Spill the Beans: Are They Healthy Or Not?

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Spill the Beans: Are They Healthy Or Not?

“Beans, beans, good for your heart…”

You probably remember that little chant that was popular among second graders, at least at my elementary school. It lightheartedly reminds us of the cardiovascular benefits of eating legumes… among other things!

Turns out that there may be some truth in the old nursery rhyme. While it’s true that beans contain certain heart-healthy benefits (and on the downside, yes, they can cause flatulence as well), the health benefits of beans are not quite so cut and dried.

Why Are Beans Controversial?

Vegans and vegetarians often rely on black beans, lentils, and other bean varieties as their main source of protein. However, diets like Paleo and keto avoid beans entirely because they contain controversial compounds called lectins.

There are also different grades of beans. While chickpeas (or garbanzo beans), navy beans and many others are a good source of B vitamins, most Americans get their fill of beans from unhealthy soy products, which are devoid of such beneficial nutrients.

Peanuts are also technically in the bean family, as they’re classified as a legume (and not a nut). Sadly, allergies to peanuts are on the rise, especially among children.

Here’s the lowdown on the pros and cons of eating certain types of beans, and how you can prepare them to maximize their nutritional value.

The Pros: Health Benefits of Beans

There are quite a few nutrients packed into the humble little bean. They’re rich in dietary fiber, they’re a great protein source, and they contain vitamins like folate and iron.

They are also generally low-fat and contain few calories, making them a staple in the Mediterranean diet and slow carb diet.

It also turns out that the second graders in my class were right: Beans may, in fact, be good for your heart health! One study found that pinto beans, in particular, helped to reduce LDL cholesterol, lowering the risk of heart disease.

Another study showed that eating baked beans helped reduce risk factors for type 2 diabetes, while other research finds that eating kidney beans can help reduce inflammation in the colon. And if you’re trying to lose weight, good news: yet another study found that bean consumption is associated with smaller waist circumference, lower body weight, and even reduced blood pressure.

But before you go crazy eating high fiber beans for every meal, we need to understand their risk factors, and how to mitigate it.

The Cons: Can Beans Be Unhealthy?

The biggest problem with beans is that they contain lectins, which are also present in high amounts in grains. Lectins essentially act as thorns do in rose bushes — as a protective measure for the plant. Instead of prickly deterrents that harm our skin, lectins assault our digestive systems, prompting predators (or consumers like us) to stay away.

One of the experts I look to most on this topic is Dr. Steven Gundry, renowned heart surgeon and author of the book The Plant Paradox. He explains in our podcast interview:

Lectins are a sticky plant protein, and they’re designed by plants as a defense mechanism against being eaten. These plants don’t want to be eaten… so one of the ways they fight against being eaten is to produce these lectins, which like to bind to specific sugar molecules in us or any of their predators. And those sugar molecules line the wall of our gut. They line the lining of our blood vessels, they line our joints. They line the spaces between nerves. And when lectins hit these places, they are a major cause of leaky gut. They can break down the gut wall barrier. They’re a major cause of arthritis, they’re a major cause of heart disease, and they’re a major cause, in my research, of autoimmune diseases.

We can understand from this that some lectins are more toxic than others, but all lectins have some effect on the body. This is the reason that grains, beans, and other lectin-containing foods cannot be eaten raw. In fact, ingesting even just a few raw kidney beans can cause vomiting and digestive problems.

Another problem with lectins is that they can contribute to obesity and diabetes. Lectins can bind to any carbohydrate-containing protein cells, including insulin and leptin receptors, desensitizing them. Without proper insulin and leptin function, problems like metabolic syndrome can emerge.

How to Reduce Lectins in Beans and Grains

Fortunately, it’s possible to reduce the number of lectins in beans and grains by using certain traditional cooking methods. Sprouting, fermenting, soaking, and pressure cooking are all useful ways to cut down on lectins, but keep in mind that none of these methods will remove the lectins completely. You can also buy certain brands that have taken some of these steps, so you don’t have to do any of the prep yourself.

You may choose to avoid beans entirely, but if your body isn’t too sensitive to lectin, you can reap the beneficial fiber content with these preparation methods. Start by enjoying a half-cup or so at a time to see how you feel. You might also want to get your cholesterol levels checked before and after you try these methods!

How to Soak Beans

The easiest way to remove lectins prior to cooking is to soak dry beans overnight. For best results, cover the beans completely with cold water, and add a little baking soda to help neutralize the lectins further. Since the lectins will release into the water, try to replace the soaking solution at least once or twice. Drain and rinse a final time before cooking to ensure you’ve removed as much as possible.

How to Sprout Beans

If you want to take it a step further, you can sprout the beans after you’ve soaked them. To do this, its best to use special sprouting seeds, which are free of any bacteria that would be killed if you were simply boiling them as usual.

After the soaking process, put the beans in a mason jar with a sprouting lid, or a cloth secured by a rubber band. Invert the jar over a bowl, and set it on the kitchen counter out of the way. You should see sprouts within a day, but you can keep sprouting them for a bit longer if you prefer. Just be sure to give them a rinse once a day. For more details on how to sprout individual legumes and grains, this is a great resource.

How to Ferment Beans

If you like your beans a little funky, fermentation might be the way to go. Like the sprouting process, you’ll want to start with rinsing and soaking your beans, except this time you want to cook them.

I recommend boiling them for at least an hour on the stovetop, or throw the soaked beans into a slow cooker and set on low for six to eight hours. Next, add seasoning (like garlic or salt) and a culture, like kombucha, yogurt, or a culture powder you can buy at the store. Mash them up a little to get more surface area fermenting, cover, and store in a warm place for several days. Open the lid slightly every day to release the excess gas, then set in the refrigerator when done.

Serve your fermented beans as a side dish, or enjoy them as a refreshing side dish!

Use a Pressure Cooker

Another easy way to reduce and almost completely eliminate lectins is to cook foods in a pressure cooker, like an Instant Pot. This greatly reduces the lectin content of beans and is an easy and fast way to cook them.

As with the other preparation methods I mentioned above, I recommend soaking the beans overnight in several changes of water, then pressure cooking according to the manufacturer’s directions.

Buy Safe Brands

If you don’t want to go through the hassle of soaking and cooking the beans yourself, Dr. Gundry recommends Eden brand beans. They’re pre-soaked, cooked in pressure cookers, then stored in BPA-free cans. Go ahead and eat these beans straight out of the container for the ultimate low-lectin convenience!

What Level of Lectin Consumption Is Safe?

This is a difficult question with no single answer. Keep in mind that many foods contain lectins, not just beans and grains. We can’t avoid them completely. The key is finding a workable balance that minimizes the worst sources.

My personal recommendation is to soak, sprout, ferment, or pressure cook foods high in lectins, like legumes, seeds, nuts, and grains like barley, oats, and wheat.

Nightshade vegetables like tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, and eggplant also contain lectins, and these can be reduced by peeling and pressure cooking.

What I Do to Avoid Lectin

Personally, I avoid grains and legumes unless properly prepared, soak nuts overnight, and avoid all processed and commercially prepared foods, grains, and soy.

When I was actively working to halt my autoimmune disease, I avoided lectins much more carefully. Similarly, if you are overweight or attempting to lose weight, a more stringent avoidance of lectins might be helpful.

For many, avoiding lectins for a year or so can help soothe the intestinal lining, improve gut bacteria, facilitate weight loss, and reduce allergy symptoms. If you or your children are suffering from unknown allergies or gut problems, try removing beans entirely from your diet to see if that helps.

The Bottom Line

While many people in the United States don’t sprout or ferment their beans and grains, it might be worth trying. After all, beans are proven to lower cholesterol and fight cardiovascular disease. On the other hand, if your gut health suffers when you eat beans, or your kids have a strong reaction to them, you might want to avoid them a bit more stringently.

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Lauren Jefferis, board-certified in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor or work with a doctor at SteadyMD.

Do you eat beans? If so, what kind(s)? Share below!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

208 responses to “Spill the Beans: Are They Healthy Or Not?”

  1. Thierry Avatar

    Very interesting. I knew wheat and dairy could cause leaky gut, but I didn’t know that about beans. There is a lot of condradicting information about this topic. Wikipedia seems to mention uncooked or, poorly cooked beans. So what about soft canned beans?

  2. jessica leffler Avatar
    jessica leffler

    Hi, With all this info out here on the web, I think “what should I eat? Lettuce?”
    I am trying to go meat free (I would say I am 95% meat free), I am egg free, dairy free, gluten free, white sugar free. … So I often make salads with white beans or black beans, but now I should go bean free? What is left but some rice and veggies?
    I am wondering what other people eat when they are free of all these things as well !

  3. Lee Painton Avatar
    Lee Painton

    With all due respect, madame, there are no such things are protein cells. Proteins are chains of organic molecules with complex structures that all cells synthesize as working agents.

  4. fiona Avatar

    Interesting that all the really rude and angry comments on here are written by people who are bean and grain eaters. Maybe that’s their problem.

  5. Miky Avatar

    Why do people have to always make things that complicated? Imagine hundreds of years ago, when all the technology was non-existent…human beings survived and evolved according to what mother nature offered them. In my opinion balance is the key as the dose makes the poison. I cant remember my grandparents (living in the countryside) ever complaining of being sick These were actually the base of their diets, grains and legumes + meat every now and then and loads of exercise (working the fields 🙂 plus, where i come from, that is eastern europe, allergies are significantly less common. Therefore, i really dont believe we should categorise beans as “toxic” based on “science”…

  6. steve e Avatar

    Holli, thanks for the great link to the science behind bean ingestion. Wow. I think this should quiet the storm on the evil bean! Granted of course a highly immune suppressed individual still may have problems with beans as they would with so many other benign foods. Thanks again.

  7. Holli Yargo Avatar
    Holli Yargo

    I eat beans frequently. Because I am also a meat eater, I am not in danger of bean-related nutrient theft.

  8. Erica Avatar

    Wellness Mama, have you read The China Study? Or Blue Zones? Or the recent WHO report that considers red meat a carcinogen?

  9. Lisa Avatar

    In reply to:

    “terry says November 4, 2015 at 10:42 PM
    geez thanks.. I almost threw away my pantry full of dry beans ! I love n live on them i’m near 60 & doing just great .. thanks”
    ___________________________________________________________________

    Terry:
    Since you are near 60 and doing great (congrats on that!) please don’t ever let anything you read on the web influence your choices. Being healthy after half a century of living means you are doing what works for you!!! so keep on doing it. Beans are an awesome source of fiber, complex carbs and protein.
    In some countries, beans are the staple of the diet and the people in those countries live LONGER than we do! Beans are an ancient food with a high nutrient value.
    This entire conversation has gone WAY too far and I’ve asked the thread originator to shut it down, but never got a response. I don’t get why we are beating beans to death – when they have PROVEN health benefits, while we could be discussing things like chemical fertilizers and GMO’s.

    Keep eating those beans! Not a day goes by without me having at least a cup; often more and as I’ve said in a prior post – they have helped me tremendously.

    Beans ARE a superfood; don’t give them up.

    1. Lisa Avatar

      @Teri “What is the best way to prepare beans if I am going to make them?”
      ______________________________________________________________

      Since there are many varieties of beans, there is no preparation method that would work for all of them. Different beans need different cooking times/methods and beyond that – everyone has their own preference for flavor/seasonings.

      If you choose a specific type of dried bean, you can re-post asking how to prepare the bean you chose. The answer will be the basic cooking instructions. The flavoring options or how to use beans in another dish have endless options.

  10. Heidi Avatar

    I think in moderation, beans will be fine IF PREPARED PROPERLY. Reading Weston Price articles will clue you in that canned beans (even home canned in many recipes) are not properly prepared.

    My sister, who has always carefully chosen what she ate and fed her family, went to the “Bean Queen” to remedy issues she’d been having. The bean queen put her on a very strict regime of beans at every meal, and a very strict, very limiting diet (worse than the Feingold diet for kids!!). Sister’s hubby went as a supporter, not really “believing”. Bean queen gave them two different diets, catered to each’s needs. Bean queen thought my sister should lose weight (my sister is average, not overweight)! BIL did end up having a surprising improvement in something he’d been living with but not bothered by. But my sister only got worse. Turned out, she had early stage Parkinson’s. Since the diagnosis, they eat beans occasionally, but not the 2 cups (EACH) at all three meals per day.

    Regarding protein in beans, there is evidence and studies that show the protein in beans, even when cooked properly, is not a complete protein and may not be any more advantageous than not eating protein at all. I am not going to link the studies–search yourself because the information may not be agreeable to you. Just be certain you aren’t reading from a source vested in beans. I also avoid WebMD and Mayo clinic sites, as they are so skewed to medicine and healing, and NOT toward preventative lifestyles that they don’t gain money from.

    Also, the phytates are questionable.

    There is also a reason Paleo believers and people who avoid carbs avoid beans.

    If you want to eat beans, just like everything else, don’t make them your daily fare.

  11. Steve Avatar

    I find the life of this thread fascinating. I think this blog is fantastic for alerting everyone to the benefits of tracking diet and it’s relationship to health. But the bean thing! Sorry Wellness Mama with all due respect I think your on the wrong side of this discussion. I go to folks who have no vested interest same as you, but have PhD’s and live and breathe longevity studies, cancer, microbiome, etc. One such person is Dr. Rhonda Patrick who has written on the web about the weak case made for overall “bean fear”. So many advantages to the lowly bean. Especially for those of us who burn calories at a high metabolic rate and have a hard time keeping calories coming in. Maybe there is a very small population that cannot handle beans that have been properly cooked but to cast such a wide net for the rest of us seems careless.

  12. A bohm Avatar

    First and foremost I bothered writing this to help people not to be right or for ego aggrandizement.
    I will say this much I struggled with weight for years I was like 200 pounds and middle school as an adult I am 5 six it wasn’t until I discovered and began to apply some of the principles of Katie as well as Chris kresser that anything of permanence happened I was 200 pounds two years ago in six months I dropped to 150 and have maintained that weight a yeAr and a half I do avoid white potatoes and most grains I eat oats (because as far as I know they’ve yet to be genetically modified and the health benefits of beta glucan which could also be obtained from things like shiitake) very sparingly as well as A moderate amount of beans and nuts I am interested to cut it out completely to see the effects it has on my allergies energy and mental well-being but beyond that I can Attest to the fact that after trying everything for years and then finally assuming the establishment was lying because a vested interest and intentionally trying to what the mainstream medical vilifies as they would no money in keeping people well now is there not individual doctors per se but big Pharma Monsanto etc. manipulating their education, did I ever have any sustainable results the hormonal balance and how to fix your leptin articles are totally on point my entire family of not only blood but also adoptive all have suffered from the typical post agricultural postindustrial American diet and now look to me as a model of results my doctor was totally astonished and has mentioned his surprise more than once and asked how I did it not only did I take this information and consideration but for the fact that I would like to live to see my great great grandchildren and not be a crippled sick old man I also researched Kitavins and blue zone (Google it) known for their lack of disease and longevity oddly enough they all pretty much follow these recommendations with the exception of a fair amount of grains beans and nuts with the exception of the Kitavins of course there’s a joke that the only fat one is the one who left the island. Further hey man was diagnosed here in his mid-70s If I remember correctly and was given six months to live with a diagnosis of lung cancer. All of this hits home and I researched it not only for my own health but for my family who has varying lay struggled with obesity as well as my diabetic ex-wife and I’ve lost various family members to heart disease and cancer. Anyway that man return to his homeland and their lifestyle in Ikaria Greece not only did he beat cancer when the article was written he was in his mid 90s and when asked if he ever went back to America so the doctors can figure out how he beat cancer he said yes the interviewer asked what did they say the guy gave a lighthearted chuckle and said nothing they were all dead. Is ironic is that is that should tell you a lot. Studying revelation I could see how these potentially could cause problems and accelerate AGing so I’m open minded to trying abstinence from these things. As for Wikipedia as a source some of its information over the years has kept me from accidental harm from the ignorance of otherwise inaccessible information and you can always check their sources your self furthermore not that I trust the government but I was recently reading about defective e-cigarette’s exploding and I came across a US fire department phamphlet some subdivision of FEMA and I really got a kick out of it because we were told in school not to use Wikipedia for years I guess because the government and corporations and higher education industry want a monopoly on information and as it turns out in that very Phamphlet they cited as a source Wikipedia so if it concerns you that a nutritionalist i’ll be at one who is probably gaining notoriety and making some money that is really just trying to help you mentions Wikipedia then it should probably horrify you that the government cited it. If Katie wasn’t trying to help you and the information she condenses in A form Dejargonized again the medical industry thrives off of keeping you sick and they use terms they don’t want you to understand unless you go to med school that the layperson can understand wasn’t the least bit helpful then I highly doubt you would have any following at all. I’m not in the least bit a fanatic or a follower but as a freethinker I would highly suggest considering this information. Being that I encourage this freethinking I encourage your curiosity to not only research what Katie says but what I have stated as well

  13. Amy Avatar

    A very informative read and pod cast below…

    https://chriskresser.com/rhr-what-science-really-says-about-the-paleo-diet-with-mat-lalonde/

    But in this case, it turns out that most lectins, especially the most well-studied ones like wheat germ agglutinin, PHA, which is in legumes, which is phytohaemagglutinin, they are deactivated by heat. These proteins are very sensitive to heat, and they’re destroyed. So people waving their hands in the air like, “Oh my God, these things are really toxic!” and whatnot. And it’s true. They are very toxic. We have the research to show that they are toxic in animals in vitro when they’re fed to animals, but it turns out that they’re feeding raw legumes or pure isolated proteins to these things, not cooked food.

  14. steve Avatar

    There may be some other bio-hacks for minimizing theoretical leptin damage: I like to sprout the least leptin containing beans just a bit, after soaking 12 hours and then cooking in a pressure cooker for over an hour and longer cooking time for garbanzos. Until actual research comes out demonstrating leptin toxicity from eating cooked beans (not just their presence in beans) I believe the upside far greater than downside for majority of folks. P.S. sprouting beans ever so slightly is admittedly an instinctive approach with no linkage to studies etc. I’m thinking I’m turning them more into a vegetable and less a starch by doing so. Additionally I have lost weight on this diet (not my intent by any means) while no other dietary factors were changed. Cheers.

  15. Alyssa Faith Avatar
    Alyssa Faith

    This is all very interesting to me as I seek to overcome my leaky gut and allergies through healthy diet and supplements. Something that I am wondering about is where the lectins in the beans are located. I noted reading somewhere about lectins being in the bean’s coating. If that is so, then eating split, skinless beans (i.e. skinned red lentils, split yellow peas, etc.) would be safe, if they are soaked and boiled. Is this correct? I love dal, and find it much more digestible than something like baked beans, and wouldn’t mind giving up my navy beans and black beans if I could keep eating the Indian-style dal/split legumes. What’s your take on dal?

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      The lectins are found mostly in the coating and soaking, sprouting and cooking do reduce the levels significantly. Diet is very much an individual thing so I’d stick with what is working for you…

      1. Cielo Avatar

        If I soak the beans the night before, and I cook it well done on the pressure cooker for at least 2 hours or more? Would this help to eliminate most of the lectin? And then is safer to eat without causing harm to my body?

  16. Janna Avatar

    Have you considered this? The reason that beans (legumes) and breads containing Lectin are harmful to humans or cause digestion and intestinal problems is because humans are consuming ANIMAL products along with the LECTIN products?
    Isn’t it possible that by consuming these animal products along with legumes and grain products you are creating the same TOXIC environment inside your body that is produced when animals eat legumes?
    Its just a thought -after reading the information you provided. I have been researching the controversy ‘are beans healthy or not? are grains healthy or not?’
    Basically I’ve come to the conclusion despite my lack of religious fervor that we were NEVER intended to consume Animal products -that nothing breathing should have to die in order for us to live -that the Natural Order set in place restrictions against certain combinations so that we understood not to MIX our human bodies with animal bodies in any manner -specifically by eating them.
    Lets be honest -we eat meat because we are addicted to it. Try giving it up and you may find it is just as addictive as drugs-alcohol -sugar. Mentally as well, its infected us with the idea that eating meat makes us More Successful -More Stronger -when it really destroys our natural healing abilities and weakens us with diseases.
    Spiritually and Morally if we think about it (most dont and wont) we are killing some of the most gentle and innocent of creatures on this planet. Why not eat a vicious animal instead? Its easier just to push a gentle cow into a pen, a domestic pig and a chicken into a cage. Its really sad if you think about it and listen to your conscious as well as your body’s response BUT few people will or do. Instead, because they are addicted and crave meat, plus they worry what others will say or think, or because its just too hard to change their ways…they will not stop and then they wonder why they end up with a disease despite their prayers and church attendance or good deeds.
    It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand the truth but it took me 50 years to see it, hear it and understand it.

    1. Viky Avatar

      Janna,
      Thank you for such a great post, you have a beautiful heart! I too agree that proper food pairing is utterly important! I know I used to feel terrible when ate animal with starch.

      I am on the same wave of thinking with you concerning the consumption of animal. Lets just say that I watched some videos of how “farms” treat their animals…They beat them, ridicule them, mutilate them..etc. Ever since that day, I cannot stand the sight of meat! This even happens in organic grass fed “farms”
      I still eat fish now and then, wild caught of course, because lets not get started on those farm raised!
      Ever since I switched to just fish, I don’t know if there’s something wrong with me because I don’t feel hungry like I used to, LOL! and I have more bowels than before…..uhhh, ok!

      Please, if you eat meat, please make sure its humanely raised and look for the humane seal on your meat, or go online to find vendors.

      I haven’t started eating beans yet, but I’m going to try just a very small amount with rice to try it out.

  17. Brenda Avatar

    Katie,

    I’m not on facebook or any of the other stuff but I have been reading and reading your stuff and you say beans are not good but in your 7 Simple Steps in the menu planning part you mention GREEN BEANS. Are they ok? What of yellow beans and others of that type?
    Thank you and God bless you for all the hard work you’re doing and sharing.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      Green beans are young and have less phytic acid in them, so they are not an everyday thing (who’d want to eat them that often anyway) but they are not to bad for you.

      1. Brenda Avatar

        Thank you for answering. You made my day. I love green and yellow beans picked straight off the bush and eaten. In fact they are the only beans I plant in my garden. And I do enjoy ham and strings beans especially in the winter months. All the other beans will be quite easy to give up and I’m trying to sprout them and then eat the sprouts and also feed them to my chickens. That will help keep them happy over the winter when they don’t want to go out in the snow and there’s nothing green and growing, and no insects at all to munch on.

  18. Tonya Malcolm Avatar
    Tonya Malcolm

    I enjoy such a lively & flavorful discussion, the savory bean pot with extra spice warms me and my kitchen this winter. The anecdotal wisdom and I will say I have not met a bean that disagreed with me so far.
    I hope everyone of us gets a healthy dose of wellness by ingesting and digesting the parts of this blog that they agree with. Dining accompanied by a healthy & happy friend indeed could be a better way to get micro-nutrients to behave. Ranting about what I have on my plate or a health scare a la mode is the wrong kind of pepper to put in the pot. The skeptics are a good sign that there is still flavor & food in our food. I sniff and I whiff, sometimes over exclamations of extreme chemical disgust. Or my mood & palate are tingled by tasty visions (that are not in my mouth yet)
    from a new cookbook, dinner & wellness, everyone look…take a bite.
    There is great and spirited belief that we share- that the answers can be discovered through our trial and error, or looked up online. But even if we find the truth, if I can’t accept it, or handle it, my path will stray into the bean patch. The pulverized capsule pill form of anything edible is missing the major symphony of attraction. I am what I eat therefore its colors & textures & shapes & smells salty wet hot juicy sweet sour chewy..no I’ve been told I’m crunchy. Yup sounds about right.
    My two favorite beans – Vanilla & Chocolate, I really endorse, for flavor fiber & phytos. indulge with a pinch of salt.
    The best effect of having to live with being so damn crunchy, is that I think of myself as a human bean and thank the entire bean family for adopting me & getting me to plant grow more (heirloom beans!)
    They grow with everything. I thank Mama to keep her sense of humor, because whether Wiki says it yet, I think there is great source of healing
    packed into a giggle. And lots of hope for us all.

  19. Lisa Avatar

    “NO polyunsaturated fats because they are also the root of all evil”
    *****

    The “root of all evil”? Hmmmm….. seems extreme for something humans have consumed since they’ve existed – knowingly or unknowingly.

    I grew up catholic, and was taught that SATAN was the root of all evil – however, there are those that say the government is the root of all evil – others simply say it’s mankind itself and the way we are destroying the earth and everything on it. Who would have known that none of those things are the cause and that it’s plant oils???
    Guess I better start spreading the word!

    Really?

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