Shown: posts 1 to 8 of 8. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by fritz on October 19, 2003, at 21:07:54
most frozen dinners have undetermined amounts of soy bean oil, soy protein isolate, and other soy derivatives----I know "soy sauce' and soy condiments are prohibited in maoi diest what about the other by products
Posted by Poppi on October 20, 2003, at 0:57:47
In reply to soy products in frozen dinners, posted by fritz on October 19, 2003, at 21:07:54
It would help if I knew what you are talking about. Soy products? Got a friend who grows about 1,000 acres of soybeans if that is any help! WHAT?
Posted by Poppi on October 20, 2003, at 1:00:38
In reply to soy products in frozen dinners, posted by fritz on October 19, 2003, at 21:07:54
Sorry, forgot to say maoi diest?? Do not comprehende!
Posted by Larry Hoover on October 20, 2003, at 13:05:28
In reply to soy products in frozen dinners, posted by fritz on October 19, 2003, at 21:07:54
> most frozen dinners have undetermined amounts of soy bean oil, soy protein isolate, and other soy derivatives----I know "soy sauce' and soy condiments are prohibited in maoi diest what about the other by products
Soy protein isolate is a euphemism for monosodium glutamate....same thing. Hydrolyzed plant protein, anything related to protein that says isolate, even the term "natural flavour(s)" can be a way to hide MSG.
The problem with soy sauce in particular is that it is a fermented product, and it is microbial action during the fermentation process that produces tyramine. You have to learn how to interpret the ingredient labels. I don't know a better way in North America. In other, perhaps more civilized parts of the world, food additives have been given numerical codes, so one need only avoid particular "numbers".
Lar
Posted by fritz on October 20, 2003, at 19:10:57
In reply to Re: soy products in frozen dinners » fritz, posted by Larry Hoover on October 20, 2003, at 13:05:28
> > most frozen dinners have undetermined amounts of soy bean oil, soy protein isolate, and other soy derivatives----I know "soy sauce' and soy condiments are prohibited in maoi diest what about the other by products
>
> Soy protein isolate is a euphemism for monosodium glutamate....same thing. Hydrolyzed plant protein, anything related to protein that says isolate, even the term "natural flavour(s)" can be a way to hide MSG.
>
> The problem with soy sauce in particular is that it is a fermented product, and it is microbial action during the fermentation process that produces tyramine. You have to learn how to interpret the ingredient labels. I don't know a better way in North America. In other, perhaps more civilized parts of the world, food additives have been given numerical codes, so one need only avoid particular "numbers".
>
> Lar
>
> Lar--thanks for your response, but would you please answer the question as best you can.
Posted by Larry Hoover on October 20, 2003, at 19:55:24
In reply to Re: soy products in frozen dinners, posted by fritz on October 20, 2003, at 19:10:57
> > > most frozen dinners have undetermined amounts of soy bean oil, soy protein isolate, and other soy derivatives----I know "soy sauce' and soy condiments are prohibited in maoi diest what about the other by products
> >
> > Soy protein isolate is a euphemism for monosodium glutamate....same thing. Hydrolyzed plant protein, anything related to protein that says isolate, even the term "natural flavour(s)" can be a way to hide MSG.
> >
> > The problem with soy sauce in particular is that it is a fermented product, and it is microbial action during the fermentation process that produces tyramine. You have to learn how to interpret the ingredient labels. I don't know a better way in North America. In other, perhaps more civilized parts of the world, food additives have been given numerical codes, so one need only avoid particular "numbers".
> >
> > Lar
> >
> > Lar--thanks for your response, but would you please answer the question as best you can.Soya oil and protein are safe. Is that what you meant?
Posted by fritz on October 20, 2003, at 22:19:13
In reply to Re: soy products in frozen dinners, posted by Poppi on October 20, 2003, at 0:57:47
Lar---thanks, that was it. By the by, what makes you so smart?
Posted by Larry Hoover on October 21, 2003, at 10:35:30
In reply to Re: soy products in frozen dinners » Poppi, posted by fritz on October 20, 2003, at 22:19:13
> Lar---thanks, that was it. By the by, what makes you so smart?
<shrug> I'm lucky to have a brain that readily associates and categorizes information.
Lar
This is the end of the thread.
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