Originally Posted by Easy 6:
I remember the pic you shared of the table full of your wifes holiday feast you posted 10 or more years ago, and it all looked incredible
Those clear noodles look awesome, tell us how she made it
She has gone on to work but I found the packaging in the recycle bin. Its Kimbo Mung Bean Threads a product of Taiwan. She gets it in a local Asian market in the River Market in KC.
Originally Posted by srvy:
She has gone on to work but I found the packaging in the recycle bin. Its Kimbo Mung Bean Threads a product of Taiwan. She gets it in a local Asian market in the River Market in KC.
Ill work on it when she gets home. I have never seen my wife work from a recipe. I think Filipina women are imprinted at an early age from their families with all the dishes they cook. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KCUnited:
As promised Hatch smashburgers with smoked baked beans and chilis of course
Baked beans can cause gas because they contain fiber and raffinose, a complex sugar that's hard for the body to break down:
Fiber
Beans are high in soluble fiber, which turns into a gel in your gut and is fermented by gut bacteria, producing gas.
Raffinose
The human digestive tract often lacks the enzyme alpha-galactosidase to break down raffinose, so it passes undigested into the large intestine, where bacteria feed on it and produce gas. The gas can also contain hydrogen, methane, and smelly sulfur [Reply]
Originally Posted by scho63:
Baked beans can cause gas because they contain fiber and raffinose, a complex sugar that's hard for the body to break down:
Fiber
Beans are high in soluble fiber, which turns into a gel in your gut and is fermented by gut bacteria, producing gas.
Raffinose
The human digestive tract often lacks the enzyme alpha-galactosidase to break down raffinose, so it passes undigested into the large intestine, where bacteria feed on it and produce gas. The gas can also contain hydrogen, methane, and smelly sulfur
Originally Posted by scho63:
Baked beans can cause gas because they contain fiber and raffinose, a complex sugar that's hard for the body to break down:
Fiber
Beans are high in soluble fiber, which turns into a gel in your gut and is fermented by gut bacteria, producing gas.
Raffinose
The human digestive tract often lacks the enzyme alpha-galactosidase to break down raffinose, so it passes undigested into the large intestine, where bacteria feed on it and produce gas. The gas can also contain hydrogen, methane, and smelly sulfur
Per Alton Brown, chef scientist, all you need to do is eat a proportional amount of rice with the beans and the gas issue goes away. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Megatron96:
Per Alton Brown, chef scientist, all you need to do is eat a proportional amount of rice with the beans and the gas issue goes away.