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Archive for the ‘Healthy Kitchen’ Category

Sustainable and Healthful; Sardines, Seaweed, …

In Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/06/05 at 08:37

Sustainable, healthful sardines are ready for their close-up; on the Washington Post

Mark Shelley, who is working to promote the healthful, sustainable fish. Many Americans consider sardines to be seafood versions of Spam, but the included recipes can help change that image.
MONTEREY BAY, Calif. – “Revolutionary” isn’t the first word you’d use to describe Mark Shelley. The California filmmaker drives a Toyota Prius, for goodness’ sake. But Shelley is a key member of a culinary counterculture plot to reintroduce sardines to the American palate. …
Full Story:
A New School of Thought About Sardines. They’re Eco-Friendly. But Can They Be Tasty? ; By Jane Black

Recipes on The Telegraph.co.uk

The Irish were eating seaweed centuries before sushi came to its shores. Simon Beckett joins the harvest, and discovers that hand-picked dulse and carrageen makes remarkably good bread, broth and even chocolate jelly.
Few things are more evocative than the smell of seaweed. It instantly conjures images of rock pools and beaches, an olfactory accompaniment to the crash of waves and cry of seagulls. What it isn’t generally associated with, unless it is to spark the memory of fish and chips on a windswept seafront, is food. …
Full Story: Seaweed recipes: the best of fronds; By Simon Beckett. Photographs by Peter Dench

More Interesting Links!
~ Culture – Malnourishment common among obese. Eating right is evolving as a science; Malnutrition amid plenty; WashingtonTimes.com.
~ Health and Behavior – The United States has been dubbed the fast-food nation, but that may be changing — at least in one respect. The real ‘fast-food nation’? Not U.S., survey says; USAToday.com

Organic Food, Recipe Testing & More …

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/06/04 at 12:00

‘There is a sufficiency in the world for man’s need but not for man’s greed.’ ~Mohandas K. Gandhi

It might have the green seal, but is organic safe? from the NYTimes.com

The U.S. organic movement was built on trust between the farmer and the consumer, using growing methods thought to be better for the land and to produce more healthful food. But on the heels of the recent salmonella outbreak, some people are questioning whether organic food is really more healthful.
MOST of the chicken, fruit and vegetables in Ellen Devlin-Sample’s kitchen are organic. She thinks those foods taste better than their conventional counterparts. And she hopes they are healthier for her children. …
Full Story:
It’s Organic, but Does That Mean It’s Safer?; By KIM SEVERSON and ANDREW MARTIN

Food and Dining on the WashingtonPost.com

More sustainable tuna swims into the spotlight. A bluefin tuna known as Kindai is farmed in Japan and reduces reliance on wild fish. Restaurants in Virginia and elsewhere are starting to put it on their menus.
For years sushi aficionados have reserved their most lavish praise — and their spare cash — for bluefin tuna, the fatty, pinkish fish featured at high-end restaurants across the globe. But as wild stocks of the fish have plummeted, ordering bluefin has become as socially unacceptable as consuming the once-ubiquitous Chilean sea bass.
Full Story: A More Sustainable Tuna? – Japan’s Kindai Bluefin Arrives in Virginia; By Juliet Eilperin

More Interesting Links!
~ Five Minute Food – Not if you follow these simple, seasonal recipes. Five minute food that’s both fast and delicious. Too busy to cook supper?; By Xanthe Clay, Telegraph.co.uk
~ Recipe Testing – Casilda Grigg, (enthusiastic cook), puts a 10 Minutes to Table recipe to the test. Cook against the clock: Casilda Grigg; By Xanthe Clay and Casilda Grigg, Telegraph.co.uk

Easy Bites! Nest of Grilled Peppers and Mini-Mozzarella

In Amuse Bouche, Cooking Tips, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Photography, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/06/03 at 10:25

‘One of the very nicest things about life is the way we must regularly stop whatever it is we are doing and devote our attention to eating.’ ~Luciano Pavarotti and William Wright, Pavarotti, My Own Story

Nido di Peperoni Grigliati e Bocconcini di Mozzarella / Nest of Grilled Bell Peppers and Cherry-Size Mozzarella

Difficulty: EASY / MEDIUM;
Preparation’s Time
-To Grill Peppers: 30 minutes;
-Nests: 20 minutes;
Servings: 6;


Ingredients:
• Bell Peppers, (Capsicum): 1 Red, (medium size) – 1 Yellow, (medium size);
• Bocconcini di Mozzarella (*): 1 (250g / 0.55lb) package, (standard size in Italy);
[(*)(Mini or Cherry-Size Mozzarella];
• Fresh Thyme; 1 small bunch;
• Extra-Virgin Olive Oil;
• Salt & Pepper;

Utensils, Etc:
• Salt and Pepper Mills;
• Baking-Proof Paper, (if you decide to use the oven);
• Medium size Bowls;
• 6 Espresso Saucers;
• 1 Fork;
• Paper Towels

Directions:
~ RINSE and GRILL the Whole Peppers. [If Outdoor I use a Charcoal-Barbecue-Grill. If Indoor I prefer to Broil it in a Moderately-Hot Oven, (Pre-Heat at 200°C / 400°F / Gas-6)].
~ TURN them now and again until the skin is blackened all over.
~ Then PLACE them in a Bowl and COVER with cling film, or seal in an airtight plastic bag to ‘Sweat’.

~ OEN the package of Bocconcini (*), DISCARD the liquid and RINSE.
~ PLACE the content in a Bowl; SEASON with 1 Tablespoon of Extra-Virgin Olive oil and some Fresh Thyme.
~ Set Aside.

~ After about 15 minutes, the peppers’ skin can be PEELED OFF easily with your fingers.
~ REMOVE the core, pith and seeds.
~ SLICE-UP the peppers length-wise in Medium-Thin Strips.
~ SEASON with Extra-Virgin Olive oil, Salt and Pepper to taste.
~ Set Aside.

NOTES:
In the Picture I’ve used Glass Espresso Saucers.
For an easier handling I would use “Chinese-Style Soup Spoons” and/or any other type of “Party Spoon”, (they’re made to stand and you can really “go for the Bite”).

~ In order to set a nice looking Nest:
1. Use Oil with Moderation, you can always add it!
2. Espresso’s Saucers are excellent to build the Nest; the small hollow part in the middle helps holding the Peppers.
3. Roll the Peppers-Strips with a Fork, as if you where eating Spaghetti.
4. With the help of some Paper-Towels, Place the Nest in the Saucer, (the paper will absorb the oil in excess, besides keeping the saucer clean).
5. Place 1 Bocconcino (*) on each Nest and Decorate with some Fresh Thyme.
6. Keep the Nests Refrigerated.
7. Take the Nests out of refrigerator 10 minutes Before Serving.

VEGAN: Replace the Bocconcini (*) with Firm Tofu.
ASIAN MOOD: Use Soy Sauce to Season.

BUON APPETITO!

Useful Sources:
~ Food Info: Pepper / Capsicum and Mozzarella; Wikipedia.
~ Food Glossary: Pepper; BBC.co.uk


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Vegan, Barbeque and More

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/06/02 at 11:01

‘The greatest wealth is health.’ ~Virgil

How to make fine dining 100% vegan on StarBulletin.com

At San Francisco’s Millennium restaurant, chef Eric Tucker thinks outside of traditional tempeh and tofu ingredients. He has some suggestions for keeping vegan dishes fresh: Get a simple vegetarian cookbook, subscribe to Vegetarian Times and visit your local farmers market.
Why not eat vegan? Let us count the ways: It’s boring, it’s hard, it won’t be filling, it’ll be the end of fine dining forever … and who can eat tofu every day?
Stop the whining and think beyond tempeh and tofu to delve into tasty vegan cuisine, courtesy of a San Francisco chef. …
Full Story:
Vegan venture; By Betty Shimabukuro

The Accidental Vegetarian on SFGate.com

Mention to a few friends that you are going vegan. You’ll find out who your friends are pretty quickly, as I did for the month that I adhered to the strict rules of a vegan diet. I decided to cut out all animal products and go vegan for a month because I felt I couldn’t cover the topic without having the experience. A month seemed like an appropriate amount of time, but I discovered it wasn’t, especially if I would continue feeling as good as I did. …
Full Story: Going vegan for a month; by Amanda Berne

Barbeque on DallasNews.com

Benefit from the expertise of Steven Raichlen of ‘The Barbecue! Bible’.
Each summer brings a wave of outdoor-cooking books to store shelves. Few become smash hits that warrant new editions. So it’s no small feat that 10 years after its publication, an updated anniversary edition of Steven Raichlen’s The Barbecue! Bible has been released. …
Full Story: 5 new foods to try on the grill; By TINA DANZE

More Interesting Links!
~ Eat Out on the TimesOnline.co.uk – As Michelin celebrates its 100th edition, its boss Jean-Luc Naret explains why it’s still the sexiest guide in town. Meet Jean-Luc Naret, the man in charge of Michelin guides

~ The Kitchen Refuge – Comfort food – and now, comfort television; By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ, The Wall Street Journal


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Vegan, Barbeque and More

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/06/02 at 11:01

‘The greatest wealth is health.’ ~Virgil

How to make fine dining 100% vegan on StarBulletin.com

At San Francisco’s Millennium restaurant, chef Eric Tucker thinks outside of traditional tempeh and tofu ingredients. He has some suggestions for keeping vegan dishes fresh: Get a simple vegetarian cookbook, subscribe to Vegetarian Times and visit your local farmers market.
Why not eat vegan? Let us count the ways: It’s boring, it’s hard, it won’t be filling, it’ll be the end of fine dining forever … and who can eat tofu every day?
Stop the whining and think beyond tempeh and tofu to delve into tasty vegan cuisine, courtesy of a San Francisco chef. …
Full Story:
Vegan venture; By Betty Shimabukuro

The Accidental Vegetarian on SFGate.com

Mention to a few friends that you are going vegan. You’ll find out who your friends are pretty quickly, as I did for the month that I adhered to the strict rules of a vegan diet. I decided to cut out all animal products and go vegan for a month because I felt I couldn’t cover the topic without having the experience. A month seemed like an appropriate amount of time, but I discovered it wasn’t, especially if I would continue feeling as good as I did. …
Full Story: Going vegan for a month; by Amanda Berne

Barbeque on DallasNews.com

Benefit from the expertise of Steven Raichlen of ‘The Barbecue! Bible’.
Each summer brings a wave of outdoor-cooking books to store shelves. Few become smash hits that warrant new editions. So it’s no small feat that 10 years after its publication, an updated anniversary edition of Steven Raichlen’s The Barbecue! Bible has been released. …
Full Story: 5 new foods to try on the grill; By TINA DANZE

More Interesting Links!
~ Eat Out on the TimesOnline.co.uk – As Michelin celebrates its 100th edition, its boss Jean-Luc Naret explains why it’s still the sexiest guide in town. Meet Jean-Luc Naret, the man in charge of Michelin guides

~ The Kitchen Refuge – Comfort food – and now, comfort television; By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ, The Wall Street Journal


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Food, Drink and Sweet Notes

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/26 at 11:35

‘The greatest wealth is health.’ ~Virgil

GOURMET PLEASURES WITH SOME SWEET NOTE

Gourmet Pleasures on Independent.ie
They may extol the virtues of fine ingredients, but even for committed foodies, sometimes only a treat will do, says Declan Cashin.
When it comes to food and snacks, we all have our guilty little pleasures. Sure, we know we’re all supposed to feast on fine, fresh ingredients as part of a daily balanced diet, and graze on nuts and fruits rather than cakes and biscuits during work and in our downtime. However, in tough times like these, we need our little treats and pleasures to help buck us up, and that goes for the gourmand experts too. …
Full Story:
The guilty gourmets;

Pavlova, culinary thievery? on the Independent.co.uk
New Zealand’s new Prime Minister, John Key, faces a host of diplomatic challenges as he adjusts to the job. But of them all, the one exercising him most at the moment is the weighty matter of the provenance of a meringue dessert topped by cream and tropical fruit. Mr Key is irritated by Australia’s long-standing claim to have invented the pavlova, which he dismissed yesterday as “ridiculous”. He urged his neighbour and ally to acknowledge the dessert’s New Zealand’s origins …
Full Story: Pavlova wars: New Zealand reclaims its national dessert; By Kathy Marks

More Interesting Links!
~ Health Journal – Why That Big Meal You Just Ate Made You Hungry; By MELINDA BECK, WSJ.com
~ The Gastronomer – Eggplant, Without All the Oil. Slick.; By Andreas Viestad, WashingtonPost.com


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Healthy Eathing: Barbecue

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/24 at 05:50

Healthy Eating on More.com

Traditional barbecue fare — with its sizzling lipids and charred carcinogens can raise healthy eating questions. Here some suggestions with few surprising options.

Mexican Burger
Why it’s good for you:
* Grass-Fed Beef: A pound of it is pricey but here’s what you get for your money: higher levels of heart-healthy omega-3 acids and lower levels of total fat than in non-grass-fed beef, according to a report from the Union of Concerned Scientists. …
… Bonus: We added soy protein, which absorbs the meaty flavor and cuts the fat. …
Full Story: Your Anti-Cancer Barbecue Menu; by Tula Karras; Recipes by Wendy Hess, RD

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Homemade Yogurt, an Ingredient Not Just for Breakfast

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/22 at 13:24

The Curious Cook and Recipes for Health from The New York Times

Homemade yogurt
Homemade yogurt has no sweeteners or stabilizers and has a fresh, tart flavor. A step-by-step primer to making yogurt is included.
RIGHT now my kitchen is teeming with bacteria, and I’m doing everything I can to make them feel at home. They’re lactic acid bacteria, the ones that ferment milk into yogurt and buttermilk, cream into crème fraîche. I’ve been making all of these, as well as milk thickened with reputedly beneficial “probiotic” lactic acid bacteria. And getting to know viili, a Finnish fermented milk that reminds me of the Japanese soy product natto. It’s slithery. …
Full Story:
They Do the Work, You Reap the Yogurt; By HAROLD MCGEE

Recipes for Health
Tender and juicy kebabs with grilled chicken or swordfish in a yogurt marinade.
I can’t think of a better destination for chicken tenders than these grilled kebabs, which are tender and juicy (as long as you don’t overcook them). But you can use swordfish for kebabs, too: the yogurt marinade works equally well with both. Serve the kebabs with basmati rice. …
Full Story: Chicken or Swordfish Kebabs; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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Something’s Fishy: Health and Sustainability

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/21 at 07:05

Culinary News

Navigating the information to choose fish responsibly on the Chronogram.com
Spanish mackerel is sustainable, but it was “not very popular” on one chef’s Saugerties, N.Y., menu last summer. This article examines what we know about fish, human health and sustainable fishing practices.
What do we really know about the fish we eat? Even if we are diligent about buying local and organic produce, grain, and meat, does that care extend beneath the sea? Many species are suffering from overfishing. Fish farming can pollute the ocean, and spread disease to wild fish. Regulation and inspections are either lacking or inconsistently applied and enforced. …
Full Story:
Something’s Fishy: Is that seafood sustainable?; by Peter Barrett

Personal Health on The New York Times
… Among foods that help to reduce the inflammatory marker CRP are cold-water fish like salmon, tuna and mackerel; flax seed; walnuts; and canola oil and margarine based on canola oil. Fish oil capsules are also effective. Dr. Ozner recommends cooking with canola oil and using more expensive and aromatic olive oil for salads. …
Full Story: New Thinking on How to Protect the Heart; By JANE E. BRODY

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Eating Food That’s Better for You, Organic or Not

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/19 at 06:09

Health on The New York Times
In the six-and-one-half years since the federal government began certifying food as “organic,” Americans have taken to the idea with considerable enthusiasm. Sales have at least doubled, and three-quarters of the nation’s grocery stores now carry at least some organic food. A Harris poll in October 2007 found that about 30 percent of Americans buy organic food at least on occasion, and most think it is safer, better for the environment and healthier. “People believe it must be better for you if it’s organic,” …
… says Phil Howard, an assistant professor of community, food and agriculture at Michigan State University. Full Story: Eating Food That’s Better for You, Organic or Not; By MARK BITTMAN

Business> Metrics on The New York Times
The map of organic farms in the United States is clustered into a few geographic centers, a strikingly different pattern than the map of all farms, which spreads densely over many regions, breaking only for the Rockies and Western deserts.
Areas in the Northeast and Northwest have many small organic farms that sell produce directly to consumers. Large organic farms, which some critics call organic agribusiness, have flourished in California. Full Story: The Hot Spots for Organic Food; By HANNAH FAIRFIELD

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LIFESTYLE ESSENTIALS: Clarins > Organic > ≈ ≈ ≈ Mix >

Quick-Cooking Quinoa Captures Culinary Kudos

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/18 at 13:19

Cooking on Gourmet.com
Quinoa is actually an herb, not a grain, but it takes the place of couscous in recipes such as a Moroccan chicken stew. For best results, boil the quinoa in salted water, then steam it to fluff it up. Serve this ancient staple wherever you’d use couscous, and …
… you’ll get a meal with more protein and fiber than semolina could provide. Couscous, along with mahimahi and sweet Walla Walla onions, are verbal booby traps in our household: The mere mention of any of them immediately elicits the wisecrack, “I heard you the first time.” …
Full Story: Quinoa: The Better Couscous; by Kemp M. Minifie

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Acai Berry Comes With Some Pronounced Doubts

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/18 at 05:12

Lean & Fit on The Washington Post
How bad can the economy be if people are buying acai? Surely you’ve heard of acai, even if you’re not sure how to pronounce the name. (It’s ah-sigh-EE.) The little purple berries have been touted for more healthful qualities than you’d think …
… a simple berry could bear. Who’d have believed that this modest product of Brazil’s Amazon rain forest could do everything from speed weight loss to correct sexual dysfunction — while bolstering your immune system, too? A lot of people. According to Spins, Americans spent more than $108 million on acai products …
Full Story: No Matter How You Say It, Acai Comes With Some Pronounced Doubts; By Jennifer Huget

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What Is It that Stands Between You and Vibrant Health?

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/12 at 13:30

Health News on NaturalNews.com
Speaking of what’s in your food, check out this revealing article on the toxins found in packaged foods.
What is it that stands between you and vibrant health? People who have spent a fortune on supplements, …
… gotten plenty of exercise and bought high quality food still find themselves unable to answer this question. For many of them, the answer lies in neurotoxins hidden in even the most healthy sounding foods, including many foods labeled as organic. These ingredients often cause serious reactions, including migraines, insomnia, asthma, depression, anxiety, aggression, chronic fatigue, and even ALS. …
Full Story: A Hundred Health Sapping Neurotoxins are Hidden in Packaged and Restaurant Food; by Barbara Minton
Photo from Wikipedia

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The Future of Farmers’ Markets

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/08 at 15:55

Food Matters on BBC.co.uk
Britons have an appetite for buying from farmers’ markets, but are there any real advantages to buying food direct? …
… Farmers’ markets, with their emphasis on fresh, seasonal produce and their hands-on approach to shopping, are a magnet for food-lovers. Factor in the shoppers’ chances to chat to the growers and possibly pick up a recipe from fellow food-lovers, and you have a formula for food-shopping success. …
Full Story: Farmers’ markets; by Hattie Ellis

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Avocado’s Reputation Gets Another Chance

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/07 at 10:35

Recipes for Health on The New York Times
Avocados occasionally get a bad rap for containing fat, but experts say that healthy fats, along with oleic acid, vitamins and dietary fiber, can be beneficial. Eat avocados, once called “poor man’s butter,” in a variety of foods, including Mexican soups. …
… When I lived in France, in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, I hardly ever ate avocados. Those sold in the markets were smooth, thin-skinned varieties grown mostly in Israel. They were watery, not as creamy or nutty-tasting as Haas avocados, the dark, pebbly-skinned variety that we get in California. Plus, it was a time of fat phobia. Any fat was a bad fat, and avocados are rich in fat. But the fats in avocados, like those in olives and nuts, are for the most part healthy monounsaturated fats …
Full Story: Avocados: ‘Poor Man’s Butter’ No More; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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Read Before Snapping Your Next Asparagus Spear!

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/05/06 at 09:02

The Curious Cook on The New York Times
Snapping asparagus spears is a popular method for removing the fibrous ends. But cutting the spears 6 to 7 inches from the tip yields more reliably tender results. …
… IT’S spring at last: prime time for a vegetable that does not go gently into our food chain, that keeps binding up its harvest wounds even as it’s shipped and stored, growing and bending upward to find the sun. A vegetable whose texture horticultural engineers test by tapping it with a tiny hammer and listening to it vibrate. Asparagus is the hardest-living stalk in the produce business, …
Full Story: Asparagus’ Breaking Point; By HAROLD McGEE

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Artichoke Heals the Body and Mind

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/04/09 at 17:25

Recipes for Health on The New York Times
The edgy bite of artichokes is a testament to its many remedial properties. Not only does the vegetable aid the eyes and liver, but its time-consuming preparation provides a pause from life’s stresses. …
… Whenever I find bitterness in a vegetable, I suspect that there are beneficial ingredients hidden within. Artichokes, for instance — although they aren’t overly bitter, the flavor has a definite edge. No surprise, then, to learn that they are a rich source of silymarin, an antioxidant thought to be the active ingredient in milk thistle, traditionally used in many cultures to treat liver, gallbladder and digestive disorders. Artichokes also are a good source of magnesium, potassium and …
Full Story: In the Humble Artichoke, a Lesson in Patience; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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Cooks Can Be Green, Too!

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/04/06 at 22:11

Celebrity Chef Chat on the JSOnline.com
Kate Heyhoe lays claim to starting the first online food and cooking eZine, Global Gourmet, www.globalgourmet.com, in 1994, plus eight cookbooks. One of them, “Great Bar Food at Home” was a finalist for a James Beard Award. Eating organic and …
… being green always have been important to her, and she felt people needed some help figuring out how to do that. “I had been watching the green movement for a long time,” she says. “The message is out there, but I realized that there were a lot more things we could do to conserve energy.” …
Full Story: Cooks can be green, too;

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A Checklist for Eating Right this March

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/20 at 08:52

Nutrition from TheLeafChronicle.com
The theme of this year’s National Nutrition Month is “Eat Right.” The American Dietetic Association, which started the month-long designation in 1973, suggests planning meals, focusing on nutrient-rich foods and upping daily physical activity, among other tips. …
… These 31 days were set aside in 1973 by the American Dietetic Association to focus the importance of making informed food choices and developing sound eating and physical activity habits. This year’s theme is “Eat Right.”
With today’s tough economic picture, eating right is becoming a real challenge for many people in Stewart and Houston counties. …
Full Story: March is National Nutrition Month; by Stewart Houston Times Editioral

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Oil you Need to Know: Olive Oil

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/10 at 09:36

Make the Most of Olive Oil on BBC.co.uk
Before the British culinary revolution, olive oil could only be sourced from chemists who sold it for medicinal purposes. Now, hundreds of varieties are sold in supermarkets and specialist delis, and …
… olive oil connoisseurs rival wine buffs for their knowledge of estates, blends and varieties. The complex flavours and characteristics of olive oil bring so much to Mediterranean dishes. Find out how to buy the best and make the most of this indispensable oil.
Full Story: OLIVE OIL; by Clarissa Hyman

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It Might Have the Green Seal, But is Organic Safe?

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Biz Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/09 at 16:27

Sustainability – Dining & Wine on The New York Times
The U.S. organic movement was built on trust between the farmer and the consumer, using growing methods thought to be better for the land and to produce healthier food. But, on the heels of the recent salmonella outbreak, some people are questioning whether organic food is really healthier. …
… MOST of the chicken, fruit and vegetables in Ellen Devlin-Sample’s kitchen are organic. She thinks those foods taste better than their conventional counterparts. And she hopes they are healthier for her children. Lately, though, she is not so sure. …
Full Story: It’s Organic, but Does That Mean It’s Safer?; By KIM SEVERSON and ANDREW MARTIN

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It Might Have the Green Seal, But is Organic Safe?

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Biz Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/09 at 16:27

Sustainability – Dining & Wine on The New York Times
The U.S. organic movement was built on trust between the farmer and the consumer, using growing methods thought to be better for the land and to produce healthier food. But, on the heels of the recent salmonella outbreak, some people are questioning whether organic food is really healthier. …
… MOST of the chicken, fruit and vegetables in Ellen Devlin-Sample’s kitchen are organic. She thinks those foods taste better than their conventional counterparts. And she hopes they are healthier for her children. Lately, though, she is not so sure. …
Full Story: It’s Organic, but Does That Mean It’s Safer?; By KIM SEVERSON and ANDREW MARTIN

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Lentils Are Healthful and Versatile

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/08 at 04:38

Recipes for Health from The New York Times
High-fiber, protein-rich lentils require no soaking and often have a cooking time of less than half an hour. They are delicious in a nutritious minestrone with tomatoes, greens and pasta. …
… If you have lentils, you have dinner. This high-fiber, protein-rich legume cooks in 20 to 40 minutes, depending on the dish, and requires no soaking. Lentils are the basis for many starters and salads, soups and stews, side dishes and Middle Eastern pastas. The distinctive flavor has been adapted to a variety of classic cuisines, from France to the Mediterranean, from India to Mexico and North America. …
Full Story: Lentils: A Versatile Staple Flavors Classic International Dishes; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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Lentils Are Healthful and Versatile

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/08 at 04:38

Recipes for Health from The New York Times
High-fiber, protein-rich lentils require no soaking and often have a cooking time of less than half an hour. They are delicious in a nutritious minestrone with tomatoes, greens and pasta. …
… If you have lentils, you have dinner. This high-fiber, protein-rich legume cooks in 20 to 40 minutes, depending on the dish, and requires no soaking. Lentils are the basis for many starters and salads, soups and stews, side dishes and Middle Eastern pastas. The distinctive flavor has been adapted to a variety of classic cuisines, from France to the Mediterranean, from India to Mexico and North America. …
Full Story: Lentils: A Versatile Staple Flavors Classic International Dishes; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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Kicking The Can: How To Break Your Soda Habit

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/06 at 13:54

Beverage Industry> Health Tips from the ChicagoTribune.com
Soda is loaded with more calories, sugar and chemicals than many people realize. Here are nutritionists’ tips for cutting it out, or …
… at least down: •Get some perspective. Estimate how much soda you drink in a week (if you have no idea, keep a food diary for seven days). Then use a calculator to add up how many calories and sugar grams your habit costs you. …
Full Story: Kicking The Can: How To Break Your Soda Habit; By ALISON JOHNSON
Photo from Wikipedia

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Kicking The Can: How To Break Your Soda Habit

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/06 at 13:54

Beverage Industry> Health Tips from the ChicagoTribune.com
Soda is loaded with more calories, sugar and chemicals than many people realize. Here are nutritionists’ tips for cutting it out, or …
… at least down: •Get some perspective. Estimate how much soda you drink in a week (if you have no idea, keep a food diary for seven days). Then use a calculator to add up how many calories and sugar grams your habit costs you. …
Full Story: Kicking The Can: How To Break Your Soda Habit; By ALISON JOHNSON
Photo from Wikipedia

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Marketing to the Ethical Carnivore a Bold Venture

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Biz Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/05 at 10:38

Entertaining from NJ.com
When Stephen McDonnell decided to get into business for himself, the former hippie-vegetarian-macrobiotic-granola-eater made an unusual choice: He bought a smokehouse. …
… Today Applegate Farms is pioneering the “friendly carnivorism” niche with low-fat, organic, nitrate-free offerings sourced from 300 family farms. The company has even launched a program to bring healthful snacks to kindergartners near its New Jersey headquarters. Stephen McDonnell was the worst vegetarian ever. He had spent every Sunday night of his Atomic Age childhood in Peapack feasting on Sunday roasts, but …
Full Story: Building a better hot dog; by Vicki Hyman

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Marketing to the Ethical Carnivore a Bold Venture

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Biz Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/05 at 10:38

Entertaining from NJ.com
When Stephen McDonnell decided to get into business for himself, the former hippie-vegetarian-macrobiotic-granola-eater made an unusual choice: He bought a smokehouse. …
… Today Applegate Farms is pioneering the “friendly carnivorism” niche with low-fat, organic, nitrate-free offerings sourced from 300 family farms. The company has even launched a program to bring healthful snacks to kindergartners near its New Jersey headquarters. Stephen McDonnell was the worst vegetarian ever. He had spent every Sunday night of his Atomic Age childhood in Peapack feasting on Sunday roasts, but …
Full Story: Building a better hot dog; by Vicki Hyman

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Fasting for One Day Each Month Unlocks a World of Health Benefits

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/04 at 12:13

Health & Wellbeing > Features from The Indipendent.co.uk
Fasting for one day each month unlocks a world of health benefits and can add years to your life. Hugh Wilson explains the science of starvation – and puts his willpower to the test …
… Starvation, you’d think, is never a good idea, and subjecting yourself voluntarily to a period of fasting – starvation for a short time – is usually associated with religious practice. And within traditional Christian culture, the common view is that, when we fast, we punish ourselves and harm our bodies. But the latest research suggests the opposite, in fact, might be true. …
Full Story: The no-food diet; by Hugh Wilson

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Fasting for One Day Each Month Unlocks a World of Health Benefits

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/04 at 12:13

Health & Wellbeing > Features from The Indipendent.co.uk
Fasting for one day each month unlocks a world of health benefits and can add years to your life. Hugh Wilson explains the science of starvation – and puts his willpower to the test …
… Starvation, you’d think, is never a good idea, and subjecting yourself voluntarily to a period of fasting – starvation for a short time – is usually associated with religious practice. And within traditional Christian culture, the common view is that, when we fast, we punish ourselves and harm our bodies. But the latest research suggests the opposite, in fact, might be true. …
Full Story: The no-food diet; by Hugh Wilson

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8 Foods to Keep Your Brain Young and Healthy

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/04 at 12:05

Health Experts> Dr. Mao Secrets of Longevity from Yahoo.com
Senility, Alzheimer’s, and age-related memory loss: these conditions of mental decline that come with aging can be delayed or even prevented. Besides engaging in daily activities that work out your brain, …
… a regular and balanced diet rich with essential amino acids, omega oils, minerals and vitamins will ensure a vibrant and sharp memory. Eat these foods to give your brain the nutrition it needs.
1. Fish – Protein, an important component in the making of neurotransmitters, is essential to improve mental performance …
Ful Story: 8 Foods to Keep Your Brain Young and Healthy; By Dr. Maoshing Ni

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Vegan Before Dinnertime

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/03 at 09:08

Health> Well Blog from The New York Times
Many people struggle to improve their eating habits. The Times food writer Mark Bittman, appearing this week on WNYC radio, told listeners about an unusual strategy that has worked for him. …
… All day long, he eats a vegan diet. But after about 6 p.m., anything goes. In his newest book, “Food Matters: A Guide to Conscious Eating With More Than 75 Recipes,” Mark explains how increasing fruit and vegetable consumption and reducing dependence on processed foods will lead to better health …
Full Story: Vegan Before Dinnertime; by Tara Parker-Pope

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Pomegranates Are Pretty and Good for You

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/03/02 at 10:02

Healthy Kitchen from Cleveland.com
Pomegranates are being touted as a superfood packed with antioxidants and are gaining popularity. They are also pretty and add sprightly appeal to a variety of dishes, including pomegranate-and-brie bruschetta and pomegranate barbecue sauce. …
… Chasing a youthful glow never tasted so good. The pomegranate, an ancient “super” fruit, is packed with antioxidants and a bounty of health benefits. Not only does it taste good, it’s good for you. And it can also be a fun decoration for the holiday. …
Full Story: Pomegranates taste good and are good for you; by Brenda Junkin

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Baking – Gluten-Free Recipes

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/25 at 15:18

Healthy Kitchen on the TimesAndDemocrat.com
Ms Harter, a lady from South Carolina, shares her gluten-free recipes. She started cooking everything from scratch after being diagnosed with celiac disease. …
… “It’s hard, but once you do it, you’ve got it. At first, I bought a bunch of recipe books, but then, I just kind of started messing with it on my own and figured it out. Once you do it, it’s not that hard,” Check out recipes for gluten-free flour, cream cheese tart shells and pastry dough. …

Full Story: A guide to gluten-free baking; By WENDY JEFFCOAT CRIDER

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Nutritional Benefits of Eating Berries

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/25 at 08:09

Nutrition on About.com
A healthy food can bring you a number of benefits, from feeling good to helping your body to fight aging. Berries, for example, provide the body with nutrients and much more (not to mention they are delicious). …
… If you have ever had the pleasure of picking berries right from a garden or gathering wild berries in the woods, you already know how wonderful fresh berries are. Most berries are naturally sweet and require little effort to prepare. …

Full Story: Nutritional Benefits of Eating Berries; By Shereen Jegtvig

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Organic? Free-range? How Do You Know What’s Your Beef?

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/19 at 12:54

Food News on the OregonLive.com
Consumers looking for more healthful, sustainable meat often are confused by labels and marketing promising that the meat is grass-fed, organic or free-range. Explanations are provided here, along with several recipes. …
… When I read the press release, something didn’t seem right: At a taste test conducted by Oregon State University, Portland elementary and middle school students compared hamburgers made from grass-fed beef and grain-fed beef. And there was no clear winner. …

Full Story: What’s your beef?; by Leslie Cole, The Oregonian

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Lentils and Cabbage Pack a Nutritional Punch

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/18 at 10:48

Fitness & Nutrition> Recipes for Health on The New York Times
A hearty dish of stewed lentils with cabbage is satisfying and nutritious. The recipe calls for cooking the cabbage with onion and garlic in a wide-lidded skillet to release its sweetness. …
… An article last month by Tara Parker-Pope about the challenges of eating fresh food on a tight budget got me thinking about cabbage. It is a very economical vegetable that is easy to find in any supermarket and it gives you a huge nutritional bang for your buck. This humble food has always been a mainstay for the poor and in cold climates people of all classes have relied on it to feed themselves through many a winter. …

Full Story: Cabbage, an Inexpensive Nutritional Powerhouse; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN

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How to Skim Stocks & Sauces

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/17 at 10:37

Tips & Methods> Cooking on Saveur
Different sauciers have different methods for skimming, but all share the goal of removing as much unwanted foam as possible while retaining the pure meat stock. Four techniques, including the cold-spoon method and the spin method, are discussed. …
… The French sauces featured in “Mother Sauce” (December 2008, Issue 116) all begin as a meat stock; one of the keys to ensuring that you end up with a refined, velvety sauce is the careful and continuous skimming away of the fat and impurities that rise to the top of the pot as your stock simmers. Different sauciers have different methods for skimming, but all of them have the same goal: …

Full Story: Skimming 101; by Ben Mims

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Slow Food USA Concoction with a Practical Syracuse Twist.

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/10 at 10:44

Business News on Syracuse.com
Paul Mercurio is an advocate of Slow Food, but he also recognizes that Syracuse, N.Y., is not the ideal place for a trend that relies on locally grown food. When he shops, …
… he weighs the energy-to-calorie ratio in food shipped from all over the world. A Swiss chard pie, some tomato sauce and red beets are the only remnants of summer in Paul Mercurio’s refrigerator. The beets will be roasted with garlic, pureed with butter and eggs, sprinkled with gorgonzola and Manchego cheese and baked at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. …

Full Story: Syracuse man looks to speed up interest in slow food movement; By Michelle Breidenbach

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The Catch of the Day, Straight from the Ice

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/09 at 11:08

Food on Chicago Tribune
Chefs who are familiar with ice fishing say simple preparations are best to highlight the flavors of the fresh-caught fish. Recipes for panfish tempura, pickled pike and more are included. …
… For those willing to brave the cold, ice fishing yields some of the year’s best-tasting fish dinners. There are two reasons people ice fish: one, to catch and eat gorgeous freshwater fish that are at peak flavor due to the cold temperatures of the water they’re drawn from, and two, to socialize. …

Full Story: Fish on ice; By Monica Kass Rogers

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A Sure Guide to a Restaurant’s Quality

In Archives, Biz Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/07 at 05:55

Food & Drink on The Financial Times
Vernon Mascarenhas knows his onions. Having had his own restaurant in north London for 14 years, he is now managing director of Secretts farm near Godal-ming, Surrey, in south-east England. …
… After supervising the picking, which starts at 5am, Mascarenhas spends his mornings talking to many of the 300 chefs he supplies with vegetables, fruit and herbs. Mascarenhas says he loves his job because he enjoys advising chefs on what to buy and what to avoid, …

Full Story: A sure guide to a restaurant’s quality; By Nicholas Lander

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Diet Betting Becoming Popular …

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/02/06 at 07:28

Fitness & Nutrition on The New York Times
FOR Samwoo Ee, the first bet was just a warm-up. Mr. Ee, 30, worked at an Internet company in SoHo, and had been competing with a colleague to see who could lose more weight. …
… But they had both stopped going to the gym because of long hours at the office. In search of more motivation, they turned up the pressure: they entered into a formal one-month wager to see who could cut the higher percentage of their body mass index. “It got pretty competitive,” said Mr. Ee, who weighed 248 at the time. …

Full Story: Dieting? Put Your Money Where Your Fat Is; By PAMELA WEILER GRAYSON

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Good Prosciutto Requires Pig, Patience

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Photography, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/31 at 13:16

Field Report; from The New York Times Magazine
It takes eight to 24 months to transform a pig’s hind leg into complex, rich and faintly salty prosciutto. Everything matters, from the breed and weight of the pig to the type of salt used and even the weather.
If salami is the blog of cured meats, then prosciutto is the great novel. …
… A salami requires anywhere from 20 to 120 days to cure, making it popular with chefs who want to put their house-made stamp on a rustic appetizer. But the best prosciutto requires 8 to 24 months to transform the salt-covered hind leg of a pig into a $35-per-pound luxury, a rosy meat that, when thinly sliced, is a complex, faintly salty delicacy that dissolves into richness on the tongue. …

Full Story: Aging Gracefully; By CHRISTINE MUHLKE

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Staying Healthy: Eating Well

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/31 at 11:43

Eating Well; on DivineCaroline.com
You’re motivated. You’re exercising every day. You’re cooking healthy meals at home. You’re watching your portion control. You’re being so good to yourself. …
… You may have noticed some weight loss and an increase in your energy level.
There’s just one problem you really want to eat out tonight. Well then, do it! You deserve a treat.
Don’t know what to order at your favorite restaurants? The following tips can help you navigate the menu like a true health nut. You can eat out and …

Full Story: Dine Out and Stay Healthy; By Girl Healthy, on DivineCaroline.com

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Cured Meats Linked to Leukemia

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/31 at 10:43

Breaking Health News; on NaturalNews.com
New research published in the journal BMC Cancer reveals that children who eat processed meats like bacon, hot dogs and sausage are 74 percent more likely to develop leukemia than children who avoid such processed meats and …
… eat more vegetables and tofu instead.
This study, carried out in part by Dr. David C. Christiani of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, and it’s just one of many research studies linking processed meats to leukemia, pancreatic cancer and colorectal cancer.
What causes processed meats to promote cancer? Sodium nitrite, …

Full Story: Processed Meats Linked to 74 Percent Higher Risk of Leukemia; By Mike Adams, on NaturalNews.com

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Cured Meats Linked to Leukemia

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/31 at 10:43

Breaking Health News; on NaturalNews.com
New research published in the journal BMC Cancer reveals that children who eat processed meats like bacon, hot dogs and sausage are 74 percent more likely to develop leukemia than children who avoid such processed meats and …
… eat more vegetables and tofu instead.
This study, carried out in part by Dr. David C. Christiani of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, and it’s just one of many research studies linking processed meats to leukemia, pancreatic cancer and colorectal cancer.
What causes processed meats to promote cancer? Sodium nitrite, …

Full Story: Processed Meats Linked to 74 Percent Higher Risk of Leukemia; By Mike Adams, on NaturalNews.com

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Beauty Food!

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/28 at 10:49

Nutritious Dishes ›
Shine inside and out with Dr. Nicholas Perricone’s picks for his favorite beauty foods. There are so many reasons to eat healthfully. Of course, the one that rightfully tops most people’s lists is that a nutritious diet can increase your chances of living a longer, more robust life. …
… But looking good is a terrific side effect of healthier eating, and the happy news is that many of the same foods that can help your heart, brain, and other vital parts of the body are also great for your external appearance. To get the lowdown on eating pretty, we asked celebrity dermatologist Dr. Nicholas Perricone, the author of numerous best-selling books, …

Full Story: Top Ten Foods for Beauty and Health; by Megan O. Steintrager, on Epicurious.com

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A Bacon Fanatic Pushes the Boundaries

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/27 at 11:04

Culinary News
Bacon-and-apple coffeecake and candied bacon are just a few of the ways bacon can be enjoyed. A roasted potato salad also is magic to the taste buds. Bacon has a place at the table morning, noon and night. And venture beyond its natural pairings to the unusual yet sublime, …
… in an apple coffeecake or as a martini garnish. Enjoy. We were opening Christmas gifts last year when my much better half dropped a package on my lap — a cold, heavy package. Curious (and suddenly chilly), I opened it. Bacon. Six pounds of artisan bacon, ranging from thick-cut hickory-smoked to jalapeño-spiced and apple-cinnamon, varieties hailing from Virginia to upstate New York, Texas to Tennessee. …

Full Story: Bacon recipes galore!; By Noelle Carter, on the LATimes.com

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Eggs-perts Sort Through the Terminology

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, India, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/25 at 10:39

Food > Recipes
Experts explain the difference between brown eggs and white and explain what barn-laid and organic eggs really are. They note that organic eggs are more expensive, but also are more healthful. Organic, premium, vegetarian …
… the variety of eggs today in the market can baffle you. We ask the experts to show you the sunny side up.
Regular eggs
Standard eggs, or those found at any regular shop are usually procured from hens kept in small cages, where often, there’s not enough room for them to exercise. The hens are fed a high-protein diet containing antibiotics, hormones and …

Full Story: Eggs-traordinary facts about eggs; on The Times of India

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Grate Carrots for Good Health

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/24 at 10:48

Recipes for Health
Recipes that start with grated carrots include one salad with lemon juice, white-wine vinegar and mustard, and another with buttermilk and cumin seeds. Carrots are rich in fiber and nutrients, including carotenoids, which are converted to vitamin A in the liver. Carrots are great to have around …
… for healthy snacks, especially for children, and many of us buy them to make carrot juice. But how often do you plan dinner, or part of dinner, around this ingredient? It’s a question worth pondering now, in the depths of winter, when our choice of fresh vegetables, especially colorful ones, is limited. Among the nutrients that make carrots such a healthy option are so-called carotenoids, …

Full Story: Carrots: Perfect for Dark Winter Nights By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN, on the NYTimes.com

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Gluten-Free Pasta Success is All in the Cooking

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/22 at 10:34

Recipes for Health
A gluten allergy no longer means giving up pasta. More gluten-free options, such as Asian rice noodles and Papadini pasta, are more readily available, but the key to using them in a tasty pasta recipe is in the preparation. Cook it too long, it falls apart; too little, it gets rubbery. …
… My sister and a number of my friends are sensitive to gluten, a protein in wheat and other grains, and for them that has meant living without pasta. Now, though, there are a number of gluten-free pastas on the market. I’ve been experimenting with a few of them, including rice sticks …

Full Story: New Options for Allergy-Free Pastas; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN, on the NYTimes.com

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Eggs Benedict, New and Improved

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/21 at 18:35

Lifestyle › Health and Fitness, [with Recipe]
A revised version of eggs Benedict slashes the fat, cholesterol and calories of the original. The sauce is made with lemon juice, reduced-fat mayonnaise and nonfat yogurt, and the eggs are served on artichoke bottoms instead of buttered English muffins. If you’re looking for a special weekend recipe, or …
… if you enjoy breakfast-inspired foods for dinner, here’s a delicious recipe. Typical eggs Benedict consist of poached eggs and ham on a buttered English muffin topped with hollandaise sauce. It’s a tasty dish, but it is very high in cholesterol, along with substantial levels of saturated fat. …

Full Story: Eggs Benedict in spirit, better nutrition; By Megan Murphy, Memphis Commercial Appeal

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Cutting Back in the New Year Doesn’t Mean Having to Suffer

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/17 at 14:46

Food and Cooking
For 2009, the message from the experts is clear. Just follow a few simple guidelines as you go about your three squares each day, get yourself moving and soon enough you’ll be that svelte new you . . . for the rest of your life. …
… If you’re like the many Americans who use the month of January to start your annual trek to weight loss, listen up.
Fad diets are so passé. The mantra this year is a total lifestyle change, one that includes healthier eating and exercise. …

Full Story: Dieting delights; on JSOnline.com

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The Earthy Appeal of Root Vegetables

In Archives, Cooking Tips, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, UK, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/12 at 10:11

* Life & style * Nigel Slater recipes
Jerusalem artichokes are the key ingredient in an inexpensive but velvety and delicious soup. These and other root vegetables might look boring, but they have a simple, honest appeal. One of the rules of good food shopping is that any vegetable sold with a coating of mud usually deserves a closer look. …
… There is not only the chance that your root vegetables are more likely to be fresh from the field, but in better condition. Vegetables tend to be happier in soil than in plastic. The sacks of sand in which our family kept its home-grown parsnips and turnips saw them in fine fettle through till early spring. …

Full Story: Coming back down to earth; by Nigel Slater, on the Guardian.co.uk

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Write a Fool Proof Resolution

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/06 at 18:33

Longevity
The key to a good resolution is to write is correctly. That may seem silly, but putting some thought into what you are really trying to do and how it will fit into your life can really increase your chances for success. Use this exercise to convert your resolution into a S.M.A.R.T. one. …
… S.M.A.R.T. Goals to Make a Change: A goal should provide guidance and direction. Goals like ‘lose weight’, ‘eat better’, or ‘have less stress’ are far too vague and unspecific to help very much in making change. Use the S.M.A.R.T. criteria to help put more detail into your goal. Spending some time creating effective goals will be a huge help later on. …

Full Story: S.M.A.R.T. Goals for Lifestyle Change; By Mark Stibich, Ph.D., About.com

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Beware of Shopping-Mall Food Courts Planning!

In Archives, Biz Tips, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/06 at 18:10

Eat, Drink and Be Healthy
The folks who plan shopping-mall food courts are no dummies. They know that when you’ve been slogging from store to store all morning, dragging ever-bigger bags of bargains (plus your winter coat) and contending with snippy salesclerks and pushy fellow shoppers, come noontime you’ll be ready to eat – and eat just about anything. …
… And by “just about anything” I mean the carb and fat-heavy concoctions beckoning from behind the food court counters: cheeseburgers and fries, sesame chicken, rich and creamy shakes. They tempt you when your guard is down – and before you know it, you’ve ingested more calories than you’d choose to consume when your wits are about you. …

Full Story: Courting Dietary Disaster at the Mall? With Planning, You Can Shake It Off; By Jennifer Huget, on the WashingtonPost.com

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The Time-Defying Diet

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2009/01/04 at 21:04

Food & Drink
Want to knock off 5lb and 10 years in two weeks? Then follow the eating plan that not only your skin, eyes and hair will thank you for, but also your waistline. The health of your skin begins with good nutrition. New, living cells continually replace the dead cells on the skin’s surface and the growth of these cells is dependent on vitamins, minerals and hydration. It might sound obvious, but …
… you should eat at least five servings of fresh fruit and vegetables each day. Remember to look for the ACE vitamins: A to help prevent ageing, C to promote clarity, and E to protect against the environment. Vitamins A and C are plentiful in fruit and vegetables. Vitamin A is found in carrots, spinach, watercress, broccoli, sweet potatoes and melons. …

Full Story: The time-defying diet; by Bobbi Brown. Recipes by Sybil Kapoor, on the TimesOnline.co.uk

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The Mediterranean Way

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/28 at 20:20

Eat, Drink and Be Healthy
Can your holiday feast be festive, flavorful, and healthful, too? Yes, if it follows the time-honored tenets of the Mediterranean diet, which calls for lots of nutritious foods to be enjoyed slowly and in the company of friends and family. …
… Imagine a holiday feast rich in taste, texture, scent and color. A meal designed to be eaten slowly and deliberately, leaving plenty of time between forkfuls for talking with friends and family – and for savoring sips of good red wine. …

Full Story: Oldways Offers New Ways to Think About Holiday Feasting; By Jennifer Huget, on the WshingthonPost.com

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Goji Berry Might Help Fight Skin Cancer

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/26 at 20:52

Body+Soul
Goji berries, already celebrated for their antioxidant properties, might prevent skin damage that leads to cancer, researchers say. Mice that drank diluted goji berry juice experienced less sun damage from ultraviolet rays and a slower advance of skin cancer. …
… Another experiment showed skin cancer advanced slower in mice that had drunk goji juice. A tiny red berry celebrated for its antioxidant qualities may also help protect against skin damage that leads to cancer, researchers believe.

Full Story: Goji berry stops skin cancer – Sydney University study; By Tamara McLean, The Daily Telegraph; on News.com.au

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Appreciating Oregon Truffles

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/25 at 23:34

PEOPLE
Oregon is one of the top truffle-producing regions in the world, but even people in Oregon don’t know it, says Charles Lefevre, who wants to spread the word. Recently, Lefevre arranged a blind taste test between Italian and Oregonian truffles. “Every single person preferred the Oregon white truffle,” he said. …
… Charles Lefevre is a man on a mission. He wants you to appreciate Oregon truffles. “We are in one of the great truffle-producing regions of the world,” he says. “But even many Oregonians don’t know that.”
Lefevre, a Eugene native who studied at the University of Oregon and Oregon State University, where he got a Ph.D. in mycology, is on a quest to shed more light on this dark, mysterious and pungent fungus, which grows naturally in Europe, in China — and in the maritime Northwest.

Full Story: Oregon truffles a ‘culinary treasure’; By Bob Keefer, on The Register-Guard

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Appreciating Oregon Truffles

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/25 at 23:34

PEOPLE
Oregon is one of the top truffle-producing regions in the world, but even people in Oregon don’t know it, says Charles Lefevre, who wants to spread the word. Recently, Lefevre arranged a blind taste test between Italian and Oregonian truffles. “Every single person preferred the Oregon white truffle,” he said. …
… Charles Lefevre is a man on a mission. He wants you to appreciate Oregon truffles. “We are in one of the great truffle-producing regions of the world,” he says. “But even many Oregonians don’t know that.”
Lefevre, a Eugene native who studied at the University of Oregon and Oregon State University, where he got a Ph.D. in mycology, is on a quest to shed more light on this dark, mysterious and pungent fungus, which grows naturally in Europe, in China — and in the maritime Northwest.

Full Story: Oregon truffles a ‘culinary treasure’; By Bob Keefer, on The Register-Guard

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Learn Gluten-Free Baking

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/24 at 09:26

Food/Dining
An estimated 1% of Americans have celiac disease, which can be treated by eliminating gluten from the diet. Chef Richard Coppedge offered a class at the CIA on cooking without gluten. “It took years of experimenting to get the flour blends right,” he said, but now those blends can be easily substituted in other recipes. …
… At first glance, the carb fest looked like any other dieter’s nightmare/nirvana: crusty homemade bagels, muffins, waffles, cookies and seriously addictive chocolate-glazed doughnuts.
But this feast, thanks to a little culinary sleight of hand by chef Richard Coppedge, was different …

Full Story: Flour power! Learning to bake gluten-free breads and cookies; BY ROSEMARY BLACK, on the NYDailyTimes.com

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5 Items for Brain Health

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/21 at 08:46

HEALTHY EATING
Including foods with folate, choline and antioxidants, as well as water and tea, in adult nutrition can affect cognition – in a good way. Registered dietitian Carolyn O’Neil explains where these items are found and how they help. Thinking about what to eat today? …
… Perhaps you should consider which foods and beverages might actually help you think.
While the majority of nutrition studies has focused on our hearts, bones and waistlines, a thoughtful bunch of scientists is amassing research on how what we put into our bodies affects the health of our brains. …

Full Story: Load up on these five items and your brain will thank you; By CAROLYN O’NEIL, on The Atlanta Journal-Constitution


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A Plea for Considerate Diets

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/17 at 09:53

Food & Wine
Gopal Kapur is a food philosopher who believes people should adopt a considerate diet, with less waste, more empathy and eat with environmental and social awareness. He wants people to eat nothing but raw foods one day a month and to cut their calorie intake in half another day each month. …
… Gopal Kapur isn’t some kind of food facist. He’s not trying to guilt-trip anyone into going vegan or vegetarian. He’ll grub on chicken like the rest of us backyard grillers. …

Full Story: Thought for food; By Chris Macias, on The Sacramento Bee

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2 Hot Recipes … Literally

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/12/16 at 19:32

Food for thought
This food lover cites a British study in which hot peppers with breakfast caused people to eat less and burn more calories. She highlights the health benefits of pepper sauce here. …
… I find myself craving foods loaded with spices and vegetables for breakfast as they seem to provide a full sustaining start to the day. Avoiding the sugary sweet breakfast cereals and doughnuts stops the craving for more sugar. Adding hot pepper sauce clears the morning sinuses while the protein in omelets …

Full Story: Food for thought: Hot foods add health benefits as days get colder; By Ruth Brunner, on ColoradoAn.com
Photo: Lucia Zeccara

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Chemical Used on Crops could Make You Fat

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/12/10 at 10:54

Many people who eat organic food and use natural products are trying to avoid pesticides that are linked to cancer and other diseases. Now Japanese researchers say there is another advantage to “going green” and avoiding toxins and chemical additives in the environment. A common pollutant has been found to have a potent effect on gene activity and could be contributing to the obesity epidemic. …
… According to an article published in the December issue of the journal Bioscience, the chemical tributyltin affects sensitive receptors in the cells of a host of animals, ranging from water fleas to people. …

Full Story: Chemical Used on Crops could Make You Fat; by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor, on NaturalNews.com

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A Glass of Milk?

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/10 at 10:23

Staying Healthy: Prevention
For all the dinner table differences across America, a glass of milk and the requirement that it must be finished before leaving the table seems to be a constant, at least it was when I was growing up. Though the “Got Milk?” campaign wasn’t yet released when I was a kid, …
… it was widely believed that milk was integral in building strong bones and teeth. It was a parent’s liquid solution to good nutrition when kids wouldn’t touch the veggies.
But although the bland white stuff seems as uncontroversial as apple pie, milk has its vehement detractors …

Full Story: Milk: Does It Really Do a Body Good?; By Brie Cadman, on DivineCaroline.com

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Love a Party But Hate the Morning After?

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/12/09 at 10:27

Health
Love a party but hate the morning after? We prepare for Christmas by testing hangover remedies.
An insatiable appetite for stodge; lingering headaches; a mouth as dry as an oatcake; contact lenses so sticky that they’re hardly worth wearing; crippling tiredness. These are the symptoms that characterise my hangovers, and they’re all too familiar during the festive season. …
… It doesn’t take much – a couple of glasses, and I’m likely to spend the next day wishing I’d never got up.
I resigned myself long ago to the fact that Christmas celebrations go hand in hand with brain-crushing aftermaths. I’m no better at declining invitations than I am at refusing top-ups of the fizzy stuff. …

Full Story: The best hangover remedies tested; By Becky Pugh, on

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Coffee Really Can Improve Alertness in Drivers

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/03 at 22:40

Healthy Kitchen
A study has confirmed what many drivers already know: Coffee improves alertness on the road. Researchers found improved reaction time and alertness in participants who were given a caffeine capsule.
Science has confirmed what many long-distance drivers already know – coffee really does keep you alert on the road. …
… Researchers at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne used a spectacle-like device that counts the number of times a person blinks to judge the effectiveness of caffeine on wakefulness. …

Full Story: Coffee makes drivers more alert: study; on TheAge.co.au

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Nine Cold, Hard Weight-Loss Truths

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/03 at 22:00

Staying Healthy
Even if you’re not trying to lose weight, chances are you’ve seen some ideas on how to do so:
“Eat what you want and lose weight!” – “Lose thirty pounds in thirty days!” – “Finally, a diet that really works!” – “Lose one jean size every seven days!” – …
… “Top three fat burners revealed” – “Ten minutes to a tighter tummy!”
But these claims are readily rebuked by anyone who’s tried to lose five, ten, or one hundred pounds. Losing weight ain’t that easy. It’s not in a pill, it doesn’t (usually) happen in thirty days, and judging from the myriad plans out there, there is no one diet that works for everyone. …

Full Story: Nine Cold, Hard Weight-Loss Truths; By Brie Cadman, on DivineCaroline.com

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The Challenge: Keep Your Weight Steady

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/02 at 22:55

Eat, Drink and Be Healthy
Let the Challenge begin! Maintaining your weight during the holidays can feel like waging an uphill battle. But with a bit of planning, you can arm yourself with strategies and tactics to get yourself through the next few festive weeks without putting on pounds — while still enjoying the pleasures of the season. …
… You could be forgiven for going into the holiday season as if it were a military campaign: Beat the holiday battle of the bulge! Fight holiday weight gain! Win the war against holiday pounds! Survive the stress of the holidays! Those are the kinds of messages we hear.
I’m kind of a pacifist when it comes to both the holidays and managing weight:

Full Story: Militarism in Defense of a Stable Weight Is No Vice; By Jennifer Huget, on the WashingtonPost.com

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Nutty Buckwheat Flour Good for Robust Seasonal Dishes

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/01 at 22:11

Food with Recipes
Buckwheat flour adds texture and nutty flavor to pasta, cookies and other foods. Recipes for sugar cookies, blini and pizzoccheri demonstrate its versatility.
The flour’s rich yet subtle flavors mingle well with robust seasonal favorites.
Buckwheat may seem like an old familiar in savory Breton crepes or in earthy, …
… nutty Japanese soba noodles, but it’s also a uniquely versatile ingredient that can be baked into biscuits, rolled into Italian pasta and embraced in other ways that might surprise even, say, a veteran cookie baker. Cookies become crumblier, pancakes have a richer crumb, pasta remains firmer, and they all benefit from buckwheat’s nuttiness, its texture and substance. …

Full Story: Buckwheat flour in baking and cooking; By Ysanne Spevack, on LATimes.cm

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Eating More Whole Grains, Less Trans Fat

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/01 at 21:03

Health & Cooking
Americans reported increased consumption of whole grains, fruits, vegetables and omega-3 fatty acids, as well as decreases in trans fat, meat, dairy and sugar intake. Whole grains are hot, trans fat is not, …
… and more Americans say they’re doing all they can to eat right, according to a new survey from the American Dietetic Association (ADA).
In the survey, 783 U.S. adults dish on their diet and exercise habits. Among the findings:
* Consumption of whole grains, vegetables, and fruits is up. …

Full Story: Top Nutrition Trends for 2008 – Survey: Americans Eating More Whole Grains, Vegetables, Fruits; By Miranda Hitti, on WebMD.com

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Eating More Whole Grains, Less Trans Fat

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/12/01 at 21:03

Health & Cooking
Americans reported increased consumption of whole grains, fruits, vegetables and omega-3 fatty acids, as well as decreases in trans fat, meat, dairy and sugar intake. Whole grains are hot, trans fat is not, …
… and more Americans say they’re doing all they can to eat right, according to a new survey from the American Dietetic Association (ADA).
In the survey, 783 U.S. adults dish on their diet and exercise habits. Among the findings:
* Consumption of whole grains, vegetables, and fruits is up. …

Full Story: Top Nutrition Trends for 2008 – Survey: Americans Eating More Whole Grains, Vegetables, Fruits; By Miranda Hitti, on WebMD.com

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USDA Panel Approves First Rules For Labeling Farmed Fish ‘Organic’

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/29 at 11:36

The Fed Page
For the first time, a federal advisory board has approved criteria that clear the way for farmed fish to be labeled “organic,” a move that pleased aquaculture producers even as it angered environmentalists and consumer advocates. …
… The question of whether farmed fish could be labeled organic – especially carnivorous species such as salmon that live in open-ocean net pens and consume vast amounts of smaller fish – has vexed scientists and federal regulators for years. …

Full Story: USDA Panel Approves First Rules For Labeling Farmed Fish ‘Organic’; By Juliet Eilperin and Jane Black, on Washington Post

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It’s time to raise a glass (of heavy water) to a longer life

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/28 at 10:01

Science & Tech
For centuries mankind has sought the secret of a long and healthy life.
And for centuries it seems we were looking in the wrong place. Forget exotic pills and potions, the key to prolonged life could be as simple as a glass of water. Scientists believe ‘heavy water’ enriched with a rare form of hydrogen could add as much as ten years to life. …
… And by also modifying foods, such as steak and eggs, with the hydrogen the way could be cleared to allowing us to eat and drink our way to a healthy old age.
The idea is the brainchild of Mikhail Shchepinov, a former Oxford University scientist. …

Full Story: It’s time to raise a glass (of heavy water) to a longer life; By Fiona Macrae

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Feeling Blue? Sniff a Lemon

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/27 at 17:11

Health
New research suggests the zingy fresh scent of a lemon may help elevate your mood.
Scientists at the Center for Autoimmune Diseases at Tel Aviv University recently discovered a link between depression and our sense of smell, and found that citrus fragrances—lemons in particular— …
… directly affected neurotransmitters in the brains of mice.
The aromas help boost serotonin, a feel-good hormone, and reduce levels of norepinephrine, a stress hormone.
How to use essential oils: Everybody responds to aromatherapy differently, …

Full Story: Feeling Blue? Sniff a Lemon; By Laurie Pawlik-Kienlen, on NaturalHealthMag.com

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The Secret to Surviving the Holiday Buffet

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/26 at 17:57

Diet & Nutrition
There is probably no greater diet danger zone than the holiday buffet. It’s hard to resist grabbing a huge plate and piling it up with buttery breads, cheeses, meats, cakes, cookies and pies. …
… Although it might seem as if we’re swimming against stream when it comes to the delicious — but calorie-laden — holiday table, there are a lot of people who seem immune to overloading their plates. They have fun at buffets, parties and dinners without gaining weight. What’s their secret? …

~Full Story: The secret to surviving the holiday buffet; By Brian Wansink, Ph.D., on msnbc.com~

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The Secret to Surviving the Holiday Buffet

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/26 at 17:57

Diet & Nutrition
There is probably no greater diet danger zone than the holiday buffet. It’s hard to resist grabbing a huge plate and piling it up with buttery breads, cheeses, meats, cakes, cookies and pies. …
… Although it might seem as if we’re swimming against stream when it comes to the delicious — but calorie-laden — holiday table, there are a lot of people who seem immune to overloading their plates. They have fun at buffets, parties and dinners without gaining weight. What’s their secret? …

~Full Story: The secret to surviving the holiday buffet; By Brian Wansink, Ph.D., on msnbc.com~

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Michigan Restaurant Nourishes People and Planet

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/24 at 11:03

WORD OF MOUTH
Mind Body & Spirits, a Rochester, Mich., restaurant, has an organic menu and an environmentally friendly building. Efforts were made to recycle, conserve energy and use local produce.
Two years in the making, Mind Body & Spirits opens in downtown Rochester later this month with a 100% organic menu and …
… a building designed to be a showplace for environmentally friendly features.
In renovating a century-old storefront on Main Street, owner Mike Plesz and his team considered virtually every green technique and technology available to reduce and recycle materials, …

Full Story: Mind Body & Spirits keeps it real with all-organic menu. Rochester spot favors local ingredients; by SYLVIA RECTOR, on Freep.com

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The Skinny On Sugars And Sweeteners

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/21 at 17:16

Health
Dispelling myths and misconceptions about what’s sweetening your diet.
When cutting calories from their diet, especially during the holiday season, conscientious eaters often start by eliminating sugar. But adding honey to tea or substituting “raw” sugar for white won’t make a difference. …
… A teaspoon of table sugar has 14 calories, no matter its color, as does honey, molasses and other “natural” sweeteners.
High Fructose Corn Syrup
This artificial sweetener has become the subject of an ongoing and heated debate. …

Full Story: The Skinny On Sugars And Sweeteners; by Rebecca Ruiz, on Forbes.com

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TRAVEL: ;

Alcohol & Muscles

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/11/20 at 18:23

Health & Fitness
You may have wondered how detrimental your drinking habits really are on your muscle-building progress. Is it really that harmful to go out with the guys and have a few beers after work on a Friday? If you’re trying to get lean, does this mean you should forgo all alcohol for the next month or two? Or, …
… if you are really diligent with the rest of your diet, can you indulge on the weekend with a few cold ones?
Many guys would rather have a few drinks on the weekend than cheat with food that’s not a part of their diet plan. While some struggle to cut out foods, for others, cutting out drinking is the real challenge. …

Full Story: Alcohol & Muscles; by Jeff Bayer, on AskMen.com

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Seven Health Myths Debunked

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/11/18 at 21:07

BODY & SOUL
Grewing up eating carrots because it would decrease the chances of needing glasses. After a little research, it came up that it was a big, fat lie.
Turns out the British Royal Air Force started the carrot tale in World War II to keep their newfound fighter pilots’ radar under wraps. …
… They spread the rumor that their pilots were eating more carrots, and that as a result, their vision (and thus their aim) was drastically improved.
That got me wondering—what else did I believe without question that could be just an old wives’ tale?

Full Story: Seven Health Myths Debunked; By Dayna Davis, on DivineCaroline.com

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The Protein Pyramid

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/10 at 12:10

Editorial
Per capita meat consumption more than doubled over the past half-century as the global economy expanded. It is expected to double again by 2050. Which raises the question, what does all that meat eat before it becomes meat?
Increasingly the answer is very small fish harvested from the ocean and ground into meal and pressed into oil. …
… According to a new report by scientists from the University of British Columbia and financed by the Pew Institute for Ocean Science, 37 percent by weight of all the fish taken from the ocean is forage fish: small fish like sardines and menhaden. Nearly half of that is fed to farmed fish; most of the rest is fed to pigs and poultry.

Full Story: The Protein Pyramid, on The NYTimes.com

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What’s a metabolism?

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/11/09 at 11:20

Eating Well
Metabolism refers to your body’s ability to digest and utilize food energy (in calorie form) in order to maintain essential bodily functions like breathing and regulating heartbeats.
Just last week, I chided a friend about skipping meals in an attempt to lose a few pounds. …
… “It slows down your metabolism, so you’ll just gain weight,” I reasoned. “How does it do that?” she wanted to know. “Well … it … okay, I don’t know. But it does!” I responded, rather sheepishly.
Anyone who has picked up a health or fitness magazine has read about the need to keep our metabolisms “revved up”…

Full Story: Taking the Mystery out of Metabolisms; By Vicki Santillano, on Divine Caroline

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7 Foods That Fight Over-40 Fat

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/08 at 01:11

Diet & Nutrition
Add these smart choices to your diet to boost nutrition and shed pounds
Boost the benefits of your workout and burn more fat, faster, with these seven smart food choices. Add them to your daily diet and you can shed about 10 pounds over the course of a year …
… Water with lemon
A California study of 240 women found that dieters who replaced their sweetened drinks with water lost an average of 3 pounds more a year than those who didn’t…

Full Story: 7 foods that fight over-40 fat; By the Editors of Prevention, on msnbc.com

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Foodbuzz

How do we learn how much food to put on our plates?

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/07 at 20:02

Health
That’s a question Jennie Fisher, associate professor of public health and researcher at Temple University’s Center for Obesity Research and Education, has been picking away at for years.
Fisher’s work is aimed at decoding the array of factors in the eating environment,…
…from visual cues such as the size of a serving vessel to social influences around the kitchen table and practicalities such as the size of the serving spoon, that may influence decisions about how much food to put on your plate.
In Fisher’s latest study, presented at the annual meeting of the Obesity Society earlier this month,…

Full Story: Learning How Much to Eat; by Jennifer Huget, on The Washington Post

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Remembering How to Make Pasta e Fagioli

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/06 at 22:39

Bitten
Mark Bitten creates a recipe for pasta e fagioli as he is cooking. After preparing the dish, he consults an Italian cooking encyclopedia to find several regional recipes that varied but ended in just about the same place…
…Pasta and beans — pasta e fagioli, the “pasta fazool” of the iconic pre-Sopranos paean to all things Italo-American, “That’s Amore,” where it is elegantly rhymed with “drool” — is just the ticket when you’re feeling unwell but not so unwell that the only possible dinner is boiled rice.

Full Story: Gaining Strength from Pasta e Fagioli; by Mark Bittman, on The New York Times

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Pizza As A Health Food

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/05 at 10:54

Nutrition
A slice of pizza can be hundreds of calories and dozens of grams of fat – nobody needs that in their diet; but pizza is so darn good. With a few adjustments, you can make a pizza that is a more reasonable and even more delicious meal…
Answer: It is possible to enjoy healthier pizza, but probably not at a restaurant. One slice of pizza usually has at least 300 calories, so it doesn’t take long to eat most of your day’s calorie needs in one sitting. Interestingly, since it is also difficult for many people to estimate portion sizes for wedge-shaped foods, overeating can be very easy…

Full Story: Please tell me how to make a healthier pizza; By Shereen Jegtvig, on About.com

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Cooking a Perfect, Healthier Burger

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/04 at 22:47

In the Spotlight: Low Carb Diets
Cooking a burger is filled with techniques – should you press down on the meat on the grill? How much filler should you use? And then there’s draining all that unhealthy grease – learn which steps are critical, which hurt flavors and which can make your burger more healthy…
…Burgers – most of us love them. But sometimes they are dry, sometimes they don’t have much flavor, and sometimes they turn into “hockey pucks” on the grill. Here are some tips to bring your burgers from “good” to “great”.
Select the Best Meat
I surveyed a lot of authorities on cooking burgers, and there is agreement on this point…

Full Story: Tips for Cooking the Best Hamburgers; By Laura Dolson, on About.com

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Is it Difficult to Eat Well on a Limited Budget?

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/11/04 at 21:05

Well
How much does it really cost to eat a healthy diet?
Economists, health researchers and consumers are struggling to answer that question as food prices rise and the economy slumps. The World Bank says nearly a billion people around the world live on a dollar a day, or even less; in the United States, the daily food-stamp allowance is typically just a few dollars per person,…
…while the average American eats $7 worth of food per day.
Even middle-class people struggle to put healthful food on the table. Studies show that junk foods tend to cost less than fruits, vegetables and other healthful foods, whose prices continue to rise…

Full Sory: Money Is Tight, and Junk Food Beckons; By TARA PARKER-POPE, on The New York Times

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Mindful Eating – Dinner as Meditation

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/31 at 02:37

Mindful eating turns your meals into a special type of meditation. If you practice mindful eating you’ll notice that you are aware of being full sooner, your food preferences change (for the better), and many other benefits. Give it a try at your next meal…
…Mindful eating is a practice that has existed for centuries, but few practice it in our culture. In fact, we are rarely mindful at all when we eat. For example, you may have seen someone walk into the kitchen, fill a plate with a few things (or grab a bag of snacks) and begin eating before sitting down at the table…

Full Article: Mindful, Sensual Eating: How to Develop Food and Eating Awareness; By Matthew Tiemeyer, on About.com

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Fresh Extra Virgin Olive Oil’s Time!

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Organic, Photography, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/28 at 10:40

Sorry for not updating my blog but I am traveling in the south of Italy to follow the whole process to produce organic “Extra Virgin Olive Oil, [EVOO]…
It’s Fresh Olive Oil Time!

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Skip the Spinach, Try the Chard

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/25 at 01:30

Recipes for Health
Chard might be in the same family as spinach, but this sturdier, more flavorful vegetable stands out on its own. Chard comes in a variety of colors. While the leaves always are dark green, the red chard has red stalks and same with the yellow. This veggie is a great source of calcium, potassium, vitamin C, vitamin A, and beta-carotene, as well as two carotenoids, lutein and zeaxanthin…
…I don’t associate Swiss chard with Switzerland. Instead, I associate this healthy, heart green with cuisines from the Mediterranean, where it is eaten widely. It’s coming into my farmers’ markets now and will be widely available until next spring. Of all the greens I cook with, chard is the most versatile; it’s sturdier than spinach, yet has a more delicate flavor than other sturdy greens like kale or turnip greens.

Full Story: Chard: Spinach’s Sturdier Cousin; By MARTHA ROSE SHULMAN, on The New York Times

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Pork Chops Getting a Better Reputation

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/23 at 09:32

The U.S. government has confirmed that the risk of trichinosis from undercooked pork is relatively rare, but the fear persists. This chef says pork chops are a mainstay on his menu, along with pâtés, terrines, curing, sausages, braising and bacon.
Pork: more than the other “white” meat…
…Ever since the trichinosis scare in the 1970s, Americans have been overcooking their pork in fear of sickness.
Matthew Millar, owner and head chef of Fennville’s Journeyman Cafe and Rye, is trying to change how people perceive the meat.
“Pork tends towards dryness in people’s kitchen’s because they have a habit of overcooking it due to concerns of illness,”…

Full Story: Not your mom’s pork chops: Chef shares tips for cooking the other white meat; By ASHLEY TEFFER, on The Holland Sentinel

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At a Glance, The Key to Eating Yourself Fit

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/23 at 08:27

Health
It could be the answer to a health conscious shopper’s prayers. Scientists have devised an at-a-glance guide which rates the nutritional value of food on a scale from one to 100.
Those scoring a perfect 100 – and deemed best for health – include broccoli, blueberries, oranges and green beans.
Dr David Katz, the brains behind the two-year project, said…
…it helped shoppers cut through the reams of conflicting dietary advice.
It uses a series of equations to crunch the nutritional value of each food. Factors taken into account include the protein, fat, sugar, vitamin, fibre and calorie content, as well as salt and cholesterol levels. ‘You’re in the bread aisle and you know that wholegrain bread is more nutritious but…

Full Story: The real good food guide: Simple league table scores nutritional value from 1 to 100; By Fiona Macrae, on Daily Mail

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We Are Taking Food Seriously Again.

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Photography, Special Reports, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/22 at 09:02

The Way We Live Now
OUR RELATIONSHIP WITH food is changing more rapidly than ever, and like many others, I’ve watched in awe. As a food journalist and author for 30 years, my perspective has been unusual: I’ve worked with influential people in the field while remaining in frequent contact with my readers, who are some unknowable percentage of the home-cooking, food-obsessed segment of the public…
…I’ve never been more hopeful. (In fact, I was never hopeful at all until recently.) Each year, each month it sometimes seems, there are more signs that convenience, that mid-20th-century curse word, may give way to quality — even what you might call wholesomeness — just before we all turn into the shake-sucking fatties of “Wall-E.”
We are taking food seriously again.

Full Story: Why Take Food Seriously?; By MARK BITTMAN, on The New York Times

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Melamine Contaminated Edible Sex Accessories

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Special Reports, UK, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/21 at 22:12

World Briefing | Europe
Britain’s food regulator said Monday that several edible sex accessories imported from China and sold in Britain were contaminated with small amounts of melamine…
…The products included…

Full Story: Britain: Now, Not Even Adults Are Safe; By SARAH LYALL, on The New York Times

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Melamine Contaminated Edible Sex Accessories

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Special Reports, UK, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/21 at 22:12

World Briefing | Europe
Britain’s food regulator said Monday that several edible sex accessories imported from China and sold in Britain were contaminated with small amounts of melamine…
…The products included…

Full Story: Britain: Now, Not Even Adults Are Safe; By SARAH LYALL, on The New York Times

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Kabocha Squash Becomes the Centerpiece

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/21 at 10:26

The kabocha squash stands out from its winter squash siblings as it is nuttier and sweeter. Steam, bake or simmer it with onion, sweet corn, celery and carrot in a vegetable broth. Add cinnamon, nutmeg, clove and ginger.
The greatest thing about autumn is the harvest of winter squash – and we’re in high season…
…Inexpensive, nutritious, easy to prepare and filling, butternut, acorn and even spaghetti squashes tend to get the spotlight in the cornucopia. But in recent years, the kabocha squash has started to edge its way into the mainstream. The draw, one chef says, is its subtle nuttiness and delicate sweetness that blends – not overpowers – other vegetables in a warm salad or even a soup…

Full Story: Squash’s flavor, if not name, is now familiar; by LISA DONOVAN, on Sun Times

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The 20 ‘Functional Foods’ You Should Be Eating for a Long and Active Life

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Special Reports, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/20 at 21:01

They are the foods you need for a long and active life – and it will not be much of a surprise that most are fruit and vegetables.
But there are still some everyday pleasures, such as tea, coffee and chocolate, on a list of the foodstuffs which could help you live to a ripe old age.
The 20 types of food and drink have been identified by Gary Williamson, professor of ‘functional foods’ at Leeds University, and…
…he recommends that we should all make them part of our diets.
He has coined the phrase ‘lifespanessential’ to describe the key foodstuffs, all of which contain chemicals called polyphenols.
The chemicals are produced by plants and are known for their antioxidant properties,…

Revealed: The 20 ‘functional foods’ you should be eating for a long and active life; By James Tozer, on Daily Mail

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Breast Cancer and Diet: Is There a Link?

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Special Reports, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/20 at 20:38

Google “breast cancer diet” and you’ll find dozens, if not hundreds, of links to diet plans that claim to reduce your risk of breast cancer. But can the right diet really prevent breast cancer or improve your chance or survival if you have breast cancer?…
…Unfortunately, we just don’t know for sure. One of the most controversial questions is whether or not a low-fat diet reduces the risk of breast cancer. Big population studies suggest that fat consumption is linked to breast cancer risk. That is, populations with higher fat intake have higher breast cancer…

Full Story: Breast cancer and diet: Is there a link?; by Monica Reinagel, on Nutrition Data

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Whole Grains Not the Only Source for Much-Needed Fiber

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/20 at 10:35

A diet with whole grains, such as spelt, teff, kasha and amaranth, can decrease the risk of certain chronic diseases. Sensitive to wheat? Try quinoa. Fruits and veggies, too, can help prevent heart disease and high blood pressure…
…With our grocery dollar shrinking, more of us are motivated to be sure we’re getting the most nutrition for our money.
One important nutritional guideline to remember is to include adequate fiber in your diet to lower the risk of certain chronic diseases.
Who needs how much?
Women younger than age 50 should aim for 25 grams and men 38 grams of fiber daily.

Full Article: Add the right kind of fiber to your diet; by SHIRLEY PERRYMAN, on Coloradoan.com

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Tumeric Yields Sunny Color, Exotic Taste

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, India, Nutrition, Special Reports, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/16 at 10:20

Discovered in China by Marco Polo in 1280 and introduced to the West, turmeric is the spice that makes mustard yellow and often is used in curries. While it colors food much the same as saffron does, tumeric is less expensive and has a bitter, warm, exotic taste…
…I acquired a taste for turmeric early in life. At the time I didn’t have a clue I was eating turmeric. When my age was still in single digits my mother would make a special treat for me – a slice of homemade white bread slathered with yellow mustard and topped with a generous sprinkling of sugar…

Full Story: Tasting Turmeric print this article - Good and good for you, this spice is used more often than you might think; by KARL WELLS, on The Telegram

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Paired with Pears, Pork is Easy on the Waistline

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/16 at 10:15

Healthy and nutritious, pork can be a good choice for those watching their weight if they choose a cut such as tenderloin or a top loin roast or boneless top loin chops. This recipe featuring pear, caramelized onions and rosemary calls for pork chops but would work just as well with medallions of tenderloin or fresh ham eye…
…Pork and fat often seem to go hand in hand, perhaps because bacon, sausage and barbecue are so popular. But don’t let this keep you from considering pork as a healthy choice.
Pork tenderloin mostly gets kudos for its healthful nutritional profile, and for good reason.

Full Story: Despite a fatty image, pork can be a healthy pick; By JIM ROMANOFF, on TheStarPress.com

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Red Corn Isn’t Just Decorative

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/16 at 09:35

Crunchier and more nutritious than its yellow counterpart, edible red corn, or “Indian” corn, mixes well with ingredients that don’t overwhelm its earthy flavor. This recipe calls for the corn to be sprinkled with sugar and sauteed in olive oil and lime juice then topped with salty cotija anejo cheese…
…Notice anything unusual about this corn? It’s real red you’re seeing. That’s no ordinary ear of corn. That’s an ear of edible red corn.
In the U.S. we typically refer to colored corn as “Indian corn” since Native Americans were the first people to grow corn in the New World…

Full Story: Red Corn Recipe With Cilantro And Cotija Anejo Cheese; on eMaxHealth.com

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Farmer in Chief

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/12 at 16:40

The Food Issue
Dear Mr. President-Elect
,
It may surprise you to learn that among the issues that will occupy much of your time in the coming years is one you barely mentioned during the campaign: food. Food policy is not something American presidents have had to give much thought to, at least since the Nixon administration — the last time high food prices presented a serious political peril. …
… Since then, federal policies to promote maximum production of the commodity crops (corn, soybeans, wheat and rice) from which most of our supermarket foods are derived have succeeded impressively in keeping prices low and food more or less off the national political agenda. But with a suddenness that has taken us all by surprise, the era of cheap and abundant food appears to be drawing to a close.

Read: Farmer in Chief; By MICHAEL POLLAN, on The New York Times

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What Exactly do Doctors Mean by a “Healthy Diet”?

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/11 at 18:38

Eating Well
Many of us consider the Mediterranean diet to be the closest thing known to an ideal meal plan, rich in vegetables, fruits, legumes, cereals, fish, olive oil and, yes, a bit of red wine with meals. Compared to traditional American menu — high in red meat and in butter and other dairy products — …
… the Mediterranean diet is lower in saturated fat, more varied and often more satisfying.
Decades worth of research also suggests that this way of eating is healthier. Many studies have documented reduced rates of heart disease and cancer among those adhering to a Mediterranean diet, …

Read: What exactly do doctors mean by a “healthy diet”?; By Peter Libby, M.D.; on The New York Times

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Blood Test Brings Celiac Diagnosis After Years of Miscues

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/11 at 10:25

October is Celiac Awareness Month, and Sarah Sapperstein is a perfect example of why the disease needs more attention – it can take years to get a diagnosis. Sarah often wore braces as for 13 years physicians thought she had everything from lupus and rheumatoid arthritis to …
… Lyme disease and multiple sclerosis. Last year, the 25-year-old walked into to a free blood testing clinic at the University of Chicago and finally found out the truth.

Read: Celiac Disease awareness rises with free testing; by Laura Schocker

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Crack Wise – Think eggs are unhealthy?

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/10 at 21:46

Pity the poor egg: It gets cracked, scrambled, and whipped—not to mention unfairly maligned as the villain of the breakfast world. That’s because there’s a misguided belief that the cholesterol in eggs (found in the yolk) raises the cholesterol levels in your body and puts your ticker at risk. …
… But good news, frittata fans: Research supporting the health bennies of eggs is piling up. And several studies—including a recent one in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that found no link in healthy people between eggs and either heart attack or stroke—have debunked the bad-egg myth. …

Read: Crack Wise – Think eggs are unhealthy? The yolk’s on you.; By the Editors of Women’s Health; on MSN.com

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Sesso e cibo. Mousse di cioccolato e peperoncino

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Chocolate, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/10 at 11:49

Le proprietà afrodisiache del peperoncino in particolare, ma in generale delle spezie – e del cioccolato – sono ben conosciute e legate essenzialmente al processo di “vasodilatazione” con conseguente effetto “stimolante”. …
… Inoltre, ad una concentrazione neppur troppo elevata, è in grado di poter inibire colonie di salmonelle e colibacilli diffusi nelle zone calde e responsabili di malattie intestinali.

Leggi il seguito, con la ricetta: Sesso e cibo | digg story; su Peccati di Gola.eu

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Veggies Aren’t The Only Food Suitable for Pickling

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/09 at 10:32

Chef Peter McCarthy, owner of Evoo restaurant in Massachusetts, likes to go beyond the unexpected when it comes to pickling. From his farmers market finds, he pickles rhubarb, cherries, blueberries, peaches, apples and other fruits. …
… For home cooks, quick or refrigerator pickles are an easy way to give his creations a try, (two recipes included). Late summer and early autumn is pickling time. Cucumbers, green tomatoes, and jalapenos are favorites among enterprising canners, …

Read: Pickled fruit adds flavorful touch to dishes; on the Boston Globe

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Long a Pariah, Lard Making a Comeback

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/08 at 18:48

Although the word “lard” has long been associated with obesity and excess, chefs are starting to put it back to work, spreading it on breads, draping it over meats to be roasted and using it to create the flakiest pastry crust. And as more people learn about the different types of fats, they’re finding out that lard isn’t the menace they’ve been told it is. …
… Few food terms have become as loaded as lard, weighed down by the connotation of excess and enlisted as a prefix in the harshest obesity put-downs. But after a century of slander, the four-letter pork product is undergoing a reputation renaissance.

Read: Loving Lard; by James Temple, San Francisco Chronicle

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Warning Over Chemicals in Curries

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, India, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/07 at 21:37

A quarter of takeaway curries contain illegal levels of potentially harmful chemicals, a study has found.
The survey of 66 takeaways in West Yorkshire found that 27 per cent of them were using illegally high levels of artificial colour. …
… Nearly all the samples were coloured with a cocktail of tartrazine (E102), sunset yellow (E110), ponceau 4R (E124), carmoisine (E122) and allura red (E129).
The Food Standards Agency has called for these colours to be phased out of use because of their effects on children.

Read: Warning over chemicals in curries; on uk.news.yahoo

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Halloween Treats To Enjoy And Avoid

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/07 at 21:15

Giving up the candy isn’t really an option, but choosing and portioning treats wisely can lessen the impact of the calorie-heavy holiday. Every parent is guilty of it: You spend 364 days of the year preaching to your children the importance of eating healthy–and then Halloween rolls around and all bets are off. …
… Not only do we suddenly let our kids indulge in sugary excess, we dip into it ourselves and hand it out to the rest of the neighborhood.
Talk about a mixed message.

Read: Halloween Treats To Enjoy And Avoid, by Allison Van Dusen; Forbes.com Health

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Tofu: Not Just for Veggies Anymore

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/06 at 21:27

Do you tofu?
If there isn’t a block or shred of soybean curd in your refrigerator right now, chances are it crosses your plate only in restaurants, or not at all. Vegetarians, vegans and dietitians know that tofu is high in protein, iron and calcium, has little saturated fat and may help lower cholesterol. …
… More Americans should be enjoying the product, according to one writer, and cookbooks designed to help include Deborah Madison’s “This Can’t Be Tofu!” Plain tofu is mild, easy to cook with and relatively inexpensive, …

Read: Not Just for Vegetarians, Tofu Has Subtle Charms; By Bonnie S. Benwick; on the Washington Post

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Prepared to Be Shocked – Restaurant Nutrition

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/06 at 19:50

Some meals have more than a day’s calories. That’s right, one meal is more than you need all day. Check out your favorite meals at restaurants and, if they are over 500 calories, hunt around for a substitute or eat only half. …
… It really is shocking what restaurants do to otherwise simple meals.

Check this
‘Nutrition Data for Restaurants’, on About.com


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Burger King Switches to Trans Fat Free Oil

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/04 at 23:59

NEW YORK–Burger King Corp. said Thursday it is now cooking with trans fat free cooking oils at all of its restaurants nationwide.
The No. 2 hamburger chain also said all of its menu ingredients, including its baked goods, will contain zero grams of trans fat by Nov. 1. …
… Trans fats are partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. They can raise bad cholesterol and lower healthy cholesterol, increasing the risk of heart disease, according to doctors. Trans fats are used to increase the shelf life of foods and preserve flavor.

Read:
Burger King switches to trans fat free oil; Chicago Sun Sentinel

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Chinese Island’s Cooking Method Makes Its Way Across the World

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/03 at 09:52

Hainanese chicken with rice, a recipe that makes full use of both the chicken and its stock, originated on the Chinese island of Hainan, but it can be found from southeast Asia to Los Angeles, thanks to its intense flavors and simple preparation. …
… GENTLY poaching a chicken and using both the meat and the resulting stock is a venerable and nearly universal cooking practice, but I recently learned a version that has become my favorite.

Read the full article: From a Chinese Island, a Chicken for Every Pot, The Minimalist-By MARK BITTMAN; New York Times

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After a Tough Summer, Tomatoes Still Have a Big Fan

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/02 at 22:39

Despite a salmonella outbreak that dealt the tomato industry a huge blow in June and July, chef Paul Canales of California is celebrating the peak of tomato season with a series of dinners that will use about 1,000 pounds of farmers market tomatoes. Here is one of his recipes. …
… In June and July, growers reported lost fresh-tomato sales of about $40 million, says the United Fresh Produce Association, a trade group for the industry. Even though California tomatoes were quickly excluded from the advisory, the state had a 38% drop in fresh-tomato volume sales in June, …

Read the full article: Tomatoes’ Sweet Comeback, By KATY MCLAUGHLIN; WSJ.com


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Eat Healthfully and Enjoy It!

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/10/02 at 17:47

A healthy lifestyle involves many choices. Among them, choosing a balanced diet or eating plan. So how do you choose a healthy eating plan? Let’s begin by defining what a healthy eating plan is. …
… According to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, a healthy eating plan:
* Emphasizes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and fat-free or low-fat milk and milk products
* Includes lean meats, poultry, fish, beans, eggs, and nuts
* …

Read the full article: Healthy Eating for a Healthy Weight, by Centers for Disese Control and Prevention.gov

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Quiz: Test Your Food-Safety Knowledge

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Biz Tips, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/09/28 at 20:39

Does squeezing a loaf of bread indicate freshness? …
… Knowing basic food safety is important when it comes to preparing meals. Dr. Christine Bruhn, director of the center for food safety research at the University of California, Davis, created a video on food safety for www.monkey see.com. Here’s a quiz based on Bruhn’s video. Answer the following statements true or false.
To Follow: Are you handling food safely? Take this quiz to be sure. The Dallas Morning News

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Mediterranean Diet: “intangible piece of cultural heritage”

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/26 at 17:12

KASTELI, Greece — Dr. Michalis Stagourakis has seen a transformation of his pediatric practice here over the past three years. The usual sniffles and stomachaches of childhood are now interspersed with far more serious conditions: diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol. A changing diet, he says, has produced an epidemic of obesity and related maladies.
Fast Food Hits Mediterranean; a Diet Succumbs; by ELISABETH ROSENTHAL; New York Times

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Mediterranean Diet: “intangible piece of cultural heritage”

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/26 at 17:12

KASTELI, Greece — Dr. Michalis Stagourakis has seen a transformation of his pediatric practice here over the past three years. The usual sniffles and stomachaches of childhood are now interspersed with far more serious conditions: diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol. A changing diet, he says, has produced an epidemic of obesity and related maladies.
Fast Food Hits Mediterranean; a Diet Succumbs; by ELISABETH ROSENTHAL; New York Times

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Heirloom Beans Gain Respect

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/25 at 14:36

An inspiring article by Jane Black,(washingtonpost.com), that writes about Old-Fashioned ‘Heirloom Bean’ varieties and the man that, following ‘his obsession’, founded a bean company and has 15 heirloom varieties on trial, each with their own tastes and textures.

Mr. Steve Sando knows beans. His heirloom varieties are making their way into the pots of America’s most famous chefs, and maybe into yours. You Don’t Know Beans…

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Heirloom Beans Gain Respect

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/25 at 14:36

An inspiring article by Jane Black,(washingtonpost.com), that writes about Old-Fashioned ‘Heirloom Bean’ varieties and the man that, following ‘his obsession’, founded a bean company and has 15 heirloom varieties on trial, each with their own tastes and textures.

Mr. Steve Sando knows beans. His heirloom varieties are making their way into the pots of America’s most famous chefs, and maybe into yours. You Don’t Know Beans…

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Soups – Going back to the basics

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/25 at 10:36

CULINARY NEWS

Soups – Going back to the basics

To clear these misconceptions about making soup: It takes too long, you must use stock, scraps and bones are what make it, and it comes out of a can, you should read what MARK BITTMAN, The Minimalist, writes on the New York Times. It’s Soup: Vegetables, Herbs, Water; included some delicious recipes.

Also, from his archive, a video with some fresh summer soups.

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Basil Could Fight the Effects of Ageing

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, India, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/24 at 20:36

Basil could fight the effects of ageing

Native to India, its extract has long been used in the ancient system of Ayurvedic medicine practised in India and other parts of Asia as a rejuvenation drug.
In the first formal study of the herb, pharmacy researchers found that holy basil extract was effective at protecting against free radicals – cancer-causing chemicals which can attack key organs such as the heart, liver and brain and damage genes and nerve cells. MORE

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Vegetarian = Boring? Try Sattvik, Dakshin: New Delhi Dining

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, India, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Photography, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/24 at 20:18

Vegetarian = Boring?
Try Sattvik, Dakshin: New Delhi Dining
Review by Sam Nagarajan

Forget boring salads, fake sushi rolls and tofu masquerading as meat. In India, vegetarian food holds its own against the best cuisines – think crumb-fried croquettes of banana flowers, potato and coconut in a yogurt and mustard sauce.
Vegetarianism in India has its origins in “ahimsa,” a Sanskrit word for non-violence rooted in the Hindu/Buddhist tenet of compassion, MORE

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Quinoa has distinctive flavor, many nutrients

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/24 at 18:11

Quinoa has distinctive flavor, many nutrients
By Charles Stuart Platkin
Diet Detective

Quinoa is a seed, not a fruit. “It is a seed of the goosefoot plant. The seeds are small, flat and oval, resembling a mix of sesame seed and millet. When cooked, the seed transforms into an interesting shape. The outer germ twists outward to form a small white ‘tail’ that is attached to the kernel. This gives the cooked grain a circular shape,” said Anne VanBeber, Ph.D., R.D., L.D., associate professor and chairman of the nutritional sciences department at Texas Christian University. MORE

Photo: Fran-cis-ca

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8 Food Myths Busted!

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/22 at 18:52

8 Food Myths Busted!
By Joy Bauer, PARADE Magazine

Food myths are created from outdated science, old wives’ tales, and a bit of wishful thinking. They stick around because they are so familiar. But every now and then, you need to take another look at information you believe is true and change with the times. How many of these common myths are still part of your nutrition playbook?

Certain foods can burn fat.
WRONG!
MORE

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6 Food Mistakes Parents Make

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/22 at 18:49


Harriet Worobey, a childhood nutrition instructor, knows firsthand that children can be picky eaters, but even she was surprised by a preschooler last year who ate a mostly chocolate diet.

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5 foods to maximize your muscle power

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/20 at 19:48

5 foods to maximize your muscle power

Want tighter abs or bigger biceps? You need more than a workout program
There is a strong connection between muscle mass and good health, says Robert Wolfe, director of Translational Research in Aging and Longevity at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. “As we age, we tend to lose muscle, especially if we are not using it,” says Wolfe. “These losses eventually affect quality of life, our balance, strength and ability to recover from an illness or accident.” MORE

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10 veggies you should get to know

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/19 at 19:21

10 veggies you should get to know

You may be trying to eat more vegetables, knowing that they’re good for your health. But it’s easy to get in ruts and get burned out when it comes to what we eat.
Are you tired of baby carrots for lunch? Do you feel that you can’t look at another baked potato for a while? MORE

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A mayo clinic: basic homemade mayonnaise

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/13 at 21:21

THE SAUCIER
A mayo clinic: basic homemade mayonnaise
Mel Melcon

SMOOTH COMBINATIONS: A range of flavors can jazz up classic homemade mayonnaise. Add fresh tarragon and stone-ground mustard, top; sprinkle in a pinch of saffron, middle; or spice things up with a purée of roasted piquillo peppers.
With an immersion blender, making basic mayonnaise is easy. Then once you master the original, get creative and spike it with mustard, tarragon, saffron or piquillo pepper. MORE

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Hallucinogenic chocolates doom Berlin sweet shop

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/12 at 19:48

Hallucinogenic chocolates doom Berlin sweet shop

BERLIN (Reuters) – Police closed down a Berlin sweet shop after discovering the owner was selling chocolates and lollipops laced with hallucinogenic mushrooms and marijuana. MORE

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Are Curvy Women More Intelligent?

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/09/06 at 23:16


Women with waists that were about 70 percent of the diameter of their hips scored slightly better on intelligence tests and tended to have a slightly higher level of education than women with a higher waist-to-hip ratio, or WHR.

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Would you eat a clone?

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/06 at 22:40

Would you eat a clone? What about the offspring of a clone? Food companies are sensing that many of us won’t, and are positioning themselves accordingly. A survey conducted by the Center for Food Safety, a group that opposes cloned and genetic engineered food, reports that 20 food companies have pledged that no meat or milk from a clone will end up in their products. Among those companies: giants Kraft Foods, General Mills, Gerber/Nestle and Campbell Soup Co.

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Eating for a Healthy Heart

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/04 at 00:07


Maybe you just came from the doctor’s office. Your cholesterol is a too high, your blood pressure is up, you weigh 30 pounds more than you should and you don’t remember the last time you exercised. How to Reduce Your Risk Factors for Heart Disease With Dietary Changes.

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‘Gender bending’ chemicals found in beer and wine

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/09/02 at 15:08

‘Gender bending’ chemicals found in beer and wine

If you are worried about the potential effects of phytoestrogens in soya, you may also want to avoid several other popular foods and drinks. More

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Want to lose weight? Eat eggs for breakfast

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/31 at 19:33

Want to lose weight? Eat eggs for breakfast
Eating at least two eggs for breakfast helps overweight adults lose more weight and feel more energetic, revealed a new study by an Indian-origin researcher.
Nikhil V Dhurandhar, PhD, lead researcher and associate professor in the laboratory of infection and obesity at Pennington Biomedical Research Center said that eating two eggs in the morning, as part of a reduced-calorie diet, helps in losing 65 per cent weight in overweight people, than those who eat bagel breakfast of equal calories. More

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Make Magic with Mangoes in Salsa and on the Grill with Toasted Coconut

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Sweet News, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/26 at 12:53

If you only know the mango as a smoothie ingredient, you’re missing out. Luscious, sweet, fragrant and full of juice, the mango is a nutritional powerhouse. The fruit is low in calories and high in essential vitamins and antioxidants, and is a good source of dietary fibre. When purchasing mangoes, choose fruits that are relatively free of bruises …

NOTES: ‘Food and Nutrition’
A fruit, originally of Indo-Burmese origin and now grown widely throughout the tropics, Mangifera indica. The fruit is ovoid, 3-5 in (75-120 cm) in diameter, with orange-coloured sweet aromatic flesh surrounding a large central stone. A 150-g portion (one quarter slice) is a rich source of vitamins C and A (as carotene); a source of copper; supplies 75 kcal (320 kJ).

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Keep the oven off and enjoy: Granita, Berries Jubilee and Rose Wine Jelly

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/25 at 13:07


Cool summer dessert recipes from Paris-based chef and blogger David Lebovitz… Wherever you are, even if the oven stays off, it’s still nice to finish backyard barbecues and outdoor dinners with something sweet — a rich espresso granita maybe, or a sophisticated rosé jelly with nectarines and blueberries, or luscious berries jubilee with peach sorbet.

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Keep the oven off and enjoy: Granita, Berries Jubilee and Rose Wine Jelly

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/25 at 13:07


Cool summer dessert recipes from Paris-based chef and blogger David Lebovitz… Wherever you are, even if the oven stays off, it’s still nice to finish backyard barbecues and outdoor dinners with something sweet — a rich espresso granita maybe, or a sophisticated rosé jelly with nectarines and blueberries, or luscious berries jubilee with peach sorbet.

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Vitamin D and Bone Health

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/08/22 at 12:53

Vitamin D is among the most important nutrients for both prevention and treatment of osteoporosis. If you don’t get enough vitamin D, even the most effective drug treatments won’t work as intended.

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The diet that really works

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/22 at 12:44

Bryan Appleyard thinks he has found a diet that really works: it took him three weeks to shed 14lb with healthy ease. But he had to go back 5,000 years to discover the science behind it.

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5 Reasons to Write Down Everything You Eat For a Week

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/21 at 22:42

Quick, what did you eat for lunch on Monday? Ok, stop, you have no idea and neither would I. That’s a problem if you are trying to lose or maintain your weight. How do you know what is causing gains and losses if you aren’t tracking things? If you need to be coerced,consider these reasons why writing down everything you eat for a week will help.

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Are You A Food Addict

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen on 2008/08/20 at 17:02

Are you a food addict? Is there such a thing? What do people mean when they say they’re food addicts? Aren’t we all food addicts? We need to eat to live so… It’s like saying you are addicted to water or sunlight. “Hi, I’m Irene. I’m a water addict.” ” Hi Irene.”Generally, when people say they are food addicts, they mean they have trouble controlling the amounts they eat of certain foods. Most food addicts don’t have a problem with broccoli but they may have a problem with chips, ice cream or cake (for example).

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Nine Salts That Will Spice up Your Life

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/20 at 16:51


One of the latest food trends, according to the American Food Institute’s “what’s hot, what’s not” survey, is something even more basic. Ranking in as the tenth hottest item on their list is our old friend, sodium chloride—a.k.a, salt.

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Tug of War in Food Marketing to Children

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/08/05 at 23:47


The Federal Trade Commission issued a report detailing the pervasiveness of food marketing to children, and a coalition of food companies responded with its own report arguing they had made progress on the issue. The F.T.C.’s report was conducted as part of a Congressional inquiry into rising childhood obesity rates. The F.T.C.’s report was conducted as part of a Congressional inquiry into rising childhood obesity rates. It found that food companies had spent $1.6 billion to market their products to children and teenagers in 2006.

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Ethics of Studies in Poor Countries Lead to Call for New Reg

In Archives, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/08/05 at 23:39

Two researchers from the University of North Carolina are calling for new ways to regulate health surveys.
Even something as apparently innocuous as health surveys can raise tricky moral questions when conducted in poor countries, researchers wrote in this month’s Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
The article, by a bioethicist and a population geographer from the University of North Carolina, calls for new ways to regulate surveys.

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Sorting Out Coffee’s Contradictions

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/08/05 at 23:34


As with any product used to excess, consumers often wonder about the health consequences of caffeine.
Through the years, the public has been buffeted by much misguided information about caffeine and its most common source, coffee. In March the Center for Science in the Public Interest published a comprehensive appraisal of scientific reports in its Nutrition Action Healthletter. Its findings and those of other research reports follow.

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Gordon Ramsay’s exotic salads

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/04 at 12:00


The chef discovers new flavours on holidays that combine into cool and interesting combinations. Three recipes to try…. A holiday abroad is a great time to pick up ideas for new recipes. Nine times out of ten you’ll find me by the sea, wolfing down as much fresh seafood as possible with plenty of salad and vegetable dishes on the side.

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16 Secrets The Restaurant Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/02 at 14:36


A hidden force behind America’s obesity epidemic is the fact that many chain restaurants-which provide one-third of all restaurant meals, according to the New York Department of Health-obfuscate the fat and calorie counts of their menu items, and fight any attempt to shed light on what, exactly, is going on between their buns and inside their taco

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7 Things You Didn’t Know About Fat

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/08/02 at 14:14


Fat is a word that most of us do not want to hear on a regular basis, especially when it relates to our own bodies. We associate fat with growing beer guts, tighter pants, and less-than-ideal sex and social lives. However, fat plays a critical role in many of the processes our bodies go through each and every day, and it has both positive and negative.

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The Skinny on Scallops

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/02 at 13:01

Scallops are low in calories, fat, carbohydrates and cholesterol, so it’s a nutritional crime when they are breaded and deep-fried or drowned in a fat-laden casserole.Health experts recommend eating at least two seafood meals a week as part of a healthful diet. Pleasantly sweet and mild scallops can be a good choice because their flavor has broad appeal even among those who aren’t the big fans of seafood.

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Food Apartheid

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/08/01 at 15:31


The war on fat has just crossed a major red line. The Los Angeles city council has passed an ordinance prohibiting construction of new fast-food restaurants in a 32-square-mile area inhabited by 500,000 low-income people. We’re not talking anymore about preaching diet and exercise, disclosing calorie counts, or restricting sodas in schools. We’re talking about banning the sale of food to adults. Treating French fries like cigarettes or liquor.

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Chef Raises Allergy Awareness

In Archives, Culinary News, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/30 at 15:00

Food allergies can be severe, according to Chef Ming Tsai, host and executive producer of public television’s ”Simply Ming.”To Ming, practicing food safety means requiring all restaurants to train staff on food protection, putting a notice on menus of the customer’s obligation to inform the server about any food allergies and to maintain a list of ingredients used in preparation of each and every food item.His advice to other parents with food allergy-plagued kids: Stop trying to emulate things they can’t eat, and learn how to cook things they can.

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Ever Wonder Why Junk E-Mail Is Called “Spam?”

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Special Reports, UK, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/25 at 23:07

Unsolicited e-mail is known as “spam.” Why is that? The answer goes back to Hormel Foods in 1937, and Monty Python in 1970.Hormel Foods created a canned precooked meat product called SPAM luncheon meat, and since 1937 has sold an astounding six billion cans around the world. The labeled ingredients in its “classic” variety are ham, pork, sugar, .

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Recipes for Health – Fresh Tomato Sauce alla Marinara

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/24 at 22:54

Recipes for Health
Fresh Tomato Sauce

The latest in a series of daily recipes for the health-conscious. Today, a recipe for a quick, simple marinara sauce that will only be good if your tomatoes are ripe. More

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These deviled eggs take comfort food to new heights

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/24 at 22:50


Great deviled eggs require a secret weapon. Something to ensure that every indentation in the tray is emptied in rapid-fire succession, that those creamy little halves are popped into the mouth like so much hot buttered popcorn.

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In dieta con tacchino alla griglia in marinata di arancia

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/24 at 21:45

In dieta con tacchino alla griglia in marinata di arancia di Peccati di Gola

Ingredienti per 4 persone: 400 g. di scaloppine di tacchino, 2 arancie, 1 spicchio d’aglio, 1 grosso pizzico di erbe di Provenza, sale e pepe.

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Photo by: Gaetan Lee

No ambiguity: Lobster is safe, green stuff isn’t

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/23 at 20:08

The intersection of commerce and public health can be a dangerous place.
That was clear last week, when the state issued a warning that eating lobster tomalley could be hazardous to your health. The slimy green stuff, which serves as the lobster’s liver and which some folks love to eat, has recently tested positive for high levels of the toxins caused by red tide algae. And those toxins can, in extreme cases, lead to respiratory failure and death.

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Good News on Saturated Fat

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/23 at 19:30

Should we be reconsidering the conventional wisdom on saturated fat? Yes, according to Gary Taubes’s interpretation of the new report in The New England Journal of Medicine on a two-year diet experiment in Israel. The Israeli researchers found that people on a relatively low-fat diet lost less weight (6 pounds) than those who ate a [...]

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Fish Pedicures: Carp Rid Human Feet of Scaly Skin

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Travel Et Places on 2008/07/22 at 21:56


Fish Pedicures: Carp Rid Human Feet of Scaly Skin

Ready for the latest in spa pampering? Prepare to dunk your tootsies in a tank of water and let tiny carp nibble away. More

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Fish Pedicures: Carp Rid Human Feet of Scaly Skin

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Travel Et Places on 2008/07/22 at 21:56


Fish Pedicures: Carp Rid Human Feet of Scaly Skin

Ready for the latest in spa pampering? Prepare to dunk your tootsies in a tank of water and let tiny carp nibble away. More

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Rise of the ‘Gastrosexual’ as Men Take Up Cooking

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/21 at 21:51


They say that the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach but it seems the dining tables have turned as increasing numbers of men are taking up cooking in a bid to seduce women.

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Against the Grains

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Photography, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/21 at 21:37

Low-carbohydrate and Mediterranean diets outperform low-fat regimen in two-year trial. A new study finds that a low-carb diet results in greater weight loss and better cholesterol readings than a low-fat regimen that promotes a lot of grains and fruits. A Mediterranean diet that incorporates some of each diet yielded results that fell between the

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Gluten-Free Brownies

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Chocolate, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/20 at 18:05


If you like a fudgy brownie, unadorned with any fillers, this recipe is for you. These brownies are adapted from one of the best brownie recipes in the world. These have a crackly top, with a discernible texture as your teeth bite down. And beneath them? Pure, smooth chocolate, as rich as flourless chocolate torte.

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Dehydrated Tomatoes Show Promise For Preventing Prostate Cancer

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/20 at 16:56


New research suggests that the form of tomato product one eats could be the key to unlocking its prostate cancer-fighting potential, according to a report in the June 1 issue of Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

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Regular Walking Protects The Masai – Who Eat High Fat Diet

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/07/20 at 16:14


Scientists have long been puzzled by how the Masai can avoid cardiovascular disease despite having a diet rich in animal fats. Researchers at Karolinska Institutet believe that their secret is in their regular walking.

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Artichoke Leaf Extract Lowers Cholesterol

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/20 at 15:58


Researchers at the University of Reading have found that an over-the-counter Artichoke Leaf Extract (ALE) from the globe artichoke plant can lower cholesterol in otherwise healthy individuals with moderately raised levels. Cardiovascular diseases are the chief causes of death in UK, and are associated with raised levels of total cholesterol.

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Sweet sorbets are a light treat for steamy days

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/18 at 18:59

Master the science of sorbet making, and you can have your fruit and eat it, too. Just about any fruit you can think of, from juicy ripe melon to sweet berries, can be enhanced with a liquid or a liqueur and then frozen. [Simply Delicious!]

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A Fruit with 6X Vitamin C of Oranges & 2X Calcium of Milk

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Sweet News, Travel Et Places, Vegetarian, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/16 at 21:55


It is one of the strangest fruits under the sun and has been revered in Africa for thousands of years. The fruit, which from the outside looks like a coconut, contains six times more vitamin C than oranges and twice as much calcium as milk.

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Sea, Détox and Sun

In Archives, European Cuisine, France, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Travel Et Places on 2008/07/14 at 19:22


Sea, détox and sun

Réconcilier équilibre diététique et dolce vita…, c’est la délicieuse idée de Martine Fallon, qui organise des croisières détox en Turquie. Elle nous offre quatre recettes avant l’embarquement.

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Scientists Learn How Food Affects The Brain: Omega 3 Especially Important

In Archives, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/14 at 13:02

In addition to helping protect us from heart disease and cancer, a balanced diet and regular exercise can also protect the brain and ward off mental disorders.

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Dinner: Takoyaki

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Japan, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/13 at 16:32


Takoyaki are fairly hard to make well, and Tokyoites tend to do a poor job, even takiyaki vendors. The snack is commonly sold from street vendors and small shops as a street food throughout Japan, but it’s mostly people from Osaka who make takoyaki at home and eat it not as a snack, but as a meal.

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Fat or Fiction? Debunking Seven Myths About Cholesterol

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/13 at 15:22


While an unhealthy diet and a sedentary lifestyle contribute to our soaring incidence rate, the problem seems to be compounded by misinformation surrounding the condition. With the help of medical experts we debunk the myths and give you the facts.

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Super-vise Me – Fast Food News

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/12 at 17:46


This month, restaurant inspectors from New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, scourge of both smokers and trans-fat lovers, will add a new violation to their checklist: the failure to display, in large type and directly on the menu board, the calorie counts of every item on the menu.

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Best Japanese Foods You Can’t Get at Home

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Japan, Nutrition, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/11 at 18:18

Even everyday Japanese dishes are exciting–and worth seeking out during a visit to the country. Foreigners who visit Japan think they have a solid grasp of Japanese food before they even set foot in the country: [In the pictures: Tako Yaki, is a golf-ball-sized fritter of octopus (tako) mixed with a potato batter, eggs, onions, pickled ginger and cabbage, with some sweet mayo squirted haphazardly on top.]

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Popular Fish, Tilapia, Contains Potentially Dangerous Fatty Acid Combination

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/11 at 12:04

Science News
Popular Fish, Tilapia, Contains Potentially Dangerous Fatty Acid Combination

The researchers say the combination could be a potentially dangerous food source for some patients with heart disease, arthritis, asthma and other allergic and auto-immune diseases … More

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Salmonella Outbreak Highlights Bioterrorism Concerns

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/07/10 at 17:06

Tomatoes Are Still in Doubt, Jalapenos Are Now Suspect, and Bigger Food Supply Scares Loom. Over 1,000 people in 41 states and Washington D.C. have become sick with the same strain of salmonella poisoning, according to the FDA. The source of the largest food outbreak in a decade has still not been determined and while tomatoes are still considered a potential cause, fresh jalapenos have been added to the suspect list.

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77 Year-Old Granny Beats Up Italian Soldiers

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, Travel Et Places on 2008/07/10 at 12:34

Keiko Wakabayshi, also known as the “Samurai Granny” was hired by the Italian army to teach new soldiers hand to hand combat techniques. But if you think that she is only teaching the methods rather than putting them into practice, think again.

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Perfection? Hint: It’s Warm and Has a Secret

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Chocolate, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/09 at 11:09


Quest for the Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie

The recipe for the consummate chocolate chip cookie builds on decades of acquired knowledge, experience and secrets. TOO bad sainthood is not generally conferred on bakers, for there is one who is a possible candidate for canonization.

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Chocolate Will Be as Expensive as Caviar

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Chocolate, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports, Sweet News, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/08 at 13:22

Chocolate’s bitter sweet relationship with the rainforest

(CNN) — “I think that in 20 years chocolate will be like caviar,” says John Mason, executive director and founder of the Ghana-based Nature Conservation Research Council (NCRC). Chocolate will become so rare and so expensive that the average Joe just won’t be able to afford it.

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Cherries Jubilee by Auguste Escoffier

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, France, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Travel Et Places, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/08 at 12:12

Cherries jubilee to make at home
By Wolfgang Puck

When you have fresh fruit this delicious, you really don’t need to enhance it with too much cooking. Usually, just rinsing it with cool water and putting it in a bowl does nicely. Sometimes, though, it’s fun to do a little bit more to highlight the dazzling color, flavor, and texture, like putting it into a fruit salad, cobbler, or pie. More

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A fabulous outdoor picnic that’s fast, cool and easy

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/07/07 at 20:20


The Fourth of July may have passed, but we’ve still got plenty of picnic season left this summer. To get some insights on outdoor cooking that won’t leave you wanting to nap indoors, we asked Suki Hertz, editorial director of FoodNetwork.com, for some of her favorites.

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Tofu ‘may raise risk of dementia’

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/07/06 at 17:27


Soy products are rich in micronutrients called phytoestrogens, which mimic the impact of the female sex hormone oestrogen. Eating high levels of some soy products – including tofu – may raise the risk of memory loss, research suggests.

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Activia your Gut Instinct

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/03 at 17:44

What health benefits, exactly, is Activia yogurt supposed to offer???
By targeting the female stomach, Activia sales topped $130 million in 2006, a very unusual success for a new food product’s first year. The following year, profits increased by 50 percent.

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Best Foods for Men

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Travel Et Places on 2008/07/03 at 15:29


It’s great to be a hungry man in America
If these dishes haven’t yet crossed your lips as you’ve crossed the country, you’ve got some miles to cover and some joys to behold
By Matt Goulding

From the lobster pounds of Maine to the burrito barrios of San Francisco, our country serves up regional chow that rivals the food of any nation on this planet. More

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Do You Know Where Your Mushrooms Come From?

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/07/02 at 14:47


U.S. law doesn’t require a country of origin label for produce. Although the law will change this fall, a recent trip to a produce wholesale market illustrated the confusion over where produce is grown.
NPR

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Organic farming is increasing. Bad news for the poor.

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/07/01 at 14:51

As global food prices soar, hurting the poor in particular, environmentalists may find organic farming trickier to promote. Organic farming produces far less than conventional intensive methods, so more land must be farmed for the same yield. The Economist

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The 11 Best Foods You Aren’t Eating

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/07/01 at 14:18


The 11 Best Foods You Aren’t Eating

“The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth,” updated list with some favorite foods that are easy to find but don’t always find their way into our shopping carts. More

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L’Ulivo e il Tartufo dei Colli Berici

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/06/30 at 20:07


In pochi conoscono l’olio e il tartufo dei colli Berici, considerati meno nobili rispetto agli stessi prodotti di altre zone d’Italia. Ma vi posso garantire, che anche da queste parti si inizia a fare sul serio. continua

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10 Reasons Why Organic Can Feed the World

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports, Travel Et Places on 2008/06/30 at 13:46


10 reasons why organic can feed the world
Ed Hamer & Mark Anslow

Switching to organic farming would have different effects according to where in the world you live and how you currently farm.
Studies show that the less-industrialised world stands to benefit the most. More

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Insalata di carote e cannella, extralight con gusto

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/06/27 at 17:59

Ingredienti per 4 persone: 200 grammi di carote, 2 cetrioli, 3 arance tardive, 20 grammi di capperi, 1 costa di sedano, olio extravergine di oliva, cannella, sale e pepe.

Segui la Ricetta su PeccatiDiGola.eu

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In Tibet, a worm worth its weight in gold

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/27 at 14:17


In Tibet, a worm worth its weight in gold
By Barbara Demick

What Tibetans call the worm is actually not a worm but a fungus — Cordyceps sinensis, to be precise — that feeds on caterpillar larvae. Or, to give the fungus its more poetic name, “winter worm, summer grass,” because its appearance changes from one to the other with the seasons. More

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In Tibet, a worm worth its weight in gold

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports, Tibet on 2008/06/27 at 14:17


In Tibet, a worm worth its weight in gold
By Barbara Demick

What Tibetans call the worm is actually not a worm but a fungus — Cordyceps sinensis, to be precise — that feeds on caterpillar larvae. Or, to give the fungus its more poetic name, “winter worm, summer grass,” because its appearance changes from one to the other with the seasons. More

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California Introduces Aggressive Plan to Cut Emissions

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/06/27 at 09:57

California will introduce a plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels in 12 years by capping emissions from utilities, requiring more energy-efficient buildings, lowering vehicle emissions, and generating 33% of its energy from renewables.

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Eating Healthy Food When You Travel

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/06/25 at 21:14


With a little bit of effort and willpower, you can navigate your way around the junk food and maintain your healthy diet while on a long road trip. You’ll feel healthier, more alert, and have more fun.

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The prison food that just might be unconstitutionally bad

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/25 at 20:52

Taste-Testing Nutraloaf
The prison food that just might be unconstitutionally bad.
By Arin Greenwood

Nobody thinks prison food is haute cuisine, but could it be so bad it’s unconstitutional? The question comes up more often than you might think, and there’s one dish in particular that so offends the palates of America’s prisoners that it’s repeatedly been the subject of lawsuits: Nutraloaf. More

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The Scoop on Frozen Desserts

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News on 2008/06/20 at 21:08


Nothing beats a sweet and cool treat on a hot summer day. But if you’re watching your weight, these indulgences can pack on unwanted calories and pounds. So what’s the best option when it comes to icy treats?

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The Food of Love

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/06/19 at 14:31

The Food of Love
By James Moore

GUESTS at Coleen McLoughlin and Wayne Rooney’s Italian wedding bash tucked into piles of pizza.
Perhaps they didn’t realise this was a health choice, but experts at the Mario Negri Institute for Pharmaceutical Research in Milan found it can protect against cancer. Full Story
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Choosing cooking oils

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/06/16 at 19:03

Choosing cooking oils
Posted by Colette Cope

Before you use an oil, ask yourself several questions. Are you going to be cooking it at high temperature or tossing it on a salad? Are you consuming it strictly for its health properties? Do you want the flavor to stand out in the dish? Full Story

Photo by
fdecomite

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Vegan babies

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/06/16 at 17:20

Vegan babies
Q&A: the Times nutritionist answers your questions
Amanda Ursell

The Vegan Society has published a very good book entitled Feeding Your Vegan Child (£9.99), written by the dietitian Sandra Hood. In it, she reveals how parents, infants and children can thrive on a diet that avoids completely all animal products, including meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy foods, honey and by-products of animals such as gelatin. Full Story
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Save money by freezing summer’s best fruits and vegetables

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Sweet News, Vegetarian on 2008/06/15 at 09:44

Save money by freezing summer’s best fruits and vegetables
State fair winners offer tips on this easy alternative to canning
By KIM PIERCE

With the cost of food and gasoline squeezing most budgets, preserving peak-of-season fruits and vegetables is looking smart. And freezing is easier than canning. Full Story
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That Buzz in Your Ear May Be Green Noise

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic on 2008/06/14 at 22:54

That Buzz in Your Ear May Be Green Noise
By ALEX WILLIAMS

An environmentally conscientious consumer is left to wonder: are low-energy compact fluorescent bulbs better than standard incandescents, even if they contain traces of mercury? Which salad is more earth-friendly, the one made with organic mixed greens trucked from thousands of miles away, or the one with lettuce raised on nearby industrial farms? Should they support nuclear power as a clean alternative to coal? Full Story
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The dirt on detox diets

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/06/14 at 21:27

The dirt on detox diets
By Terri Coles

TORONTO (Reuters) – Oprah Winfrey does it — and even blogs about it. As more celebrities jump on the detox bandwagon, it’s also catching on with the general public. But some medical professionals say these body cleansing diets are not only unnecessary, they can be dangerous. Full Story
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Slimming Japan

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Japan, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/13 at 16:33

Slimming Japan
Slide Show

Japan has undertaken one of the most ambitious campaigns ever by a nation to slim down its citizenry. Full Story
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Vitamin D: Boning up on the sunshine vitamin

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/12 at 22:48

Health
Vitamin D: Boning up on the sunshine vitamin

Imagine incorporating an inexpensive, single supplement into your life that forces you to get a little sunshine and promises to strengthen your bones, thwart different forms of cancer, stave off multiple sclerosis and autoimmune disorders and fight infections. Full Story
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Size 12 woman told she was too big by model agencies will compete for Miss England title

In Archives, European Cuisine, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, UK on 2008/06/12 at 22:08

Size 12 woman told she was too big by model agencies will compete for Miss England title
By Daily Mail Reporter

An aspiring model who was rejected by leading model agencies for being a size 12 has beaten 200 other girls to be crowned Miss London. Full Story
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Banking on Gardening

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Photography, Special Reports on 2008/06/11 at 23:56

Banking on Gardening
By MARIAN BURROS

CASSANDRA FEELEY prefers organic ingredients, especially for her baby, but she finds it hard to manage on her husband’s salary as an Army sergeant. So this year she did something she has wanted to do for a long time: she planted vegetables in her yard to save money.
“One organic cucumber is $3 and I can produce it for pennies,” she said. Full Story
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Another Failure on Climate Change

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/06/11 at 23:44

Editorial
Another Failure on Climate Change

The most obvious lesson to be learned from the Senate’s failure to mount any sort of grown-up debate on climate change last week is that the country needs a new occupant in the White House. Full Story
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IS THERE A QUICK WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT?

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen on 2008/06/11 at 12:16

IS THERE A QUICK WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT?

TELLY host Fern Britton caused an outcry when she confessed her new slimline figure wasn’t only down to diet and exercise but a special gastric band fitted to stop hunger. Full Story
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Links between policy and organic farming in Europe

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/06/10 at 14:57

Links between policy and organic farming in Europe

Each EU Member State has its own way of dealing with the conflict between environmental consideration and economic growth, and that this is of immediate importance to the implementation of the environmental policy. Organic farming regulations may be considered environmental standards, triggering a unique conflict between organic and conventional farming in each Member State, expected to influence the policy directly. More …
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Good and Healthy – Bon et Sain, [FR]

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Cooking Tips, European Cuisine, Food Guide, France, Healthy Kitchen, India on 2008/06/08 at 12:27

Madame Figaro
Bon et sain
Une cuisine inspirée, des aliments vitaminés, des astuces pour manger plus de fruits et de légumes…, c’est pas si compliqué de se faire du bien !
par Nathalie Bouvard

LA CUISINE DU BONHEUR
Inspiré de l’ayurvéda, médecine ancestrale qui prône la spiritualité, cet ouvrage nous entraîne, à travers 60 recettes légères, inventives et raffinées, à vivre une expérience presque philosophique de la cuisine, liée à nos émotions. L’auteur, Florence Pomana,
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Four Foods You Should Be Eating to Stay Slim

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/05 at 19:46

BY THE NUMBERS
Four Foods You Should Be Eating to Stay Slim
Keeping those extra pounds off is even tougher than losing them in the first place. Here’s what to stock in your fridge so your weight doesn’t creep back up.
By Temma Ehrenfeld

About 70 percent of dieters report that they regain their lost pounds, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. The good news is that bucking the trend and staying slim doesn’t mean starving. In fact, one issue may be the foods dieters don’t eat. If your weight keeps yo-yoing up and down, the problem may be that you’re not eating enough of these four food groups (sorry—sugary, fried and fatty foods still aren’t recommended): More …
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Fast Food Goes Organic

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic on 2008/06/04 at 21:32

Fast Food Goes Organic
High Noon Sale Reflects Growing Appetite for Quick, Healthy Eateries
By Michael S. Rosenwald

The history of the demand for organic food starts where you would expect: at a little farm in the country, with a farmer picking his way through his field.
That’s nice and quaint, but not business for the masses. Co-ops brought the food to more people. More …
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Do Organic Cotton Jeans Just Have Better DNA?

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/06/03 at 20:58

Do organic-cotton jeans just have better DNA?

The Bite
YY, yes they do. Tons of designers are adapting their denim lines by bringing Earth-friendly fabrics into the mix. Check ‘em out, and watch your wardrobe evolve. More …
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Mediterranean Eating

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/06/03 at 17:57

Mediterranean Eating: A Delicious Way to Promote Your Health
By Sally Squires

Fresh fruit and vegetables, whole grains, fish, olive oil and wine are the makings of a great meal, and they may also be the prescription to help prevent Type 2 diabetes.
A large new study published in the journal BMJ finds that people who adhered closely to a traditional Mediterranean diet, which is also low in meat and dairy products, had “substantial protection” against Type 2 diabetes. More …
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Childhood Obesity Numbers

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/06/02 at 11:46

The Childhood Obesity Numbers

It is a sad commentary on the health of American youngsters that we are cheering a leveling off of childhood obesity rates. Far too many children and teenagers are still overweight.
Tens of millions of young people will be at risk of illness and death unless this country commits to reversing, not just stabilizing, the epidemic. More …
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Can a Strawberry Be Savory?

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News on 2008/05/29 at 23:46

Can a Strawberry Be Savory?
Washington Post

A big shout-out to the strawberry, who’s back in town and making Washington area farm markets a little more gorgeous.
A member of the rose family, the strawberry is unlike her other berry brethren, as she’s the only one that keeps her seeds in full view, on the skin. Of all the berry options to come our way this summer, More …
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U.S. Agencies Must Talk to Boost Food Safety

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/05/27 at 10:44

U.S. Agencies Must Talk to Boost Food Safety: Study
By Christopher Doering

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. federal agencies must do a better job of sharing information with each other as well as state, local and private organizations to combat deadly bacteria such as E. coli that threaten thousands of people each year, More …
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Deceiving Diet Menus

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/05/27 at 10:33

Deceiving Diet Menus
By Annie Bell Muzaurieta
The DailyGreen.com

Beware When Opting for “Healthier” Fare; You Might Be Getting More Calories and Fat Than You Ordered
Several TV stations conducted an investigation of dishes touted as healthy at popular chain restaurants, according to Good Morning America. The results were not appetizing. More …
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Harvard’s New Food Pyramid

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/05/25 at 11:50

Harvard’s New Food Pyramid
Posted by Elizabeth Cooney
Boston.com

Remember when the government revised its food pyramid three years ago, only to confuse Americans with its 12 versions and staircase on the side?
The people at the Harvard School of Public Health certainly do. They set out to create a guide to good nutrition that uses the familiar pyramid shape but incorporates current research findings in a more straightforward way. More …
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Brown Rice Wins FDA Health Claim

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/05/24 at 11:19

Brown Rice Wins FDA Health Claim
By Shane Starling
Food Navigator

Brown rice has been added to the FDA-approved list of whole grains that may make health claims including reducing the risk of heart disease and some cancers.
Brown rice, along with many other grains was prewviously excluded because its dietary fiber content was considered too low, but this requirement has been relaxed.
The health claim means brown rice products will be able to bear a whole grains logo and information pointing out the benefits of consuming whole grains. More …
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Putting and End on Mindless Munching

In Archives, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen on 2008/05/23 at 11:13

HEALTH JOURNAL
Putting and End on Mindless Munching
Melinda Beck
Wall Street Journal

First, ask yourself how hungry you are, on a scale of 1 (ravenous) to 7 (stuffed).
Next, take time to appreciate the food on your plate. Notice the colors and textures.
Take a bite. Slowly experience the tastes on your tongue. Put down your fork and savor.
“Most people don’t think about what they’re eating — they’re focusing on the next bite,” More …
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Veggie Pride Parade

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Special Reports, Vegetarian on 2008/05/20 at 10:48

Veggie Pride Parade Humanely Devours Manhattan
The Gothamist

New York’s Veggie Pride Parade wound through downtown Manhattan yesterday, stretching from its defiant start in the Meat Packing District to its triumphant conclusion at the Washington Square Park. The event, intended to raise awareness about the benefits of a vegetarian and More …
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Asparagus – Power Food

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/05/19 at 21:20

Power Foods:
Asparagus
MarthaStewart.com

For such a small vegetable, asparagus demands a whole lot of patience. After all, the plant needs to grow for at least three years before you can harvest it. But the wait is always worth it, because in early spring, a time of year when very few green things emerge from the ground, the roots send up shoots that can reach up to 7 inches in as little as a day. More …
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Herb Infusion Adds Pizzazz to Chocolate

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Chocolate, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News on 2008/05/14 at 11:07

Herb Infusion Adds Pizzazz to Chocolate
Pioneer Local

The subtle infusion of herbs has long been the secret ingredient to many favorite entrees, but this timeless trend has evolved and can add an unexpected twist of flavor to desserts and beverages, too.
From rosemary to green tea to fresh mint infusions, the process of extracting flavor from herbs is a great way to spark new life into traditional recipes.
Here are a few tips to infuse flavor into culinary creations by way of household herbs: More …
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Chocolate ‘May Cut Diabetes Risk’

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News on 2008/05/13 at 12:56

Chocolate ‘May Cut Diabetes Risk’
BBC.com

Scientists are to investigate whether eating chocolate can reduce the risk of heart disease in women with diabetes.
Volunteers – postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes – will be asked to eat a bar of chocolate a day for a year.
Cocoa is rich in compounds called flavonoids, which are thought to benefit the heart.
The University of East Anglia is using a specially formulated form of chocolate which contains more flavonoids than usual. More …
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Genetically Modified Crops, The Consequences

In Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/05/12 at 11:42

The Consequences of Genetically Modified Crops for Organic Farming in Denmark
Gösta Kjellson, NERI and Birte Boelt, DIAS
Darcof.dk

A report from DARCOF analyses the potential risks of plant biotechnology development for organic production in Denmark. The main objective is to compile existing knowledge concerning the effects of genetically modified plants (GMP) and crops in order to propose concrete measures to avoid or to minimize the risks of GM-contamination.
The work leading to the report has been carried out by a group of experts with experience in organic farming, agricultural production, regulation and control, plant biology, plant biotech, modelling and risk assessment of ecological, agricultural and toxicological effects of GMP. More …
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Misguided Efforts to Promote Food Safety

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/05/11 at 19:22

Habitat Destruction Driven by Misguided Efforts to Promote Food Safety
by Chuck Benbrook
Photos by the Wild Farm Alliance
The Organic Center

The Wild Farm Alliance has compiled a shocking series of photographs that capture the tragic events unfolding in and around California’s Salinas Valley in the name of food safety.
It takes no more than five minutes to look at the series of photos in the file posted below. Warning — these pictures will leave you outraged and saddened. More …
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Misguided Efforts to Promote Food Safety

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic, Special Reports on 2008/05/11 at 19:22

Habitat Destruction Driven by Misguided Efforts to Promote Food Safety
by Chuck Benbrook
Photos by the Wild Farm Alliance
The Organic Center

The Wild Farm Alliance has compiled a shocking series of photographs that capture the tragic events unfolding in and around California’s Salinas Valley in the name of food safety.
It takes no more than five minutes to look at the series of photos in the file posted below. Warning — these pictures will leave you outraged and saddened. More …
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Fruit Soups With a Kick

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Sweet News on 2008/05/10 at 11:35

Recipes:
Fruit Soups With a Kick
BY ROSEMARY BLACK
New York Daily News

The hottest cold fruit soups this spring feature a little extra kick, an unexpected flavor to enhance and enrich the other ingredients and to surprise the taster.
It could be a pinch of pepper, or some shallots, or even a splash of red wine that cuts the sweetness and adds some depth to everything from berries to melon. If you try making these soups at home – and you definitely should – keep a light hand and remember, a little goes a long way when it comes to adding savory seasonings. More …
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Is It Better to Eat Locally or Eat Differently?

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/05/10 at 11:10

Environment
Is It Better to Eat Locally or Eat Differently?

Talk of the Nation, May 9, 2008 · When it comes to greenhouse gas emissions, what you eat may be more important than where that food comes from. A new study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology indicates that replacing the calories from red meat and More …
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Slim Chances for Weight Loss

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/05/10 at 10:57

[Ever heard of a lip gloss that promises to help shed pounds while plumping your pout? Follow the link because there is more to read ...]

Slim Chances for Weight Loss
By NICOLE LYN PESCE
New York Daily News

With bikini season looming on the horizon, many women are turning to drastic measures to get their bods beach-ready. But when your trusty magazines feed you sketchy slimming tricks like “stop swallowing air,” what’s a woman to believe?
“I always tell my clients that if any of this actually worked, it would be the cover story everywhere,” says Betty Kovacs at the New York Obesity Research Center’s Weight Loss Program in St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital. More …
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Aromas Are Emotionally Charged

In Archives, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/05/10 at 09:57

Aromas Are Emotionally Charged
By Karin Welzel
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW

Areas of the brain that handle emotions and memories are intricately tied to aromas and smells, a reason why one person will be brought to tears when served a plate of food like Mom used to make — and another will turn away.
“Smells are strongly linked to emotional memories,” says Leslie J. Stein of the science communications department at Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. “Most of our responses to smells are learned, More …
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Hotel Chefs Embrace Local, Organic Food Trend

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic on 2008/05/09 at 13:36

Hotel Chefs Embrace Local, Organic Food Trend
By Kelly Carter
USA TODAY

An increasing number of hotels are touting restaurants that offer organic and locally grown foods, much in the same way they would promote pillow-top mattresses and in-room wireless Internet.
Blue on Blue, a poolside restaurant at the Avalon Hotel in Beverly Hills, celebrates Earth Day next week with a $55 prix fixe menu showcasing organic and sustainable food from local farms, paired with flights of biodynamic and organic wines for another $25. Early risers can enjoy the Beverly Hills Breakfast, consisting of fresh fruit, bee pollen, wildfire honey, an organic muffin and banana soy smoothie.
How California. But hotels eager to please health-conscious and environmentally aware diners stretch beyond the Golden State. More …
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Fines Herbes: Spring’s Zesty Fab Four

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, France, Healthy Kitchen, Photography on 2008/05/06 at 21:38

COOKING
Fines herbes: Spring’s zesty fab four
By Regina Schrambling
Los Angeles Times

CONSIDERING France is the country that gave the world the expression ménage à trois, it’s probably not surprising that cooks there have defined ways to use herbs in multiples too. Three of these brilliant combinations will make cooking more enticing any day of the year, but one of them could not be better suited to this season: fines herbes.
Herbes de Provence, typically thyme, rosemary, lavender and bay leaves, are the essence of summertime cooking, More …
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Cookbook Helps Us Leave Obesity in Our Dust

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/05/06 at 21:23

RECIPE:
Pork sauté helps you walk away from fat
Cookbook helps us leave obesity in our dust
By JENNIE GEISLER
Erie Times News

If you’ve never heard of the Walk from Obesity, tune in now.
The walk is an annual event that takes place nationwide in September and October, though not in Erie yet; the closest takes place in Cleveland.
It’s designed to raise money for programs that serve people affected by obesity. The event has raised more than $2.3 million to fuel the fight between Americans and fat. More …
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Master Chef’s Indian Cuisine Sans Grease

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Ayurveda, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, India, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/05/06 at 10:50

Love for food: Master chef’s Indian cuisine sans grease
Indo-Asian News Service(New Delhi):

Indian food has never been lighter. Imagine a full-course desi meal without a drop of oil. For palates bred on lard and dollops of fatty cooking oil, the idea of food that has not been sauted or lightly fried seems a tad strange.
But master chef Sitangsu Chakravarty has pulled off a miracle. His latest cookbook, No Added Fat: Recipes Redefining Indian Cuisine, lists 81 recipes – vegetarian, non-vegetarian and desserts – that have done away with oil from the list of ingredients. More …
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Safe Fugu?

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Japan, Nutrition, Photography, Special Reports on 2008/05/04 at 19:05

If the Fish Liver Can’t Kill, Is It Really a Delicacy?
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
The New York Times

SHIMONOSEKI, Japan — Poison has been as integral to fugu, the funny-looking, potentially deadly puffer fish prized by Japanese gourmands, as the savor of its pricey meat. So consider fugu, but poison-free.

Thanks to advances in fugu research and farming, Japanese fish farmers are now mass-producing fugu as harmless as goldfish. Most important, they have taken the poison out of fugu’s liver, considered both its most delicious and potentially most lethal part, More …
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Diary of a Celiac

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/04/30 at 00:48

Diary of a celiac
A foodie discovers she’s allergic to gluten – and it’s hidden in french fries, ice cream, and other unlikely places
By Louisa Kasdon
Boston Globe

I was always the one with the cast-iron stomach. I could eat everything, travel everywhere, and sample it all. I might pass on the sauteed sheep’s eyeballs in Marrakech, or the mystery meat stew offered to me in a village in southwestern Mali, but that was just squeamishness. Every once in a while, I’d pick up a bug, a little intestinal something from my more exotic travels, and I’d use the three-day course of antibiotics I carried in my travel kit. It worked like a charm. Until a year ago. More>>
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Becoming a ‘Locavore’

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic on 2008/04/30 at 00:22

Organic gardening: Groundbreaking way to become a ‘locavore’
By Kathy Stephenson
The Salt Lake Tribune

Whether it is the recent meat recalls, the use of pesticides on mass-produced vegetables or simply the rising cost of shipping food, people all across America and in Utah are embracing the idea of “eating local.”
One way to become a “locavore” – which happens to be the newest word in the dictionary – is to shop at a farmers market. Another option is to sign up with a Utah farmer and participate in a Community Supported Agriculture program. More>>
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Change is Good for Heavy Recipes

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/28 at 15:33

HEART SMART™
Change is good for heavy recipes

If you’re concerned that your favorite cookbooks are anything but heart-friendly, have no fear. A few simple ingredient modifications can turn a heart hazardous recipe into a Heart Smart delight.
Advertisement

Changing ingredients to lower the fat, cholesterol or sodium content of a recipe is easy.

• Substitute puréed fruit such as applesauce or mashed bananas for some or all of the oil in quick bread and muffin recipes. Replace the cream in pumpkin pie with evaporated skim milk. Or try reduced-fat mayonnaise in a recipe for chicken salad. More>>
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Doctors Get a Crash Course in Healthful Cooking

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/04/24 at 22:19

Your Health
Doctors Get a Crash Course in Healthful Cooking
by Allison Aubrey
npr.com

A dinner of salmon and arugula might sound like an appealing meal, but for many people, what winds up on the table is more along the lines of frozen pizzas or taquitos.

Chefs at the Culinary Institute of America would like to help Americans learn to eat better — and they’re starting with a key group of diners. Through a collaboration with Harvard University’s medical school, the chefs and at least one med student are training doctors to cook. More>>
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Camembert Wars Get Dirty in Fight for France’s Soul

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, France, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/23 at 13:15

Camembert wars get dirty in fight for France’s soul
Said to smell like God’s feet, France’s favourite soft cheese is at the heart of a battle pitting small farmers against the corporations
Angelique Chrisafis in Camembert
Guardian.co.uk

In his tiny workshop with a view of his cows, Francois Durand stood lovingly ladling raw milk curd into cheese moulds. After several weeks of salting, ripening and maturing, these would turn into the pungent, oozing Camembert that is France’s favourite soft cheese – as much part of the national stereotype as the Basque beret, the baguette and a glass of red wine.

“When you use raw, unpasteurised milk, the taste is nice and fruity,” Durand mused as he inspected the smelly contents of his ripening rooms. “You can taste what the cows have been eating at different times of year.” more>>
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Herb-Infused Oils Boost Taste and Health

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/23 at 12:57

Herb-infused oils boost taste and health
Add kick to your cooking – and your health – by using herb-infused oils for pasta, salads, or even a stress-relieving massage
By Jeff Schnaufer
CTW Features
Mail Tribune.com

Feeling run down? Maybe it’s time you changed your oil. Herb-infused oil, that is.

Mixing herbs with oils is nothing new, but combining them in creative ways — from aromatherapy to cooking — is a new twist you won’t want to miss.

“It’s very interesting what you can do with herb-infused oils,” says Elaine Shaughnessy, vice chair of the Herb Society of America. “It’s really only limited by your imagination.”

Rhavda Emison, owner of Scents of Success in Arlington, Texas, says dried and fresh herbs can be mixed with a variety of oils for a multitude of healing purposes. more>>
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Cauliflower Power

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports, UK on 2008/04/23 at 00:06

UK
Cauliflower power
They’re healthy, delicious and cheap — so why is one of our favourite vegetables an endangered species?
by Fiona Sims
Times Online


Instead of your lovingly raised British cauliflower, grown in our trace-element-rich chalky soils (they love a bit of chalk), wet with morning dew (in farmers’ markets, at least), soon we might be able to buy only bland varieties, shrink-wrapped and chilled to within an inch of their lives, transported from Thailand or Guatemala. A crying shame, for sure, but a cauliflower funeral – a bit dramatic, isn’t it?

“It’s metaphor for what’s happening across the food sector in this country. more>>
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Mainstream Food Firms Get Proactive About Probiotics

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/22 at 17:19

Mainstream Food Firms Get Proactive About Probiotics
By Sally Squires
Washington Post

How about having some bugs with your breakfast cereal?
That’s the idea behind the growing nutritional trend of eating food with probiotics — friendly bacterial strains that may help thwart an array of conditions from allergies, asthma and eczema to gastrointestinal ailments.

The potential for probiotics is huge, since their use seems to have virtually no side effects. Exploiting friendly microbes also fits with the trend to promote health and treat conditions with fewer prescription medications.

So it should be no surprise to see probiotics turning up in breakfast cereals, yogurt, beverages and cheese. (See the box at right.) And they’re not just relegated to the dusty corners of health food aisles. more>>
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Safeway Restricts Purchases of Chilean Salmon

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/04/18 at 22:12

Safeway Restricts Purchases of Chilean Salmon
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO
The New York Times

Safeway, among the largest supermarket chains in the United States, has restricted some purchases of farm-raised Chilean salmon over concerns about a virus that is killing millions of fish there.

The supermarket chain decided late last month to stop buying from its supplier of Chilean salmon, Marine Harvest, because the virus for infectious salmon anemia, or I.S.A., was “impacting the quality of the product,” Brian Dowling, a Safeway spokesman, said this week. Mr. Dowling said the virus, which does not pose a risk to humans, was nevertheless affecting the size of the salmon, “which impacts the quality and the taste.” continue>>
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The Lighter Side of Passover

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Jewish Et Kosher Cuisine, Non-Regional Cuisines on 2008/04/16 at 17:46

FOOD / DINING
The lighter side of Passover
By ROSEMARY BLACK
New York Daily News

Julie Negrin, culinary director of the JCC in Manhattan, wasn’t surprised when a recent “light and healthy” Passover class sold out.

“After two heavy meat meals at the start of Passover, I think that people want to cook a little lighter,” Negrin says. “I give them ideas for dishes that are a little inventive, a little creative.”

And a little untraditional, too. In her holiday cooking, Negrin makes liberal use of ingredients like quinoa, pumpkin seeds and turmeric. Kosher for Passover yogurt also turns up in many of this chef’s dishes. continue>>
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Celebrate Earth Day with Food

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Special Reports on 2008/04/16 at 17:07

Celebrate Earth Day with food
By ROSEMARY BLACK
New York Daily News

What will you do when you wake up on Earth Day on April 22?
Eat an organic banana, drink a cup of shade-grown coffee, and use a travel mug (not a polystyrene disposable cup). After breakfast, think about what you can do to help the planet on a larger scale, like working with local retailers to stop stocking plastic grocery bags (they take 1,000 years to completely degrade), learning more about the household cleaners that contain toxins, and breaking the bottled water habit (and helping build political support to improve public drinking water.) continue>>
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Celebrate New Season

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/04/14 at 20:50

Spring Entertaining: Keeping It Simple
by Georgeanne Brennan
San Francisco Chronicle

Giving a dinner party to celebrate the new season is one of my favorite things to do. In spring, letting the young, tender produce take center stage makes for easy entertaining menus.

Spring is the season of early growth, when soil moisture combined with the increasing day length and rising temperatures encourages perennials such as rhubarb, artichokes and asparagus to send forth tender stalks and buds. Favas and peas are flowering and setting their first tender pods. The young carrots are sweet, the radishes crunchy and crisp. Green garlic is available for only a few weeks, before the bulbs fill more>>
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Greek Revival – Food: The Way We Eat

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/14 at 10:27

Food: The Way We Eat
Greek Revival
By JILL SANTOPIETRO
The New York Times

In 1942, when Dannon introduced its yogurt in America, the product was such a flop that by 1947, the company began adding fruits and sugar to its tart, European-style cultured milk. “Americans wanted candy,” said Gary Hirshberg, a founder and the “C.E.-Yo” of Stonyfield Farm, a yogurt company in Londonderry, N.H.

And for decades that’s exactly what we got — a sweet snack food. Only recently have we finally become smitten by thick, plain yogurts, like those traditionally made in parts of Europe, the Middle East and India. more>>
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Good Ol’ Nutmeg

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Caribbean, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines on 2008/04/14 at 08:42

JAMAICA
Good ol’ nutmeg
by Francesca Carpenter
Jamaica Gleaner

Nutmeg (myristica fragrans) is firmly rooted in Jamaican cuisine and unique among the spice plants. Nutmeg is used as two spices; the seed is dried and used in powdered form while the outer fleshy network is also dried and ground, producing the spice known as mace.

Nutmeg is one of the oldest spices and, along with pepper and cloves, has been cultivated for over 1,000 years. The nutmeg tree can grow up to 70 feet.

Medicinal uses
The health benefits of nutmeg oil includes its ability to treat stress, pain, more>>
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Salad Time!

In Americas Cuisines, Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Vegetarian on 2008/04/13 at 20:38

Salad from the ground up
By Valerie Usowski
The Citizen, Auburn, (NY)

Warm weather is approaching and what better time to get reacquainted with our gardens and produce sections. After a winter of carb laden comfort foods, we can transition into lighter, healthier fare.
Salads have become more popular and have moved from the side dish category to the main entree. Salads can be separated into two groups; mixed or composed.

A mixed salad is just as you would expect, mixed greens and vegetables tossed with a dressing like a Caesar. A composed salad is a tad bit more complex. The composed salad usually has a selection of cooked meats, boiled eggs, cooked potatoes or cheeses and is arranged in a very appetizing manner; think a Cobb salad.

To make a great salad, either mixed or composed, we need to understand the building blocks that really make it great. The main component of any salad are the greens. Base lettuces such as the mild crispy iceberg, slightly bitter elongated romaine or the soft buttery butterhead (Boston and Bibb) lend to the direction of flavor/texture of the intended result. Greens should be crisp and tightly layered with a good green color. more>>
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Blueberries Aid Memory Pathways

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/04/13 at 20:20

Health
Study: Blueberries aid memory pathways
United Press International

PLYMOUTH, England, April 11 (UPI) — British researchers say blueberries added to the diet improved spatial working memory by the third week. more>>
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A Nutty Idea for Protecting Our Heart

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Special Reports on 2008/04/12 at 21:49

A nutty idea for protecting your heart
By Euggle Robertson
Chillicothe Gazette, Ohio

Picture this: an all-natural, no additives, organic food that may help prevent heart attack, reduce cholesterol, decrease risk for heart disease, and rein in your appetite.
Oh yes, and it actually tastes good. Sound a little nutty?
Actually, it is. Almonds, to be exact.

The nut that once was considered a high-fat, off-limits indulgence to serious nutritionistas is now enjoying a dietary comeback of Hollywood proportions. The past five years have produced study after study uncovering the same results: a handful of these little babies may be just what the doctor ordered.

Canadian researchers determined a small handful of dry-roasted almonds could help lower patients’ LDL (low-density lipoprotein), or bad cholesterol. The American Heart Association, which recommends eating a balanced diet loaded with fruits, vegetables and whole grains accompanied by low-fat dairy, fish and lean meats, says because almonds don’t have cholesterol in them, they are a good protein source. They do caution, however, more>>
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Tofu Meets Its Match

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Healthy Kitchen on 2008/04/11 at 14:36

A Good Appetite
Tofu Meets Its Match in a Dish Fit for Carnivores
By MELISSA CLARK
The New York Times.com

THE closest I ever got to becoming a vegetarian was living with one in college. Seth was an inspired cook. He could work magic with ingredients as unlikely as canned beans and iceberg lettuce bought at the bodega on our deserted corner in Williamsburg.

When he did procure prime ingredients — fresh tofu from Chinatown, for example — the variations were legion and sublime. Poached, stewed, braised, wok-fried or baked: in Seth’s hands, tofu was good enough to make me forget that I hadn’t eaten bacon in months.

Then one day, a carnivorous friend came to dinner. more>>
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Organic To Go Delivers Pizza

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic on 2008/04/11 at 13:11

Restaurant News
Organic To Go Delivers Pizza
QSR Magazine.com

2008-04-10 — To satisfy organic enthusiasts’ hunger, Organic To Go, the nation’s first fast-casual cafe chain to be certified as an organic retailer, is launching Pizza Organico, a new line of organic stone-hearth pizzas.

Adding to Organic To Go’s extensive corporate catering offerings, organic pizza delivery commenced yesterday to Seattle, Bellevue, and Redmond, Washington, catering customers. more>>
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Wrapping Food

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Photography on 2008/04/10 at 14:33

The Minimalist
Quickly and Easily, a Touch of Elegance
by Mark Bittman
NewYorkTimes.com

MOSTLY I play down elegance — it’s too complicated and fussy for most home cooks to bother with — but occasionally I’m surprised at how easily it can be achieved. That was the case a couple of weeks ago when I decided to try to mimic a restaurant-style dish that resembles stuffed cabbage but contains far fewer ingredients and can be put together in less than half an hour.

That dish is fish wrapped in romaine lettuce leaves (or more>>
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Is Cuisine Still Italian Even if the Chef Isn’t?

In Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Photography, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/04/08 at 20:19

Is Cuisine Still Italian Even if the Chef Isn’t?
By IAN FISHER
The New York Times

ROME — Last month, Gambero Rosso, the prestigious reviewer of restaurants and wine, sought out Rome’s best carbonara, a dish of pasta, eggs, pecorino cheese and guanciale (cured pig cheek; for the aficionados, pancetta is not done) that defines tradition here.

In second place was L’Arcangelo, a restaurant with a head chef from India. The winner: Antico Forno Roscioli, a bakery and innovative restaurant whose chef, Nabil Hadj Hassen, arrived from Tunisia at 17 and washed dishes for a year and a half before he cooked his first pot of pasta.

“To cook is a passion,” said Mr. Hassen, now 43, who went on to train with some of Italy’s top chefs. “Food is a beautiful thing.” more>>
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Potatoes!

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/04/07 at 15:09

AUSTRALIA
More dash than mash
by Steve Manfredi
The Sydney Morning Herald

This week: Potatoes

THE UNITED NATIONS has declared this the International Year of the Potato. A key event, the Global Potato Conference, was held last week in the historic city of Cuzco, Peru, at the heart of the potato’s Andean origins.

In the wake of spiralling food prices, the conference looked at ways of increasing the potato’s role in food production, especially in poor economies. The potato has huge potential because it produces more food on less land than corn, wheat or rice.

One of the events that piqued my curiosity as a cook was a visit to a 12,000-hectare “Potato Park” near Cuzco, where researchers and farmers grow and study more than 600 traditional Andean varieties, providing the genetic building blocks of future varieties.

At the local fruit shop my attention was caught by new-season Royal Blue potatoes the size of golf balls. Full Story>>
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Organic, Is It Worth it to Buy?

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Organic on 2008/04/07 at 14:34

Is it worth it to buy organic?
Bridget Murray Law
Health/MSNBC.com

Before you hit the grocery store or farmers market, find out when it’s worth spending the extra money for organic fruits and vegetables, and when to scrimp.

Many people like the idea of buying organic produce because they believe it’s more nutritious and safer to eat than conventional fruits and veggies that may have been grown with synthetic fertilizers or sprayed with pesticides.

However, organic foods — which can cost up to 50 percent more than conventional produce — can be out of reach for many more>>

Source:
Environmental Working Group; Chensheng Lu, Emory University’s School of Public Health; United Fresh Produce Association
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Baby Greens Add Versatility to Salad Plates

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/04/06 at 14:36

Taste
Baby greens add versatility to salad plates
By Brad Schleicher
BaltimoreSun.com

If you’re looking to liven up your greens, spring is a great time to have a baby.

While other vegetables are still seedlings, farmers are harvesting baby spinach, baby arugula and even smaller microgreens. The sprouts are tender and in some cases tiny, but their flavor can be deliciously different.

“The whole idea of harvesting early is to increase the flavor,” says Bryan Kerney of Truck Patch Farms in New Windsor. “Picking before a vegetable is fully grown naturally concentrates the flavor that would be dispersed throughout a fully grown vegetable. more>>
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PLEASE RED ABOUT “BABY GREENS TYPES & TIPS to BUY IT”
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The Story of a Flower Eater

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Photography on 2008/04/06 at 09:45

Bloomin’ good, the story of a flower eater
By CHRISTINE HAWES CORRESPONDENT
HeraldTribune.com

Joan Kershaw’s memories include running wild in the woods, plucking honeysuckle flowers and sucking out the luscious nectar.
But unlike most of us who might share a similar memory, Kershaw ate all kinds of other flowers, and she kept on eating flowers long after childhood. She collected books on edible flowers, more>>
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Top 10 Undiscovered Culinary Capitals

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/04/05 at 18:02

Top 10 undiscovered culinary capitals
Reuters.com

SYDNEY (Reuters Life!) – For foodies looking for somewhere new to explore and give their taste buds a work-out, men’s Web portal AskMen.com has come up with a list of the world’s top 10 undiscovered culinary gems.

The list was compiled by editors at www.askmen.com and is not endorsed by Reuters:

1. San Sebastian, Spain

San Sebastian on the north coast of Spain in the country’s Basque region, more>>
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Organic Farmed Olives

In Archives, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Organic, Photography, Special Reports, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/04/05 at 16:19

Italy
Portrait of Organic Farmed Olives.

Photo: OCK.STYLE

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Spring Gratin

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/05 at 01:46

COOKING
Gratin with a spring in its step

Cheese and garlic, sauce and bread crumbs, fresh veggies: try them all.
By Regina Schrambling
Los Angeles Times

Gratins have a bit of seasonal affective disorder. They turn up in fall and winter but disappear when the sun comes back out in springtime. Which is surprising considering how well everything at peak of green right now goes with cheese and sauce, and how easily a quick pass through the oven makes them all rich and bubbly together. Asparagus, artichokes, green garlic, dandelions, even not-so-green new potatoes can be transformed by the gratin treatment.

The super-fresh aspect makes gratins especially tantalizing once you start to feel a little bored by the vegetables that tasted so new just weeks ago. more>>
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Humans Are Very Dull Omnivores

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/04 at 22:06

Recipes: Having some long-lost friends over for dinner

From overlooked roadside plants to odd-coloured carrots, there are many old foods that we neglect at our dietary peril, writes Rose Prince.
Now weed on…
Telegraph.co.uk

Look closer at that leafy weed on the verge by the side of the road. Could it go into the pan, then on to a plate? There are hundreds of neglected, underused species of food plants, animal breeds and fish in the world. In spite of those long supermarket aisles packed with thousands of “lines”, humans are very dull omnivores. Around 50 per cent of the world’s food requirements is taken from three cereal crops: rice, wheat and maize. It is estimated that 90 per cent of our vegetable and fruit supply derives from 103 species out of 7,000, pointing to an interesting 10 per cent of under-exploited edible wild foods. more >>
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Sensory World of the Futurist Banquet

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Photography, Special Reports on 2008/04/03 at 21:41

* Food & Wine
Elasticake, anyone? A very strange meal
British Library recreates weird and wonderful Futurist Banquet
MSNBC/Associated Press

LONDON – More than 100 well-heeled diners are sitting in the august British Library, eating a fennel slice, an olive and a kumquat while stroking pieces of velvet, silk and sandpaper. The scent of cloves wafts around the room as an airplane engine roars. And this is just the appetizer.

The main course of this unusual banquet is “Alaskan salmon in the rays of the sun with Mars sauce.” Dessert is Elasticake — a fluffy pastry ball oozing blood-red zabaglione and crowned with quivering licorice antennae.

Welcome to the weird, sensory world of the Futurist Banquet — [More...]
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Las Vegas Hot Spots for Diners on a Budget

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/04/03 at 17:47

Las Vegas hot spots for diners on a budget
by S. Irene Virbila
Los Angeles Times

JAVA SCENE: Espressamente Illy, the top Italian coffee company, serves quality espresso in a smart urban setting.
For small spenders who want to eat well, the choices include cocktails at Mix Lounge, gumbo at Fish Camp and small plates at Guy Savoy’s Bubble Lounge.

LAS VEGAS — No doubt about it. The top of the Vegas food chain is the domain of high rollers. But here’s a secret: You don’t have to spend big to eat big in this town. You can sample Guy Savoy’s legendary artichoke truffle soup for just a few dollars, or take in the million-dollar view at Mix for the price of a cocktail. Stray off the Strip and head to the places the famous chefs hit when they’re off duty — including one of the country’s best Thai restaurants. [More...]
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The Robust Green Peas

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/04/03 at 17:04

Peas are packed with flavor, nutrients
By Jim Romanoff
For The Associated Press
The Salt Lake Tribune

Green peas are so robust they can be planted in spring when the ground temperature has reached just 50 degrees. Nutritionally speaking, green peas – sometimes called English or garden peas- live up to this brawny image.
Sweet and starchy, green peas are a great source of vitamin C and folic acid, fiber and plant proteins.
Green peas actually are part of the legume family which means they produce pods with seeds or beans.
Fresh green peas can sometimes be found in the market, but most often are sold frozen or canned. If fresh aren’t available, always opt for frozen rather than canned. [More...]
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Taste of Olive Oil

In Archives, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen on 2008/04/03 at 12:45

Fascinating short article about small boutiques selling Olive Oil with pedigree. The real info that should be on the label, beside all kind of markings, is: HOW MUCH OIL (%) THE COMPANY/FARM IS EXTRACTING FROM “X” QTY. OF OLIVES?

Oil boom
A growing crop of olive-oil boutiques makes shopping a delectable pursuit
By Susan Taylor
Chicago Tribune

Sniff, sip and savor isn’t just about wine anymore. Olive oil is capturing the same allure for consumers attracted to its flavors and mystique. [More...]
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Chefs Warn on Side-Effects of Sushi Boom

In Archives, Asian Cuisine, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Japan, Special Reports on 2008/04/02 at 22:03

JAPAN
Chefs warn on side-effects of sushi boom
By Sophie Hardach
Yahoo/News

TOKYO (Reuters) – As Japanese sushi conquers restaurants and homes around the world, industry experts are fighting the side-effects of the raw fish boom: fake sushi bars, over-confident amateurs, poisoned consumers.
ADVERTISEMENT

Once a rare and exotic treat, seaweed rolls and bites of raw tuna on vinegared rice are now familiar to most food fans. So familiar, in fact, that many hobby cooks in Europe and the United States like to make them in their own kitchens.

But chefs and sushi experts at an international restaurant summit in Tokyo warned of a lack of awareness in handling raw fish among amateurs and some restaurateurs who enter the profitable industry without sufficient training. [More...]
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“A must-read article on raw fish and the health risk of unsafe handling.”

Learning to Love a Beet

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Vegetarian on 2008/03/30 at 14:57

The Accidental Vegetarian: Learning to love a beet
by Amanda Berne, Special to The Chronicle

Beets are the devil’s root. That’s what I always say. Or, that’s what I used to say.

I’ve never been a huge fan of beets and was dismayed by this fact for years. The beautiful jewel-toned roots taunted me, as did most of my beet-loving friends and family.

My aversion was strong, but when I read Jeffrey Steingarten’s “The Man Who Ate Everything,” and came across his story about getting over dislikes, I decided to investigate.

His theory – and I paraphrase – is that if you don’t like a food, you should try it seven different ways, and then if you still don’t like it, [More...]
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Organic Feast for Spring

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic on 2008/03/30 at 14:38

An organic feast for spring’s sustainable table
BY RACHEL WHARTON
NewYorkDailyNews.com

Spring’s arrival is big news to cooks like Jesse Ziff Cool. A well-known caterer in California and the author of “Simply Organic” (Chronicle Books), she has been shopping with the seasons since well before most of us first heard the term organic.

She has also made dinners for food writer Michael Pollan, has her own chicken coop, knows her local farmers by name and wrote one of the country’s first organic cookbooks near-ly a decade ago.

Now updated, those first easy recipes and thoughts on buying and cooking sustainably raised foods, [More...]
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Organic Feast for Spring

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Environment Et Eco-Friendly, Food Guide, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Organic on 2008/03/30 at 14:38

An organic feast for spring’s sustainable table
BY RACHEL WHARTON
NewYorkDailyNews.com

Spring’s arrival is big news to cooks like Jesse Ziff Cool. A well-known caterer in California and the author of “Simply Organic” (Chronicle Books), she has been shopping with the seasons since well before most of us first heard the term organic.

She has also made dinners for food writer Michael Pollan, has her own chicken coop, knows her local farmers by name and wrote one of the country’s first organic cookbooks near-ly a decade ago.

Now updated, those first easy recipes and thoughts on buying and cooking sustainably raised foods, [More...]
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Chile, The Salmon Are Dying!

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Special Reports on 2008/03/27 at 15:52

Chile under fire for results of intensive salmon fish farms
By Alexei Barrionuevo
InternationalHeraldTribune.com

PUERTO MONTT, Chile: Looking out over the low green mountains jutting through miles of placid waterways here in southern Chile, it is hard to imagine that anything could be amiss. But beneath the rows of neatly laid netting around the fish farms just off the shore, the salmon are dying.

A virus called infectious salmon anemia, or ISA, is killing millions of salmon destined for export to Japan, Europe and the United States. The spreading plague has sent shivers through Chile’s third-largest industry, which has left local people embittered by laying off more than 1,000 workers.

It has also opened the companies to fresh charges from biologists and environmentalists who say that the breeding of salmon in crowded underwater pens is contaminating once-pristine waters and producing potentially unhealthy fish. [More...]
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Bacon, food people hate to love

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/03/27 at 11:53

BRING HOME BETTER BACON
Americans consumed more than $2 billion worth of bacon last year, but the tastiest stuff is made by a small group of artisanal producers
by Nick Passmore
Businessweek.com

Bacon is the food people hate to love.

It must also be the most politically incorrect food in the culinary world. The Talmud prohibits its consumption, as does the Koran. It’s loaded with nitrates, salts, and the worst kinds of animal fat. But still we keep on eating it—$2 billion worth annually in the U.S. according to the National Pork Board, the Other White Meat people. Why? Because it tastes so very good.

The lure is that exquisite combination of intense, concentrated, sweet pork fat, along with salt and smoke. There’s something very basic and primal about bacon’s flavor. It seems to hark back to a simpler, more agrarian past when most of the population was in close contact with the land.
Pigging Out in Kentucky [More...]
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Pecorino Senese al Pepe

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, European Cuisine, Food Guide, Healthy Kitchen, Italy, Nutrition, Кулинарные Тенденциии и Гид on 2008/03/25 at 03:02

Cheese Course: A pepper coat enhances Tuscany’s pecorino senese
by Janet Fletcher
San Francisco Chronicle

Documenting Italy’s many pecorinos could keep a scholar busy for years, but I can hardly imagine more enjoyable research. The task would require traipsing around Tuscany – no hardship there – because that region produces innumerable sheep’s milk cheeses, known generically in Italian as pecorini. Among the noteworthy Tuscan specialties is pecorino senese (seh-NEH-zeh), made in the vicinity of Siena for centuries.

Recently, local Whole Foods stores have been carrying a delightful pecorino senese from the Pinzani dairy in Castel San Gimignano. Established in 1969, the dairy makes only raw-milk cheese because [More...]
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~ Vegan diet may ease ARTHRITIS

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/03/20 at 17:25

Vegan diet may ease arthritis, study finds
· Reduced swelling hints at unexpected immunity link
· Research raises hope for rheumatoid patients

* James Randerson, science correspondent
* Guardian.co.uk-Medical Research; [3/18]

Rheumatoid arthritis patients may be able to improve their symptoms by switching to a vegan and gluten-free diet, a study in Sweden has found.

The researchers’ findings were based on a small study group of only 30 patients with the disease and they are not yet sure why the diet change appeared to work. However the research team, which demonstrated changes to the immune system that may underlie the beneficial effect, believe it has identified an area that would repay further study. “I think it is a quite unexpected and interesting finding,” said Prof Johan Frostegård at the Karolinska Institutet rheumatology unit in Stockholm, who led the study. “The effects on the immune system are quite new.” [... More]

The National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society, a charity that supports people with the disease, welcomed the study.

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Official 2008 Beijing Olympics Store

Vegetable Dishes for Holidays

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/03/20 at 15:00

The All-Inclusive Holiday Meal
An Easter Spread With Worthy Options
By David Hagedorn
Special to The Washington Post; [3/19]

Vegetable dishes at holiday dinners get so little attention, they might as well be seated at the children’s table.

I say this year we let them upstage the big boys. Leave the lamb, ham and turkey in the wings, and put the veggies front and center — especially ones that can be made well in advance.

The main attraction, Mushroom Lasagna Bolognese, [... More]
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Easter, Vegetarian and Vegan Recipes

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Holidays~Celebrations, Non-Regional Cuisines, Nutrition, Vegetarian on 2008/03/18 at 18:12

Vegetarian and Vegan Easter Recipes
From Jolinda Hackett
About.com’s Guide to Vegetarian Food.

For vegetarians and vegans, Easter is all about fresh spring vegetables.

Here are some traditional (and some not so traditional!) vegetarian and vegan recipes for your Easter dinner or brunch. [... More]

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Invigorate Your Breakfast with Fresh Herbs

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/03/18 at 11:30

Herbs Can Add Punch to Breakfast Staples
Food_Herbal_Breakfast
By MARIA NOEL GROVES
For The Associated Press
WRAL-TV (N.C.); [3/14]

Take a hint from the French and perk up your morning fare with the incomparable flavors of fresh herbs.

With just a few snips of your kitchen scissors you’ll transform your favorite egg, potato, quick bread or crepe.

“Fresh herbs expand everything,” explains David Barry, an instructor at the Culinary Institute of America who teaches breakfast cuisine.

“You can take something as basic as eggs and completely change how the aromas are going to taste,” he says. “We turn to herbs a lot for our scrambles.”

Adding herbs to a recipe can make it healthier, as well as tastier. The additional flavors reduce the need for salt, says Georgeanne Brennan, who wrote the cookbook “Brunch” and runs a cooking school in France.

Here’s what you need to know to experiment with herbs at breakfast. [... More]

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Tofu, Healthy & Versatile

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/03/11 at 13:46

Eat healthier with nutritional tofu
By STEVE PETUSEVSKY South Florida Sun-Sentinel
dallasnews.com/lifestyles/health; [3/10]

Most Americans used to loathe milky, wet, cheeselike blocks of tofu. And the high-protein soybean curd was the target of jokes.
Flash forward to the present to see a changed world. The growth of tofu’s popularity, at least in the U.S., is due to people learning to properly prepare it and to appreciate its health benefits. Many cooks are interested in learning to make tofu dishes that taste good. …

Varieties of tofu and related products: Tofu Shirataki (…) is noodlelike. Some are flavored, such as Tofu Rella-Garlic Herb (…) and White Wave Baked Tofu-Sesame Peanut Thai (…). The others are: Banyan Hard Tofu (…), Tofu Rella-Plain (…) and Nasoya Silken Tofu.
continued…

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My health concern is: with claims that the world wide soya market is made of OGM, what type of nutritional elements are we getting?

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Great Health Eating Tips To Lower Cholesterol Diet

In Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/03/09 at 02:05

Great Health Eating Tips To Lower Cholesterol Diet
By Irene Maseko
uberarticles.com

Those who love to eat red meat and other dishes that are fatty or oil are at risk of getting sick. This isn’t diarrhea but something worse which could be life threatening because of the amount of bad cholesterol that is being taken into the body.

So what can you do lower your cholesterol levels? The first line, perhaps the only one that is truly effective is a combination of regular exercise and proper diet. These two activities go hand in hand. Without one factor, you cannot succeed. Dieting without exercising the body will only lead to weak muscles, which will eventually weaken the body’s resistance. … [Read full article]

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Mexican food: Expand your knowledge

In Americas Cuisines, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Mexico, Nutrition on 2008/02/27 at 21:53

MEXICO
Mexican food: Expand your knowledge
By Irene Maseko
uberarticles.com
If you ask majority of Americans on when the last time they ate Mexican food, usually it is within the last week. Mexican foods have become very popular in the United States. The problem is that the Mexican foods in America are not the same as they are in Mexico. Americans have added super fat and super sized the meals. If you go down to Mexico, you may not even find the same dishes because the dishes were created in America. Authentic Mexican food is rich in fresh vegetables, protein, and nutritious vitamins and spices.
You may be wondering if people in Mexico eat healthier foods. In America we have the choice to go to health food stores where we can find organic foods and foods not as fattening. The only drawback is that not everyone can afford to buy these foods whenever they grocery shop. In Mexico, healthier choices are available. Each year the health food market in Mexico makes over $500 Million. The consumers make up 5 percent of Mexico’s population. Their age range is from 20 to 50 years old. They usually live in metropolitan areas and can afford to buy these types of healthier foods. If they cannot afford it, they still are not getting all the fats and calories that we find in American foods, especially fast-foods. Authentic Mexican foods still carry many vegetables and ingredients that are good for your body, and also the way the food is cooked is healthier. … [Read more by clicking on the Post Title]

10 Changes To Your Diet That …

In Archives, Culinary News, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition on 2008/02/11 at 13:18

10 Changes To Your Diet That Will Make It 90% Better Instantly
By Jayson Hunter RD, CSCS

95% of people don’t realize that by making 10 simple changes to their eating lifestyle they can improve their diet by 90% along with improving their health and overall well-being.

Apply these changes to your diet today and you too will be experiencing an increased benefit to your health, probable weight loss, a leaner body, and likely improvements to your blood profile. This all equals a longer healthier life.

Now let’s get started so you can benefit from these 10 simple changes that anyone can make immediately.

1. Hydration: Is there a difference? Consume Green Tea or Water instead of calorie filled drinks such as soft drinks. Green Tea has many health benefits and is a powerful antioxidant. You should be drinking 1ml of non-caffeinated fluid for every calorie that you consume. This works out between (8-12) 8oz glasses of Green Tea or Water a day.

2. Benefits of Fiber Recommend consuming 25-35 grams of fiber per day. Since the average diet contains only 14 grams we could all use more fiber. Fiber will help satisfy hunger pangs as well as control insulin and blood sugar levels which tend to promote fat storage when they are elevated. By simply eating at least 1 serving of fruit and vegetables at every meal should get you to the goal of 25-35 grams of fiber per day.

3. The Importance of Protein Eat lean protein sources which include; lean beef, chicken breasts, turkey breasts, salmon, low-fat cottage cheese and other low-fat dairy products, and whey protein powders, at every meal. This will also help control insulin levels and satisfy hunger pangs which tend to promote fat storage. You will find yourself naturally eating less food throughout the day if you eat some type of lean protein at every meal.

4. Frequent Meals: Why? Eat 4-6 small meals day a day instead of the usual 2-3 large meals. Eating frequently will help regulate and boost your metabolism to burn more calories. By also including your protein and vegetables at these meals you will tend to eat less overall thereby reducing your calorie intake.

5. What are Whole Foods? Consume whole foods that are high in fiber and low in sugar such as lean protein (lean beef, chicken, fish, and whey protein), fruits vegetables (oranges, apples, strawberries, blueberries, broccoli, peppers, asparagus, carrots, nuts (almonds, cashews, walnuts), and whole grains. Try to minimize processed foods that come in a box or a bag. Instead choose whole grain choices such as whole wheat foods, oatmeals, and vegetables.

6. Healthy Fats: Yes, there are healthy fats Consume adequate amounts of healthy fat foods such as olive oil, walnuts, almonds, or other Omega-3 products. Healthy fats are great antioxidants as well as help with brain function and many other essentials processes that take place in the body on a daily basis. Essential Fatty acids also help prevent certain diseases.

7. Superfoods Include what I call “Superfoods” into your meal plan on a daily basis. These include but not entirely lean meat, salmon, low fat plain yogurt, tomatoes, spinach, mixed berries, whole oats, mixed nuts, olive oil, flax seeds(or flax meal), green tea, and various beans. These are just some of the “Superfoods” you should be incorporating into your daily meal plans.

8. Fat Keep total fat intake under 30% for the day. This can be accomplished by not adding too many extra fats such as butter, sour cream, mayonnaise, etc. This doesn’t mean you have to completely eliminate these items, but do not eat them as a regular food item every day.

9. Food Log: Yes, this is the most important step Record what you eat and drink. You will be amazed at what you consume and not even realize you did it until you right it down and reflect back on the day. Keeping a food log is critical to your success because if modifications need to be made you need something to be able to evaluate and analyze. If changes aren’t happening like you had hoped the answer can usually be found in your food and or exercise journal.

10. Food Labels Review food labels. Avoid foods packed with excess sugar, calories, or foods that contain any trans-fats. You should be looking for more natural foods and not overly-processed foods. Ingredients to look for and avoid or minimize if they are one of the top ingredients listed in the ingredients list: Sugar, High Fructose Corn Syrup and Hydrogenated or Partially Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil.

If you see these ingredients listed at the top then that means the food product is made up of that ingredient as it’s largest source.

Now I don’t expect you to make every change in one day. What I do expect is that if you are serious about living a better life and a healthier life then you need to make these changes over the next 4 weeks. The best way to accomplish this task is to map out your plan. Create meal plans and have a plan of attack in place in regards to what you are eating and when.

You will start to see just how easy it is to live a healthier life and achieve the goals that you desire.

About the Author:
Jayson Hunter, RD, CSCS, is a registered dietitian and fitness professional with more than 10 years of experience. He has worked with 1000’s of individuals in achieving their ideal body and has been published in numerous magazines. Get your free newsletter on diet meal planning today.

… on Antioxidants

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Culinary News, Food Styling, Food for Thought, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Photography on 2008/01/24 at 18:05

Blueberries, (Mirtilli)

Lycopene is a bright red carotenoid pigment, a phytochemical found in tomatoes and other red fruits. Lycopene is the most common carotenoid in the human body and is one of the most potent carotenoid antioxidants. Its name is derived from the tomato’s species classification, Solanum lycopersicum (formerly Lycopersicon esculentum).

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycopene]

Appetizers, etc…

In Amuse Bouche, Archives, Cooking Tips, Culinary News, Food Styling, Healthy Kitchen, Nutrition, Photography on 2008/01/24 at 01:28

Continuing with the Appetizers here something very easy, light and nutricious.
Raw Courgettes stuffed with Vegs Basmati Rice Salad

Hors d’œuvre
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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  • Hors d’œuvre, (French , but in American English normally ; French plural: hors d’œuvre, without an extra s; English plural often hors d’œuvres), also known as appetizer(s) are the food served before or outside of (hors de) the main courses of a meal (œuvre, literally “work”).
  • Antipasto is the Italian equivalent of hors d’œuvre, meaning “before the meal” (anti = before, pasto = meal). In Italian cuisine, this typically consists of savory cold foods such as cheeses and raw or marinated vegetables, as well as cold cuts and cured meats such as prosciutto.
  • Meze is the equivalent of hors d’œuvre found in Mediterranean (Turkish, Greek, Macedonian, etc.) and Middle-Eastern cuisines.
  • In the Montenegrin cuisine and language, the term Meza is in fact the synonym for the Italian-style Antipasto, and not the aforementioned Meze.
  • Picaditas is the Spanish equivalent of hors d’œuvres in Argentina, pasabocas in Colombia, pasapalos in Venezuela, boquitas in Honduras, botanas in Mexico, bocaditos in Peru, and entremeses, or tapas in Spain.
  • Zakuski is an offering of hors d’oeuvre served in Russian cuisines. Usually presented buffet style, it often consists of cured meats and fishes, various pickled foods such as carrots, cucumbers, and garlic, prepared salads, caviar, and breads. Zakuski is often offered with vodka or other spirits.

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Last updated on Friday January 04, 2008 at 10:20:51 PST (GMT -0800)