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Food and Health Room

a place for talking about food, specially Kurdish food recipes

Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Feb 06, 2017 4:56 am

Piling wrote:Today is Frozen Yogurt Day.

SERIOUSLY ???? :shock: FROZEN yogurt ? Never heard a such thing.

I imagine Kurds' reaction if I ask why they don't freeze their beloved yogurt. =)) =)) =)) =))


I LOVE FROZEN YOGURT :x

I am amazed that you have never heard of it :shock:

It tastes almost the same as ice cream but contains far fewer calories and is much healthier :ymparty:
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Mon Feb 06, 2017 7:18 am

Frozen yogurt is unknown in France… and in Kurdistan, I guess. How is the taste ?

I prefer true ice-cream, pistachio ice-cream. The best ice-creams in the world are Italian :

https://wir.skyrock.net/wir/v1/profilcr ... =598&h=378


But I like also Marash ice-cream, honey, pistachios and orchids :

http://e-turkey.ru/wp-content/uploads/2 ... enoe_5.jpg


About Nutella, interesting facts :

Image
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Feb 06, 2017 11:27 am

Piling wrote:Frozen yogurt is unknown in France… and in Kurdistan, I guess. How is the taste ?


Tastes almost the same as ice cream - most people would not be able to tell the difference

Piling wrote:I prefer true ice-cream, pistachio ice-cream. The best ice-creams in the world are Italian :

https://wir.skyrock.net/wir/v1/profilcr ... =598&h=378

But I like also Marash ice-cream, honey, pistachios and orchids :

http://e-turkey.ru/wp-content/uploads/2 ... enoe_5.jpg

About Nutella, interesting facts :

Image


I have never heard of Marash ice-cream but am happy to try some :ymhug:

I had no idea that Nutella contained so much sugar - good thing I stopped eating it O:-)
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Wed Feb 08, 2017 1:02 pm

Strawberries season in Duhok. I eat a lot. :D
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Feb 08, 2017 11:08 pm

Piling wrote:Strawberries season in Duhok. I eat a lot. :D


I am surprised you have strawberries so early in the year - winter has returned to the UK and we have freezing weather :(
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Thu Feb 09, 2017 1:54 am

We had 14ºc and a sunny day yesterday. Like a Parisian April.

Common method of cooking rice can leave traces of arsenic in food, scientists warn



Experiments suggest normal method for cooking rice can expose consumers to range of health problems including heart disease, diabetes and cancer

Millions of people are putting themselves at risk by cooking their rice incorrectly, scientists have warned.

Recent experiments show a common method of cooking rice — simply boiling it in a pan until the water has steamed out — can expose those who eat it to traces of the poison arsenic, which contaminates rice while it is growing as a result of industrial toxins and pesticides.

The chemical has been linked to a range of health problems including heart disease, diabetes and cancer, as well as development problems.
Read more : http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style ... ebook-post
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Feb 09, 2017 3:31 am

My rice comes in a packet and goes into my microwave :D
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Thu Feb 09, 2017 3:32 am

It is Pizza Day. Happy Europeans who can eat good pizza with HAM !
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Feb 09, 2017 12:49 pm

Piling wrote:It is Pizza Day. Happy Europeans who can eat good pizza with HAM !


I will be going out later to have my dinner in a pizza restaurant - without ham O:-)
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Thu Feb 09, 2017 12:58 pm

I made a cheese börek, instead. Turkish food has many nice things. :-D
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Feb 23, 2017 1:03 am

Why IS chocolate so impossible to resist? :ymhug:

    TV doctor reveals the 13 surprising reasons why certain foods can make you addicted

    In a new BBC series, Dr Michael Mosley investigated some of our favourite foods

    In The Secrets of Your Food he deconstructs cakes, cheeses and coffee in a lab

    He reveals why smelly cheeses seem irresistible, and why coffee is so addictive

So I was thrilled to be asked to make a TV series where I would learn all about the hidden chemistry of food and what it does to our bodies at a molecular level.

As part of the series The Secrets Of Your Food, I went to the country's leading food science laboratories to deconstruct our favourite foods to find out exactly what's going on when we eat them...

WHY IT'S SO HARD TO DENY OURSELVES CHOCOLATE

Cocoa beans are 50 per cent fat, while Cornish clotted cream is 60 per cent fat. Why do we find this almost addictively delicious?

Partly it's to do with the way the creamy viscosity of chocolate and cream melts on the tongue, feeling smooth.

Special touch receptors on our tongues detect this — texture is thus effectively a taste, which prompts wonderful feelings in the pleasure centres of our brains.

Image

But crucial to this enjoyment is the sugar added to make chocolate and found in cream.

In nature, fat and sugar are rarely found together — except in breast milk, where we find the ratio of two parts sugar (in the form of lactose, or milk sugar) to one part fat as well as the same viscosity that we love in chocolate and cream.

For the TV series, I tasted human breast milk and found it surprisingly sweet.

In other words, we are primed to like these foods because they are like our first food — and as we grow older, our taste for this mix of carbs and fats does not really change.

The influence of the first food we ever ate sets the pattern for what is to come and for what kinds of food we will like in future — even if it's not as healthy as breast milk.

You will find the same perfect ratio of carbs to fats found in breast milk in many foods we can't resist, such as biscuits, cake and crisps.

Manufacturers have exploited this golden formula to hook us on to their products.

The mix of fats and carbs activates an area in the brain called the amygdala, which is at the core of our emotional response to food.

It also targets the nucleus accumbens, the brain's centre of desire. This creates the motivation to eat it again.

The formula also activates the memory area of the brain — the hippocampus — to make you remember everything about the experience and the frontal lobes, which control behaviour and planning — so you can do what's needed to recreate the experience again.

BEANS ON TOAST IS A PERFECT MEAL

Across the globe, humans have instinctively combined beans and pulses with other foods to create nutritious meals, whether it's beans on toast, dahl with rice or beans and pasta (the classic Italian dish, pasta e fagioli).

What's driven this? It's quite simple really.

Our bodies need something called essential amino acids to build protein.

Our bodies can make most of these amino acids, but there are nine we can only get from food.

And while you can get all nine from meat, most plant sources are missing at least one or two of them.

For vegetarians and people who want to cut back on meat, there are ready answers in the shape of time-honoured recipes.

By instinctively creating traditional recipe combinations of beans and pulses mixed with grain, our ancestors — perhaps driven by a lack of meat — invented ways to get all nine additional amino acids from plant sources.

PLEASURE OR PAIN OF HOT CURRIES

Our large brains have enabled us to acquire new tastes and learn to love foods that appear to harm us — such as chillis.

Chilli contains capsaicin, which triggers a pain receptor in our mouths and bodies called TRPV1.

The receptor makes the capsaicin feel like scalding heat and sparks our 'fight or flight' response, which triggers the release of powerful painkilling substances called endorphins.

These can also induce a natural high, which is why chillis are painful and pleasurable.

Surprisingly, the hottest part of the chilli is not the seeds, but the placenta, the white spongy ridge down the inside of the fruit.

Cut out the placenta to make your chillis less fearsome. If your curry's still too hot, drink milk.

Casein protein molecules in milk are attracted to oily substances in capsaicin molecules.

They surround them, preventing them locking into our TRPV1 receptors and washing them away.

WHY A SMELLY CHEESE IS SO GOOD

Epoisses is one of the stinkiest cheeses in France.

The bacteria with which it is made give off sulphur-based compounds that are related to those found on sweaty human feet.

When you inhale it, the smell stimulates receptors that can make you think 'Ugh!'.

But when the cheese is in your mouth, the aroma compounds go into the back of your nose and smell different.

This is because we then experience it through a mechanism known as 'backward smelling', where aromas waft from your mouth back through your nasal cavity, triggering smell receptors.

Your brain combines the creamy taste on the tongue with the smell, and dramatically changes your experience to pleasure.

The resulting flavour seems sensational — sharp, warming and comforting. For the full effect, always eat the rind. It's where most of the smelly sensations lie.

MILK MAKES YOUR COFFEE ADDICTIVE

We drink 55 million cups of coffee a day in Britain. Why the attraction? Ask bees.

Research shows that the dose of caffeine from feeding on the flowers of coffee plants boosts their ability to remember the flowers' scent — so they know to come back.

It also amplifies the bees' positive experience of the sugary nectar.

Caffeine likely affects human memory by similarly amplifying the sense of reward: it makes us crave it again.

It may also make the experience of having sugar and cream with your coffee more intense.

They make coffee still more attractive, and make us love the ritual of buying and drinking it.

YOGHURT MAY BOOST LIFE SPAN

There is a mountainous region in Bulgaria where people live unusually long and healthy lives.

This may be partly due to their diet, specifically the yoghurt they eat, which makes up a large part of their nourishment.

The bacteria in the yoghurt, lactobacillus bulgaricus, is associated with reducing the inflammation in the gut and body that may cause problems such as heart disease and cancer.

You don't necessarily need Bulgarian yoghurt to get such benefits. Local shop bought ones will help.

Studies have linked many other full-fat, live bacteria natural yoghurts to improved health.

LOVE SALT? BLAME FISHY ANCESTORS

Our love of salt is due to our ancient biology.

Life seems to have arisen in the oceans, including the earliest cells. It follows that as these cells formed they trapped sea water inside them.

To this day, salt remains vital to our cells' function.

The movement of trillions of sodium ions in our brain enables us to think, move and sense the world around us.

Salt also interferes with bitter taste receptors in our mouths. To demonstrate this, try adding salt to coffee — it banishes the bitter flavour.

This ability to make food more palatable gives salt its powerful attraction.

The sodium ions also work on our taste buds. We have a salt receptor in our mouths that is constantly on the look-out for sodium in our food.

It's not ideal for our blood pressure, though.

STRAWBERRIES HELP YOU TO CUT SUGAR

Strawberries taste sweeter than blueberries, but contain half the sugar.

We think of them as very sweet because they trick the brain.

The secret is in their smell. It contains 36 chemicals that boost our taste sensation and fool the brain into thinking that we are getting a lot more sugar than we are.

HOW TO TURBOCHARGE YOUR MUSHROOMS

We get most of our vitamin D, needed for healthy bones, from the sun's effect on the cholesterol in our skin.

But in the UK, year-round sun is scarce. One trick to boost our levels is to expose mushrooms to sunlight before eating or cooking them.

Mushrooms use vitamin D to protect themselves from the sun's harmful rays.

Exposing them to light turns them into vitamin D factories. They contain chemicals similar to cholesterol, which react with sunshine to make vitamin D.

The trick is to lay your mushrooms gill-side up on a sunny windowsill or in the garden for half an hour. This will dramatically increase their vitamin D content.

BRILLIANT ADVICE :ymapplause:

THE BITTER VEG YOU SHOULD LEARN TO LIKE

Most poisons found in nature taste bitter, so we have 20 times more bitter receptors on our tongues than we do for sweetness. They are there to save our lives.

The potato used to be a bitter, poisonous plant — a relative of deadly nightshade — but descendants of the Incas in Peru transformed it into a life-giving staple through generations of cultivation.

But avoid green potatoes — they're not only bitter, but can be poisonous.

They're green because of exposure to light, which may have caused them to develop a high level of toxins called glycoalkaloids.

Some veg have evolved bitter tastes as a defence against predators, but they are, in fact, the opposite of poisonous.

Brassicas — nutritious greens such as broccoli, sprouts and cabbage — use this trick.

Most of us learn to enjoy them because we know they do us good, though often we can't stand them as children.

IS BEEF THAT'S GRASS FED BETTER FOR YOU?

Our bodies have evolved mechanisms for creating fats we need in our bodies. But there are two we can't make: omega 6 and omega 3.

These we must get from food. There is plenty of omega 6 in vegetable oil. Omega 3 is rarer, but it is vital for our brains.

Oily fish such as salmon and mackerel can contain plentiful amounts of omega 3.

Sea-caught salmon are rich in it, because they get it from eating omega 3-rich seawater algae.

But freshwater salmon contains very little. When the fish migrate into rivers, they lose their algae diet.

A rugby team nutritionist told me mackerel is a much better bet for omega 3, as the fish live only in the sea.

Omega 3 is also found naturally in grass and clover. Cattle fed on it have high levels in their meat.

Grain, meanwhile, contains very little omega 3 — so factory farmed beef is seriously lacking in this vital acid. Try to buy only pasture-raised beef.

TASTY REASON WHY WE LOVE TOMATOES

The tomato contains more umami (which, after sweet, sour, salty and bitter, is the fifth taste — a Japanese word that translates as 'pleasant savoury taste') than any other fruit. That is a heavy punch and it helps explain why we love them.

The umami molecule is an amino acid called glutamate, which is one of the building blocks of protein.

We have a taste receptor on our tongues that's on the lookout for glutamate in our food. We are wired to enjoy the taste of protein and to want more.

One of the most umami-rich foods is cured ham made from Spain's black-footed Iberico pig. The pigs get the umami amino acids from acorns they eat.

During the curing process, more and more glutamate molecules are released in the ham (this is probably true when we cook tomatoes and may explain our love of ketchup).

Other umami-rich foods are beef, chicken, mushrooms, soy and parmesan cheese, or foods that combine them all, such as pizza.

Link to Article - Photos:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/artic ... esist.html
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Feb 23, 2017 10:51 am

Fruit and veg: For a longer life eat 10 a day

Eating loads of fruit and vegetables - 10 portions a day - may give us longer lives

The study, by Imperial College London, calculated such eating habits could prevent 7.8 million premature deaths each year.

The team also identified specific fruit and veg that reduced the risk of cancer and heart disease.

The analysis showed even small amounts had a health boon, but more is even better.

A portion counts as 80g (3oz) of fruit or veg - the equivalent of a small banana, a pear or three heaped tablespoons of spinach or peas.

The conclusions were made by pooling data on 95 separate studies, involving two million people's eating habits.

Lower risks of cancer were linked to eating:

green veg (eg spinach)
yellow veg (eg peppers)
cruciferous vegetables (eg cauliflower).

Lower risks of heart disease and strokes were linked to eating:

apples
pears
citrus fruits
salads
green leafy vegetables (eg lettuce)
cruciferous veg

The results, published in the International Journal of Epidemiology, also assessed the risk of dying before your time.

Compared with eating no fruit or veg a day, it showed:

200g cut the risk of cardiovascular disease by 13% while 800g cut the risk by 28%
200g cut the risk of cancer by 4%, while 800g cut the risk by 13%
200g cut the risk of a premature death by 15%, while 800g cut the risk by 31%

The researchers do not know if eating even more fruit and veg would have even greater health benefits as there is little evidence out there to review.

Dr Dagfinn Aune, one of the researchers, said: "Fruit and vegetables have been shown to reduce cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and to boost the health of our blood vessels and immune system.

"This may be due to the complex network of nutrients they hold.

"For instance, they contain many antioxidants, which may reduce DNA damage and lead to a reduction in cancer risk."

However, many people struggle to even eat the five a day (400g) recommended by the World Health Organization.

In the UK, only about one in three people eats enough.

Dr Aune said the findings did not mean the five-a-day message needed to change.

He told the BBC: "There are many different considerations if changing policy, it's not just the health effects - is it feasible?

"But our findings are quite clear in that they do support five a day, but there are even some further benefits for higher intakes."

Dr Alison Tedstone, chief nutritionist at Public Health England, said: "The five-a-day target is the foundation of a healthy balanced diet and is an achievable way to help prevent a number of diseases.

"Whilst consuming more than five portions of fruit and vegetables a day may be desirable... adding pressure to consume more fruit and vegetables creates an unrealistic expectation."

Not all of the 95 studies that were analysed fully accounted for other aspects of lifestyle, such as exercise levels, that could also play a role in prolonging lives.

However, Dr Aune said the conclusions were "quite robust".

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-39057146
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Feb 27, 2017 9:47 pm

The five foods you need to eat every day for a flatter stomach
(including miso soup and bread)

    We round up the foods you should be eating to ensure you have a toned stomach
    Includes watermelon, which is hailed the 'ultimate' bloat buster
    Wholewheat bread, walnuts and legumes are also great for flat stomachs

A flat stomach is something we all yearn for but something many of us struggle to achieve.

We all know that ditching alcohol and doing hundreds of sit-ups can help shift the weight around our middle but did you know there's certain foods that will actually help you lose stomach fat?

From watermelon to miso soup and even wholewheat bread, we round up the foods you should be eating every single day to ensure you have a toned stomach.

I LOVE WATERMELON :D

Wholemeal bread

Dr Marilyn Glenville, author of Natural Alternatives to Sugar, http://www.marilynglenville.com, advises avoiding any foods that make your blood sugar rise quickly, because - as blood sugar drops again - your body releases adrenaline and cortisol to stabilise it once more and you end up caught in a catch 22 situation. She says you should swap to wholegrain alternatives that release energy slowly.

According to Marilyn, wholemeal bread contains four times as much fibre, more than three times as much zinc and almost twice as much iron as white bread. The carbohydrates in wholemeal break are broken slowly over several hours, like the coals in the fire, and so do not give any sudden flooding of sugars into the bloodstream.

Also this gradual release helps you to feel full for longer, suppressing your appetite and stopping you craving sweet foods because you are not on the blood sugar rollercoaster.

Legumes

Legumes consist of amylose, which is a resistant starch, so called because it is resistant to stomach acid and digestive enzymes, it reaches the large intestine essentially intact. So it manages to escape digestion and absorption in the small intestine. It almost behaves like fibre, providing bulk for the bowel motion and fuel for the beneficial bacteria.

List of Legumes

    Alfalfa
    Asparagus bean
    Asparagus pea
    Baby lima bean
    Black bean
    Black-eyed pea
    Black turtle bean
    Boston bean
    Boston navy bean
    Broad bean
    Cannellini bean
    Chickpeas
    Chili bean
    Cranberry bean
    Dwarf bean
    Egyptian bean
    Egyptian white broad bean
    English bean
    Fava bean
    Fava coceira
    Field pea
    French green bean
    Frijol bola roja
    Frijole negro
    Great northern bean
    Green bean
    Green and yellow peas
    Kidney bean
    Lentils
    Lespedeza
    Licorice
    Lima bean
    Madagascar bean
    Mexican black bean
    Mexican red bean
    Molasses face bean
    Mung bean
    Mung pea
    Mungo bean
    Navy bean
    Pea bean
    Peanut
    Peruvian bean
    Pinto bean
    Red bean
    Red clover
    Red eye bean
    Red kidney bean
    Rice bean
    Runner bean
    Scarlet runner bean
    Small red bean
    Snow pea
    Southern pea
    Sugar snap pea
    Soybean
    Wax bean
    White vlover
    White kidney bean
    White pea bean

Globe artichokes

Clinical Nutritionist Suzie Sawyer says that while they may look a little strange, they really pack amazing health benefits, and are great for ‘beating the bloat’.

One of the active constituents of globe artichokes are the chlorogenic acids, which aid detoxification and stimulate bile production. This means great digestion and a flatter stomach.

Watermelon

This fruit is hailed 'the ultimate' when it comes to controlling the bloat. Not only is watermelon packed with antioxidant-boosting nutrients to stop the ageing process, but it's a natural diuretic that's also loaded with potassium to stop any water retention.

Miso

Unpasteurised miso, in particular, can be great for our digestive health, says Cassandra Barns, Nutritionist.

It’s a natural source of friendly bacteria, which plays many vital roles in gut health, including breaking down and absorbing nutrients and helping to keep the ‘bad’ bugs at bay.

For the greatest benefits, make sure you go for unpasteurised miso, as the pasteurised versions are heat-treated and will contain only minimal – if any – beneficial bacteria. And if you’re using unpasteurised, don’t heat your miso to high temperatures, for the same reason; add it to sauces or cooked foods at the end of cooking, or use it in dressings, dips or spreads.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/food/ ... omach.html
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Piling » Tue Feb 28, 2017 2:32 pm

Since the beginning of the Lent, my breakfast is reduced to 3 simple things :

When I wake up, at 5. am, only a good rich black coffee. Eastern coffee but filtered in my Western coffee maker. I could not survive the Fast without it.

At 9.30, while the others eat cheese, yogurt, marmalade, kaymak, etc. I limit my meal to tahini and black olive, and a Kurdish bread (GOOD) or an ordinary industrial white bread (BAD).

Some Christians eat French fries instead of dairy, but I am not sure it will make a very healthy Lent :lol:

At 2. pm, the main meal : today, rice, tomatoes, pepperoni, onion and fish, with 2 tbsp of oil.

At 6 pm, some dried fruits like salted almonds or pistachios. I can even take chips, chipsters, pop corn, corn chops, etc. It is my only SIN :D
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Re: Food Room

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Feb 28, 2017 2:55 pm

Piling wrote:Since the beginning of the Lent, my breakfast is reduced to 3 simple things :

When I wake up, at 5. am, only a good rich black coffee. Eastern coffee but filtered in my Western coffee maker. I could not survive the Fast without it.

At 9.30, while the others eat cheese, yogurt, marmalade, kaymak, etc. I limit my meal to tahini and black olive, and a Kurdish bread (GOOD) or an ordinary industrial white bread (BAD).

Some Christians eat French fries instead of dairy, but I am not sure it will make a very healthy Lent :lol:

At 2. pm, the main meal : today, rice, tomatoes, pepperoni, onion and fish, with 2 tbsp of oil.

At 6 pm, some dried fruits like salted almonds or pistachios. I can even take chips, chipsters, pop corn, corn chops, etc. It is my only SIN :D


5am :shock:

Does everyone wake up so early in Kurdistan?

Do you take sugar in your coffee?

It is a fairly healthy and pop corn is very good, hardly any calories :ymapplause:
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