Blimey, just catching up!
Cinnamon_girl I doubt eating the odd bit of salt marsh lamb is going to make a big difference with regard to iodine intake. Iodine/thyroidism/goitre/cretinism was a big issue in parts of the Alps in the 18th and 19th centuries but very localised and due to local food and water sources. Those conditions don’t really exist now.
@slowoldman Every little helps and, although the conditions you mentioned may no longer apply, there is a problem with iodine deficiency. Here’s some more reading including a UK pre-print paper, both by UK endocrinologist.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27973468 (one paragraph)
Iodine status of UK schoolgirls:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21640375
CG have a search for sand carrots too (we can buy them in Paris markets) supposed to have better mineral content.
@jambalaya – not heard of those.
C-G, this is magnificently random. Thank you.
@BigDummy – 😳 thank you kindly!
Almost every foodstuff you buy has an impact on animals, be it ethical or not, so if you don’t trust supermarket meat then to stay consistent you shouldn’t buy anything from supermarkets.
@glasgowdan – I could only aspire to such godliness but do you not remember the horsemeat scandal?
@welshfarmer – excellent, thank you. I’ve done a little bit of cycling in that forest.
If I may drift a short distance OT, is their such a thing as machair-raised lanb or mutton? Thanks.
@slowoldgit – not heard of that. Can mutton be bought these days?
@mefty – you’ve lost me, what have red trousers got to do with anything?