Posts tagged "sear"

Coffee Contributes 31% Of Total Daily Antioxidants

“Coffee is the number one antioxidant molecule in the American diet,” claims expert on polyphenols at symposium of science writers 

Dr. Vinson is Professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania. He spoke at a symposium, Nutrigenomics: The New Science of Genes, Nutrition, and Health. The educational event was held here to introduce science writers to nutrigenomics, the new study of how foods affect our genes and how individual genetic differences affect the way we respond to nutrients in foods.

The chemist said that chronic diseases cost our society over $200 billion per year in medical costs and lost productivity. He explained, “These diseases have a pathology that is initiated by free radicals. Recent epidemiology has shown that polyphenols consumed in foods may be the major agents responsible for their health benefits – not the antioxidant vitamins C and E as we’d all originally assumed. Unfortunately, measuring individual phenolic compounds is a difficult if not impossible task, due to the very large number – it’s 8000 and growing – of these compounds in plants. And that’s just one of the obstacles we encounter.

Dr. Vinson’s group accepted the challenge, “Our research group used market samples of common fruits, vegetables, spices, nuts, grains, oils and beverages to determine the total amount of phenols in foods and beverages using an analysis that measures the extract’s antioxidant activity. We also measured the quality of antioxidants in foods and beverages by means of an in vitro ‘heart disease in a test tube’ model.”

Dr. Vinson told the group that foods and beverages are better antioxidants than are antioxidant vitamins. He noted, “With the polyphenol content data and the USDA database of per capita food consumption, the contribution of each type of food to the average estimated intake of phenolic antioxidants was calculated for 2003. Total per capita phenolic antioxidants in the United States diet was 2.2 g. Polyphenols are the major antioxidants in foods and beverages, with the vitamins primarily being minor contributors. The beverage group produced the largest percentage of the total per capita intake of phenolic antioxidants – totaling 49%.”

Professor Vinson explained that “Coffee was the largest single contributor on a daily basis for the average American, contributing 31% of the total daily antioxidants. Coffee is high in phenolic acids and chlorogenic acid, and is the number one antioxidant molecule in the American diet.”

“But do high polyphenol foods and beverages act as antioxidants in the body?” he asked. “Coffee given to humans increases plasma antioxidant capacity, and the polyphenol metabolites act as antioxidants at the level of low density lipoprotein (LDL), decreasing its oxidizability, a possible benefit for slowing down the atherosclerosis process and lowering the risk of heart disease. Recent studies have shown that milk drunk in coffee does not inhibit the absorption of polyphenols in a cell and animal experiment, although recent research suggests that milk in tea interferes with biological effect and presumably antioxidant absorption. Other high polyphenol foods such as tea, chocolate and red wine have the same effects on plasma antioxidant capacity and LDL oxidation.”

Dr. Vinson said that polyphenols, including those in coffee, can also affect oxidative stress by acting both directly as antioxidants and indirectly by affecting cell signaling and gene expression. He concluded, “Polyphenols have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antiproliferative, anti-angiogenic, antithrombic and vasorelaxive properties, which can affect disease and its pathology.”

 

 

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Hot Sauce – Heating Things Up

There’s absolutely nothing similar to a splash of hot sauce to liven up even the blandest of all dishes. Actually, true to the genre of sauces all over the globe, the hot sauce isn’t only an accompaniment but also does honors as the primary ingredient in many dishes.

The term hot sauce could not have been more likely for it refers to any hot and spicy sauce made from chilly peppers or chilly extracts and vinegar. Thus, you can have sauces made from any type of chilly pepper (i.e., the fruits of plants hailing from the Capsicum family) such as red peppers, habaneras or tabasco. The Tabasco sauce is the most well-known amongst all of the hot sauces offered.

How hot your hot sauce is going to be is determined by the kind of pepper being used. Therefore, you have the bell pepper with a barely-there taste at one end of the spectrum and the robust habaneros, which will work up a good steam, at the other end. Interestingly, it is a substance known as capsaicin, which imparts the characteristic heat to the pepper.

The hot sauce is really a well-known constituent in lots of Mexican and Cajun dishes and in Thai and Vietnamese cuisine. However, its most widespread use is, as a barbequeue accompaniment.

Barbecue sauce is poured onto grilled or barbecued meat. It is also used as a dipper. A hot barbecue sauce is generally a blend of sweet, sour and spicy elements and the most well-known combination contains tomato flavorings, vinegar and sugar.

Barbecue sauces come in myriad forms, with every region bragging of their native BBQ sauce. Therefore you have the fiery Texas variety with a tomato base, the vinegar and tomato based Arkansas variety tempered down by molasses, the white mayonnaise based Alabama type and the black pepper, mustard and vinegar concoction hailing from South Carolina.

For all the fire they spew, hot pepper sauces are simple to prepare.

Take a few peppers (the quantity wholly depends upon how hot your sauce will be) like habanera or tabasco, a cup of water, 1/3 cup red wine vinegar, one bell pepper, a tablespoon of paprika, salt to taste and cumin if you so want. Chop or grind the peppers and boil it with all the ingredients. Finally, crush this heady mixture in a blender. Your hot pepper sauce is ready.
 
A word of caution

Whilst working with pepper and pepper sauces, do remember to don the gloves. A few peppers are absolutely nothing short of live ammunition and are known to cause skin irritation and are especially nasty once they enter the eyes.  

There’s much more to a pepper than just the tangy taste. Peppers are storehouses of vitamins A, C and E, potassium and folic acid. So aside from the distinct taste, the hot sauces also give certain nutritional value to the dishes they grace.

The hot sauce holds its own in whatever dish it appears. As the saying goes, like it or loathe it, you simply can’t ignore it.

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The Munchmobile searches for cajun and creole food

Pete Genovese and the Munchmobile opened the 2009 season by searching New Jersey for the best cajun and creole food in the state. (Video by Tim Farrell/The Star-Ledger)

Duration : 0:1:58

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JB vs JB searchin my channel

No mow repeat videos unless I find a better recipe for an uploaded dish…. Nawww It aint possible

Duration : 0:9:16

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does anyone know where to eat Cajun food in London? I mean Southern American dishes like Jambalaya, etc…?

I am already aware of place like Big Easy in Chelsea or other Tex Mex restaurant but they don’t really make Cajun food

I haven’t tried anywhere yet myself – it’s on the list of things to do – but I generally use the Timeout website to help me find decent restaurants, among other things. I’ve included a web link to their section on Caribbean food. Hope it helps!

http://www.timeout.com/london/search/?tag_id=4256&date=&cuisine_vis=South+American+%26+Caribbean&cuisine=1224&area_vis=All+areas%2Fpostcodes&area=&keyword=Keyword+%28optional%29&postcode=&submit=1


Win His Heart with a Jacques Lemans

It is said that the way to man’s heart is through his stomach. I strongly agree with this statement but I have found when it comes to some men there is another way. Recently my husband was in desperate need of a new watch. He wanted something sporty but that was stylish enough to do double duty for dress if necessary. While doing our due diligence on different watches that might work we also had to consider the cost factor. Through a friend I found out about Blue Dial where we could get everything we were looking for at a cost we could afford.
While searching through the great assortment of watches at www.bluedial.com I came across the perfect watch for my husband. We fell in love with a jacques lemans watch that fit all the criteria that we were looking for. What we found was a sporty, stylish, durable watch and within our watch budget. We were so excited to find the perfect watch with relative ease. According to the Blue Dial site, “Perfection without compromise!” the legendary Formula 1 sponsored and acclaimed Jacques Lemans has always held this ideal as their paradigm. I couldn’t have said it better. We compromised on nothing and my husband thinks I’m great.


Reverse sear eye of the round p1

Google it boy

Duration : 0:9:30

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Reverse sear eye of the round p2

Google it boy

Duration : 0:5:25

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Trinidadian French Creole- The Flavour of a Fading Creole (Final Edit)

The Flavour of a Fading Creole is a short study of the last users of Trinidadian French-lexicon Creole, in the community of Paramin in Trinidad. We hear the language through the voices of its last remaining speakers, and get a taste of its culture through a presentation of Trinidadian French Creole cuisine, flavoured by the very seasoning grown by farmers in this agricultural community. The recordings were done by Nicole Scott who was seeking to research and describe this language before it disappeared. This video is approximately seven minutes and 59 seconds long (7:59).

Duration : 0:9:38

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Trinidadian French Creole: Part 1 – The Flavour of a Fading Creole

This video documents Trinidadian French Creole, a dying language, as it is spoken by some of its last speakers, in the community of Paramin in North Trinidad. It shows these speakers and their culture, in particular the food which they grow and their styles of cooking. This video is part of the Caribbean Indigenous and Endangered Languages website, co-sponsored by the Jamaican Language Unit/Unit for Caribbean Language Research, University of the West Indies, and UNESCO. http://www.caribbeanlanguages.org.jm

Duration : 0:6:14

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