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View Full Version : Will this work for Trail Food??



wornoutboots
09-10-2015, 12:22
http://thehustle.co/soylent-what-happened-when-i-went-30-days-without-food

JustaTouron
09-10-2015, 14:36
Soylent Green. I will pass unless my plane crashes in the Andes with a Rugby team. :)

Malto
09-10-2015, 16:56
There have been multiple threads on this. Sure, why not?

kayak karl
09-10-2015, 18:47
Do they list the ingredients ;)

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Sarcasm the elf
09-10-2015, 20:10
Seems like an expensive solution in search of a problem...

Dogwood
09-10-2015, 20:22
"In 2013, 24-year-old Rob Rhinehart created a powdered drink mix that met all the nutritional requirements for an average adult. Basically, a meal replacement."

Highly skeptical of such a claim especially when it's based on reductionist nutritional theory that food is simply the sum of its components. Food, in the context of its wholeness, unrefined unprocessed form, largely unadulterated by humanity, has a synergistic nutritional value that many in modern nutritional science, those that see nutritional science only by laboratory analysis, fail to account for. The issue with reductionism is that nutritional science is an ever evolving study. Since that is true there is information yet unknown or recognized by nutritional science with a concensus. Humans sometimes(often?) assume they know more than they do even scientists and it carries over into scientific study and approaches.

Cobble
09-10-2015, 20:42
I can blender MRE's then dehydrate them!

Heliotrope
09-13-2015, 22:59
http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/09/13/4f23d1dffa616cf467af1e17973e53b9.jpg

Reminds me of the scene in the matrix film where Keanu reeves has his first meal on the ship. The glop made from a single celled organism that has everything the body needs.


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coyote9
11-27-2015, 17:40
You will still have to blend the digestive product in order to "expel" it.

Venchka
11-27-2015, 18:40
"In 2013, 24-year-old Rob Rhinehart created a powdered drink mix that met all the nutritional requirements for an average adult. Basically, a meal replacement."

Highly skeptical of such a claim especially when it's based on reductionist nutritional theory that food is simply the sum of its components. Food, in the context of its wholeness, unrefined unprocessed form, largely unadulterated by humanity, has a synergistic nutritional value that many in modern nutritional science, those that see nutritional science only by laboratory analysis, fail to account for. The issue with reductionism is that nutritional science is an ever evolving study. Since that is true there is information yet unknown or recognized by nutritional science with a concensus. Humans sometimes(often?) assume they know more than they do even scientists and it carries over into scientific study and approaches.

Kinda like changing the definitions to fit the climate change hysteria.

Dogwood,
Do you understand what you're saying?
[emoji3][emoji106][emoji41]

Wayne


Sent from somewhere around here.

TexasBob
11-28-2015, 00:05
Here is a product that has been available for years that will meet all your nutritional needs and is much tastier than soylent.

http://www.amazon.com/ZuPreem-Primate-Diet-Dry-20/dp/B0002ARMVS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1448683316&sr=8-1&keywords=zupreem+monkey+chow

shelb
11-28-2015, 23:42
Cute.. reminds me of when the doctor prescribed my husband "beano."

He got it and backed up so bad for over a week. All it ended up doing was put a cork in it!