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-   -   Are you irritable????????????? (https://www.apostolicfriendsforum.com/showthread.php?t=12212)

Elizabeth 02-06-2008 01:36 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by AmazingGrace (Post 381651)
Oh I know... I have one recipe that my best friends dad gave me... it literally calls for 4 tbsp chili powder!!! Good Lord that would kill anyone!!!

Whoa! They must be used to it, that is WAY to much-

The thing was I already have acid reflux and had my prilosec on hand but it was not helping. Usually when I feel like the way we both did--chest pains and all, I take tums by the hand fulls--well the tums got left behind. The antacids they have come individual wrapped-not helpful!

Can you imagine we had to eat it anyway!

AmazingGrace 02-06-2008 01:38 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by dizzyde (Post 381654)
Well, I know I get grumpy if I don't get it!!! :toofunny

My pastor asked Sunday night for the church to go on a 28 day "fast food" fast (abstaining from).

I told him when he came in to the office on Mon., I'm behind him, but seeing as how he has to work with me all day, he might want to not consider Starbucks fast food, otherwise it could be a veeerrrrryyy long month! :toofunny :toofunny

ROFL!!! Too funny!

Elizabeth 02-06-2008 01:39 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by dizzyde (Post 381655)
That is hilarious.

I am sorry for your pain Jeanie, but stuff like that will make you laugh later (when you can't still vividly remember the pain)! :toofunny

He caught my expression too, but he said something in their language to our main host-

I know it is funny, I am not good at hiding my shock though. It almost like I was watching someone else's life and not mine own!

AmazingGrace 02-06-2008 01:40 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeanie (Post 381656)
Whoa! They must be used to it, that is WAY to much-

The thing was I already have acid reflux and had my prilosec on hand but it was not helping. Usually when I feel like the way we both did--chest pains and all, I take tums by the hand fulls--well the tums got left behind. The antacids they have come individual wrapped-not helpful!

Can you imagine we had to eat it anyway!

Yes I believe it... however God will bless you for it in time.. I know that sounds weird but you were there ministering to their people and for one to not eat their food is such a insult to them that you did the right thing.. your asophagus (sp) may not love you but God will bless you for it LOL

Elizabeth 02-06-2008 01:42 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by AmazingGrace (Post 381659)
Yes I believe it... however God will bless you for it in time.. I know that sounds weird but you were there ministering to their people and for one to not eat their food is such a insult to them that you did the right thing.. your asophagus (sp) may not love you but God will bless you for it LOL

Thank you for saying that!

But I seriously need to take some tums right now-just talking about it!

AmazingGrace 02-06-2008 01:43 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeanie (Post 381661)
Thank you for saying that!

But I seriously need to take some tums right now-just taking about it!

LOL sorry that was sad but funny! Makes ya have heartburn and get irritable just thinking about it huh?!

Pragmatist 02-06-2008 02:05 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeanie (Post 381642)
I was really irritable the last night in India.

Our host had us get up at 4 am to go on a nature adventure and we did not get back to the hotel until 13 hrs later--only to have to go to an Elders home for dinner at 8pm.

We didnt get to take a nap, David was awake and I was so cranky--I knew dinner was going to be another spicy meal that was going to kill me and Keith (the antacids we had we not working well at all and we were having chest pain at night due to the chili powder the put in many of their dishes)

No matter how much we told them it was killing us, it was still spicy!

Anyway I was cranky but I knew I had to go dinner or I would look ungrateful, after all they were trying to show their gratitude by fixing us this very thoughtful meal.

We arrived and everything looked wonderful and smelled great. The host handed me a plate and said

"We hope you enjoy this meal we made it especially spicy"
My eyes bugged out and then I smiled and said "thank you"

You need to have some yogurt with the meal. That tones down the spices. When my in-laws cook they make the food too spicy for me. Also, there is a different connotation to spicy and hot. If you tell them it's too hot they might understand better.

COOPER 02-06-2008 02:15 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pragmatist (Post 381682)
You need to have some yogurt with the meal. That tones down the spices. When my in-laws cook they make the food too spicy for me. Also, there is a different connotation to spicy and hot. If you tell them it's too hot they might understand better.

Alkazelter Cold helps me when I get heart burn.

I have a food allergy to Black Pepper.

Black pepper makes me tired, heart burn and a bad head ache.

dizzyde 02-06-2008 02:18 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeanie (Post 381658)
He caught my expression too, but he said something in their language to our main host-

I know it is funny, I am not good at hiding my shock though. It almost like I was watching someone else life and not mine own!

Too funny, I wonder what he said??

Actually, I just remembered an article I read recently about the chili pepper. It has an amazing variety of health benefits. I can't find the exact article online, I am posting part of a webpage on the subject, you can find it here:

http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?t...dspice&dbid=29

The website is "The World's Healthiest Foods"

(I hope this covers the legal aspects of reprinting this, if not admin can delete it and perhaps leave the link?)


Health Benefits

Fight Inflammation

Chili peppers contain a substance called capsaicin, which gives peppers their characteristic pungence, producing mild to intense spice when eaten. Capsaicin is a potent inhibitor of substance P, a neuropeptide associated with inflammatory processes. The hotter the chili pepper, the more capsaicin it contains. The hottest varieties include habañero and Scotch bonnet peppers. Jalapeños are next in their heat and capsaicin content, followed by the milder varieties, including Spanish pimentos, and Anaheim and Hungarian cherry peppers.

Capsaicin is being studied as an effective treatment for sensory nerve fiber disorders, including pain associated with arthritis, psoriasis, and diabetic neuropathy. When animals injected with a substance that causes inflammatory arthritis were fed a diet that contained capsaicin, they had delayed onset of arthritis, and also significantly reduced paw inflammation.

Natural Pain Relief

Topical capsaicin is now a recognized treatment option for osteoarthritis pain. Several review studies of pain management for diabetic neuropathy have listed the benefits of topical capsaicin to alleviate disabling pain associated with this condition.

In a double-blind placebo controlled trial, nearly 200 patients with psoriasis were given topical preparations containing either capsaicin or placebo. Patients who were given capsaicin reported significant improvement based on a severity score which traced symptoms associated with psoriasis. The side effect reported with topical capsaicin cream is a burning sensation at the area of application.

Cardiovascular Benefits

Red chili peppers, such as cayenne, have been shown to reduce blood cholesterol, triglyceride levels, and platelet aggregation, while increasing the body's ability to dissolve fibrin, a substance integral to the formation of blood clots. Cultures where hot pepper is used liberally have a much lower rate of heart attack, stroke and pulmonary embolism.

Spicing your meals with chili peppers may also protect the fats in your blood from damage by free radicals—a first step in the development of atherosclerosis. In a randomized, crossover study involving 27 healthy subjects (14 women, 13 men), eating freshly chopped chili was found to increase the resistance of blood fats, such as cholesterol and triglycerides, to oxidation (free radical injury).

Subjects were randomly divided into 2 groups. For 4 weeks, half the subjects ate a freshly chopped chili blend (30 grams/day, about 1 ounce), consisting of 55% cayenne, while the other half consumed a bland diet (no chili). After 4 weeks, the groups were crossed over for another 4 weeks. During the intervention periods, consumption of other spices such as cinnamon, ginger, garlic, and mustard was restricted. Blood samples were obtained at the beginning of the study and after each dietary period.

After eating the chili-containing diet, the rate of oxidation (free radical damage to cholesterol and triglycerides) was significantly lower in both men and women than that seen after eating the bland diet.

In addition, after eating the chili-spiced diet, women had a longer lag time before any damage to cholesterol was seen compared to the lag time seen after eating the bland diet. In men, the chili-diet also lowered resting heart rate and increased the amount of blood reaching the heart.

Clear Congestion

Capsaicin not only reduces pain, but its peppery heat also stimulates secretions that help clear mucus from your stuffed up nose or congested lungs.

Boost Immunity

Chili peppers' bright red color signals its high content of beta-carotene or pro-vitamin A. Just two teaspoons of red chili peppers provide about 6% of the daily value for vitamin C coupled with more than 10% of the daily value for vitamin A. Often called the anti-infection vitamin, vitamin A is essential for healthy mucous membranes, which line the nasal passages, lungs, intestinal tract and urinary tract and serve as the body's first line of defense against invading pathogens.

Help Stop the Spread of Prostate Cancer

Red chili peppers' capsaicin, the compound responsible for their pungent heat, stops the spread of prostate cancer cells through a variety of mechanisms, indicates a study published in the March 15, 2006 issue of Cancer Research . Capsaicin triggers suicide in both primary types of prostate cancer cell lines, those whose growth is stimulated by male hormones and those not affected by them. In addition, capsaicin lessens the expression of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), inhibits the ability of the most potent form of testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, to activate PSA, and directly inhibits PSA transcription, causing PSA levels to plummet.

The dose effective for test animals was equivalent to 400 milligrams of capsaicin, three times a week, for a man weighing about 200 pounds. After four weeks of receiving capsaicin, prostate cancer tumor growth and size decreased significantly in the animals. One warning: Excessive intake of hot chilies has been linked to stomach cancer, so don't go overboard.

Prevent Stomach Ulcers

Chili peppers have a bad--and mistaken--reputation for contributing to stomach ulcers. Not only do they not cause ulcers, they can help prevent them by killing bacteria you may have ingested, while stimulating the cells lining the stomach to secrete protective buffering juices.

Lose Weight

All that heat you feel after eating hot chili peppers takes energy--and calories to produce. Even sweet red peppers have been found to contain substances that significantly increase thermogenesis (heat production) and oxygen consumption for more than 20 minutes after they are eaten.

Lower Risk of Type 2 Diabetes

Making chili pepper a frequently enjoyed spice in your Healthiest Way of Eating could help reduce your risk of hyperinsulinemia (high blood levels of insulin)-a disorder associated with type 2 diabetes.

In a study published in the July 2006 issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Australian researchers show that the amount of insulin required to lower blood sugar after a meal is reduced if the meal contains chili pepper. When chili-containing meals are a regular part of the diet, insulin requirements drop even lower.

Plus, chili's beneficial effects on insulin needs get even better as body mass index (BMI, a measure of obesity) increases. In overweight people, not only do chili-containing meals significantly lower the amount of insulin required to lower blood sugar levels after a meal, but chili-containing meals also result in a lower ratio of C-peptide/ insulin, an indication that the rate at which the liver is clearing insulin has increased.

The amount of C-peptide in the blood also shows how much insulin is being produced by the pancreas. The pancreas produces proinsulin, which splits into insulin and C-peptide when secreted into the bloodstream. Each molecule of proinsulin breaks into one molecule of C-peptide and one molecule of insulin, so less C-peptide means less insulin has been secreted into the bloodstream.

In this study, which involved 36 subjects aged 22-70 years, the effects of three interventions were evaluated. Subjects were given a bland meal after a bland diet containing no spices, a chili-containing meal after a bland diet, and finally, a chili-containing meal after a chili-containing diet. A palatable chili flavoring, not pure capsaicin (the active component in chili), was used.

Blood sugar rose similarly after all three interventions, but insulin rose the most after the bland meal after a bland diet and the least after the chili-containing meal after a chili-rich diet.

The maximum increases in insulin after the bland diet followed by a chili-containing meal were 15% lower than after the bland meal following a bland diet, and 24% lower after the chili-containing meal after a chili-rich diet compared to the chili-containing meal after the bland diet.

C-peptide blood levels also increased the most after the bland meal after a bland diet and the least after the chili-containing meal after a chili-rich diet, showing the least insulin was secreted after the chili-rich diet and meal.

In addition, the C-peptide/insulin ratio was highest after the chili-containing meal after a chili-rich diet, indicating an increase in the liver's ability to clear insulin.

Besides capsaicin, chilies contain antioxidants, including vitamin C and carotenoids, which might also help improve insulin regulation.

A little chili pepper can really perk up an omelet, add heat to a black bean/sweet potato soup, or transform an ordinary salad dressing. So, spice up your meals with chili peppers. Your body will need to make less insulin and will use it more effectively. No need to go overboard though. Population studies in India and Mexico suggest that loading up on hot chilies at every meal may be linked to increased risk of stomach cancer.

MissBrattified 02-06-2008 02:19 PM

Re: Are you irritable?????????????
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pragmatist (Post 381682)
You need to have some yogurt with the meal. That tones down the spices. When my in-laws cook they make the food too spicy for me. Also, there is a different connotation to spicy and hot. If you tell them it's too hot they might understand better.

Yes! Plain yogurt goes great with almost any Indian food anyway. We also serve ours with cold buttermilk. (Try pouring 1/4 c. over a bowl of Channa--Yum!) You don't really taste it--(Unless you purposely keep it separate like I do), but it makes the dish a little creamier and cools everything down.

I love Indian food. :girlyluv


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