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Keyword: foods

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  • Britain's first green superstore goes £36m into red... (Whole foods)

    08/03/2009 8:41:02 AM PDT · by C19fan · 21 replies · 874+ views
    Daily Mail ^ | AUgust 3, 2009 | By Staff
    Britain’s first ever green superstore is languishing ever deeper in the red after losing nearly £36million as the recession takes a bite out of organic food sales. The U.S. owners of Whole Foods Market had hoped to open 40 more emporiums across the UK after beginning trading in London in 2007. But, two years on, they have failed to leave the capital after their flagship British shop in up-market Kensington lost an astonishing £35.9million last year.
  • Ew, Y'all: Bizarre Foods Show Comes to Texas

    05/25/2009 1:35:28 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 13 replies · 770+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | 5/24/09 | Jeanne Jakle
    Texas cuisine is not only big, it’s bizarre. At least that’s the word from the host of Travel Channel’s Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern. Zimmern is a chef and professional eater with an infectiously amiable nature and, as The Soup likes to point out, a penchant for entrails, eyeballs and other strange edibles. He found the Lone Star State, and especially its food, not only “larger than life,” he said in an interview, but unusual and interesting enough to fill an entire episode of his culinary show. Bizarre Foods: Texas premieres at 9 p.m. Tuesday on the Travel Channel. During...
  • Fast Food Hawk

    05/05/2008 5:37:08 AM PDT · by Revski · 9 replies · 132+ views
    YouTube Video ^ | 5/5/08 | Revski
    This animated humorous hawk video of McDonalds fast food chain is created to reveal the fact that this fast food chain does not serve wheat buns in their have it your way menu. The characters of this video are a frog and red-tailed hawk with a McDonalds drive up window.
  • Certain Dry Foods Are Good Past Their Best-before Date, Food Scientists Say

    01/13/2008 2:47:05 PM PST · by blam · 23 replies · 193+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 2-1-2007
    Certain Dry Foods Are Good Past Their Best-before Date, Food Scientists Say February 1, 2007 — Some low-moisture foods such as dried apples can be safe to eat even years after their expiration date, if properly stored, food chemists say. They verified this in a tasting experiment of 28-year-old rolled oats. Heat, moisture and light can degrade food's nutritional value. The next time you find forgotten food in the pantry, don't just toss it. Keeping food past its expiration date may not seem like a good idea, but certain foods last a lot longer than you think -- years longer....
  • Castleberry’s Updates Status of National Canned Food Recall

    08/02/2007 7:16:57 AM PDT · by girlangler · 11 replies · 1,125+ views
    Food & Drug Administration ^ | 8/1/2007 | news release
    Recall -- Firm Press Release FDA posts press releases and other notices of recalls and market withdrawals from the firms involved as a service to consumers, the media, and other interested parties. FDA does not endorse either the product or the company. This listserv covers mainly Class I (life-threatening) recalls. A complete listing of recalls can be found in the FDA Enforcement Report at: http://www.fda.gov/opacom/Enforce.html Castleberry’s Updates Status of National Canned Food Recall Officials Express Urgent Need for Retailers and Consumers to Identify and Discard Recalled Items Contact: Doug McGraw Fleishman-Hillard (212) 453-2202 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -- AUGUSTA, Ga. –...
  • Don't hold the mayo (Canola Real Mayonnaise instead of Soy yea!)

    05/20/2007 11:57:02 PM PDT · by restornu · 23 replies · 1,302+ views
    All of a sudden, mayonnaise is in the news. Kraft touts its "first-of-its-kind" Big Mouth jar, a 32-ounce shatterproof container with an opening double the size of the one on a regular jar. Spatulas and even measuring cups fit neatly into the jar, which is available in Real Mayo and Light Mayo. It's about $2.65 in supermarkets. Not to be upstaged, Best Foods has introduced Canola Real Mayonnaise, made with canola oil instead of the soybean oil usually used in bottled mayo. Canola oil is said to have a better fatty-acid profile, meaning it contains higher levels of monounsaturated fat...
  • Did Jesus Declare All Meats Clean?

    04/21/2007 9:24:38 AM PDT · by DouglasKC · 227 replies · 2,414+ views
    Good News Magazine ^ | November 2002 | Larry Walker
    Did Jesus Declare All Meats Clean? Many assume Jesus' statements in Mark 7 did away with the dietary restrictions recorded in the Old Testament. How should we understand Christ's words? by Larry Walker In this series of articles we have examined statements of Jesus Christ that when understood correctly are surprisingly different in meaning from the way they are commonly understood. In the case of dietary restrictions recorded in the Bible, the surprise may be the result of understanding not just what Jesus said but what He did not say in the Gospel of Mark.Many believe that in His...
  • FDA proposes softening label requirements for irradiated foods[To be called ”pasteurized”]

    04/06/2007 11:31:51 PM PDT · by Dacb · 31 replies · 483+ views
    AP ^ | 03 April 2007 | AP
    WASHINGTON - The government proposed Tuesday relaxing its rules on labeling of irradiated foods and suggested it may allow some products zapped with radiation to be called ”pasteurized.” The Food and Drug Administration said the proposed rule would require companies to label irradiated food only when the radiation treatment causes a material change to the product. Examples includes changes to the taste, texture, smell or shelf life of a food. The FDA also proposed letting companies use the term ”pasteurized” to describe irradiated foods. To do so, they would have to show the FDA that the radiation kills germs as...
  • UIC Researchers Show How Cancer-preventing Foods Work

    07/26/2005 4:25:33 PM PDT · by Coleus · 3 replies · 313+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 07.13.05
    UIC Researchers Show How Cancer-preventing Foods Work Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago are unraveling the biochemical mechanism by which functional foods combat cancer."Compounds like sulforaphane in broccoli and resveratrol in wine have been shown to prevent cancer," said Andrew Mesecar, associate professor of pharmaceutical biotechnology in the UIC College of Pharmacy. "They do that by signaling our bodies to ramp up the production of proteins capable of preventing damage to our DNA."We now have a good idea how that signal works."The findings are published in this week's Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of...
  • Health costs of obesity exceed smoking and drinking

    06/05/2005 6:14:01 PM PDT · by SheLion · 82 replies · 3,123+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 6-5-05 | Patricia Reaney
    ATHENS (Reuters) - Treating obesity-related disorders costs as much or more than illnesses caused by aging, smoking and problem drinking.  It accounts for 2 percent of the national health expenditure in France and Australia, more than 3 percent in Japan and Portugal and 4 percent in the Netherlands. A review of research into the economic causes and consequences of obesity presented at the 14th European Congress on Obesity showed that in 2003 up to $96.7 billion was spent on obesity problems in the United States. "An increase in the prevalence of obesity increases the healthcare costs," Anne Wolf of the...
  • Learning something everyday (vanity)

    03/02/2005 12:29:48 PM PST · by sure_fine · 10 replies · 247+ views
    did you know you can make, and keep remaking your own buttermilk? in case there is some gawd awfull reason anyone would want buttermilk, that is ;)
  • Artificial sweeteners like aspartame and sucralose may actually promote obesity and weight gain

    01/29/2005 2:37:15 PM PST · by jb6 · 40 replies · 1,323+ views
    Diabetes Factor ^ | Friday, January 28, 2005
    Groundbreaking new research published in the International Journal of Obesity reveals that artificial sweeteners like aspartame and sucralose -- precisely the kinds of chemical sweeteners found in diet soft drinks or many low-carb food products -- may actually promote obesity by tricking the body into thinking that sweet-tasting foods and drinks don't contain as many calories as they really do. In the experiments, rats who were fed artificially-sweetened foods tended to overeat foods containing real sweeteners, causing them to gain weight. In humans, it's the same result: drink diet soft drinks and consume enough foods made with artificial sweeteners, and...
  • Antioxidant-Rich Diet Helps Fight Leukemia

    01/12/2005 10:51:21 PM PST · by Coleus · 356+ views
    Antioxidant-Rich Diet Helps Fight Leukemia   As if undergoing chemotherapy isn't trying enough, kids with the most common form of childhood leukemia receiving this treatment may also experience a significant reduction in their antioxidant and micronutrient levels. This decrease could lead to severe side effects from the chemotherapy.However, there may be a ray of hope amidst this dark cloud.According to a study, children could improve antioxidant and micronutrient levels and prevent some of the adverse side effects of chemotherapy by simply incorporating more fruits and vegetables into their diets.The study, prompted by parental concern regarding children's safety in taking...
  • Harvard Study: Snack Foods And Soda Not Linked To Obesity

    09/21/2004 3:25:10 PM PDT · by BattleFlag · 27 replies · 992+ views
    The Center for Consumer Freedom ^ | September 21, 2004 | The Center for Consumer Freedom
    Harvard Study: Snack Foods And Soda Not Linked To Obesity From the rhetoric coming out of last weekend's obesity-lawsuit-pushing Public Health Advocacy Institute (PHAI) conference in Boston, you'd think snack foods and soft drinks were the number one cause of childhood obesity. But the sue-first-ask-questions-later food cops and trial lawyers apparently didn't bother to consult researchers across town at Harvard, who last week provided the latest evidence that snack foods and soda are actually not a cause of childhood obesity. After studying more than 14,000 American children, a team of six Harvard doctors found that snack food and soda do...
  • 1st Annual Free Republic County Fair; Post Your Entries Here

    09/19/2004 8:11:43 PM PDT · by hispanarepublicana · 43 replies · 5,240+ views
    9/19/04 | Hispanarepublicana
    Since most FReepers are personally responsible, hard-working, well-prepared, self-sufficient individuals, I thought it would be nice for us to get to brag about the fruits of our labor--whether it be traditional county-fair fare (canning, crochet, quilting, crops, cheeses) or FReeper-oriented fare (political slogans, FReep posters, FReep ideas, breaking news, opus posts, FR handles, FR profiles, posts-of-the-day, etc.) I'm not sure who the judges will be, but you all are welcome to post your entries here.
  • Bird flu hits Grampian Foods (Free Trade)

    01/24/2004 5:49:12 PM PST · by fatso · 2 replies · 134+ views
    http://news.scotsman.com/topics ^ | 1/14/04 | PERRY GOURLEY
    Bird flu hits Grampian Foods PERRY GOURLEY SCOTTISH firm Grampian Country Foods is facing a sales clampdown following the outbreak of bird flu in Thailand. The European Union suspended all chicken imports from Thailand on Friday after the country revealed there had been two cases of humans catching the disease which has already ravaged bird flocks in other parts of Asia. A spokesman for Grampian Country Foods - Scotland’s biggest private company - stressed that its site in Thailand, which processes more than 800,000 birds a week, was not linked to the cases. But the plant does export to other...
  • Where Did We Get "Turkey"?

    11/27/2003 12:55:23 PM PST · by WaterDragon · 19 replies · 364+ views
    FrontPageMagazine ^ | November 27, 2003 | Lowell Ponte
    WE LOVE TO PUT TURKEY INTO OUR MOUTHS each Thanksgiving. But why do we find this odd word “turkey” in our mouths, in our vocabulary? Finding this answer brings us to a smorgasbord of history, politics and culture that gives added savor to most of the foods of this Thursday’s feast. “About 1530, a new dish began to be put on English tables,” writes one cultural historian, “a fowl a little larger than the traditional goose, but with a lot more meat and a refreshingly new taste. “This bird,” the historian continues, “had been brought to England by merchants trading...