"What does education often do? It makes a straight-cut ditch of a free, meandering brook."Henry David Thoreau
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Espresso Brownie Recipe This espresso brownie recipe blends together chocolate, coffee, and almond flavors into one great taste. Ingredients Brownies: 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1 cup (packed) dark brown sugar 1/2 cup granulated sugar 2 sticks (1 cup) ...
Grilling Hamburgers and Sittin' on an Old Ice Cream Freezer Copyright 2005 - Great-Salsa.com Hamburgers, one of my earliest backyard grilling memories. Our Family would get together, usually on the weekends, and have a hamburger and ice cream supper as we say here in Texas. I can fondly remember sitting on top ...
What Is It With French Chocolate? The 19th century French writer, Brillat-Savarin said, "Chocolate is health". Brillat-Savarin, had a passion for chocolate similar to Voltaire who drank 12 cups a day! He suggested it be used for anything from lethargy to hangovers long before the ...
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During the last decades there has been a change towards mechanization and homogenization of farming, which uses pesticides, additives, herbicides, synthetic fertilizers and mass-production techniques. All this is clearly affecting mankind's health, and new diseases are spreading rapidly amongst humans and animals (bird's flu being the most recent one).
The World Health Organization produces reports to show how the use of chemicals and other products on food, coupled with the manufacturing processes involved, are actually a threat for our health.
If you have space for a few pots or even a small piece of land, it is a wise decision to grow your own organic vegetable garden. Today I'm presenting you with seven reasons for doing this:
1. You will have no additives in your vegetables. Research by organic food associations has shown that additives in our food can cause heart diseases, osteoporosis, migraines and hyperactivity.
2. There will be no pesticides or synthetic fertilizers used. These chemical products are applied to obtain crops all the time regardless plagues or weather conditions, and affect the quality of the vegetables. Besides, pesticides are usually poisonous to humans.
3. Your vegetables will not be genetically modified (GM). Antibiotics, drugs and hormones are used on vegetables to grow more and larger ones. One of the consequences of this practice are vegetables which look all the same and are usually tasteless. Besides, we end up consuming the hormones that have been used on the vegetables, with the potential risks for our health.
4. Eating your own organic vegetables will be much more healthy for you. They will not contain any of the products or chemicals named above, and they will be much more natural than any ones you would find at the supermarket. Your health will not be at risk because you will then know that nothing has been added to your vegetables.
5. Your own organic vegetables will be much more tasty. The use of pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, hormones and antibiotics make vegetables grow unnaturally and take the taste away from them. With organic vegetables, your cooking will be enhanced as their flavour will show fully.
6. Organic farming is friendly to the environment. Because you won't use pesticides or other equally harming products on your vegetables, you will not damage the soil or the air with the chemical components.
7. When you grow your own organic vegetables you are contributing to your own self-sustainability and the sustainability of the planet. Small communities have been founded where members exchange products that they grow naturally, thus contributing to create a friendly and better place for us all.
In the end, eating organic products only means that we do not add anything else to them than they would naturally have. As you can guess, additives, fertilizers, pesticides or hormones are not components of naturally grown food. To better care for your health, grown your own organic vegetables -and a few pots is all you need.
About the author:
Cristina Diaz Garcia is the Author and Founder of the "Beautiful Gardens Email Club". Visit her page for an useful Pot Gardening free report at http://www.soapystuff.com/free-garden-reports.html
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Bittman builds your cooking skills a recipe at a timeChicago Tribune"How to Cook Everything. The Basics: All You Need to Make Great Food — With 1000 Photos" By Mark Bittman; Wiley, $35 What it is: "Everything" is a bold boast, but obviously longtime New York Times food writer Mark Bittman is not going to teach you how ... |
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Looking for Love in China? Get CookingWall Street Journal (blog)By Kristiano Ang A new survey suggests that in China and other parts of Asia, knowing how to cook may help you win the heart of a potential mate. Property ownership is often seen as a prerequisite to getting hitched in China, but if you're single and ... |
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'How To Cook Like a Man' by Daniel DuaneBoston GlobeBy Ted Weesner Jr. Page through Daniel Duane's “How to Cook Like a Man” and you will fast wonder what havoc celebrity chef culture has wrought upon present-day notions of masculinity. It's as if the blazing klieg lights of the Food Network, et al., ... |
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Artichokes 101: Tips for selection and cookingSacramento BeeCooked artichokes keep for a week, also, and can be heated up on the grill or in the oven just before serving. Freezing: Cooked hearts and blanched smaller artichokes can be frozen. To blanch, remove the outer petals (or bracts) so only the pale inner ...and more » |
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