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Womens Things

Whether you wake up with nausea or cravings, a healthy breakfast is very important if you are pregnant. These easy-to-use and largely pre-cooked breakfast options are filled with essential nutrients to keep you healthy, support your baby's growth and start the day as best as possible. Pregnancy Breakfast ideas will lead you on the way of getting better nutrition.

Breakfast with salmon and cream
Smoked salmon is not a good choice for pregnant women because of the risk of listeriosis. But that's not a reason to miss omega-3 fatty acids in salmon. These healthy fats are important for the development of your brain! Choose a variety of baked fish and enjoy them with cream cheese in your favorite bagel. Look for mini-bagels that are actually much closer to the size of the good portion than the huge coffee variant. If you can find a variety of whole grains, you will receive another nutritional bonus for you and your baby.

Breakfast with apples
Are your morning's crazy? It's still not an excuse to skip breakfast, especially with this simple option. Prepare this oatmeal the day before and enjoy by preparing your meals or parking at your desk. Just mix 1/2 cup of oatmeal with 1/2 cup of milk in a mason jar, sprinkle with a tablespoon of chopped walnuts and rub in the middle of an apple. Shake and let stand overnight in the refrigerator, and ready: Breakfast is served!

Breakfast smoothie
How about a glass of super foods in the morning? This shake is full of vitamin C that comes from fruits and protein, calcium come from the yogurt. And you probably know how important it is to have enough folic acid in during the. So to properly arrange the requirement amount of folic acid you have to follow pregnancy breakfast ideas. Leafy vegetables such as spinach will serve the purpose. Chia seeds are an important plant source of omega-3s; the beneficial fatty acids that scientists believe are needed. To make this super-loaded smoothie, mix 1/2 cup almond milk, 1/2 cup yogurt, a kiwi, a handful of spinach and a tablespoon of chia seeds.

Egg, cheese breakfast
If you're having trouble getting enough vegetables during the day, try starting the day with a full serving. This burrito is also a source of protein. Eggs, beans, and cheese help you get the extra 25 grams of protein you need now. To prepare, sprinkle two scrambled eggs, two tablespoons boiled beans (canned), two tablespoons grated shredded cheese, such as cheddar cheese, and a medium-sized tomato cut into a tortilla. Season with salt and pepper and roll, fold up and down.

Breakfast with eggs and avocado
Start the day with a useful dose of chorine from eggs, a superstar nutrient for expectant moms. It helps to improve the function of your brain (so you will never forget breakfast again) and discusses the development of your baby's brain, especially during the last trimester. And your belly will thank you for the fiber of all toasts and avocados.

Boiled egg and avocado with toast
Start the day with a useful dose of choline from eggs, a superstar nutrient for expectant moms. Recent research shows: In the morning we can't get required nutrition, so get in the breakfast an egg yolk contains about a quarter of the hill you need each day. It helps to improve the function of your brain (so you will never forget breakfast again) and discusses the development of your baby's brain, especially during the last trimester. And your belly will thank you for the fiber of all toasts and avocados.

Weight Gain Breakfast for Mom



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There is no question that cold cereals revolutionized the American breakfast table. No longer did mom have to cook hot cereal, eggs or meat, and kids could independently prepare something for themselves before heading off to school. At the turn of the twentieth century, the creation of cold cereal basically began with two enterprising men who saw the possibilities and took a gamble. And breakfast has never been the same.

In the late 1890s, a rather eccentric man named John Harvey Kellogg, ran a health sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan, and had created a bland, tasteless food for his patients with digestive issues. A few years later, his brother Will decided to mass-market the new food at his new company, Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company, adding a bit of sugar to the flakes recipe making it more palatable for the masses, and a star was born.

Around the same time, C. W. Post, who had been a patient at Kellogg's sanitarium, introduced an alternative to coffee called Postum, followed by Grape-Nuts (which have nothing to do with either grapes or nuts) and his version of Kellogg's corn flakes, naming them Post Toasties, and America's breakfasts were never the same.

Both men could thank an enterprising gentleman by the name of Sylvester Graham, who forty years earlier had experimented with graham flour, marketing it to aid "digestive problems." He created a breakfast cereal that was dried and broken into shapes so hard they needed to be soaked in milk overnight, which he called granula (the father of granola and graham crackers).

Capitalizing on that original idea, in 1898 the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco) began producing graham crackers based on the experiments of Sylvester Graham, first promoting them as a "digestive" cracker for people with stomach problems; (Seems a lot of people had digestive problems even back then.)

Fast forward and other companies were sitting up and taking notice. The Quaker Oats Company, acquired a method which forced rice grains to explode and began marketing Puffed Rice and Puffed Wheat, calling them a marvel of food science which was "the first food shot from guns" (oh boy, would they come under fire for that one today, no pun intended);

1920s Wheaties was introduced and cleverly targeted athletes as they proclaimed to be the "Breakfast of Champions;"

The 1930s saw The Ralston Purina company introduce an early version of Wheat Chex, calling it Shredded Ralston (sounds a little painful);

Soon Cheerios appeared and would become the best-selling cereal in America, worth about $1 billion in sales in 2015.

No one can dispute the convenience and versatility of dry packaged cereal. In the last fifty years, this multi-billion dollar industry has spun off multiple uses, unlimited possibilities and targeted kids with clever packaging, outrageous names, flavors, colors and choices (all loaded with sugar of course). What could be more American than corn flakes?


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Congratulations on your healthier new lifestyle! Plenty of things will change, including your diet. But don't worry, nobody said that you can't have your sugar fix when you crave for it! Although you have to be more careful with the ingredients of your desserts, it doesn't mean that the delicious taste will be compromised!

Try these 3 guilt-free desserts that are incredibly mouth-watering:

Apple Extravaganza

What you need:

    2 apples, sliced into skinny wedges
    1 lemon, juiced
    2 tablespoons chocolate chips, divided
    2 tablespoons chopped pecans
    1 tablespoon peanut butter
    4 teaspoons coconut oil, divided
    1 teaspoon finely shredded coconut

Mix together 1 tablespoon chocolate chips and 2 teaspoons coconut oil in a microwave-safe bowl and heat in the microwave until melted. In a separate bowl, combine peanut butter and remaining coconut oil and heat in the microwave until melted. Arrange apple wedges on a plate and sprinkle with lemon juice. Pour chocolate mixture followed by peanut butter mixture. Top with remaining chocolate chips, pecans and coconut.

Gluten-Free Choco Avocado Brownies

What you need:

    2 large avocados
    3 eggs
    1 cup coconut sugar
    1/2 cup cocoa powder
    1/2 cup chocolate chips
    1/2 cup brown rice flour
    1/2 teaspoon baking soda

Scoop out the flesh of the 2 avocados and place in a food processor. Add the coconut sugar and cocoa powder to the blender and blend until smooth. Add the eggs, brown rice flour and baking soda and continue processing just until eggs are well-combined with the mixture. Carefully fold in chocolate chips. Pour the batter in a greased 8x8 inches brownie pan. Bake in a pre-heated oven (350F) for 15 minutes. Allow to cool completely before slicing and serving.

Dark Chocolate Chewy Cookies

What you need:

    2 eggs
    10 pcs. dried dates, boiled
    2 cups almond butter
    1/2 cup dark chocolate chips
    2 tablespoons water
    2 teaspoons vanilla extract
    1/2 teaspoons baking powder
    1/4 teaspoon sea salt

Combine softened dates, water and sea salt in a food processor and pulse until coarsely ground. Add almond butter, vanilla extract and baking powder to the food processor and blend until smooth. Stir in (by hand) the chocolate chips. Form mixture into balls and arrange on greased baking sheets. Bake in a pre-heated oven (350F) for 8 to 10 minutes. Allow to cool for several minutes in a cooling rack before serving.

Satisfy your sweet tooth without feeling guilty - try these delicious guilt-free desserts!



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We have a new question that gets asked of us more and more these days. It's how to go about making the strongest Kava possible. Well, lucky for you, there are many ways to make your Kava as strong as possible!

First, anyone who has experience with Kava knows that Kava drinks are usually made with water or coconut water. Fruit juices are often added, but mainly, Kava drinks are made from water.

The trouble is, is that Kavalacatones, the active ingredients in Kava responsible for the pleasurable effects, really like to be extracted into fats. Fats include liquids we all know well, such as milk, soy milk, coconut milk, and many others. Oils are also fatty, but who wants to make a drink out of olive oil? Not me!

The other problem is that fats and oils do not get along together. If you have ever had balsamic vinaigrette salad dressing, you know that you have to shake the oil and vinegar to get them to blend. And even then, it only blends long enough to get onto your salad! So, let's do a little bit of math:

Kavalactones account for just 10% of the total Kava root powder material. Doesn't that mean we could use a 10% fat solution for our drink to get that 10% of Kavalactones? Well, unfortunately, it doesn't work exactly like that. Things like soy milk are already water-based, and have plenty of water in them. So, if we wanted the strongest possible drink without any extra additives, we could simply use 100% milk, soy milk, or almond milk as these are already blended with plenty of water, instead of just water.

Kava Additives

But there are more than a few natural products that act as emulsifiers. What's an emulsifier you say? Glad you asked! Emulsifiers help bridge the gap between water and oils (or fats). Emulsifiers allow water and fats or oil to play nice together, and stay blended in your drink. So, if your salad dressing had an emulsifier added to it (many do), you would never have to shake your dressing!

Knowing that, what might be typical emulsifiers for Kava? Having water and fats play nice together does indeed make for stronger Kava drinks. One very common emulsifier is coconut milk and another is soy lecithin. These are used quite often as a way to give your Kava that extra "kick". Both are safe, and vegan as well. So, they're popular choices. There is another product available online called Kava Blender. This is an organic rice-based product that does a very similar job to soy lecithin, but as a powder instead of a thick, gooey substance or in granule form. I really like it and prefer that over soy lecithin at the moment.

Heating Your Kava

I also get asked whether or not Kava can be heated up. Even though the breakdown point for Kavalactones is only 140 degrees Fahrenheit, we have made plenty of Kava tea, Kava brownies, and a stack of other Kava-related items that still had plenty of kick to them. So, although Kava isn't approved as a food ingredient, there are many reports online of people making treats out of Kava and enjoying a Kava brownie alongside that Kava drink. And, from personal experience I can say that this is an effective way of having a stronger Kava experience without actually making strong Kava.

Drink More Kava

Let's now look at the more obvious ways of making strong Kava. One of the easiest ways is to simply drink more of it! I know the focus of this article is making strong Kava, but the beautiful thing about Kava is that there is no immediate tolerance to it as you're drinking it. This makes it possible to enjoy several shells over the course of a few hours. In social situations, my friends and I will enjoy several cups ("shells") of Kava over the course of a few hours.

It doesn't matter how strong you make your Kava, the effects only last about an hour or so when taking single servings of Kava. But, when you start to consume more than just one shell an hour; say 2 shells per hour, some very relaxing and pleasurable effects start to take hold. And that is when things can get very interesting.

Another simple way to increase the effectiveness of your Kava is to simply add stronger Kava into the drink you're making. This is most easily accomplished by using items such as Kava Tincture Plus or Kavalactone Paste 55%. These items are both emulsified, and will blend easily with any Kava extraction that you're working on. If you're looking for a bigger initial "kick" then these simple additives are the perfect solution to making strong Kava drinks.

And, just like anything else, both responsibility and moderation is the key to having a safe and fun time with Kava. It's completely legal throughout the world for personal use (except Germany as of this writing), but can have effects that could make it more difficult to drive. So, if you plan on making strong Kava, please make sure you're in a safe place such as a Kava bar or your own home, and get familiar with the effects before venturing out into the world.

In Summary

So, what have we learned about making strong Kava drinks today? That it is indeed possible, and fun at the same time! You can extract into something that already has natural fats in it such as soy milk, almond milk, or even cow's milk. That will make a stronger Kava drink than if you had extracted into only water.

There are also additives that can be quite effective, and are only needed in small amounts. Next, there's always simply drinking more Kava! It's not technically making stronger Kava, but it definitely is concentrating your Kava inside your body.





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Tromping down memory lane, who could forget these (now somewhat ghastly) staples of our early diet:

Cheez Whiz... much like Velveeta, this processed food made its debut in 1952 and was piled on crackers and spread on white bread
Hostess Twinkies and Cupcakes
Jello
Popsicles
Hot Dogs
Potato Chips
Scrambled Eggs and Bacon
Peanut Butter
S'mores
Iceberg lettuce with watery bottled dressing
Grilled Cheese Sandwiches
Campbell's Tomato Soup
Yoo Hoo (chocolate flavored soft drink developed in New Jersey in 1928 and manufactured by Keurig Dr Pepper)
Swanson Frozen Dinners
Meatloaf (smothered in ketchup)
Tuna Noodle Casserole
Baked Alaska
Deviled Eggs
Chicken à la King
Red Delicious Apples
Welsh Rarebit
Ry-Krisp Crackers
Succotash
Spam
Bubblegum
Salisbury Steak
Meatballs and Spaghetti
Toll House Cookies
Brownies

and some of the first convenience foods:

1950. Minute Rice
1951. Ore Ida Foods (frozen potato products)
1953. Eggo Frozen Waffles
1954. General Mills Trix cereal
1955. Kellogg's Special K cereal
1956. Imperial Margarine

It's fun to look back and see which of these bastions of the early years we still consume and even enjoy, and which ones we wouldn't eat on a bet (can you spell J-e-l-l-o?). We've traded sugary cereals for Irish Steel Cut Oatmeal, Chinese take-out for spicy Thai noodles, Cheez Whiz for goat cheese and Brie and fish sticks for fish tacos. Our first bite of KFC fried chicken is an ancient memory, our first McDonald's we probably can't even remember and our first white Minute Rice a bland, boring starchy filler. Many of us still embrace peanut butter, but it's the natural organic variety, not sugary Skippy.
Baked Alaska? Good luck finding it on any restaurant menu these days. Head lettuce has given way to crunchy Napa cabbage, arugula and romaine, cremini, portobello and shitake mushrooms and and the revered avocado added to salads, sandwiches and our new favorite Mexican foods. Risotto rice with savory veggies, beautiful pasta dishes with nary a meatball in sight, endless flavors of tortilla chips and salsas, designer pizza, white chicken chili, fresh fish with flavorful sauces or just grilled on a barbeque.

Okay, so maybe you have a box of Twinkies or Little Debbie snack cakes hidden in the linen closet; a stash of Hershey bars under the dish towels in the kitchen; or a jumbo bag of Lay's Potato Chips in the trunk of your car (in case you get stranded on the freeway for several hours). You're in control, aren't you? And sometimes you just draw the binds, don't answer the phone and down an entire bottle of Pinot Grigio wine with your Laughing Cow cheese triangles (on Ritz Crackers, of course). Life is good. Food is good. And aren't we lucky. We can pick up a roasted rotisserie chicken at the supermarket, a carton of garlic mashed potatoes, pop a bag of frozen vegetables into the microwave and have a whole dinner in less than 15 minutes. What a world. And not a jiggly bowl of cherry Jello in sight.

Later I'm going out for shrimp tacos drenched in fresh lime juice and Pico de Gallo. And maybe some double chocolate swirl gelato. This Boomer is a full-fledged foodie with no end in sight.



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In short, Russian cuisine can be divided into four main eras:

Old Russian cuisine (9th-16th centuries);

In the medieval period most Russian beverages turned national: mead, khmel, kvass, cider. Beer appeared in 1284. In 1440-1470s Russia discovered vodka made from rye grain. Until the 17th century milk and meat were not popular. Meat boiled in shchi (cabbage soup) or for kasha was not even roasted until the 16th century.

Old Moscow cuisine (17th century):

Starting with Peter the Great, Russian nobility borrowed some of West European culinary customs and traditions. Rich nobles who visited countries in Western Europe brought foreign chefs with them to expand their repertoire. It was at this time that minced meat was introduced into Russian cuisine: chops, casseroles, pates and rolls became quite popular, along with non-Russian (Swedish, German, French) soups, which appeared in the 17th century: solyanka, (beef soup) and rassolnik (potato and pickle soup) containing brines, lemons and olives appeared at the same time and were hppily integrated into the cuisine. It was during this period that such well-known delicacies as black caviar and salted, jellied fish appeared.

In the 16th century Kazan and Astrakhan Khanates along with Bashkiria and Siberia were annexed to Russia. New food products such as raisins (grapes), dried apricots, figs, melons, watermelons, lemons and tea made their first appearance, much to the delight of the populace. During the short growing season, even poor farmers could enjoy a variety of fresh fruits, along with drying them for the long winter months. Foreign chefs cooked their national dishes, which harmoniously fitted in Russian cuisine. There was also the time of German sandwiches, butter, French and Dutch cheeses.

Petersburg cuisine (end of the 18th century-1860s)

The French expanded the assortment of starters by adding a number of old Russian meat, fish, mushroom and sour vegetable dishes the variety of which can be a surprise for foreigners. Because cold weather could last as long as nine months in some regions, preserved foods were a large part of Russian cuisine, and households would store as much food as possible to last through the long winters. This included smoking, salting, soaking, and fermenting. Cabbage could be used all winter to make shchi, or be used as a filling for dumplings. Soaked apples were often served to guests or in some side dishes. Pickled cucumbers were a main ingredient in many dishes, including several traditional soups. Salted and dried meat and fish were eaten after religious and pre-holiday fasts. Overall, it was a pretty spartan diet, with most economic groups using what was available.

Traditional Russian foods are heavily influenced by filled dumplings, hearty stews, soups, potatoes and cabbage:

+Borscht one of Russia's best-known foods, a chunky, cold stew made with beets and topped with sour cream

+Beef Stroganoff - strips of beef sauteed in a sauce of butter, white wine, sour cream (called 'smetana' in Russia), mustard and onions; eaten either straight or poured over rice or noodles

+Sweet-and-Sour Cabbage - cooked in red wine vinegar, applesauce, butter and onions.diced apples, sugar, bay leaves

+Solyanka Soup - a hearty soup made from thick chunks of beef and/or pork, cooked for hours over a low flame with garlic, tomatoes, peppers and carrots

+Golubtsy.- Shredded or minced beef wrapped in cabbage and steamed/boiled until cooked; found all over Eastern Europe

+Olivie. - a kind of potato salad made with pickles, eggs, bologna and carrots mixed with mayo

+Blini - thin, crepe-like pancakces topped with savory or sweet toppings like minced beef, caviar, or apples

+Potato Okroshka.- cold soup made from buttermilk, potatoes and onions, garnished with dill; Vichyssoise (often attributed to the French, it was actually created at the Ritz Carlton in NYC in 1917 but of course disputed by French chefs, who insist they created it)

+Knish - mashed potatoes, ground beef, onions and cheese filled inside thick dough pastry and deep fried/baked

+Khinkali - dumplings of ground beef and cilantro

+Khachapuri - thick, crusty bread shaped like a boat and filled with a variety of melted cheese

+Zharkoye - a beef stew made with potatoes, carrots, parsley, and celery, spiced with garlic, cloves, and dill; served hot with sour cream

+Pelmeni - dumplings made from thin, unleavened dough, filled with minced meat, mushrooms and onions

+Shashlik - classic shesh kebab

+Tula Gingerbread - similar to our gingerbread, but may contain jam or nuts

+Pirozhki - pastries filled with meat, potatoes, cabbage or cheese, similar to Polish pierogi

+Morozhenoe (rich ice cream); well hey... now you're talkin'

+Chak-Chak (Russia's attempt at funnel cakes... would we make that up?)

You'll notice a distinct absence of fresh vegetable salads, seafood, pasta and rice.They are just not part of their basic diet. And of course Russia is certainly not known for their desserts. Even Chicken Kiev is generally credited to several NYC restaurants who claim they created it, not to any native Russian chef or restaurant. (gee... you can't believe anything these days).

So next time you get a hankering for some borscht or a kinkali, you just may have to whip it up yourself. There is not a preponderance of Russian restaurants anywhere in the U.S. nor the desire for them. Few people thnk of blinis or knish when planning Sunday dinner. But who knows? You might just discover a whole new world of cuisine when you stick your toe in the Russian diet (oh dear, that didn't come out right). Go for it.


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