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From and MSN article:
Sugar consumption spikes The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the recommended 13.3 teaspoons. |
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On Sat, 2 Mar 2019 19:26:31 -0500, Ed Pawlowski > wrote:
> From and MSN article: >Sugar consumption spikes >The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the >health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing >campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple >pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 >pounds today—or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the >recommended 13.3 teaspoons. I said GOD DAMN!!! Who the hell eats 42.5 teaspoons of sugar a day? let me restate that.. what kind of person would eat that much sugar a day... I have 2-4 with my coffee, if I eat pancakes maybe 2 more if I have a salad with the dressing that I make maybe 1/4 more if I have a drink at night maybe 1 more with dinner maybe 2-3 more.... lets say an extra for errors and that is less than 11 max 42.5 freakin teaspoons of sugar..... I say GOD DAMN!! -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
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![]() "Ed Pawlowski" > wrote in message ... > From and MSN article: > Sugar consumption spikes > The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the > health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing > campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple > pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 > pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the recommended > 13.3 teaspoons. I believe that. Sickly sweet coffee along with pastry. Sugar added to things that should never have it. Saw a recipe the other day that used canned green beans, turkey bacon and 2 cups of brown sugar. Gag me! |
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Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> From and MSN article: > Sugar consumption spikes > The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the > health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing > campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple > pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 > pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the > recommended 13.3 teaspoons. i wonder how that graph looks when compared to diabetes/pancreaitis/pancreatic cancer rates... i have never had any doubts about the problem as you commonly see people with their 32+oz cups of fizzy sugar water/etc all over the place ( even small children!). songbird |
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Julie Bove wrote:
> > "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: > > From an MSN article: > > Sugar consumption spikes > > about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the recommended > > 13.3 teaspoons. > > I believe that. Sickly sweet coffee along with pastry. Go into a 7-11 in the morning before 9am. People lined up to buy coffee and donuts. arrgh Many add lots of sugar to that coffee too. As Jill often says, "I just can't imagine doing that." ![]() My first cup of coffee (12oz) at home I *lightly* (TM-Jill) add 1/2 tsp sugar and a little milk. The rest of the coffee from my morning pot (about 16 oz), I drink plain black with no sugar. I often don't even finish that but it's ok even when cold. Just something to sip on. > Saw a recipe the other day that used canned green > beans, turkey bacon and 2 cups of brown sugar. Gag me! No! >;-| You DID NOT see any such recipe, Julie. No recipe ever calls for 2 cups of brown sugar unless you are looking at one of Sheldon's Navy recipes for 400 seamen, cooked in a 50 gallon barrel. If you saw that recipe just "the other day," post it here. Should be easy to find again. I'd like to see your recipe for green beans, turkey bacon and *2 cups of brown sugar*. |
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On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 8:08:34 AM UTC-5, Gary wrote:
> Julie Bove wrote: > > > > "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: > > > From an MSN article: > > > Sugar consumption spikes > > > about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the recommended > > > 13.3 teaspoons. > > > > I believe that. Sickly sweet coffee along with pastry. > > Go into a 7-11 in the morning before 9am. People lined up to buy > coffee and donuts. arrgh Many add lots of sugar to that coffee > too. As Jill often says, "I just can't imagine doing that." ![]() > > My first cup of coffee (12oz) at home I *lightly* (TM-Jill) add > 1/2 tsp sugar and a little milk. The rest of the coffee from my > morning pot (about 16 oz), I drink plain black with no sugar. I > often don't even finish that but it's ok even when cold. Just > something to sip on. > > > > Saw a recipe the other day that used canned green > > beans, turkey bacon and 2 cups of brown sugar. Gag me! > > No! >;-| You DID NOT see any such recipe, Julie. No recipe ever > calls for 2 cups of brown sugar unless you are looking at one of > Sheldon's Navy recipes for 400 seamen, cooked in a 50 gallon > barrel. > > If you saw that recipe just "the other day," post it here. Should > be easy to find again. I'd like to see your recipe for green > beans, turkey bacon and *2 cups of brown sugar*. If she doesn't provide a citation... The worst "bacon, green beans and brown sugar" recipe I found called for 2 pounds of green beans and 2/3 cup brown sugar. Still gag-worthy, but a long way from 2 cups. Cindy Hamilton |
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On 3/3/2019 6:42 AM, songbird wrote:
> Ed Pawlowski wrote: >> From and MSN article: >> Sugar consumption spikes >> The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the >> health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing >> campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple >> pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 >> pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the >> recommended 13.3 teaspoons. > > i wonder how that graph looks when compared to > diabetes/pancreaitis/pancreatic cancer rates... > > i have never had any doubts about the problem > as you commonly see people with their 32+oz cups > of fizzy sugar water/etc all over the place ( > even small children!). > > > songbird > I like sugar and sweets, but could not consume that much. My beverage of choice is water. If we stop at a fast food for a qiuck lunch, wife and I will split a small drink, but there is a bottle of cold water in the car. |
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On 3/2/2019 5:26 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> From and MSN article: > Sugar consumption spikes > The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the > health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing > campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple > pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 > pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the > recommended 13.3 teaspoons. Yep. Today's Yoplait yogurt has roughly 4.3 teaspoons of sugar, in it. About the same as a 12oz can of soda. There's already a couple anti-sugar documentaries (none good) about massive sugar replacement in "low fat" foods. Mostly pushed by one of the sugar "Council's". nb |
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On 2019-03-03 4:42 a.m., songbird wrote:
> Ed Pawlowski wrote: >> From and MSN article: >> Sugar consumption spikes >> The sugar industry began funding research in the 1960s to minimize the >> health risks of sugar and emphasize the dangers of fat. The marketing >> campaign apparently worked, as sugar consumption exploded from a couple >> pounds per person per year to 123 pounds per person in 1970 and to 152 >> pounds today€”or about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the >> recommended 13.3 teaspoons. > > i wonder how that graph looks when compared to > diabetes/pancreaitis/pancreatic cancer rates... > > i have never had any doubts about the problem > as you commonly see people with their 32+oz cups > of fizzy sugar water/etc all over the place ( > even small children!). > > > songbird > Not only that but cookies and cakes are also loaded with sugar. It was something I noticed when I arrived in N. Am. When using any cookie recipe, I always cut back the sugar content by half, and they are still a bit too sweet. |
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graham wrote:
.... > Not only that but cookies and cakes are also loaded with sugar. It was > something I noticed when I arrived in N. Am. When using any cookie > recipe, I always cut back the sugar content by half, and they are still > a bit too sweet. it's not just cookie/cakes but also things like a chocolate or candy bar - if i want anything decent tasting i have to make it myself. songbird |
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notbob wrote:
.... > Today's Yoplait yogurt has roughly 4.3 teaspoons of sugar, in it. About > the same as a 12oz can of soda. ick, i've never really liked the sweetened yogurts. if that's all that is available i try to get the ones with fruit on the bottom and scrape off the top, but even those are way too sweet for me. i've always liked the plain yogurts (whole milk the best) because of the tart aspect from the lactic acid. when i make a quick cheese cake i always add extra lemon juice to it for more of a zip. in the most recent batch i was thinking i should cut the sweetened condensed milk in half and try some plain condensed milk instead and see if that is better. the cream cheese is kinda sweet itself as it is... songbird |
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On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 2:13:09 PM UTC-5, songbird wrote:
> graham wrote: > ... > > Not only that but cookies and cakes are also loaded with sugar. It was > > something I noticed when I arrived in N. Am. When using any cookie > > recipe, I always cut back the sugar content by half, and they are still > > a bit too sweet. > > it's not just cookie/cakes but also things > like a chocolate or candy bar - if i want > anything decent tasting i have to make it > myself. > > > songbird Happily, I like plain chocolate, so good quality candy bars are easy to find. Cindy Hamilton |
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On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 2:13:10 PM UTC-5, songbird wrote:
> notbob wrote: > ... > > Today's Yoplait yogurt has roughly 4.3 teaspoons of sugar, in it. About > > the same as a 12oz can of soda. > > ick, i've never really liked the sweetened > yogurts. if that's all that is available i > try to get the ones with fruit on the bottom > and scrape off the top, but even those are way > too sweet for me. > > i've always liked the plain yogurts (whole > milk the best) because of the tart aspect from > the lactic acid. > > when i make a quick cheese cake i always add > extra lemon juice to it for more of a zip. in > the most recent batch i was thinking i should > cut the sweetened condensed milk in half and > try some plain condensed milk instead and see > if that is better. the cream cheese is kinda > sweet itself as it is... > > > songbird Sweetened condensed milk in a cheesecake? Huh. Never heard of it. Here's what I use: Filling: 1 pound cream cheese at room temperature 3/4 cup sugar 3 eggs well beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla No lemon with dairy for me. But what really makes the cheesecake for me is the crust: 1/4 pound butter, melted 16 graham cracker squares, coarsely crushed (1 square = 4 crackers) 1/4 cup brown sugar It's the brown sugar that does it. Cindy Hamilton |
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![]() "Gary" > wrote in message ... > Julie Bove wrote: >> >> "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: >> > From an MSN article: >> > Sugar consumption spikes >> > about 42.5 teaspoons per day, compared to the recommended >> > 13.3 teaspoons. >> >> I believe that. Sickly sweet coffee along with pastry. > > Go into a 7-11 in the morning before 9am. People lined up to buy > coffee and donuts. arrgh Many add lots of sugar to that coffee > too. As Jill often says, "I just can't imagine doing that." ![]() > > My first cup of coffee (12oz) at home I *lightly* (TM-Jill) add > 1/2 tsp sugar and a little milk. The rest of the coffee from my > morning pot (about 16 oz), I drink plain black with no sugar. I > often don't even finish that but it's ok even when cold. Just > something to sip on. > > >> Saw a recipe the other day that used canned green >> beans, turkey bacon and 2 cups of brown sugar. Gag me! > > No! >;-| You DID NOT see any such recipe, Julie. No recipe ever > calls for 2 cups of brown sugar unless you are looking at one of > Sheldon's Navy recipes for 400 seamen, cooked in a 50 gallon > barrel. > > If you saw that recipe just "the other day," post it here. Should > be easy to find again. I'd like to see your recipe for green > beans, turkey bacon and *2 cups of brown sugar*. Here it is. Copied from the FB page, 19 Scandals and Counting. I stand corrected on the canned. They are frozen green beans. I assumed canned because most of what they eat comes from cans. 19 Scandals and Counting "These green beans are sure to be a favorite with everyone! At the €śbig house€ť (Duggar home), wed usually serve these as a side with beef brisket and party potatoes! This recipe makes one, large industrial size pan, or two 9Ă—13€ł pans and serves about 20 people as a side. 5 lbs. green beans, whole, frozen 1 lb. turkey bacon, cut into chunks (or cook before for crispy bacon) 2 cups brown sugar 1 cup butter or margarine 2 teaspoons garlic powder 1 teaspoon salt Grease two 9Ă—13€ł pans (or one large industrial pan). Dump frozen green beans into pan. Melt butter and add all remaining ingredients to pan. Stir. Bake at 350 degrees for 30-45 min." |
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Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 2:13:10 PM UTC-5, songbird wrote: >> notbob wrote: >> ... >> > Today's Yoplait yogurt has roughly 4.3 teaspoons of sugar, in it. About >> > the same as a 12oz can of soda. >> >> ick, i've never really liked the sweetened >> yogurts. if that's all that is available i >> try to get the ones with fruit on the bottom >> and scrape off the top, but even those are way >> too sweet for me. >> >> i've always liked the plain yogurts (whole >> milk the best) because of the tart aspect from >> the lactic acid. >> >> when i make a quick cheese cake i always add >> extra lemon juice to it for more of a zip. in >> the most recent batch i was thinking i should >> cut the sweetened condensed milk in half and >> try some plain condensed milk instead and see >> if that is better. the cream cheese is kinda >> sweet itself as it is... > > Sweetened condensed milk in a cheesecake? Huh. Never > heard of it. Here's what I use: look up cherry breeze recipe if you want the original. it is a quick cheesecake filling (as i said "quick" quite intentionally there). > Filling: > 1 pound cream cheese at room temperature > 3/4 cup sugar > 3 eggs well beaten > 1 teaspoon vanilla > > No lemon with dairy for me. > > But what really makes the cheesecake for me is the crust: > > 1/4 pound butter, melted > 16 graham cracker squares, coarsely crushed (1 square = 4 crackers) > 1/4 cup brown sugar > > It's the brown sugar that does it. > > Cindy Hamilton i don't make baked cheesecakes. i don't really much like eggs in a lot of things and the other thing is that we don't really like crusts for pies or such so i like to make the quick filling version and then just eat it as is or with some fruit. lately, i'm not even doing this. gotta pare back the food until spring/summer - i'm getting too plump again. lol songbird |
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![]() "songbird" > wrote in message ... > Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 2:13:10 PM UTC-5, songbird wrote: >>> notbob wrote: >>> ... >>> > Today's Yoplait yogurt has roughly 4.3 teaspoons of sugar, in it. >>> > About >>> > the same as a 12oz can of soda. >>> >>> ick, i've never really liked the sweetened >>> yogurts. if that's all that is available i >>> try to get the ones with fruit on the bottom >>> and scrape off the top, but even those are way >>> too sweet for me. >>> >>> i've always liked the plain yogurts (whole >>> milk the best) because of the tart aspect from >>> the lactic acid. >>> >>> when i make a quick cheese cake i always add >>> extra lemon juice to it for more of a zip. in >>> the most recent batch i was thinking i should >>> cut the sweetened condensed milk in half and >>> try some plain condensed milk instead and see >>> if that is better. the cream cheese is kinda >>> sweet itself as it is... >> >> Sweetened condensed milk in a cheesecake? Huh. Never >> heard of it. Here's what I use: > > look up cherry breeze recipe if you want the > original. it is a quick cheesecake filling (as i > said "quick" quite intentionally there). > > >> Filling: >> 1 pound cream cheese at room temperature >> 3/4 cup sugar >> 3 eggs well beaten >> 1 teaspoon vanilla >> >> No lemon with dairy for me. >> >> But what really makes the cheesecake for me is the crust: >> >> 1/4 pound butter, melted >> 16 graham cracker squares, coarsely crushed (1 square = 4 crackers) >> 1/4 cup brown sugar >> >> It's the brown sugar that does it. >> >> Cindy Hamilton > > i don't make baked cheesecakes. i don't really > much like eggs in a lot of things and the other > thing is that we don't really like crusts for > pies or such so i like to make the quick filling > version and then just eat it as is or with some > fruit. > > lately, i'm not even doing this. gotta pare > back the food until spring/summer - i'm getting > too plump again. lol I always wondered why some people gained weight in the winter. Do they eat different food? Have less activity? When I lived in areas with a lot of snow, the shoveling provided a lot of activity. Otherwise I just exercise in the house. I dance and use my weights. Since it's not hot in the house, I can do more of that than I could in warmer months. Or maybe people eat less during warmer months? |
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Julie Bove wrote:
.... > I always wondered why some people gained weight in the winter. Do they eat > different food? Have less activity? When I lived in areas with a lot of > snow, the shoveling provided a lot of activity. Otherwise I just exercise in > the house. I dance and use my weights. Since it's not hot in the house, I > can do more of that than I could in warmer months. Or maybe people eat less > during warmer months? for me it is much less exercise, we both like to shovel snow and have never had a snow-blower, but some years we don't get much snow. i hate exercise for the sake of exercise so i have to reduce calories all winter until spring returns and i can get outside more. walking the roads here in the winter is too often a hazard otherwise we do that when we can or if we're out we'll walk around the store, but it's really not the same as what i do in the summer for exercise (gardening as much as possible). as an example, in the winter 1200 calories a day is usually enough. in the summer i can quadruple that. when i used to practice Tai Chi i did better but i haven't been able to get back to it as much as i keep saying i'd like to... i also used to do basic callistenics just to keep some tone/muscle strength but once i get out of the habit it takes me a long time to get back to it. songbird |
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