The Healthy Thread

Out of context: Reply #558

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  • Nairn0

    Currently experimenting with not eating dairy products as I correlated two days of awfulness with previous night's cheese consumption.

    Apparently lactose intolerance is something that can develop in later years, or because of a variety of different reasons.

    I'm going to be pretty cheesed off if I am indeed intolerant of dairy produce - i'm like a quarter cheese by wet weight. Hate to say it though - I've been feeling a lot better this last few days.

    • Priorities... I'd rather feel bad than stop eating cheese. What's life without chesse and wine?OBBTKN
    • "What's life without cheese and wine"... Err, I'm going to print a shirt with thisOBBTKN
    • Yeah, I'm hoping it's just a glitch - it's surprisingly hard to avoid cheese, at least in my usual routines. I keep catching myself about to founder...Nairn
    • Like, even with th emorning cheese crepes for my kid - i don't like crepes, but if she leaves some, it's straight into my mou.. oh. No, it's not.Nairn
    • Of all diary products, cheese has probably the lowest content of lactose
      Lactose is a carbohydrate, cheese is just fat + protein
      drgs
    • One of the 'episodes' was me glugging a load of milk, which was made the correlation flicker into mind, but thta's GREAT to know (!) :)Nairn
    • *which was what made, ffs.Nairn
    • you probably just had an overdose. keep it easy in dosing, forget bout that intolerance google bs.uan
    • pretty sure I've developed it. Can have it in my tea but half a glass of milk in the evening fucks me up overnight.Fax_Benson
    • On the contrary
      https://bcdairy.ca/m…
      drgs
    • drgs is right about cheese being low lactose. Emmentaler, for example, is more or less lactose-free.Continuity
    • Even a soft cheese like Camembert will have a really low amount of lactose.Continuity

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