The workers were, in fact, paid in beer - a common practice in ancient Egypt.
Great read: A History of the World in 6 Glasses: Standage, Tom: 9780802715524: Amazon.com: Books
The workers were, in fact, paid in beer - a common practice in ancient Egypt.
Great read: A History of the World in 6 Glasses: Standage, Tom: 9780802715524: Amazon.com: Books
Vitamin W?
Is this some sort of joke or reference I am not getting? Is it a typo? Not only have I never heard of a vitamin W, neither Wikipedia nor Google seem to know of it, either as an actual vitamin or some other nutrient (or even as any remotely relevant humorous reference, so far as I can tell). Urban Dictionary says it means whiskey or marijuana (weed).
I’m thinking Smeghead was using it by way of illustration.
I would assume the meaning is “some Vitamin X” where X is unknown. That is the usual meaning of “Lets say” I doubt there is any intent that a specific vitamin is designated. Which is why a non-existent vitamin was chosen. (Maybe a slight joke reference using W instead of X.)
Si
/facepalm
Slight nitpick - seaweeds are algae.
Not even 7 AM yet, and I already learned something new today. Thanks.
Vitamin W helps you makes decisions.
I’m always puzzled by how often this question arises on the Dope, as if it was some kind of holy grail to be able to eat one food for every meal and not starve. If I had to exist on one food even for a week I think I’d rather starve anyway*. Do none of you people enjoy food?
Matrix Goop is not a real thing. For a liquid of that consistency, you’d have to consume gallons of the stuff to get enough energy.
I’m in the unfortunate position of knowing this because, due to an ongoing dental problem (dry socket = nasty (and yes, I’m British :rolleyes: )), I am currently unable to consume any solid food.
So my lunch consists of about 500ml of very thick milkshake comprising: 50g each of peanut butter and dried skimmed milk, 100g of raw banana, 100g of greek yoghurt - chocolate powder for flavour and enough full-fat milk to make it pourable when blended.
500ml of this stuff provides about 650 calories - a sedentary adult male could break even (energy-wise) on about three of these 500ml portions a day. An active person might need double that or more.
500ml at lunch leaves me feeling quite full for the whole afternoon and I’m losing weight fast.
And this is something that’s very much thicker and richer than the watery goop in The Matrix (which they only seem to require about 50ml of at a sitting.
Indeed. One is reminded that the US space programme went to significant lengths to create a varied and palatable array of foods for the astronauts, and most missions (apart from Skylab and the ISS) were for little more than a week. This is an application where science fiction has had as a staple the idea of meals in a pill or worse.
The other exemplar is submariners. I was impressed to discover that the sub crews (at least of old) were fed the best that could possibly be managed aboard, and crew members often brought additional food ingredients along as a significant part of their limited personal locker space - to be provided to the cook in return for a share of other food created from other crew members additions. Both examples basically showing that humans, for the most part, really crave real food, and the idea of a universal goop is something that exists on the minds of sci-fi writers and a curious tiny part of the population who just don’t get good food.
In Heinlein’s The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, I always remember the almost throw away remark that
Mr Hoag was impressed how the designer of humans had had the creative genius to make the intake of sustenance a pleasure.
Prisoners’ opinions of nutraloaf further supports that position.
People who are tube-fed live on liquid formulas like Ensure.
The Dilberito is supposed to be nutritionally complete:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/1999/03/21/make-that-mr-dilbert.html
http://www.dietfacts.com/html/nutrition-facts/dilberito-spicy-indian-burrito-without-mango-chutney-42050.htm
I’ve read that (chicken) eggs contain the whole range of vitamins, amino acids, etc. that the human body requires to live, that it’s the most nutritionally complete single food item and others are compared to it as a baseline. Any truth to that?
I once lived for six months by this method. It sucked. But I’m alive, so…
Thanks for the replies and the (ahem) food for thought.
For the record: I know the Matrix goop isn’t real and Dozer’s script was technobabble. I referred to it merely as inspirational imagery.
I haven’t yet digested (I’m here all week) the other linked-to thread on the topic. My apologies if continuing the discussion here is redudnant.
The fundamental question is, if the Matrix goop provides “everything the body needs”, what is the actual list of what needs to be in the goop? I want to take that list and compare it to the ingredients of Monkey Chow (thanks for that!) or Ensure, or use it to make my own prison loaf.
Machine Elf says “The nutritional requirements of the human body are pretty well understood” It is not understood by me. There is an overwhelming variety of sources claiming to know in bookstores and on the internet. Health Canada’s food guide is helpful but complex.
I’m certainly not enamoured with the idea of chomping only Monkey Chow or slurping only Ensure for life. It would be nice to know, though, what it the absolutely simplest way to stuff into my body the minimum required checklist of stuff I need.
Something like:
x g of protien
y g of riboflavin
w mg of vitamin w
Using this, at least in principle one could create a quantum with the correct proportions of all of this, then apply some simple formula including age, weight, gender to count out the right number of quanta to eat at the right times throughout the day: e.g. 5 pellets (or cups if liquid) at breakfast, 2 at 10:30, 6 at lunch, etc…
I presume from the discussions such a checklist/recipe/forumula/schedule would apply to all humans (perhaps different for those who are pregnant or have a specific medical condition).
You’ll find probably most of the information you want here:
http://www.nutrition.gov/smart-nutrition-101/dietary-reference-intakes-rdas
But as I said, I think it’ll be hard to make this into a liquid form that isn’t a chore to consume. Pellets, sure - human chow, as has been discussed many a time.
Most of those nutrition books (heck, most of the vitamin industry itself) are insane and unscientific. While there is some scientific debate over the exact amount of vitamin X to minimize your chance of cancer/disease Y, the amounts for general healthy living are pretty clearly defined and applicable to most healthy adults, who do get most of what they need from an ordinary diet.