Monday, 9 December 2019

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Saturday, 7 December 2019

Wednesday, 27 November 2019

That's Christmas: Blow Christmas breakfast up says Janine!

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Wednesday, 30 October 2019

That's Health: Can this dream of a menu help you sleep better?

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Tuesday, 29 October 2019

That's Books and Entertainment: The Knobbly, Wobbly, Bobbly Celeriac

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Monday, 13 May 2019

EU veggie ‘burger’ ban challenged across Europe

Campaign and petition launched by ProVeg International

The European Parliament’s "bizarre" proposal to ban the use of names such as ‘burger’ and ‘sausage’ from being used to describe vegetarian and vegan products is being challenged across Europe, with food awareness organisation ProVeg International driving the campaign forward.

The agricultural committee of the European Parliament last month voted in favour of the proposal on grounds that the names are "misleading for consumers". If the proposal is passed into law, vegan and veggie burgers would ave to be re-named, as either ‘discs’ for burgers and sausages would be called ‘tubes’.

ProVeg International has today launched a campaign targeting the proposed ban with a petition calling on the soon-to-be-elected European Parliament to reject the proposal, which it describes as “unnecessary” and “irrational”.

Spokesman for ProVeg UK, Philip Mansbridge said: “There is no evidence to suggest consumers are confused or misled by the current labelling of vegetarian and vegan products.

"To suggest consumers don't understand the meaning of the term ‘veggie burger’ and other similar terms is an insult to their intelligence.

“The use of ‘burger’, ‘sausage’, and ‘milk’ wording on plant-based products actually serves an important function in communicating characteristics consumers are looking for when buying plant-based products, especially in terms of taste and texture. They’ve been used successfully for decades. Why confuse matters?

“The proposed restriction would also unnecessarily restrict manufacturers, producers, and the positive social and environmental changes created by the plant-based market, one of the fastest-growing and most innovative sectors in the food industry today.”

The petition will be delivered to the European Parliament ahead of the final vote. You can sign the petition here:- https://proveg.com/uk/stop-the-veggie-burger-ban-petition/

(EDITOR: That's Food and Drink is backing this campaign.)

(Image courtesy of Marta Cuesta https://bit.ly/2JihMOc www.pixabay.com)

Thursday, 8 November 2018

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Monday, 22 October 2018

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Wednesday, 26 September 2018

That's Books and Entertainment: Lifestyle Change With April

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Thursday, 23 August 2018

"Coconuts are pure poison?" "That's pure nuts!" says expert

Situated on the tropical Malabar Coast of southwestern India and famed for its great beauty, Kerala has been called one of the ’10 paradises in the world’.

In Sanskrit it translates as ‘land of coconuts’ which is where Jacob Thundil, Founder and chief nut of Cocofina was born and raised and where his journey began.

Kerala is, of course, known for its coconuts trees and it was as a young boy he would watch a farmer come to his home and harvest the coconuts from the palms in his garden. Outside of Kerala and wherever he travelled he just could not find any good quality coconut products.

His lightbulb moment arrived in 2004 when he was sat on Ipanema beach in Rio de Janeiro sipping coconut water straight from the nut.

He realised he could bottle the water and sell it and went on from there to become the first in 2005, to start selling coconut water in the UK. Fast forward to 2018 and Cocofina now has a range of 32 products and is sold in close to 30 countries.

Jacob says: “The title of the recent coconut oil news is very sensationalist and dramatic. If coconut oil were pure poison, everyone in Kerala including myself should be dead by now!

"A balanced diet is important and even within the sensationalist article it touches on the fact that there is not enough research to prove the merits of coconut oil since it’s a different kind of saturated fat called MCT. Coconut oil has a respectable place in your kitchen and vanity case. It has a high flash point, great taste and has proven to be a good moisturizer for hair and skin. Personally I use coconut oil, olive oil, rape seed oil & rice bran oil depending on what I am cooking.”

Prof Kay-Tee Khaw and Prof Nita Forouhi from the University of Cambridge along with the BBC, ran an experiment with 100 volunteers over 50 years of age to test the effects of coconut oil on LDL cholesterol. The results of the study although limited in scope was that coconut oil did not raise bad cholesterol, but it increases the levels of good cholesterol.

The proponents of Coconut oil claim that coconut oil is rich in MCTs, which are processed by body differently from other saturated fats. This study has been published in the British medical journal and we hope further studies will be done to throw light on this.

https://www.cocofina.com

That's Food and Drink is grateful for the assistance of Cocofina and Jacob Thundil in the preparation of this article.