Template: Sticky

07 Jan 2012 no comments admin

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There are a few things to verify:

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Eating Out vs Eating at Home USDA

Is Eating Out Making Us Unhealthy? Eating Out vs. Eating at Home USDA

24 Jan 2020 no comments admin

In this day and age, everything is at a fast pace. Messages to be sent across the globe do not take weeks or months as it used to be. It takes but mere seconds for information to travel all throughout the globe. Our daily grind has gone up a notch and with it so have our lifestyles. People who have much better things to do end up not having enough time to prepare their own food. So the logical move is to buy, to eat out. And with the rate we are going, fast foods are the way to go.

Fast foods are generally food that is pre-prepared and cooked at discretion. Even in this day and age, nutritious fast foods are quite uncommon. Even with the push of a lot of vegan and pro-nutrition motions, health is not always the choice. Fast foods are fast, convenient, and economical. We pay more in restaurants than at the ole’ hotdog stand. This is one of the reasons why a lot more people choose to eat at fast foods for less than they would at other restaurants.

Currently, the US stands at the 12th position in the world in the percentage of the population that is obese and the most obese country in North America according to World Atlas. That stands for about 36% in the whole population of the United States. There have been studies since the 2000s about the effects of how eating out at restaurants and fast foods have contributed to the rates of obesity. As the country grows so has been the supply of calorie-rich processed foods. Since people have so little time, so does their awareness of a more nutritionally balanced diet. This results in the continued consumption of calorie-rich food. In the 1980s there were about 850 million overweight or obese people across the world. At around 2013, that number has more than doubled with a number exceeding 2 billion, these statistics are according to hundreds of published studies in the Lancet. As obesity rates continue to rise up so does the number of food eaten outside of the home, 20% during the 1970s to more than 30% before 2010. This information runs from the US Department of Agriculture ( food surveys around 2009.
As we move faster with all the technology that we have, our rate of becoming overweight or obese flies along with it. We should start thinking of our health as much as we think of the next iPhone, because there will come a time when obesity will become the norm for US citizens and that does not bode well for us as a country.

food2chefnex

Food was more a distraction than a desire.

21 Jan 2020 no comments admin

Headings

Header one

Header two

Header three

Header four

Header five
Header six

Blockquotes

Single line blockquote:

Stay hungry. Stay foolish.

Multi line blockquote with a cite reference:

People think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I’m actually as proud of the things we haven’t done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.

Steve Jobs – Apple Worldwide Developers’ Conference, 1997

Tables

Employee Salary  
John Doe $1 Because that’s all Steve Jobs needed for a salary.
Jane Doe $100K For all the blogging she does.
Fred Bloggs $100M Pictures are worth a thousand words, right? So Jane x 1,000.
Jane Bloggs $100B With hair like that?! Enough said…

Definition Lists

Definition List Title
Definition list division.
Startup
A startup company or startup is a company or temporary organization designed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model.
#dowork
Coined by Rob Dyrdek and his personal body guard Christopher “Big Black” Boykins, “Do Work” works as a self motivator, to motivating your friends.
Do It Live
I’ll let Bill O’Reilly will explain this one.

Unordered Lists (Nested)

  • List item one
    • List item one
      • List item one
      • List item two
      • List item three
      • List item four
    • List item two
    • List item three
    • List item four
  • List item two
  • List item three
  • List item four

Ordered List (Nested)

  1. List item one
    1. List item one
      1. List item one
      2. List item two
      3. List item three
      4. List item four
    2. List item two
    3. List item three
    4. List item four
  2. List item two
  3. List item three
  4. List item four

HTML Tags

These supported tags come from the WordPress.com code FAQ.

Address Tag
1 Infinite Loop
Cupertino, CA 95014
United States

Anchor Tag (aka. Link)

This is an example of a link.

Abbreviation Tag

The abbreviation srsly stands for “seriously”.

Acronym Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

The acronym ftw stands for “for the win”.

Big Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

These tests are a big deal, but this tag is no longer supported in HTML5.

Cite Tag

“Code is poetry.” –Automattic

Code Tag

You will learn later on in these tests that word-wrap: break-word; will be your best friend.

Delete Tag

This tag will let you strikeout text, but this tag is no longer supported in HTML5 (use the <strike> instead).

Emphasize Tag

The emphasize tag should italicize text.

Insert Tag

This tag should denote inserted text.

Keyboard Tag

This scarcely known tag emulates keyboard text, which is usually styled like the <code> tag.

Preformatted Tag

This tag styles large blocks of code.

.post-title {
	margin: 0 0 5px;
	font-weight: bold;
	font-size: 38px;
	line-height: 1.2;
	and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE tag handles it and to find out how it overflows;
}

Quote Tag

Developers, developers, developers… –Steve Ballmer

Strike Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

This tag shows strike-through text

Strong Tag

This tag shows bold text.

Subscript Tag

Getting our science styling on with H2O, which should push the “2” down.

Superscript Tag

Still sticking with science and Isaac Newton’s E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up.

Teletype Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

This rarely used tag emulates teletype text, which is usually styled like the <code> tag.

Variable Tag

This allows you to denote variables.

Eating Out vs Eating at Home USDA

Is Eating Out Making Us Unhealthy? Eating Out vs. Eating at Home USDA

15 Jan 2020 no comments Anand Vid

In this day and age, everything is at a fast pace. Messages to be sent across the globe do not take weeks or months as it used to be. It takes but mere seconds for information to travel all throughout the globe. Our daily grind has gone up a notch and with it so have our lifestyles. People who have much better things to do end up not having enough time to prepare their own food. So the logical move is to buy, to eat out. And with the rate we are going, fast foods are the way to go.

Fast foods are generally food that is pre-prepared and cooked at discretion. Even in this day and age, nutritious fast foods are quite uncommon. Even with the push of a lot of vegan and pro-nutrition motions, health is not always the choice. Fast foods are fast, convenient, and economical. We pay more in restaurants than at the ole’ hotdog stand. This is one of the reasons why a lot more people choose to eat at fast foods for less than they would at other restaurants.

Currently, the US stands at the 12th position in the world in the percentage of the population that is obese and the most obese country in North America according to World Atlas. That stands for about 36% in the whole population of the United States. There have been studies since the 2000s about the effects of how eating out at restaurants and fast foods have contributed to the rates of obesity. As the country grows so has been the supply of calorie-rich processed foods. Since people have so little time, so does their awareness of a more nutritionally balanced diet. This results in the continued consumption of calorie-rich food. In the 1980s there were about 850 million overweight or obese people across the world. At around 2013, that number has more than doubled with a number exceeding 2 billion, these statistics are according to hundreds of published studies in the Lancet. As obesity rates continue to rise up so does the number of food eaten outside of the home, 20% during the 1970s to more than 30% before 2010. This information runs from the US Department of Agriculture ( food surveys around 2009.
As we move faster with all the technology that we have, our rate of becoming overweight or obese flies along with it. We should start thinking of our health as much as we think of the next iPhone, because there will come a time when obesity will become the norm for US citizens and that does not bode well for us as a country.

Scheduled

01 Jan 2020 no comments admin

This post is scheduled to be published in the future.

It should not be displayed by the theme.

greekimg1chefnex

Thai squid & pineapple curry

13 Jan 2018 no comments admin

Greek Salad. We’ve turned a classic brunch shakshuka dish into more of a sharing main course by adding seasonal spring vegetables like peas, broad beans and asparagus:

Trim or snap the woody ends of the asparagus and finely slice the spears, leaving the tips and about 2cm at the top intact. Finely slice the broccoli in the same way, leaving the heads and about 2cm of stalk intact. Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add the spring onions, sliced asparagus and sliced broccoli, and fry gently until the veg softens a little, then add the cumin seeds, cayenne, tomatoes (with their juices), parsley and plenty of seasoning, and stir. Cover with a lid and cook for 5 mins to make a base sauce, then add the asparagus spears, broccoli heads, peas and broad beans, cover again and cook for 2 mins.

Second part of meal preparation:

Make 4 dips in the mixture. Break an egg into each dip, arrange half the pea shoots around the eggs, season well, cover with a lid and cook until the egg whites are just set. Serve with the rest of the pea shoots, a spoonful of yogurt and some flatbreads, and sprinkle over another pinch of cayenne, if you like.

Steve Alex – Top Chief of The Year’ Conference, 2018

Ingredients

Employee Salary
1 bunch $1 Ssparagus spears.
200g $10.40 Sprouting broccoli.
2 tbsp $4 Olive oil.
2 p. $10 Spring onions.
1 $10 small pack parsley, chopped.
4 ripe $10 Tomatoes, chopped.
2 p. $10 Spring onions.
2 tsp $10 Cumin seeds.

Definition Lists

Definition List Title
Definition list division.
Startup
A startup company or startup is a company or temporary organization designed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model.
#dowork
Coined by Rob Dyrdek and his personal body guard Christopher “Big Black” Boykins, “Do Work” works as a self motivator, to motivating your friends.
Do It Live
I’ll let Bill O’Reilly will explain this one.

Unordered Lists (Nested)

  • List item one
    • List item one
      • List item one
      • List item two
      • List item three
      • List item four
    • List item two
    • List item three
    • List item four
  • List item two
  • List item three
  • List item four

Ordered List (Nested)

  1. List item one
    1. List item one
      1. List item one
      2. List item two
      3. List item three
      4. List item four
    2. List item two
    3. List item three
    4. List item four
  2. List item two
  3. List item three
  4. List item four

HTML Tags

These supported tags come from the WordPress.com code FAQ.

Address Tag

1 Infinite Loop
Cupertino, CA 95014
United States

Anchor Tag (aka. Link)

This is an example of a link.

Abbreviation Tag

The abbreviation srsly stands for “seriously”.

Acronym Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

The acronym ftw stands for “for the win”.

Big Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

These tests are a big deal, but this tag is no longer supported in HTML5.

Cite Tag

“Code is poetry.” —Automattic

Code Tag

You will learn later on in these tests that word-wrap: break-word; will be your best friend.

Delete Tag

This tag will let you strikeout text, but this tag is no longer supported in HTML5 (use the <strike> instead).

Emphasize Tag

The emphasize tag should italicize text.

Insert Tag

This tag should denote inserted text.

Keyboard Tag

This scarcely known tag emulates keyboard text, which is usually styled like the <code> tag.

Preformatted Tag

This tag styles large blocks of code.

.post-title {
	margin: 0 0 5px;
	font-weight: bold;
	font-size: 38px;
	line-height: 1.2;
	and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE tag handles it and to find out how it overflows;
}

Quote Tag

Developers, developers, developers… –Steve Ballmer

Strike Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

This tag shows strike-through text

Strong Tag

This tag shows bold text.

Subscript Tag

Getting our science styling on with H2O, which should push the “2” down.

Superscript Tag

Still sticking with science and Isaac Newton’s E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up.

Teletype Tag (deprecated in HTML5)

This rarely used tag emulates teletype text, which is usually styled like the <code> tag.

Variable Tag

This allows you to denote variables.