There's meat in hotdogs? That's a novel idea. 😉
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
Mmmm garlic snails , don’t need teeth for them !
Ian you make an interesting point however they are small teeth. Even when they might have been bigger i can imagine myself eating fish raw (at times when fire cannot be had) but not raw meet from animals. We have weak jaws compared to the other meat eaters. Our intestinal tract is many time longer than meat eating animals. I reckon our ancestors would have been safe catching and eating fish and could eat raw when too hard to make a fire and probably ate plenty of berries, plants etc. Foraging. Most in that category dont fight back too unlike many animals.
B12. It's not produced by cows. Its eaten by cows (found in soils and streams) and lodges in the muscle. We eat the muscle and get B12. Our ancestors didn't drink our treated water (that treats all the algae and B12 out of it) and could get B12 without eating meat.
Vegans who drink treated water as opposed to natural stream water definitely need B12 either tabs or through B12 fortified foods such as fortified Soy or almond milks etc.
Cheers
Haha. Yep. Good point. Cheers
Ps. When cooked at least!
People also ask
Where does the name hot dog originated from?
References to dachshund sausages and ultimately hot dogs can be traced to German immigrants in the 1800s. These immigrants brought not only sausages to America, but dachshund dogs. The name most likely began as a joke about the Germans' small, long, thin dogs.
Hot Dog History | NHDSC
www.hot-dog.org/culture/hot-dog-history
Search for: Where does the name hot dog originated from?
How did hot dog get its name?
These immigrants brought not only sausages to America, but dachshund dogs. The name most likely began as a joke about the Germans' small, long, thin dogs. In fact, even Germans called the frankfurter a "little-dog" or "dachshund" sausage, thus linking the word "dog" to their popular concoction.
Hot Dog History | NHDSC
www.hot-dog.org/culture/hot-dog-history
Search for: How did hot dog get its name?
Why is it called a hot dog?
In the mid-19th century, German immigrant butchers in the United States began selling variations of sausages, some of which were thin and long, like the dog breed dachshund. They called these dachshund sausages. Over time, the phrase may have been bastardized into “hot dog.”
Well, we could get into a discussion over how our industrial scale/mono culture produced plant foods are produced and therefore 'de-natured', ie. lacking a lot of vitamins, minerals and micro nutrients their home grown or smaller scale produced cousins are alleged to have greater amounts of, including far less pesticide/herbicide residues.Originally Posted by Roverlord off road
Or is that all sounding a bit too herbal?![]()
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