Archive for December, 2009

December 20th, 2009  Posted at   General
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Breadmakers are rather strange things. They’re surprisingly big kitchen appliances with only one use: they bake bread. Now, baking bread isn’t really that hard, but breadmakers claim to make it so simple that your family can wake upto the smell of freahly baked bread every day for the rest of your life. Much like those machines that make you orange juice every day from fresh oranges, however, the necessity of this is debatable.

 

 

To use a breadmaker, you need some free breadmaker recipes with high quaility ingredients. The machine will make dough from your ingredients and then bake it into a loaf of bread. The bread typically tastes quite good, but won’t last very long because of the lack of preservatives.

 

 

Where breadmakers really get interesting is not when they are making normal, store-style bread, but when you decide to get creative with them. Because they make bread so quickly, they make it much more convenient to experiment with strange ingredients that might just turn out great. You can make bread with your favourite cheese in it, for example, or chocolate, or some kind of herbs and spices that you like. There are many websites on the Internet devoted entirely to sharing interesting breadmaker recipes, and many new kinds of bread have been discovered through this experimentation that would never have been found otherwise.

 

 

Basically, if you just want bread, you will probably better off buying it from a supermarket. If you want unusual, customised experiments in bread, however, then breadmakers aren’t very expensive, and getting one could be a good choice for you. The only thing to worry about, really, is where on earth to put the bulky things.

 

December 20th, 2009  Posted at   General
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Human beings are adaptable, long-lasting creatures. Average lifespan in the developed countries is climbing above 80 years! As our biological knowledge grows, we have come to realize that there are both short term factors and intermediate to long-term factors that affect our health.

For example, there is a generally accepted minimum daily Vitamin C intake necessary to prevent scurvy. Once we thought that this minimum amount was all that anyone needed. Subsequent scientific studies showed us that increased Vitamin C intake had significant health and well-being benefits.

If you don’t get any Vitamin C, you will contract scurvy in a few months. The general health cycle for better health from higher daily Vitamin C consumption levels that is measured in years and decades.

There are other, longer-lasting cycles of effects of deprivations of nutrients, antioxidants, phytochemicals, probiotics and others that affect us. Long-term deprivations of these seem to lead to problems usually associated with aging, like diabetes, heart disease, senile dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

On the dark side there are pollutants, toxins, carcinogens and other substances, both known and as-yet-unknown, that have cumulative life-shortening effects on us humans.

Knowing this encourages us to avoid commercial drugs in favor of natural cures .

Knowing this now we can successfully devise an effective uterine fibroids treatment, and treat uterine cysts symptoms effectively. Ultimately it will help us live longer, happier, more active and fuller lives..

Our biochemistry is very complex. There are genetic links to more diseases and conditions than we ever suspected just a few years ago. As we continue to decode the complex interrelations of genetics, DNA, biochemistry and causes and effects of what we ingest, we are finding new solutions to old problems in often surprising places.

Disclaimer: This posting is based on information freely available in the popular press and medical journals that deal with dyslexia. Nothing herein is intended to be or should be construed to be medical advice. For medical advice the reader should consult with his or her physician or other medical specialist.

– Steven Hinson

Unite

December 20th, 2009  Posted at   General
   |   7 Comments

Babies learn about the world around them by using the senses of touch and feel, the skin of babies is soft, and they like things that are soothing to their skin. Natural, organic baby clothes are the obvious choice to protect your baby’s precious skin. Cotton is a natural organic fabric, and many baby clothes are made from it, babies love the texture, and it does not feel scratchy against their tender skin. Use this thought process from the earliest point you can, for instance give consideration to what you put baby in when you come home from the hospital.

Usually in the hospital your baby will be clothed in cotton in hospital, In addition the blankets they use for wrapping your baby is also likely to be soft, gentle and warm cotton. Probably everything your baby wear in it’s first few weeks of life will be natural cotton, it works in hospitals so when you bring baby home you should be looking for the same high standards, natural cotton is how to achieve that. If all hospitals adhered to this and took it one step further to make sure that they were using not only natural cotton but organic cotton the all our babies would be getting the best start in life.

Generally it is easy to find baby clothes whether online or in stores, but, natural organic baby wear proves to be different, it is harder to find what you are looking for if you insist on these items. The internet has made this much less of a problem; although such items can still be difficult to source locally the availability of e-commerce has made it simple to buy them anywhere. You can find some places locally that stock organic clothes, however the selection will be limited as most retailers prefer to concentrate on the high volume mass produced market.

Now that organic natural baby wear is so readily available from online sources you will be doing both you and your baby a disservice if you do not go for the natural option at every opportunity