Many rawists consider tofu a processed food. Can someone pls explain why? Also, what if you make it at home in your kitchen like my friend on my other board does? Is that still considered processed?
Permalink Reply by Ken on March 14, 2009 at 1:54pm
I think the comment usually made is it is processed more than once in different plants (uh..factories).
The process involves fermentation no matter how or who. but its up to the individual what constitutes healthy and relatively wholesome nutrition, as opposed to the poles of just eating air or sunshine or just eating cardboard or outright poisons. Its a high estrogenic food, and a high starch/protein food, like all legumes. I don't see it (non GMO) as drastically different then lentils, and probably alot healthier then peanut products.
Permalink Reply by Ken on March 14, 2009 at 2:06pm
some people consider miso to be raw, even though it is made from cooked components - something about the result being living bi-products. As to my knowledge tofu has to be heated to create the product, and if not, the enzymes have to be deactivated in order for it to be packaged, where the miso I guess can just be refrigerated.
i don't think it's as bad as some people make out. i still eat tofu occasionally and have no major issues from it. i'm sure if you over do it then there'd be more problems but i think the main thing is keep it organic and therefore non gmo, traditionally made from fermented soybeans without additives ect. i like silken tofu best. i think it must be easier to digest since its so soft.
Soybeans have gotten a really bad rap, including all these soymilks, unless they're fermented soybeans, like tempeh and miso.
Soymilk always clogs my sinuses, when I went raw I finally stopped buying it.
Tofu & soymilk seems like an alternate universe to me after eating them for many, many years. Tofu is a staple of yer average veterinarian, or vegetarian. In any event, it's a cooked product. :)) I don't know if it'll keep ya svelte in La.
Oh hi, svelte. I was just thinking about you the other day and wondering where you have been.
But, uh, I have nothing useful to contribute to this discussion.
I guess I would ask how are these people defining processed? I mean, I could chew a bunch of sprouts, spit them out into a cheesecloth, strain it, and let it sit for a few hours and that could be considered processed. Or a factory somewhere far away could do that and include a chemical to boost its shelf life and then it could sit on a truck for a few days. I mean both examples are processed, in my opinion, so it is just a matter of better defining it. Or at least this is what I think.
Probably depends on every step of the process. I've had edamame at a Japanese restaurant that made me sick and tofu made by macrobiotic kids in Alaska using beans from an organic farmer in Missouri that was amazing and didn't affect me at all (& I am allergic to small amounts of commercial soy... even a bit of nama shoyu). Maybe that guy's farm isn't contaminated by gm soy. Anyway processing starts from the gene ;)
Hi! I am allergic to some soy-products too. But i don`t know which one:/somebody??? I still eat tofu now and then (im such a big fan of japanese cooking). I think tofu make me feel good, so i continue eating it because..its just make me feel good. Some soymilks are dangerous for me( the allergic reaction is similar to the deadly nut-allergic reaction) but as a vegan, my doctor says that tofu is not a "wholeprotein source" i don`t know what it is in english. SO, he said to me that i have to eat more nuts instead. But im hazel-allergic, and nuts make me feel sick some times. GO TOFU!! >:(((
Can you believe that.....................I'm guilty of buying locally-crafted tofu and making a miso soup with it for breakfast a couple of times a week? Why? cause I feel good after eating it. Other days I want a green smoothie. I eat a high percentage of my diet raw, but after eating strictly all raw, I now eat what I want, and feel better for it. but I'm blessed to have access to quality tofu and not that crappy commercial stuff.
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