A nutritional moral dilemma
Posted: Mon May 12, 2014 7:31 pm
Okay, here it is:
I have several cans of spinach sitting around and a local organization is doing a food drive.
I found out that, unlike other kinds of spinach, I don't like canned spinach at all.
It seems there are 2 possibilitiest:
A) I give it to the food drive and The spinach feeds and nourishes some hungry people, if they eat it. Spinach is Loaded with nutrients, as showing here: http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tnam ... e&dbid=101 I knew spinach was nutritious, but it kind of blew me away when I saw the numbers.
OR
B) I throw the canned spinach away, lest someone tries this canned kind and finds it disturbing also, and forms a bad opinion of spinach tells others that spinach is yucky, thinking that all spinach is pretty much the same, not knowing that the problem was in the preparation. The involved parties would possibly miss out on a yummy nutritional powerhouse for life.
What would you do
Thanks
I have several cans of spinach sitting around and a local organization is doing a food drive.
I found out that, unlike other kinds of spinach, I don't like canned spinach at all.
It seems there are 2 possibilitiest:
A) I give it to the food drive and The spinach feeds and nourishes some hungry people, if they eat it. Spinach is Loaded with nutrients, as showing here: http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tnam ... e&dbid=101 I knew spinach was nutritious, but it kind of blew me away when I saw the numbers.
OR
B) I throw the canned spinach away, lest someone tries this canned kind and finds it disturbing also, and forms a bad opinion of spinach tells others that spinach is yucky, thinking that all spinach is pretty much the same, not knowing that the problem was in the preparation. The involved parties would possibly miss out on a yummy nutritional powerhouse for life.
What would you do
Thanks