Food For Women – Companies Are Developing More and More Products Specifically Geared to Women

More than 1,000 new foods and drinks targeting women have hit the global market in the past four years. Nicknamed chick foods, these products include such things as the Luna Bar, Tab Energy drink, General Mills Harmony cereal, and Woman’s Bread. Retail sales of women’s food and beverages in 2004 were more than $4.5 billion, and sales are projected to reach $7.7 billion by 2009. Is the chick food market a lasting, lucrative one, or just a fad?

Women are usually the primary buyers of products such as foods and household items-more than $6 trillion a year, according to Time magazine. When more women began working outside the home in the 1970s, marketing efforts to reach them began in earnest. Nowadays, companies are trying to appeal to women less as the “do it all” consumer and more as someone with a strong self-image-self-assured, confident, and secure. “It has to be subtle, showing a woman in a position of power where she is respected,” said Lisa Finn, the editor of the newsletter, Marketing to Women. Condescending to women, such as coloring a product pink, for example, may not go over well.

Designed to deal with health issues unique to women, such as PMS, pregnancy, lactation and menopause, or relating to aging, such as osteoporosis, heart disease, and cancer. Functional foods designed for women started to make the scene as early as the 1980s. The 1980s also saw a surge in new products with nutritional additives geared toward women, but they are expected to sell even better in the future as awareness of women’s health issues continues to grow.

The Luna bar may have been the first obvious product marketed directly to women. Introduced in 1999, Luna bars are 100 percent natural and “contribute to women’s nutrition” with ingredients such as green tea extract, nuts, and seeds. It is also fortified with folic acid, soy protein, and calcium-essential nutrients for a woman’s daily nutritional needs. It was created to assist women to obtain more of the nutrients lacking in their current diets.

Other products marketed to boost women’s diets include Women’s Bread and Zoe Foods cereals. The founders were looking for foods that could replace hormone replacement therapy and help to alleviate menopausal discomforts such as hot flashes. Zoe Foods’ Flax and Soy Clusters, for example, is a granola cereal with flaxseed and soy, providing phytoestrogens, fiber, protein, and omega-3 fatty acids.

Soy was found to have protective properties against heart disease, as well as breast and uterine cancers. Calcium is necessary to protect against osteoporosis. Higher calcium diets were also found to ease PMS symptoms. The requirement for calcium increases by about one third during pregnancy, and the requirements for lactation can be up to two thirds. Folic acid requirements also increase during pregnancy. Read the rest of this entry »

The Best Food

Everyone eats so everyone has an opinion about food. But if health is the objective, mere opinion doesn’t count nor does fad or majority rule.

Most people think the average cooked diet based upon official food pyramids is just fine. Some eat predominantly fast food. Others advocate veganism (eating only plant foods), or lacto-ova vegetarianism (plants plus milk and eggs). There are also proponents of special foods such as fresh juices, soybean products and macrobiotic cooked grains and rice.

Everyone can make arguments on behalf of their beliefs. They can cite examples of people who have escaped disease and lived long. Some argue morality and ethics, such as those who say sentient animal life should not be sacrificed for food. Others set their eating practices by the standards of holy writ that eschew certain forms of foods and sanctify others. Others just eat what tastes good and that’s logic enough for them.

Eating beliefs seem to take on an almost religious character. People feel guarded and pretty zealous about food and don’t like others meddling. But since health is intimately linked to what we take into our mouths, thinking, honest reflection and willingness to change are in order.

It is easy to be deceived because wrong food choices may not manifest their full impact until late in life. Nutrition can even pass through genetically to affect later generations. In this regard, food ideas are also like religion in that hundreds of different sects can each claim to have the truth. But none of them needs to fear disproof since adjudication will not occur until everyone is dead and gone to the afterlife.

The body is extremely adaptable and will attempt to survive on whatever it is given. If the food is incorrect there is usually no immediate harm. But the body will eventually be stressed beyond its ability to adapt, resulting in disease, degeneration and loss of vitality. Unfortunately, such consequences are so far removed in time from the eating regimen that caused them that few understand the relationship.

So be careful before subscribing to bold claims about what is or is not good to eat. The true test of any health idea lies too far out into the future. Our best hope then is to be well grounded philosophically before we slide our legs under the dinner table.

How do we develop a healthy eating philosophy and sort through all of the competing eating ideas? I am going to explain here a very simple principle that is so reasonable you need not even look for proofs. Follow along with me and see if you don’t agree.

Consider the following three premises:

1. Just like a tree is genetically adapted to absorb certain nutrients from soil, and a lion is genetically adapted to thrive on prey, and a deer is genetically adapted to browse on vegetation, so too, are humans genetically adapted to certain kinds of food.

2. The majority of foods we are presently exposed to are a product of the Agricultural/Industrial Revolution and occupy a small part of the genetic history of humans. (Refer back to the 276-mile time-line in which only a few inches represent industrial-type eating practices.)

3. The natural, genetically adapted to food for humans must predate them. In other words, how could humans exist before the food they needed to survive existed? We were completely developed biologically prior to agriculture and any method of food processing. That means whatever diet archetypal humans ate was the perfect diet because that was the diet responsible for the existence and development of the incredibly complex human organism. That diet was the milieu, the environmental nutritional womb, if you will, from which we sprung.

If you consider these three premises, the logical conclusion derived from them is that the best food for humans is that food which they would be able to eat as is, as it is found in nature.

Our tissues were designed to be bathed in food nutrients derived from natural living foods, not with dyes, preservatives, synthetics, nutritiously barren starches and refined sugars and oils. Make no mistake; if we are not eating according to this principle, our bodies are in constant deficiency, imbalance and toxin exposure. The result of generations ignoring this principle is an epidemic of obesity, chronic degenerative diseases and the exhaustion of our digestive processes.

A feature of all natural food is that it is raw – alive if you will. This is consistent with the Law of Biogenesis that says life can only come from preexisting life. Life begets life. In spite of scientists’ dreams to the contrary, we have never observed life springing from non-life, nor have we ever even been able to create life from non-life in a laboratory. If we eat living foods, we enhance our own life. If we eat dead, devitalized foods we become devitalized and dead. Granted, this will not happen all at once, but as the adaptive reserves are exhausted we become just like the dead food we eat.

So a fundamental feature of our natural diet was that it was raw. Yes, even the meats, organs, eggs and insects – raw. Remember, we’re far back in time, even before the use of fire (much less the microwave, stove, oven, grill, deep fryer or extruder). Studies of the diets of past cultures and today’s still-primitive societies reveals that they ate exactly as their genes and the environment dictated.

We were not suddenly dropped from outer space onto Earth with fry pans, matches and rotisseries. We began on the forest floor, not in a line to a fast food counter. We had only our natural bodies in a natural world, exactly like every other creature. Every other organism on Earth eats raw foods exactly like they are found in nature. Do you think nature doesn’t notice our decision to change all that?

Would tofu qualify? No, because tofu is found nowhere in nature. Would oatmeal porridge qualify? No, because oatmeal porridge is found nowhere in nature. Would hamburgers, French fries, pop, breakfast cereals, granola, canned foods, candy, sports drinks, muscle building powders, vitamins and minerals, mashed potatoes, carrot cake, croissants, bagels, Jolly Ranchers, Ding Dongs, Cocoa Krispies, Good ‘n Plentys or Fig Newtons qualify? No. None of these are found as such in nature.

For those of you who are by now panicking (if not gagging) at the thought of eating raw foods, yes, there is danger of food-borne pathogens. But if you are careful and clean, the danger is far less than the danger of a lifetime eating devitalized processed foods. Raw natural foods must be safe or our ancestors would have not survived and we would not exist!

It is a choice. When faced with a choice, why not opt for the wisdom of nature? Is it not strange we are the only creatures on the planet to cook our foods? Is it a wonder, given this, that we succumb with every imaginable chronic degenerative disease virtually unknown in creatures eating the raw natural diet? Read the rest of this entry »

Best Juicer For Juicing

Now with the benefits of juicing becoming extremely popular the world over, a juice bar is becoming a much needed and compulsory accessory in kitchens worldwide. One of the most basic and essential parts of a juice bar is the juicer. How can you start juicing without a good juicer? Well, if you are planning to take the plunge and buy yourself a juicer, there are chances that you will be very confused when you reach the supermarket. There are a plethora of options when it comes to juicers. From citrus juicers to wheatgrass ones and centrifugal juicers to triturating juicers, there are a lot of options in juicers. It is essential that you have some knowledge about these things to help you get the one that is best suited for your interests.

Various Types Of Juicers

There are three basic types of juicers based on the type of fruit that can be juiced in them. They are citrus juicers, wheatgrass juicers, and multi-purpose juicers. Citrus juicers are made primarily for juicing citrus fruits like oranges, limes, and pomegranate. There are electrical as well as manual citrus juicers available. They have parts made of plastic or stainless steel. The functioning of the juicer may also vary along with the price. Higher priced ones will allow you to control the pulp level. You can thus choose if you want a more dilute watery juice or a thicker pulpy one. The quantity of juice that you can extract from the juice while juicing may also vary with the quality of the juicer. Read the rest of this entry »