>Speaking of beans...does rinsing canned beans make them more
>"clean" (as in the clean way of eating; not sanitary-wise...)?
>Or are canned beans just not clean?
I don't see why they wouldn't be clean, especially if you get the no-salt-added ones. I don't have the time or interest in cooking beans from scratch, so I use organic canned beans all the time.
Who cares if "someone" considers them clean or not? (this is becoming a pet peeve of mine, and my rant is not directed towards any particular poster, just towards the recurring obsession I see here at times with dissecting every bit of food to see if it is 100% 'clean'--a term I find annoying anyway--and therefore acceptable by some mysterious 'clean police'). They are a good source of protein, low in fat, and whole foods. The processing done to them isn't excessive, IMO, and even the ones with salt in (at least if you buy a good 'natural food' brand, I'm not sure about the regular grocery-store brands, which might be higher in sodium) the sodium content is not that high (and can be reduced even further by rinsing).