This has to have been tried, right? Anyone?
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blockhose |
a gum connundrum... a gummundrum, if you will (UPDATED!) |
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OK, so I'm trying to lose a few pounds and one of the ways I bypass sweets is to chew gum. Now there are times when I'm craving a burger, or fries, or
a steak when I'm not really needing it. So why isn't there savory gum? One that tastes like bacon, or filet mignon, or something along those lines? It
would cut my caloric intake by quite a bit.
This has to have been tried, right? Anyone?
Last Edited By: blockhose 07/12/09 10:28 PM.
Edited 2 times.
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Penelope McBagpipe |
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Just wrap a piece of raw bacon around a piece of gum and chew.
Duh. |
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Hamdingers |
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Sunflower seeds.
:spits shells on PeePee: |
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Yuku Blows Goats |
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I'm sure someone has savory gum out there hose. Have you tried Googleâ„¢ ?
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StatelyWayneManor |
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Just spit it out before the blueberry pie flavor kicks in...
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Malla |
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Penelope McBagpipe |
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So how do you get the little tm thing on a word?
and I'd be careful if I were you hammy. I'm a big fan of the tobaccy. |
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blockhose |
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If I googled, I wouldn't have such a compelling topic to post about.
I'm totally gonna get that chicken gum. |
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Yuku Blows Goats |
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True, hose
However, I don't think you should even be chewing gum what with all yer teefs fallin out and stuff. |
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Hamdingers |
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Seriously, sunflower seeds are the way to go if you're trying to lose weight, and they're good for you.
Looking for a health-promoting snack? A handful of sunflower seeds will take care of your hunger, while also enhancing your health by supplying significant amounts of vitamin E, magnesium and selenium. Anti-Inflammatory and Cardiovascular Benefits from Sunflower Seeds' Vitamin E Sunflower seeds are an excellent source of vitamin E, the body's primary fat-soluble antioxidant. Vitamin E travels throughout the body neutralizing free radicals that would otherwise damage fat-containing structures and molecules, such as cell membranes, brain cells, and cholesterol. By protecting these cellular and molecular components, vitamin E has significant anti-inflammatory effects that result in the reduction of symptoms in asthma, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis, conditions where free radicals and inflammation play a big role. Vitamin E has also been shown to reduce the risk of colon cancer, help decrease the severity and frequency of hot flashes in women going through menopause, and help reduce the development of diabetic complications. In addition, vitamin E plays an important role in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Vitamin E is one of the main antioxidants found in cholesterol particles and helps prevent free radicals from oxidizing cholesterol. Only after it has been oxidized is cholesterol able to adhere to blood vessel walls and initiate the process of atherosclerosis, which can lead to blocked arteries, heart attack, or stroke. Getting plenty of vitamin E can significantly reduce the risk of developing atherosclerosis. In fact, studies show that people who get a good amount of vitamin E are at a much lower risk of dying of a heart attack than people whose dietary intake of vitamin E is marginal or inadequate. Just a quarter-cup of sunflower seeds contains 90.5% of the daily value for vitamin E. Sunflower Seeds' Phytosterols Lower Cholesterol Phytosterols are compounds found in plants that have a chemical structure very similar to cholesterol, and when present in the diet in sufficient amounts, are believed to reduce blood levels of cholesterol, enhance the immune response and decrease risk of certain cancers. Phytosterols beneficial effects are so dramatic that they have been extracted from soybean, corn, and pine tree oil and added to processed foods, such as "butter"-replacement spreads, which are then touted as cholesterol-lowering "foods." But why settle for an imitation "butter" when Mother Nature's nuts and seeds are a naturally rich source of phytosterols-and cardio-protective fiber, minerals and healthy fats as well? In a study in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, researchers published the amounts of phytosterols present in nuts and seeds commonly eaten in the United States. Sesame seeds had the highest total phytosterol content (400-413 mg per 100 grams), and English walnuts and Brazil nuts the lowest (113 mg/100grams and 95 mg/100 grams). (100 grams is equivalent to 3.5 ounces.) Of the nuts and seeds typically consumed as snack foods, sunflower seeds and pistachios were richest in phytosterols (270-289 mg/100 g), followed by pumpkin seeds (265 mg/100 g). Calm Your Nerves, Muscles and Blood Vessels with Sunflower Seeds' Magnesium Sunflower seeds are a good source of magnesium. Numerous studies have demonstrated that magnesium helps reduce the severity of asthma, lower high blood pressure, and prevent migraine headaches, as well as reducing the risk of heart attack and stroke. Magnesium is also necessary for healthy bones and energy production. About two-thirds of the magnesium in the human body is found in our bones. Some helps give bones their physical structure, while the rest is found on the surface of the bone where it is stored for the body to draw upon as needed. Magnesium counterbalances calcium, thus helping to regulate nerve and muscle tone. In many nerve cells, magnesium serves as Nature's own calcium channel blocker, preventing calcium from rushing into the nerve cell and activating the nerve. By blocking calcium's entry, magnesium keeps our nerves (and the blood vessels and muscles they ennervate) relaxed. If our diet provides us with too little magnesium, however, calcium can gain free entry, and the nerve cell can become overactivated, sending too many messages and causing excessive contraction. Insufficient magnesium can thus contribute to high blood pressure, muscle spasms (including spasms of the heart muscle or the spasms of the airways symptomatic of asthma), and migraine headaches, as well as muscle cramps, tension, soreness and fatigue. A quarter cup of sunflower seeds provides 31.9% of the daily value for magnesium.
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Us Kids Know |
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I would guestimate that about 20% of my diet is sunflower and pumpkin seeds. They're basically crack, I go into convulsions without them.
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Penelope McBagpipe |
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They're the good kind of fat, but fat nonetheless.
And I only like the shelled ones that are slathered in bbq flavored msg, which I'm doubting is very healthy. |
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Hamdingers |
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Buying them SHELLED defeats the entire purpose.
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Anne Boleyn |
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Beef Jerkey.
Drink beef broth. Plain non fat yogurt. It's tart. Mix some sunflower seeds or toasted almonds with it. that's all I got. |
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nomellons |
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UGH my husband eats sunflower seeds all the time -- his car is littered with shells and he spits the chewed up shell pulp into the bottom of his coffee mug.
GAG
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kinghouseplant |
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I've had bacon gum. It was not as good as bacon.
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Penelope McBagpipe |
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Hamdingers wrote: IT'S TOO MUCH WORK THE OTHER WAY FOR LITTLE REWARD Don't judge me. |
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OT recruiter |
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Sunflowers are native to South and North America. These tall, strong flowers that open bright yellow to their sun, are filled tightly with hundreds of seeds to carry on life. Sunflower seeds have been used throughout history to enhance energy, and as a medicine as well. The Indians of the Americas and other herbalists have used sunflower seeds as a diuretic, for constipation, chest pain, or ulcers, to treat worms, and to improve eyesight. More recently they are recommended for use for people with high blood pressure or cardiovascular problems and occasionally to help reduce allergic reactions, all with good success. He also suggests them as part of a stop-smoking program, having people in the program munch on raw, unshelled, unsalted sunflower seeds, which in addition to their medicinal properties, gives them something to do with their hands and mouth. Again, raw sunflower seeds are probably the best, higher in nutrition than roasted and definitely better than salted seeds. For people with blood pressure problems, sunflower seeds (unsalted) are very high in potassium and low in sodium, a balance sorely needed by most of us these days with so many salty foods available. One cup of sunflower seeds contains more than 1,300 mg of potassium and only 4 mg of sodium. This is likely very helpful as a diuretic or for people who already take diuretics, to help replace some potassium. The high amount of oil in sunflower seeds as polyunsaturated fats, essential linoleic acid, and vitamin E is also helpful in reducing cholesterol levels and improving or preventing cardiovascular disease. However, sunflower seeds are caloric; one half cup of hulled seeds is approximately 400 calories. If we are watching our figures, then we'll have to go a little easy on sunflower seeds, but from all other aspects of nutrition, they are a good food. For those who need to gain weight or substitute more vegetable oils for saturated fats, sunflower seeds can be the best of the seeds, and are richer in the B vitamins also, particularly in thiamine, pyridoxine, niacin, and pantothenic acid. With their high potassium and low sodium and with zinc, iron, and calcium all at good levels, sunflower seeds are a very mineral-rich food. The vitamin D that gets stored in these sun-filled seeds helps the utilization of calcium. Copper, manganese, and phosphorous levels are also relatively high; they are lower in magnesium than in calcium, which is different from other seeds. |
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hwamf |
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Smoke yourself thin!
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Hamdingers |
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That's why you NEVER buy them hulled. You know how long it takes to eat a 1/2 a cup of hulled sunflower seeds? 30 seconds. You know how long it takes to
eat 1/4 of a cup when you're putting them in your mouth and spitting the shells? A couple of hours. That's why they're good for a diet.
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Penelope McBagpipe |
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Almonds are the money nut.
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