Welcome to Yummy Lummy. A food blog about cooking meals for one.
Introduction
How has your week been? I enjoyed some warmer days early in the week with daily maximum temperatures around 28 °C (about 82 °F). It was nice to be able to walk around in shorts and also to get outside and expose my scar to some sunlight. Yes, I have ichthyosis. My skin is always dry and scaly.
I’m looking forward to warmer weather, although all residents of Canberra know that we can expect frost any morning until at least the second Tuesday of November.
What I’ve been watching this week
The bearded butchers
“The Bearded Butchers” is a YouTube channel featuring a butcher business from the USA. They specialise in sharing information on cattle, pig, and sheep butchery and meat processing for our tables.
I have this desire to learn how to butcher cuts of meat properly. I want to break down and fabricate an entire pig and lamb.
I also dream of having a decent workbench and freezer to cut and freeze my cuts.
House
Originally titled “House M.D.”, this is one of my all-time favourite shows on TV. Gregory House is an antisocial medical practitioner with specialist training in infectious diseases and nephrology.
A muscle infarction in his right thigh left him with chronic severe pain, influencing his personality. The chronic pain has resulted in opioid dependence and the need to use a cane.
He’s abrasive and contrary, but more often than not he’s correct. I don’t mind people who are obnoxious if they’re right; I do not like opinionated, obnoxious people who try to foist their views on me with poor-quality evidence.
A big surprise
I haven’t measured my mass since the morning of my injury. Because I cannot remove the brace, I didn’t see much point standing on the scales. I also don’t know the mass of the leg brace.
During the week, curiosity got the better of me, and I stood naked on the scales after breakfast, coffee, and about a litre of water. With the brace on my mass, it was a huge surprise. I was more than a kilogram lighter than I’d been since high school.
New Apple operating systems
This week, Apple released iOS17 and iPadOS17. Updating the operating system on these devices feels more effortless these days. With Apple providing beta versions months in advance, release problems are fewer.
Both devices feel faster to use, and I like some app enhancements.
Given how expensive new Apple devices are, these major operating system updates are like getting a new smartphone and tablet without paying for them.
Recipe
I cooked this during the week and thought it was worth sharing on the blog.
Equipment
Slow cooker
Oven
Ingredients
Lamb shoulder roast — boneless, rolled, and trussed with butcher’s twine
Speck — I think of speck as fancy bacon. There will be readers who think cured meat is bad for our health. But there is no proof of causation of cured meat and malignancy. At best, there are association studies. The odds ratios, however, are fairly poor and close to 1. Unlike the epidemiological studies associating cigarette smoking and lung carcinoma which was later proven with mechanistic research.
Salt — I use iodised salt
Black and white peppercorns
Instructions
Place the lamb and pork into the slow cooker with a cup of water, a couple of teaspoons of salt, and a couple of teaspoons of whole peppercorns.
Cook on low heat for 10 hours.
Carefully remove the meat and strain the liquid to remove solid matter.
Place the meat into a baking tray and cook uncovered in an oven set at 180 °C (356 °F) for 30 minutes. The oven stage will dry the surface and create a thin crust over the lamb.
While the meat is in the oven, slowly boil the strained cooking liquor to evaporate the water and thicken the liquor. The reduced liquor will make a lovely lamb and pork broth.
Remove the meat from the oven and break it down with tongs. The lamb and pork will fall apart with little effort.
Transfer the pulled meat to a container for refrigeration.
Meal ideas
Here are some photographs of how I used the lamb and pork in a few meals. I still have most of the lamb and pork in the refrigerator, and it will keep me going for a few more meals.
Slow cooker lamb shoulder and speck served with cherry tomatoes, cauliflower, and broccoli. Leftover slow cooker lamb and speck mixed with full “cream” coconut cream, olives, capers, and cherry tomatoes plus tasty and mozzarella cheeses. This was cooked in an oven at 180 °C (356 °F) for 30 minutes. It was served with an avocado cheek. Leftover slow cooker lamb shoulder and speck, with coconut cream, cherry tomatoes, broccoli, and cauliflower. I heated the lamb and pork in lamb fat before I added the coconut cream.
Final thoughts
How has your week been?
Do you update operating systems as soon as they’re released?
How has your week been? I’m getting back into the swing of working from home. It’s like COVID-19 “lockdown”, only I feel more locked in. I’m halfway through the first six-week period of having a straight leg brace.
After the first six weeks, I hope to have 30° of motion in my knee for the next six weeks.
My routines are working as intended. The main problem I’m experiencing is the relatively sedentary existence. I’m walking down the road daily and back for a coffee. The walk, with the aid of crutches, is about 20 minutes. Before the injury, I used to do a 40-minute brisk walk after dinner every day. At my current rate, that walk would take me nearly three hours, I reckon. 🤣
While I do not subscribe to the “calories in, calories out” paradigm, I know caloric restriction is essential to maintaining my health for someone confined to quarters and with limited mobility.
What have I been watching this week?
Kim’s Convenience
Kim’s Convenience is a situation comedy produced in Canada. It is about a husband and wife from the Republic of Korea who have emigrated and own and manage a convenience store.
The show also features the couple’s son and daughter and the son’s workplace, a car rental business.
The humour revolves around archetypal Asian stereotypes. I reckon it’s hilarious.
Recipe
This minced meat, cheese, and vegetable mixture will help me plan meals this week.
A lot of recipes I’ve seen include fillers like breadcrumbs. I’ll use processed pork rinds, cauliflower, and broccoli to minimise the carbohydrate content to keep this a protein-rich dish. I’ll use beaten eggs to bind everything together.
Equipment
Food processor
Box grater
Ingredients
Beef that has been minced (in Australia, we use the word “minced” rather than “ground,” which is the word used in North America. I’d mince my meat in a perfect world, but I’m too lazy. Buying minced meat has risks, so if you’re concerned, you can pasteurise it at 60 °C for 2 hours.
Iodised salt
Black pepper
Garlic powder
Roughly diced broccoli and cauliflower stems and florets.
Coarsely crumbed pork rinds
Beaten eggs
Grated Cheer™ tasty cheese
Grated Cheer™ mozzarella cheese
Diced black olives
Instructions
Put the beef, condiments, vegetables, cheese, and olives into a bowl and gently mix everything with your fingers.
Add the beaten eggs and combine everything gently to avoid too much compression.
Fill a baking dish and add more grated cheese on top. Do not pack the mixture in; keep it loose so the cooked product will be tender and juicy.
Bake in an oven for 60 minutes at 160 °C.
Aim for an internal temperature of at least 60 °C. The terminal temperature was 75 °C.
Allow the meat to rest for 30 minutes before carving and eating with half an avocado.
Give thanks to the Lord.
Eat with a knife and fork.
Thoughts on the meal
This meat, cheese, and vegetable mix will feed me for a few more meals. Different flavourings like Worcestershire sauce, commercial barbecue sauce, and panko breadcrumbs would be acceptable for people who don’t avoid carbohydrates and ultra-processed foods.
The meal was tasty and filling. I feel sated.
Photographs
Minced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheeses with avocadoBroccoli and cauliflowerPork rindsCHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheesesGrass fed minced beefMinced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheesesMinced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheesesMinced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheesesMinced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheesesMinced grass fed beef with crumbed pork rinds, broccoli, cauliflower, and grated CHEER™ Tasty and CHEER™ Mozzarella cheeses with avocado
Greetings. I hope you are well and have enjoyed a bountiful week.
I returned to work after a fortnight of personal leave. It was good to be logged in officially and working albeit from my bed.
I needed the short break for the acute recovery of the injury. I made sure I was horizontal and resting regularly. I can now manage a few stairs and a walk down the road with crutches.
This week, I attended the scheduled fracture clinic appointment and had the dressing removed. The surgical wound looked good. The orthopaedic registrar (a specialist in training) was satisfied with my progress and assured me I could bear weight on the leg. I also sought a physiotherapist’s review of the brace. Since the post-operative swelling continued to settle, the leg brace had become loose, and I needed help adjusting it.
I left the clinic feeling pretty good. I’m feeling well enough for short walks on crutches to buy a proper coffee in the morning.
A mug of cappuccino from Stella’s by the Lake
Later in the week, I attended a scheduled radiology appointment for a radiograph (x-ray) of the knee. That same day, I started getting muscle pain in the distal medial thigh. There was some bruising, which I attributed to the leg brace, but on further palpation, I could feel a knotty vein. I was guessing I might have a superficial venous thrombosis.
The patella repair looks good.
I attended outpatients again and saw the same registrar. He understood my concern, and we agreed to monitor the bruising and the pain.
Uber
Until a few months ago, I had resisted using Uber and used local taxicab services. My need for a taxicab is usually for rides to and from the Canberra airport. The car park charges at Canberra airport are extraordinary for a weekend away. It is cheaper to use a taxicab service.
I was at a meeting with work colleagues, and we agreed to get to the meeting venue by Uber. I mentioned that I’d never used Uber, and my work colleagues looked at me with incredulity. They explained that the smartphone application was straightforward and more flexible than those available for taxicab services. They also explained that the application works anywhere Uber is available because I do some interstate and international travel.
I tried it the last few times I travelled to Brisbane and back, and my colleagues were correct. Uber is also significantly cheaper than taxicab services, and the drivers rarely want to discuss controversial government policies.
With my current situation, I have to visit the hospital and other healthcare providers more regularly. An Uber Comfort ride has been comfortable and cheaper than taxicabs.
I know this because I thought I’d get a better-suited ride if I could call a taxicab company and make a special request. It turned out to be more expensive and less comfortable. That is the one deficiency of Uber: it’s not apparent how to communicate directly with the company and specify what I need. I’m grateful for the Uber Comfort option.
Butter bounty
I’m still low carbohydrate, healthy fat eating while confined to quarters. I’m getting deliveries from Woolworths and Coles.
I’ve been trying different brands of butter.
PRÉSIDENT® butterPRÉSIDENT® butter nutrition information
Kathleen has mentioned PRÉSIDENT® butter, which is a French product. The other night, while we were on FaceTime, I saw her placing cubes of PRÉSIDENT® butter in her mouth and letting it melt on her tongue. Yes, butter does melt in her mouth. 😉
Between Woolworths and Coles, only Woolworths stocks and sells the PRÉSIDENT® butter.
I finally got some the other night. It is as luxurious as Kathleen described. It is smooth, creamy, and rich. It felt decadent as I let some melt on my tongue.
MAINLAND™ butterMAINLAND™ butter nutrition information
The other butter I tried recently is MAINLAND™ Pure, made from cream sourced in New Zealand.
MAINLAND™ Pure is smooth and creamy, yet it tastes less luxurious. I’m struggling to describe the difference. Both are great tasting. I suggest you try them yourselves if you can source them. I think I’d try them on pork rinds.
While I have no allegiance with New Zealand, given that the All Blacks almost always defeat the Wallabies, the Rainbow Warrior episode remains a strong memory. With the Rugby World Cup tournament currently being held in France, it was surprising that France defeated New Zealand this morning.
The other more expensive butter I buy regularly is Lurpak®.
Recipe
Tonight, I’m cooking a scotch fillet (also known as ribeye in North America) steak. I would typically cook a steak like this at 54 °C for two hours, but someone in a Facebook group for sous vide cooking suggested 57 °C for better fat rendering.
Equipment
Precision cooker
Water bath
Vacuum chamber
Carbon steel frypan
Ingredients
Scotch fillet steak. I purchased this one from Woolworths for $10.
Iodised salt.
Black and white peppercorns.
PRÉSIDENT® butter.
Broccoli
Cauliflower
Coconut oil
Extra virgin olive oil
Instructions
Season the steak with salt and pepper and seal it in a food-safe bag with a vacuum chamber.
Cook the steak in the water bath for 3 hours at 57 °C.
Towards the end of the 3 hours, parboil the broccoli and cauliflower.
Remove the steak from the vacuum bag and dry the surface with kitchen paper.
Heat the carbon steel frypan and add a little coconut oil and a knob of butter.
When the butter ceases to sizzle, lay in the steak to sear.
Remove the steak, put the broccoli and cauliflower in the frypan, and quickly get these vegetables smothered in the healthy fats.
Arrange the steak, cauliflower, and broccoli on a dinner plate. Add a knob of butter to the steak. Drizzle the vegetables with extra virgin olive oil.
Give thanks to the Lord.
Eat with a steak knife and fork.
Final thoughts
Do you use Uber or other services other than traditional taxicabs? I’d welcome your opinion.
Do you have a favourite butter?
Do you ever eat butter on its own?
Are you watching the Rugby World Cup 2023? Which team do you want to win? I don’t think the Wallabies have a chance, so I want the Republic of South Africa to win.
Photographs
Sous vide scotch fillet steak with cauliflower, broccoli, and PRÉSIDENT® butter
Last week, I explained my current physical health circumstances.
I’m grateful for the comments and direct messages from so many readers.
I received a call from a mate I worked with in the Northern Territory of Australia. He suggested I share what I’m learning in my new circumstances.
Today’s lunch is Strasburg, olives, and Jarlsberg
What I’ve been watching
I took sick leave this week, so I’ve had time to watch some streaming shows on my tablet.
Ted Lasso
I’ve started a rewatch of the “Ted Lasso” show. What great entertainment. It’s hilarious and heartwarming. You can view “Ted Lasso” on the Apple TV app with an Apple iCloud account.
Reacher
I also rewatched season 1 of “Reacher”. I’ve listened to all the books Lee Child has written in the “Reacher” series. The TV adaptation is entertaining and worth watching.
Season 2 will hopefully be released soon.
You can view “Reacher” on Amazon Prime.
Habits
All my life, I’ve used routines and habits to ensure efficiency.
In my current circumstances, habits are more important to ensure safety. The last thing I want to do is fall and bend my knee.
These eggs have become my morning routine. I can make them using crutches; the protein and fat satiate me until lunch.
Recipe
Equipment
Bowl
Frypan
Chopsticks
Paper towel
Ingredients
Eggs ✕ 2
Cheese – grated
Cream – pouring cream rather than thickened cream
Iodised salt – because I know it’s better than the products new age natural therapy advocates recommend
Freshly ground peppercorns – I have this great Peugeot pepper mill and use black and white peppercorns. I like the white peppercorns because they have a little more “zing”.
Extra virgin olive oil
Coconut oil
Butter
Instructions
Rinse a bowl with cold water to wet the inside.
Add two eggs and beat them with a pair of chopsticks.
Add a teaspoon of salt and as much cheese as you desire.
Stir through the salt and cheese with the chopsticks.
Heat a frypan until the metal surface is hot enough to make floating balls when you sprinkle some water on the surface.
Add teaspoons of coconut oil rich in medium-chain triglycerides, extra virgin olive oil, and butter.
When the butter has stopped sizzling, the water has boiled off, and the surface of the frypan is ready for the eggs and cheese.
Pour in the beaten eggs and cheese.
Use the chopsticks to pull the solidifying egg across and around the frypan.
Keep the heat going until all the egg appears to set, and take the pan off the heat. The eggs will continue to cook using residual heat.
The aim is to allow the cheese to brown a little. It’s not a fancy-pants French omelette, so some colour is good.
Give thanks to the Lord.
Eat with chopsticks or a fork. The choice is yours.
Toileting tip
Try to imagine having a brace on your left leg. It reaches right up your posterior thigh to your ankle. Now imagine trying to sit on the toilet without a functioning quadriceps apparatus. The loss of function means you can’t do a straight leg lift. You have to use the other leg to lift the “bad” leg.
After a week, I’ve figured out the best position and posture to open my bowels. The only way to achieve this is with a toilet frame and a footstool. Unfortunately, the only way to finish the task is by standing up.
The other essential part of the equation is ensuring soft, regular stools.
Hello there. I hope you enjoyed a good week. I’m still euphoric from last weekend’s trip to Brisbane and time with my daughters and parents.
Returning to Canberra reminded me again how good Brisbane is.
What have I been reading?
I’ve been reading nutrition articles in my spare time.
I came across an excellent paper describing the nitrate–nitrite–nitric oxide (NO) pathway. Dietary nitrate has various beneficial vascular effects, including reducing blood pressure, inhibiting platelet aggregation, preserving or improving endothelial dysfunction, and enhancing exercise performance in healthy individuals and patients with peripheral arterial disease. (Lidder & Webb, 2013)
Some studies with nitrate or nitrite also show the potential to protect against ischæmia-reperfusion injury and reduce arterial stiffness, inflammation, and intimal thickness.
I was interested in the ramifications of blood pressure control and other potential physiological benefits.
It also raised a question about the difference between the nitrates in leafy green vegetables and those found in cured meats like bacon.
To answer the question, I visited three large language model artificial intelligence platforms, viz., Bing, ChatGPT, and Bard. Check out the answers at the end of this post.
Noting that the main difference is the pathways to either nitric oxide or nitrosamines, I wonder what the outcome would be if I ate bacon with antioxidants. That would be an interesting experiment.
What I find interesting is the assumption that observational studies, including meta-analyses and systematic reviews are accepted without question by so many. The difficulty is that unlike the situation with cigarette smoking and lung carcinoma where the association was strong with odds ratios >30, for the nitrates and gastrointestinal carcinoma, the odds ratios are much less and in the order of just over 1.
The absolute risk is low when you take into account that gastrointestinal carcinomas occur in people who have never consumed cured meats. That said, it would be unethical to undertake a randomised controlled trial exposing a group of people to a diet with a lot of cured meat in it. Cause and effect may never be proven.
For me, this tells me that bacon, Spam®, and cured sausages are not everyday foods, but when I put them into the context of low carbohydrate, healthy fat eating, these foods are not anathema. Nor are they forbidden to me. The danger from sucrose, refined carbohydrates, and even complex so-called slow carbs is far greater in terms of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, insulin resistance, and obesity. There is a growing belief that many malignant events are a result of insulin resistance.
Please note, reader, this is my personal opinion as it applies to my own health. I’m not providing advice to anyone. I get questions from friends and family, and I find writing out my thoughts here useful. The most important message for anyone reading this and thinking about their own health is to speak with their regular general practitioner. If you don’t have a GP, I urge you to find one and develop a strong relationship.
Recipe
Equipment
Slow cooker
Ingredients
Lamb bones
Lamb shanks
Iodised salt
Iceberg lettuce
Instructions
Brown the lamb shanks and lamb bones in a hot oven.
Place the lamb shanks and lamb bones into the slow cooker.
Cook for 9 hours.
Remove the meat and bones and then pass the cooking liquor through a metal sieve. The filtrate is the start of what will become bone broth with a few more uses with other joints of meat.
Pull the meat from the bones and place into a refrigerator container. Discard the bones.
Wash the lettuce leaves and spin them in a lettuce spinner to remove as much water as possible.
Place some of the meat along with some olive oil and apple cider vinegar into a couple of lettuce leaves and roll them to form a bite-size bundles.
You can serve these bundles of meat with a anything you like. I chose a little salad of avocado, cherry tomatoes, and olives dressed with olive oil and apple cider vinegar.
Give thanks to the Lord.
Eat with your fingers.
Thoughts on the meal
There’s nothing special or difficult about this meal. It requires no skill and given most of the cooking happens slowly the big advantage is that my flat is filled with the aroma of lamb fat and lamb meat.
Photographs
Pulled lamb wrapped in iceberg lettuce leaves with a small saladLamb bones and lamb shanksSlowly cooked lamb bones and shanksPulled lambPulled lamb wrapped in iceberg lettuce leavesPulled lamb wrapped in iceberg lettuce leavesPulled lamb wrapped in iceberg lettuce leaves
References
Lidder, S., & Webb, A. J. (2013). Vascular effects of dietary nitrate (as found in green leafy vegetables and beetroot) via the nitrate-nitrite-nitric oxide pathway: Vascular effects of dietary nitrate. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 75(3), 677–696. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2125.2012.04420.x
Bing
What is the difference between the nitrates in leafy green vegetables and those in cured meat like bacon?
Nitrates are a set of compounds that involve nitrogen and oxygen molecules. While they are often associated with cured meats, green, leafy vegetables are much richer in nitrates1. The nitrates found in vegetables may help reduce the risk of carcinoma, whereas eating foods high in added nitrates can cause health risks.
Cured or processed meats such as bacon, sausage, hot dogs, and ham often contain added nitrates and nitrites. These compounds prevent the growth of harmful bacteria, add a salty flavour, and make the meat appear red or pink2. Nitrates convert to nitrites, and in the stomach’s acidic environment, nitrites interact with specific components concentrated in meat to form N-nitroso compounds, which are potential carcinogens.
In summary, while the nitrates in leafy green vegetables may have health benefits, those in cured meats like bacon can have adverse health effects.
ChatGPT
What is the difference between the nitrates in leafy green vegetables and those in cured meat like bacon?
Both leafy green vegetables and cured meats like bacon contain nitrates, but there are essential differences in their sources, roles, and potential health implications:
Source and Chemical Structure:
Leafy Green Vegetables: Nitrates in vegetables come from the soil and water in which the plants are grown. They are naturally occurring and absorbed by the plants during their growth. Nitrates in vegetables are primarily in the form of nitrate ions (NO3–).
Cured Meats (Bacon): Nitrates in cured meats are additives, primarily in the form of sodium nitrate (NaNO3) or sodium nitrite (NaNO2). These additives are used in the curing process to preserve the meat’s colour and flavour and inhibit the growth of harmful bacteria.
Conversion to Nitrites:
Leafy Green Vegetables: Vegetable-containing nitrates are converted into nitrites (NO2–) by bacteria in your mouth and gastrointestinal tract. These nitrites convert to beneficial compounds like nitric oxide (NO) in your body.
Cured Meats (Bacon): Nitrites are additives in cured meats. Nitrites play a crucial role in preserving the meat’s colour, flavour, and safety, as well as preventing the growth of harmful bacteria.
Health Implications:
Leafy Green Vegetables: Vegetable nitrates are generally considered beneficial for health. Nitric oxide, produced from the conversion of nitrates, promotes healthy blood vessels, regulates blood pressure, and supports overall cardiovascular health.
Cured Meats (Bacon): Concerns exist about the potential health risks of consuming large amounts of processed meats containing added nitrates and nitrites. High consumption of processed meats is associated with an increased risk of specific health issues, including colorectal carcinoma and other chronic diseases. The nitrites in cured meats can react with amines in the meat to form compounds called nitrosamines, some of which are considered carcinogenic.
Dietary Context:
Leafy Green Vegetables: Consuming a variety of leafy green vegetables is generally encouraged as part of a balanced diet due to their high nutritional content, including vitamins, minerals, fibre, and antioxidants.
Cured Meats (Bacon): Processed meats like bacon are typically higher in unhealthy fats, sodium, and calories and are often low in essential nutrients. As a result, consume processed meats in moderation and choose leaner and less processed protein sources.
In summary, while leafy green vegetables and cured meats contain nitrates, their potential health implications differ. Leafy greens provide natural sources of nitrates that can positively affect health, whereas the nitrates added to processed meats can raise concerns when consumed excessively.
Bard
What is the difference between the nitrates in leafy green vegetables and those in cured meat like bacon?
The nitrates found in leafy green vegetables and cured meat are chemically the same but have different effects on the body.
Nitrates in vegetables convert to nitric oxide in the body. Nitric oxide has many beneficial effects, including lowering blood pressure, improving blood flow, and reducing inflammation.
Nitrates in cured meat convert to nitrosamines. Nitrosamines are compounds linked to carcinoma.
Nitrates in vegetables are not harmful because of accompanying antioxidants, such as vitamin C and vitamin E, which help prevent them from being converted into nitrosamines. Cured meat, on the other hand, does not contain these antioxidants, so nitrates are more likely to be converted into nitrosamines.
In addition, the processing methods used to make cured meat, such as smoking and salting, can also increase the risk of nitrosamine formation.
For these reasons, it is safe to eat leafy green vegetables, even though they contain nitrates. However, limiting your intake of cured meat is best, mainly processed meats such as bacon, hot dogs, and sausages.
Here are some tips for reducing your intake of nitrates from cured meat:
Choose fresh meat over processed meat.
Look for meats labelled “no nitrates added” or “minimally processed.”
Cook meat at lower temperatures and for shorter periods.
Avoid smoking or salting meat.
Following these tips can reduce your risk of exposure to harmful nitrosamines.
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