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Saturday, October 11, 2008

Lets talk about goji berry seed

goji berry seedMake Your Own Gourmet Gift Baskets

Everyone loves to receive a gift basket. Corporate gift baskets are often given by businesses to their customers as a token of their appreciation. However, most gift baskets are person to person expressions of love and friendship.

You can find a great selection of online gift baskets from the very expensive to the cheap. Or, you can come up with your own unique gift basket idea and surprise a cherished friend or loved one.

It�s not difficult to make your own personalized gift baskets. Most gift baskets involve a theme.

Here are some sample ideas to get you started:

  • Cookie Gift Basket � bake up some homemade cookies and enclose them in colorful plastic wrap, include a personal card or poem.

  • Chocolate Lovers Gift Basket � include individual fancy chocolates, boxed chocolates, or the person�s favorite chocolate bars along with hot chocolate mix.

  • Holiday Gift Basket #1 � a Christmas holiday gift basket idea could include small stocking stuffers, candy canes and homemade Christmas cookies.

  • Holiday Gift Basket #2 � a Halloween holiday gift basket can be stuffed with candy, throw in some plastic skulls, spiders, cob webs and assorted creepy items.

  • Wine Country Gift Basket � wine and cheese baskets are favorites, include two bottles of choice wine from your favorite winery or wine shop, add cheese and crackers.

  • Coffee Gift Basket � Your favorite coffee lover will enjoy fresh gourmet ground roasted coffee (or their favorite brand), flavored creamer, cookies and a fun coffee mug.

  • Italian Gift Basket � include a variety of dried gourmet pasta like spinach, whole wheat, or dried tomato, two jars of pasta sauce, fresh mozzarella and parmesan cheese, garlic bread and fancy olive oil.

  • Tea Lovers Gift Basket � you can include several varieties of black tea, green tea and herbal teas, a mug and homemade butter cookies adds a nice finishing touch.

  • Champagne or Beer Gift Basket - the champagne basket would be elegant: includes a bottle of fine champagne, cheese and crackers, and fancy chocolates; the beer basket includes several domestic and/or imported beers, lagers, or ales, chips, pretzels and nuts.

  • Pet Gift Basket � dog and cat gift baskets are the most popular. For a dog you can include: homemade doggie biscuits or cookies, a doggie collar, doggie toys. For a cat you can include: cat treats, cat nip and cat toys.

Now you know that all it takes to make a unique gift basket that will be treasured is a little ingenuity and your personal touch.

Copyright 2004

About The Author

Donna Monday

Love Cookies? All Your favorites here: http://www.best-cookie-jar-recipes.com



Nutrition, Evolution, and Having a Healthy Diet

Nutrition has everything to do with health.� This isn�t news, exactly, but looking around at the crazy information on the market, one wonders if anyone actually makes the connection: what you eat affects how you feel.� It�s that simple.� Your health depends on the food choices you make in both the short and long term.�

Take a pill, and all you�ve done is treat a symptom.� Change your eating habits, and create a lasting change in your well-being.� There are so many approaches to eating, however, and so much conflicting information that it�s come down to this simple question: does whatever you�re eating right now make sense?

Well, sense isn�t common, and it does depend on some good information.� So here is something to consider: what kind of foods are humans evolved to eat?� Cheetos?� Don�t think so.� That�s a no-brainer, but what about some others that we counted as healthy staples until recently, like bread and pasta.� Go way back in your imagination, to hunter gatherer days � before agriculture and the obesity which followed for the first time among humans � and consider what would be part of our ancestors� normal diet.� If you�re about to pop something into your mouth that wasn�t around before agriculture, (a relatively recent development in human history), then eat it knowing it�s not considered a �normal� food by your body.� Foods your body considers �normal� contribute to your health, other foods are either neutral or harmful.� How simple is that?

A well-known exploration of this concept that certain foods help our bodies thrive is Dr. Peter D�Adamo�s book, �Eat Right 4 Your Type,� in which he bases his lists of what to eat and avoid on blood type.� D�Adamo asserts that type O is the oldest type, and the newer A type didn�t show up on the scene until agriculture.� So, Os should eat lots of meat and veg because that blood type doesn�t know how to handle too much grain.� Type As can eat grain, but not dairy.� Dairy is a category reserved as a �normal� food only for the yet more recent human blood type, AB.� (Maybe we�ll evolve a new type that can handle Cheetos and red licorice, my personal favorite abnormal foods).

D�Adamo supports his blood-type theory with all kinds of careful research, and so what?� Does it make sense that humans should rely primarily on foods that occur naturally?� Absolutely.� If you�re going to eat a grain like wheat then, eat it whole, or don�t eat it at all, and don�t eat much of it anyway because humans pretty much made wheat up!� I�m not going to take the, �Does it occur naturally?� debate too far, because it�s time to look at another researcher�s take on the food and evolution connection.�

Dr. Phillip Lipetz wrote �The Good Calorie Diet,� a book for the weight loss market, but he also has supported his theories with all kinds of careful research.� His describes how the human response to starvation that was developed during the ice age carries on today.� Ironic, isn�t it, that the food available to us today - rich and sweet and abundant - causes our bodies to behave as though starvation is at hand.

The short story for how this works is that up until the ice age, humans ate whatever was readily available, like roots, plants, fruit, and a little tasty carrion now and then.� Along came the ice ages, and those foods became scarce.� Now humans were forced to hunt, but it was dicey and the weapons were primitive, so spans of time occured between kills.� The result: our ancestors evolved ways to make the most of the conversion of excess blood sugar into stored nutrition in the form of body fat.� When they starved, they lived off stored fat.����

Today�s diet mimics the ice age diet: high fat and high protein, and our genetic programming says, �Uh oh, we�re facing starvation again.� Better store up some fat.�� Lipetz goes into convincing detail about food combinations in his book.� He describes some that cause the creation of excess fat, such as butter on bread.� More useful are his combinations that actually inhibit fat formation, like lean meat with most vegetables.� In a society where obesity and its attendant health issues are rampant, these food combinations are helpful places to focus our attention.� Yet the single most useful bit to remember from his research is that foods which cause our bodies to create excess fat all have one thing in common: they weren�t part of our ancestors� normal diet.�

Armed with this overview, next time you�re about to pop something in your mouth - whether your focus is health or weight � you don�t need to have a bunch of rules and whacky information in mind.� Just use common sense.� Ask whether it�s a food that was around before the advent of agriculture.� If it was, go for it.� If it wasn�t, then consider that your body won�t consider the food �normal,� and in both the long and short run, that�s got health consequences.��

Judith Schwader�earned a Master's degree in Education, and has written extensively on health and nutrition.� She has a�background in social science and addressing chronic health conditions through nutrition.��Judith invites you to visit http://QandAHealth.com, an excellent resource for health.�



Ummmm....Is it Friday Yet? Can We Go Out and Play???

Thu, 09 Oct 2008 18:06:03 EDT
... pm 1 c nonfat Greek yogurt, 1/2 c blueberries, 2 tbs pumpkin seed, cashew, goji berry, raisin trail mix=2 blocks 6...

Strong Mind, Strong Body, Strong Spirit

Thu, 09 Oct 2008 18:09:42 EDT
12:45pm 3 oz tempeh, 1 c kale and zuchinni mixed, 1/4 c yam, 1/2 c nonfat Greek yogurt, 1/4 c cashew, pumpkin seed, goji berry, raisin mix = 3 blocks 4...


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