Title: Wine, Chocolate and BBQ
Location: Lodi, California
Link out: Click here
Description: Our wonderful Lodi Wineries will be offering tastes of their delicious Lodi wines paired with various chocolate treats. Enjoy winery activities, including barrel tasting, new releases, wine and food pairings, special events and live music throughout the weekend.
Start Date: 2009-02-14
Start Time: 11:00
End Date: 2009-02-15
End Time: 16:00
For the first time in a long time it appears I was on the cutting edge of a food trend… Many years ago I lived in the South of France in a very small apartment without a fridge… It wasn’t by choice, but now it appears the fridge free live style is what a very few of us are doing to reduce our carbon footprint…
One of the fridge free livers told the NY Times they were surprised how,” easy it’s been.”
Here’s the NY Times’ version of events…
By Steve Kurutz
For the last two years, Rachel Muston, a 32-year-old information-technology worker for the Canadian government in Ottawa, has been taking steps to reduce her carbon
footprint — composting, line-drying clothes, installing an efficient furnace in her three-story house downtown.
About a year ago, though, she decided to “go big” in her effort to be more environmentally responsible, she said. After mulling the idea over for several weeks, she and her husband, Scott Young, did something many would find unthinkable: they unplugged their refrigerator. For good.
“It’s been a while, and we’re pretty happy,” Ms. Muston said recently. “We’re surprised at how easy it’s been.”
As drastic as the move might seem, a small segment of the green movement has come to regard the refrigerator as an unacceptable drain on energy, and is choosing to live without it. In spite of its ubiquity — 99.5 percent of American homes have one — these advocates say the refrigerator is unnecessary, as long as one is careful about shopping choices and food storage.
Ms. Muston estimated that her own fridge, which was in the house when they bought it five years ago and most likely dates back much longer, used 1,300 kilowatt-hours per year, or produced roughly 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide — the same amount from burning 105 gallons of gasoline. And even a newer, more efficient model, which could have cut that figure in half, would have used too much energy in her view.
The folks at Men’s Health magazine have put out their list of the 20 worst foods in the supermarket… They go into some detail about what makes these particular foods so awful for you, but from reading the list it’s pretty clear.
Here is the list and the reason or reasons the foods stand out…
Gardetto’s Special Request Roasted Garlic Rye Chips / trans fats
Pillsbury Big Deluxe Classics White Chunk Macadamia Nut / trans fats
Stonyfield Farm Whole Milk Chocolate Underground / to much sugar
Twix / bad mix of fats
Eggo Original Syrup / huge amounts of sugar
Häagen-Dazs Chocolate Peanut Butter / huge amounts of fat
AriZona Kiwi Strawberry / 82 grams of sugar per can
Pop-Tarts Whole Grain Brown Sugar Cinnamon / sugar & oil
Healthy Choice Complete Selections Sweet & Sour Chicken / to much sugar & salt
Quaker 100% Natural Granola, Oats, Honey & Raisins / sugar
Pasta Roni Fettuccine Alfredo / same amount of salt as 4 orders of McDonald’s fries
Otis Spunkmeyer Banana Nut Muffins / sugar & fat
Toll House Ice Cream Chocolate Chip Cookie Sandwich / sugar & fat
Hostess Chocolate Pudding Pie / Saturated fat of 2 McDonald’s 1/4 Pounders
Oscar Mayer Maxed Out Turkey & Cheddar Cracker Combo Lunchables / all bad
Bertolli Grilled Chicken Alfredo & Fettuccine Complete Skillet Meal for Two / Saturated fat equivalent: 22 strips of bacon
Jimmy Dean Pancake and Sausage Links Breakfast Bowls / calories & fat
DiGiorno for One Garlic Bread Crust Supreme Pizza / caloris & fat
Hungry-Man Classic Fried Chicken / Calorie of 5 Krispy Kreme Glazed Doughnuts
Marie Callender’s Creamy Parmesan Chicken Pot Pie / fat equal to 23 strips of bacon
working on marketconyers for great fresh as sweet fruits and vegges follow marketconyers on twitter 2009-06-30
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