I think you meant your post for WebMD.
All these guys know about beans is their content of ... uh ... "energy".
Hi folks,
Please describe the differences between bacteria that is considered good and bad? What kind of bacteria is typically found in the food source beans?
Please feel free to send me a message
Thanks a lot
Harry Potterish
Last edited by administrator; 07-02-2012 at 02:14 PM. Reason: Edited to uniquness
I think you meant your post for WebMD.
All these guys know about beans is their content of ... uh ... "energy".
Mmmm baked beans with a bunch of bacon...
Getting close to lunchtime...
Apparently... the "good" bacteria do indeed help our systems to generate more energy out of things we eat.
I'm totally in the dark regarding bacteria so I did a search and found this right on the top... might want to have a look here...?
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-are-good-bacteria.htm
I don't believe much of what I hear on the news about things that are good or bad for you. One day eggs are bad... the next they're good. Dark green vegetables good... next day bad. I say it's all good if you mix it up and everything in moderation. We all need to die of something some day anyway. It'd be a real bummer if I passed up a big piece of rhubarb pie with a scoop of yellow vanilla on it for health concerns only to be struck by a bolt of lightening the next day...
Already exist in the Medical world. Apparently patients who have just had intestinal/bowel/etc surgery, the first good sign that everything is working OK again is the bubble-test (my words) They apparently have a collection tube in place (gasp) and a monitor to signal to nursing staff, "we have gas!" Whoopeeee."
I can hear the conversation now... "Oh you work at the hospital eh... what do you do there?"...
Gas monitor?
Fume catcher?
Bubble bagger?
Methane wrangler?
I won't get into the "collection insertion" category.
Way off the original track...
train-derail.jpg
It's got something...
I'm all for going green. Personally, I feel it's going to be a long time before we see methane gas passing wind in the race to a green solution.
Ron