Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this work?
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Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this work?
Cooking with a block of iron so the iron gets in your food. Hmmm.... Honestly, I've never heard of that. Seems this third world problem has found a third world solution.
At first it was just in the shape of a disk, and they were again't it because it went against Cambodian "culture" (which I think is better worded as 'tradition').
Anyways, they change the block of iron to look like a fish, and now all the Cambodians are happy to cook with it!!! YaY!!
Jokes aside, I think it's a cool solution.
http://boingboing.net/2014/05/21/ending ... -with.htmlIn Cambodia, millions of people have anemia because their diets don't provide enough iron--and women and children are at greatest risk. The Lucky Iron Fish project offers a clever solution: cook with a piece of iron shaped like a little fish, which releases iron into the food during the cooking process.
Project lead Gavin Armstrong says in the beginning, they offered program participants an iron disc, but nobody wanted to cook with it.
"It didn't make any sense culturally, and so after research it was discovered that the shape of fish was a shape of a symbol of luck in Cambodia," he said.
"Life is too important to take seriously."
"Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh."
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"Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh."
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
WoW ! what a fantastically simple, yet effective method to combat a huge problem
Remember your Karma helps a Wet Child In Wigan !
Re: Ending anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
I had no idea anemia was a problem here. With the amount of cooked blood they eat I don't see it being an issue. I honestly don't know if cooking blood alters/destroys the makeup of iron. Since it's a mineral I would think not, also because you "cook" with this fish it isn't a problem.
The only demographic I see with a problem maybe the muslims here, because eating blood is against Islam. Same as the Jews and some christian sects.
The only demographic I see with a problem maybe the muslims here, because eating blood is against Islam. Same as the Jews and some christian sects.
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
as to "will it work":
http://goaskalice.columbia.edu/does-coo ... n-our-food
as to anemia here, so many of the dishes eaten here lack meat it's ridiculous. the cost of adding protein to a meal is high, even fish when you're living on very very little money. not enough of it makes its way into most diets. rice, the bulk of pretty much any meal here, at least has protein but lacks any iron. cooking 1 smallish fish in a pot of soup to feed an entire family doesn't provide the necessary iron for your diet.
could also explain the often joked about over-dramatization of what we perceive as minor illnesses. if they're complicated by the weakness/etc cause by insufficient iron, they could feel as bad as they claim and foreigners tend to mock.
http://goaskalice.columbia.edu/does-coo ... n-our-food
as to anemia here, so many of the dishes eaten here lack meat it's ridiculous. the cost of adding protein to a meal is high, even fish when you're living on very very little money. not enough of it makes its way into most diets. rice, the bulk of pretty much any meal here, at least has protein but lacks any iron. cooking 1 smallish fish in a pot of soup to feed an entire family doesn't provide the necessary iron for your diet.
could also explain the often joked about over-dramatization of what we perceive as minor illnesses. if they're complicated by the weakness/etc cause by insufficient iron, they could feel as bad as they claim and foreigners tend to mock.
Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
Ya but the soup they regularly eat has blood chunks in it. Granted I don't know how much iron is in blood but I'd assume high. Or the cost of soup versus rice with very little meat, probably less but I don't see much difference. But again with the difference in $1 meal versus a $1.50 meal when you're living on $100 a month, it may be a high cost difference.
Ya our views of these illnesses as jaded by the fact that to us it's a small thing. Hell, go to the store and pickup a multi-vitamin or a stand alone iron supplement. No big deal.
Ya our views of these illnesses as jaded by the fact that to us it's a small thing. Hell, go to the store and pickup a multi-vitamin or a stand alone iron supplement. No big deal.
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
i've seen many a soup in the provinces where the whole soup has that 1 chunk of blood cake. a few of the lower end places in steung meanchey as well. and yeah, if you tack an extra 50 cents on each meal, assume 2 meals a day, 30 days a month... that's an extra $30... when you're already living pretty close to the wire.thePeck wrote:Ya but the soup they regularly eat has blood chunks in it. Granted I don't know how much iron is in blood but I'd assume high. Or the cost of soup versus rice with very little meat, probably less but I don't see much difference. But again with the difference in $1 meal versus a $1.50 meal when you're living on $100 a month, it may be a high cost difference.
Ya our views of these illnesses as jaded by the fact that to us it's a small thing. Hell, go to the store and pickup a multi-vitamin or a stand alone iron supplement. No big deal.
Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
Ya those little adds to us is no big deal but as you said "living close to the wire" there's no room for those indulgences.OrangeDragon wrote:i've seen many a soup in the provinces where the whole soup has that 1 chunk of blood cake. a few of the lower end places in steung meanchey as well. and yeah, if you tack an extra 50 cents on each meal, assume 2 meals a day, 30 days a month... that's an extra $30... when you're already living pretty close to the wire.thePeck wrote:Ya but the soup they regularly eat has blood chunks in it. Granted I don't know how much iron is in blood but I'd assume high. Or the cost of soup versus rice with very little meat, probably less but I don't see much difference. But again with the difference in $1 meal versus a $1.50 meal when you're living on $100 a month, it may be a high cost difference.
Ya our views of these illnesses as jaded by the fact that to us it's a small thing. Hell, go to the store and pickup a multi-vitamin or a stand alone iron supplement. No big deal.
Actaully I should pick up some multi's, I don't eat much meat beyond chicken and some pork. I might be on the low end of iron myself. I don't eat the blood cakes because if I don't have to my gf is happy enough to take it from me. And as far as green leafy vegetables I still don't eat much of them.
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
this is why i try to make sure i get 2-3 salads in a week.thePeck wrote:green leafy vegetables
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
Guess y'all ain't heard about cast iron frying pans. Gave one to a Khmer friend, don't guess her family will have an iron deficit prob, she uses the hell out of it.
the ol man better stay in line tho
the ol man better stay in line tho
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Re: Ending Anemia in Cambodia with an Iron Fish. Will this w
where did you get it? i'd kill to get my hands on a good one.Mr Curious wrote:Guess y'all ain't heard about cast iron frying pans. Gave one to a Khmer friend, don't guess her family will have an iron deficit prob, she uses the hell out of it.
the ol man better stay in line tho
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