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Default Cooking Quinoa

I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
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Default Cooking Quinoa

Cook in chicken stock, then add finely chopped red onion, dried cranberries and pecans.

Denise in NH
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"sf" > wrote in message
...
> On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 20:11:19 -0400, jmcquown >
> wrote:
>
>> On 10/25/2014 3:47 PM, sf wrote:
>> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
>> >
>> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
>> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
>> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
>> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
>> >
>> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
>> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
>> > entirely blotted out.... and what point is there for that? Unless
>> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
>> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
>> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
>> >

>> I don't understand eating things one doesn't like simply because it's
>> considerd "healthy". By whose standards?
>>

> Quinoa is considered a super food, but I'm stymied about why an
> independent adult is trying to make himself like it after what I
> consider a couple of very good tries.


It is purported to be very good for blood sugar. It wasn't for me which is
sad because I actually did like it. I could understand if there was some
real medical reason for it. Such as being deficient in some vitamin or
mineral and preferring to get it from a food rather than a pill but I doubt
that's the case here.

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Default Cooking Quinoa

On Mon, 27 Oct 2014 00:49:31 -0700, "Julie Bove"
> wrote:

>
> "sf" > wrote in message
> ...
> > On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 20:11:19 -0400, jmcquown >
> > wrote:
> >
> >> On 10/25/2014 3:47 PM, sf wrote:
> >> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> >> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> >> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> >> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
> >> >
> >> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
> >> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
> >> > entirely blotted out.... and what point is there for that? Unless
> >> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
> >> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
> >> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
> >> >
> >> I don't understand eating things one doesn't like simply because it's
> >> considerd "healthy". By whose standards?
> >>

> > Quinoa is considered a super food, but I'm stymied about why an
> > independent adult is trying to make himself like it after what I
> > consider a couple of very good tries.

>
> It is purported to be very good for blood sugar.


That's all well and good, but there's plenty more out there to eat.

> It wasn't for me which is
> sad because I actually did like it. I could understand if there was some
> real medical reason for it. Such as being deficient in some vitamin or
> mineral and preferring to get it from a food rather than a pill but I doubt
> that's the case here.





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Default Cooking Quinoa


"JohnJohn" > wrote in message
...
> On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 22:21:51 -0700, sf > wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 20:11:19 -0400, jmcquown >
>>wrote:
>>
>>> On 10/25/2014 3:47 PM, sf wrote:
>>> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
>>> >
>>> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
>>> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
>>> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
>>> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
>>> >
>>> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
>>> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
>>> > entirely blotted out.... and what point is there for that? Unless
>>> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
>>> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
>>> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
>>> >
>>> I don't understand eating things one doesn't like simply because it's
>>> considerd "healthy". By whose standards?
>>>

>>Quinoa is considered a super food, but I'm stymied about why an
>>independent adult is trying to make himself like it after what I
>>consider a couple of very good tries.

>
> Because, as you said, it's a super food, real or perceived.
>

It's high in protein so good for vegetarians and vegans.



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Default Cooking Quinoa

On Mon, 27 Oct 2014 18:58:42 +1100, JohnJohn >
wrote:

> On Mon, 27 Oct 2014 00:50:07 -0700, "Julie Bove"
> > wrote:
>
> >
> >"JohnJohn" > wrote in message
> .. .
> >> On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 22:21:51 -0700, sf > wrote:
> >>
> >>>On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 20:11:19 -0400, jmcquown >
> >>>wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On 10/25/2014 3:47 PM, sf wrote:
> >>>> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
> >>>> >
> >>>> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> >>>> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> >>>> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> >>>> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
> >>>> >
> >>>> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
> >>>> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
> >>>> > entirely blotted out.... and what point is there for that? Unless
> >>>> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
> >>>> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
> >>>> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
> >>>> >
> >>>> I don't understand eating things one doesn't like simply because it's
> >>>> considerd "healthy". By whose standards?
> >>>>
> >>>Quinoa is considered a super food, but I'm stymied about why an
> >>>independent adult is trying to make himself like it after what I
> >>>consider a couple of very good tries.
> >>
> >> Because, as you said, it's a super food, real or perceived.
> >>

> >It's high in protein so good for vegetarians and vegans.

>
> There you go.


Back to balanced diets. He's a fool if he's a strict vegan or
vegetarian.


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Default Cooking Quinoa

On Mon, 27 Oct 2014 16:34:50 +1100, JohnJohn >
wrote:

> On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 22:21:51 -0700, sf > wrote:
>
> >On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 20:11:19 -0400, jmcquown >
> >wrote:
> >
> >> On 10/25/2014 3:47 PM, sf wrote:
> >> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> >> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> >> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> >> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
> >> >
> >> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
> >> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
> >> > entirely blotted out.... and what point is there for that? Unless
> >> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
> >> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
> >> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
> >> >
> >> I don't understand eating things one doesn't like simply because it's
> >> considerd "healthy". By whose standards?
> >>

> >Quinoa is considered a super food, but I'm stymied about why an
> >independent adult is trying to make himself like it after what I
> >consider a couple of very good tries.

>
> Because, as you said, it's a super food, real or perceived.


Eat a balanced diet and you won't need to eat a superfood.


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Default Cooking Quinoa


"sf" > wrote in message
...
> On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 18:35:52 -0700, "Pico Rico"
> > wrote:
>
>>
>> "sf" > wrote in message
>> ...
>> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
>> >
>> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
>> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
>> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
>> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
>> >
>> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
>> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
>> > entirely blotted out.... and what's point is there for that? Unless
>> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
>> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
>> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
>> >

>>
>> and stop contributing to the negative impacts of the lands from where it
>> comes.
>>

> How did you get the idea that our consumption of quinoa is making a
> negative impact? Farmers have more money, so they can afford the
> higher price and city people don't eat quinoa, so the rise in price
> doesn't affect them.
>
>
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/201...rs-who-grow-it
>


read further, not just a puff piece put out by the quinoa marketing board.

The Dirt on Quinoa
The problem, it turns out, is not really dietary but environmental. Kerssen
notes that the potential desertification of the growing region should also
be factored into consideration. She believes turning this sacred seed from a
subsistence crop into a prized commodity is leading the poorest, most
vulnerable farmers to work the soil year-round, degrading the very land they
depend on for survival and cultural identity. Among the Andean ecological
disruptions keeping Kerssen awake at night are the effects of mechanized
soil tilling, one of the hallmarks of industrialized agriculture. "When you
combine that with global warming and higher temperatures in that region, you've
got the perfect recipe for greater incidence of pests," she says. In a
region where pesticides are practically unheard of-bugs are rare above
12,000 feet-insects are beginning to appear, leading some farmers to use
insecticides and other agrochemicals to maintain production. And of course,
once farmers begin using pesticides, they eliminate not only the bugs they
are targeting but also the helpful critters. As a result, one of quinoa's
fundamental appeals-its organic status-could be compromised.

Exacerbating the environmental dilemma is that the llamas who once grazed
and fertilized traditional farms-and helped prevent erosion with their
large, padded feet-are being moved off the land to make way for more quinoa
crops. Sven-Erik Jacobsen, associate professor of plant and environmental
sciences at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, believes.



http://vegnews.com/articles/page.do?pageId=6345&catId=5




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On Mon, 27 Oct 2014 05:42:29 -0700, "Pico Rico"
> wrote:

>
> "sf" > wrote in message
> ...
> > On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 18:35:52 -0700, "Pico Rico"
> > > wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> "sf" > wrote in message
> >> ...
> >> > On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:59:08 -0400, wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> >> >> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> >> >> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> >> >> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike
> >> >
> >> > Mike, why stress over it when you obviously don't like quinoa? No
> >> > recipe is going to change the flavor enough for you unless it's
> >> > entirely blotted out.... and what's point is there for that? Unless
> >> > you're getting it free somewhere, it's too expensive to be cooking
> >> > something you dislike. Think of all the money you've wasted already.
> >> > Switch to something you like better, like couscous or potatoes.
> >> >
> >>
> >> and stop contributing to the negative impacts of the lands from where it
> >> comes.
> >>

> > How did you get the idea that our consumption of quinoa is making a
> > negative impact? Farmers have more money, so they can afford the
> > higher price and city people don't eat quinoa, so the rise in price
> > doesn't affect them.
> >
> >
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/201...rs-who-grow-it
> >

>
> read further, not just a puff piece put out by the quinoa marketing board.
>
> The Dirt on Quinoa
> The problem, it turns out, is not really dietary but environmental. Kerssen
> notes that the potential desertification of the growing region should also
> be factored into consideration. She believes turning this sacred seed from a
> subsistence crop into a prized commodity is leading the poorest, most
> vulnerable farmers to work the soil year-round, degrading the very land they
> depend on for survival and cultural identity. Among the Andean ecological
> disruptions keeping Kerssen awake at night are the effects of mechanized
> soil tilling, one of the hallmarks of industrialized agriculture. "When you
> combine that with global warming and higher temperatures in that region, you've
> got the perfect recipe for greater incidence of pests," she says. In a
> region where pesticides are practically unheard of-bugs are rare above
> 12,000 feet-insects are beginning to appear, leading some farmers to use
> insecticides and other agrochemicals to maintain production. And of course,
> once farmers begin using pesticides, they eliminate not only the bugs they
> are targeting but also the helpful critters. As a result, one of quinoa's
> fundamental appeals-its organic status-could be compromised.
>
> Exacerbating the environmental dilemma is that the llamas who once grazed
> and fertilized traditional farms-and helped prevent erosion with their
> large, padded feet-are being moved off the land to make way for more quinoa
> crops. Sven-Erik Jacobsen, associate professor of plant and environmental
> sciences at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, believes.
>
>
>
> http://vegnews.com/articles/page.do?pageId=6345&catId=5
>


Let's stop global deforestation first, then I can begin to get upset
about the loss of lama grazing lands.


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Default Cooking Quinoa

On Saturday, October 25, 2014 11:59:12 AM UTC-7, Mike wrote:
> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike


Mike, here is a wonderful side dish made with quinoa. I hope you are not one of those people who can't take cilantro, if you are, then nevermind. You could substitute parsley but it wouldn't be the same. If you try it let me know how you liked it.

http://www.hizzoners.com/index.php/r...n-and-cilantro
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On Saturday, October 25, 2014 2:59:12 PM UTC-4, Mike wrote:
> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike


I've been using it with steel cut oats, some dried fruit ....makes a good b'fast.
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On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 16:39:51 -0700 (PDT), Kalmia
> wrote:

>On Saturday, October 25, 2014 2:59:12 PM UTC-4, Mike wrote:
>> I would dearly like to incorporate quinoa into my diet. I've tried it
>> cooked in stock and with a sauted onion but it still tastes like
>> quinoa. I'd like to use it as a side dish to something like roasted
>> chicken. Any suggestions are appreciated - Mike

>
>I've been using it with steel cut oats, some dried fruit ....makes a good b'fast.


That reminds me - I always cook extra quinoa, and save it to use in
pancakes. No specific recipe - just throw it in some pancake batter
and cook as usual. Gives the pancakes a slight crunch.

Doris


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I can't get past the fact that from what I remember from being a youngster on a farm and raising
chickens, the way quinoa smells is just like how chicken feed smells. I cooked it once, and that
was enough to totally turn me off it forever.

N.
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On 2014-10-25 20:01, Nancy2 wrote:
>
> I can't get past the fact that from what I remember from being a youngster on a farm and raising
> chickens, the way quinoa smells is just like how chicken feed smells. I cooked it once, and that
> was enough to totally turn me off it forever.
>
>LOL That is how I used to feel about the green bean casserole that is

the trademark side dish for an American Thanksgiving. It always reminds
me of a trip to my mother's uncle's farm and helping him slop the pigs.


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On Sat, 25 Oct 2014 20:41:54 -0400, Dave Smith
> wrote:

>On 2014-10-25 20:01, Nancy2 wrote:
>>
>> I can't get past the fact that from what I remember from being a youngster on a farm and raising
>> chickens, the way quinoa smells is just like how chicken feed smells. I cooked it once, and that
>> was enough to totally turn me off it forever.
>>
>>LOL That is how I used to feel about the green bean casserole that is

>the trademark side dish for an American Thanksgiving. It always reminds
>me of a trip to my mother's uncle's farm and helping him slop the pigs.


I went through my quinoa phase several years ago. Eventually came to
the conclusion it wasn't worth continuing with, I didn't exactly hate
it but never exactly loved it either.
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