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" ... A worker paints an ecological coffins at a workshop in Cali, Colombia on April 20, 2016. Guillermo... [+] Castillo makes handmade coffins with impoverished resins, rice husks, sisal and other biodegradable products, which are the product of several years of studies and tests thinking to reduce the felling of trees and electricity use. / AFP / LUIS ROBAYO (Photo credit should read LUIS ROBAYO/AFP/Getty Images) ... "
" ... MC: No. It’s an enormous piece of property and we’re actually turning it into a bit of an agricultural campus. We’ve partnered with a friend of ours who used to own an oyster farm. He’s installed thirteen 10,000 gallon saltwater tanks and he’s farming shrimp. We’re serving the first ever Vermont-raised shrimp. Eventually, we’ll use the husks and byproduct of the malting program to make feed for them. Additionally, Foam has all of their barrel storage there, and they’ve worked in a little corner of the barn to seal and pitch the floor. They’re moving all wood storage for Foam and House of Fermentology to the farm. There’s also a bakery moving in. ... "
" ... Still hoping to pin the epidemic on a pathogen, Eijkman speculated that perhaps the rice had grown some sort of microbe in storage, or else cooking fueled the growth or virulence of a microbe no one had seen yet. More trials ruled out both of those possibilities, though; cooking the rice wasn't the problem. Cooked brown rice was perfectly safe. And in fact, polished rice served up with a side order of the recently-removed husks was also perfectly safe. Eijkman revised his hypothesis: clearly the rice grains' husks contained an "anti-beriberi factor" that protected against whatever dangerous toxin or pathogen lurked in the grain itself. That helped explain the epidemic; polished white rice had become very popular in much of east Asia after the introduction of steam-driven machinery for polishing the grains, because people liked its taste better. In societies where many people at mostly rice, the result was disastrous. ... "
" ... The COVID-19 pandemic becomes another layer in a disguised war-torn scene. The news carries no images of craters in the streets and bombed out husks that were once houses or apartments. Instead, there are the subtle signs of dual battles, one societal and one biological, that have joined forces. ... "
" ... There’s no caffeine, since it involves husks, not beans. You can add sugar, although you won’t really need it. There’s nothing more comforting than a pot of qishr and a slice of sabaya, a flaky pastry topped with honey that’s made for Qahwah House. ... "