixed in will add a "greens" flavor.

Excellent bulk source for (wild-sourced) Chia seeds and other herbals. Most herbals priced for the pound you pay for the oz in retail stores!
http://www.herbalcom.com/store.php3?alpha=yes&lett=a-dA-D
 

Synap

Deceased
Desert Lil's Delicacies
MESQUITE AS FOOD

http://www.desertusa.com/lil/mesquite.html

A Little Background

Mesquite grows well in desert areas from the southwestern United States to the Andean regions of South America. Traditionally, Native peoples in the Southwest depended on mesquite. It provided food, fuel, shelter, weapons, medicine, and cosmetics. As times changed, and as refined sugar and wheat flour became staples, the role of mesquite was diminished.

Mesquite meal, made by grinding the seeds and pods, Modern milling techniques grind the entire mesquite pod, including most of the protein-rich seed. This produces a meal that is highly nutritious as well as flavorful. The meal ground from the pod contains 11 to 17 percent protein. A high lysine content makes it the perfect addition to other grains that are unusually low in this amino acid.

Although desert dwellers have used mesquite pods as a source of food for centuries, when you order and use this product, you become part of a pioneering network of chefs and nutritionists who are working together to discover new uses for this tasty food.

Add it to soups, gravies and sauces, casseroles, vegetable and meat dishes, pie crusts, or sprinkle on desserts such as fruit compotes, puddings and ice cream.

We are eager to learn about your experimentation. If you develop successful new recipes using mesquite meal, we'd love to have a copy for future publication. If used your contribution as a partner will be acknowledged.

The Value of Mesquite

Mesquite pods were once a treasured part of the Pima and Tohono O'odham diet. The sweet pods are a good source of calcium, manganese, iron, and zinc. The seeds within are 40 percent protein. Mesquite flour from grinding the whole pods produces fructose, which can be processed without insulin, and soluble fibers, which are slowly absorbed, without a rapid rise in blood sugar.

Medical studies of mesquite and other desert foods, said that despite its sweetness, mesquite flour (made by grinding whole pods) "is extremely effective in controlling blood sugar levels" in people with diabetes. The sweetness comes from fructose, which the body can process without insulin. In addition, soluble fibers, such as galactomannin gum, in the seeds and pods slow absorbtion of nutrients, resulting in a flattened blood sugar curve, unlike the peaks that follow consumption of wheat flour, corn meal and other common staples.

"The gel-forming fiber allows foods to be slowly digested and absorbed over a four- to six-hour period, rather than in one or two hours, which produces a rapid rise in blood sugar,"

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[Recipes]

MESQUITE CORNBREAD
from Native Peoples Magazine

3/4 C. each of cornmeal and flour
3/8 C. mesquite meal
2 tsp. Baking powder
1/2 tsp. Each baking soda and salt
1 C. yogurt
1 egg
3 Tbs. Honey
3 Tbs. Oil

Combine dry ingredients in medium sized bowl. Combine the wet ingredients and stir into the dry ingredients just until combined. Spread into greased 8 inch by 8 inch pan. Bake 20 - 25 minutes at 350 degrees. For a unique Southwestern kick, add 1 tablespoon chipotle (dried, smoked jalapeno) flakes and 3/4 cup fresh or frozen corn kernels.
Mesquite flour recipes

OATMEAL COOKIES
from Promez

2 c whole wheat flour
1 c sugar
3/8 c mesquite meal
2 eggs
1 c oats
1 c margarine or butter
2 t baking soda
1/2 cup chopped nuts
2 t baking powder

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Blend first five dry ingredients (flour, meal, oats, soda and baking powder ) in medium bowl. Blend margarine ( or butter ) and sugar, add eggs. Combine all ingredients until well blended. Drop on un-greased cookie sheet. Bake by rounded teaspoons for 25 minutes or until lightly browned.

MESQUITE PANCAKES
from Martha Darancou Aguirre of Rancho la Inmaculada

3/4C Mesquite flour
1C Flour (enriched, bleached, buckwheat)
1tsp Baking powder
1/2 tsp Salt
1 Tb Sugar
1 tsp Vanilla
2 Eggs
1 to 2 C Milk

Mix dry ingredients first. Add vanilla and eggs. Mix. Add milk until desired thickness is acquired. (The thinner the mix, the thinner the pancakes, the thicker the mix, the thicker the pancakes.) Spoon onto a hot griddle and flip when just beginning to bubble. Serve with butter and honey or better yet, prickly pear syrup. Makes 12 - 18 pancakes.

MESQUITE BANANA BREAD
from Martha Darancou Aguirre of Rancho la Inmaculada

3/4C Mesquite meal
1C All purpose flour
2/3 C Sugar
2 tsp Baking powder
1/2 tsp Baking soda
1/4 tsp Salt
1C Mashed banana
1/3 C Shortening, margarine or butter (preferred)
1/2 C Milk
2 Eggs
1/4C Chopped nuts

Mix mesquite meal, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Add mashed banana, shortening, margarine, or butter, and milk. Beat on low speed until blended then on high for 2 minutes. Add remaining flour. Beat until blended. Sir in nuts. Pour into greased 8x4x2 inch loaf pan. Bake in a 350 degree oven for 55 to 60 minutes until toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool for 10 minutes. Remove from pan. Cool thoroughly.

MESQUITE ZUCCHINI BREAD
from Martha Darancou Aguirre of Rancho la Inmaculada

1 C Mesquite meal (Sonoran)
1C All purpose flour
1 tsp Ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp Baking soda
1/4 tsp Salt
1/4 tsp Ground nutmeg
1C Sugar
1C Finely shredded unpeeled zucchini
1/4C Chopped walnuts

Mix flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and nutmeg. In another bowl, mix sugar, zucchini, oil, egg and lemon peel. Mix well. Add flour mixture and stir until combined. Stir in nuts. Pour into greased 8x4x2 inch loaf pan. Bake in a 350 degree oven for 55 to 60 minutes or until toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Cool for 10 minutes. Remove from pan. Cool thoroughly before wrapping.
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Synap

Deceased
Local resources for SE AZ folks
http://epacenter.org/refood.html

Sources of locally grown organic produce and other foods:

Food Conspiracy Co-op. 412 N. 4th Ave [Tucson]. 624-4821. A great member owned co-op offering organic and natural foods/products. They support local growers and suppliers by carrying their goods, and they generously sponsor local organizations and events.

Source of locally and organically raised free-range beef: Chet and Debbie with the Saguaro/Juniper Association. 520-212-4769 [Benson]. They raise the cattle and then take them to slaughter. The animals never leave local hands as all the meat is processed by a local butcher. The meat is very lean and in 2001 averaged just over $3/pound of mixed cuts.

Source for information on organically grown foods and policy:

Organic Consumers Association (OCA). www.organicconsumers.org.

Sources of grain mills (for grinding mesquite pods and the like): R & R Mill Company, Inc. PO B0x 187, 48 West First North, Smithfield, Utah 84335-0187. (435)563-3333. A good supplier of hand and electric powered grain mills.Local source of a hammermill for use of grinding your own mesquite pods:

Once a year David Omick and Pearl Mast host a mesquite bean milling day in Cascabel, Arizona (just north of Benson) with the community hammermill (a mechanical mill that easily breaks up the mesquite pod and some of the hard seed to produce quality flour). It's a small, but festive, event, usually held in late September/early October, so we're out of the humid monsoon weather and the beans have a chance to dry well. They send out a notice a couple weeks before the event. The only stipulation is that the milling be for home consumption (non-commercial) use only. Bring as many beans as you like. Contact them via email at david@omick.com. or regular mail at David Omick and Pearl Mast, 5780 North Cascabel Road, Benson, AZ 85602. phone (520)-212-4628.

Here are their mesquite harvest recommendations:

-- Pick beans off the tree rather than the ground to help prevent getting moldy beans. Ripe beans will come off the branch easily, with just a gentle pull.

-- Wash beans (we dunk them in a tub of water).

-- Spread beans out thinly on a clean surface to dry for several days in direct sun. (It's important that the beans be crispy dry for milling - they should snap in two if you try to bend them.)

-- In storage, the beans may hatch insects, but we mill them anyway (it's just a different form of protein). Some folks prefer to store them in the freezer or heat them in an oven and then seal them to prevent insects.

-- After milling, put the meal into jars and heat (we use a solar oven) to about 150 degrees for a couple hours to kill insect eggs. Seal the jars with a tight fitting lid, and the meal will last indefinitely without bugs.

-- About 30 gallons of plump dry pods will mill down to about 5 gallons of seed coats/chaff and 5 gallons of mesquite meal (which you quickly and easily separate from the chaff with a window screen).

Sources of native edible foods:

Native Seeds/SEARCH, 526 N. 4th Ave., Tucson, AZ 85705, ph. 520-622-5591 They have packaged mesquite flour, tepary beans, cactus jelly, chia seeds, and more!

San Xavier Farm Cooperative Association, Inc., 8100 S. Oidak Wog, Tucson, AZ 85746. 520-295-3774. A great local source of native mesquite flour, tepary beans, roasted wheat flour, corn meal, roasted corn, squash, and more!

Bake Mixes by Junie. Junie Hostetler, Owner, POB 41591, Tucson, AZ 85717-1591. 520-360-7613. Email: bakemix@bakemixesbyjunie.com. Junie specializes in quality dry baking mixes using Southwest ingredients such as chile poweders, blue cornmeal, mesquite flour, native herbs, and popped amaranth.

Hot Springs Canyon Herb Co. 6055 N. Canyon Rd., Benson AZ 85602. Organic, hand processed prickly pear syrup along with organically grown exotic veggies and fruits.
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Tortilla Flats just out of Phoenix AZ......

sells delicious prickly pear ice cream......a good prep item :D And it didn't make me fat, just like it said in the article......maybe 10 cones might fatten me up tho.
 
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