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Food Processing February 2008 |
Visualize Whirled Peas or the Pulse of the Green Movement Pulses -- peas, beans, chick peas and lentils -- are healthy, versatile, gluten-free and environmentally friendly, proof that great things come in small packages. |
Food Processing June 2012 Mark Anthony |
Formulating Gluten-Free Products How did a grain protein that a statistical handful of people are allergic to end up the ingredient non grata of the 21st Century? |
Science News July 9, 2005 Naila Moreira |
Beans, Beans, Good for the Heart One serving of black beans a day helps stave off heart disease, researchers have confirmed in a new study. Yet consumption of this legume has fallen among Latin Americans and among Hispanics in the United States, both of which have traditionally eaten beans as a staple. |
Food Processing February 2008 Mark Anthony |
Going Gluten Free Even though fewer than 1 percent of the U.S. population have been medically restricted from ingesting gluten, the category has taken off enormously. |
Food Processing January 2005 Kantha Shelke |
Healthful flour alternatives Modern manufacturing practices are practically built around flour, making it a difficult ingredient to substitute for in the production of low-carb and low-glycemic foods. And while there are many healthful alternates to flour available, food formulators are finding they often demand compromise. |
Food Processing June 2012 Mark Anthony |
How Do you Create a Healthier Savory Snack? Building healthier snacks may be a way to rein in some of the extra calories we eat and provide a little more energy to move -- and that would be a good thing. |
Food Processing July 2012 |
Food Processors Looking at the Whole (Grain) Truth About Breakfast Cereal Despite what seems to be a perpetual war on carbohydrates, it's hard to escape this enduring tradition. |
Food Processing October 2012 Mark Anthony |
Food Manufacturers Look to Reformulate With Lupin Looking for plant-based sources of protein that can compete with animal proteins? Try the lupin. |
Delicious Living January 2007 H. K. Jones |
Roughing it Keeping things moving along in your digestive system isn't fiber's only claim to fame. More and more research indicates that a high-fiber diet may help prevent diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. |
Food Processing June 2007 |
Healthy Baking Here's what baked-goods processors are doing to hold onto their slice of the consumer pie. |
Food Processing February 2009 |
New Directions in Healthy Baking Any way you bake it, filling consumer demand for healthy baked goods takes the cake. |
Prepared Foods June 1, 2005 Gallagher et al. |
Advances in Formulating Gluten-free Products As awareness of gluten intolerance and Celiac Disease grows, companies are using novel ingredients and processes as tools to replace gluten, a structure-building protein in products. |
Food Processing November 2010 |
Oils, Gluten-Free in Baking Spotlight Healthier oils and shortenings and gluten-free products seemed to be the focus of the ingredient side of the International Baking Industry Exposition. |
Food Processing October 2008 Mark Anthony |
Ingredients for Healthy Indulgence The smart strategy for processors intent on tapping the healthy indulgence market is to focus on the ingredients consumers equate with indulgence, yet deliver healthy profiles to the foods and beverages they enhance. |
Prepared Foods August 2007 J. Hugh McEvoy (Chef J) |
Gluten-free: Opportunities and Challenges The greatest challenge in creating successful new gluten-free products may be in understanding them. |
Food Processing December 2005 Mark Anthony |
Take Heart According to the Centers for Disease Control, nearly one million Americans per year die of cardiovascular disease. That's more than 40 percent of all deaths, at a rate of nearly two per minute. |
Food Processing August 2013 Rory Gillespie |
Food Manufacturers Reformulating Childrens' Foods For More Gluten-Free Options Chuck E. Cheese experiences the challenges and rewards of reformulating without gluten. |
Food Processing February 2011 Mark Anthony |
Baking for the Future Less gluten, more whole grains and fiber and cleaner statements are coming out of the oven. |
Food Processing April 2010 Mark Anthony |
Food Processors Working to Produce Healthier Baked Goods Bakers are answering consumer demands for healthier breads and snacks with ancient grains and old-fashioned fiber. |
Food Processing October 2012 Mark Anthony |
How Well Do You Know Your Starch? Riding a roller-coaster of a health reputation, the vital macro ingredient is enjoying positive acclaim via sources such as pulses and alternative grains. |
National Gardening Charlie Nardozzi |
Edamame A favorite Asian snack: While the typical home garden use of soybeans is as a cover crop, some varieties of the common soybean (Glycine max) have been bred to be eaten fresh. |
Food Processing August 2009 David Feder |
How to Build a Healthy Breakfast Breakfast makers are looking beyond snap, crackle and pop to a functional future of simplicity, endurance and heart health. |
AskMen.com January 4, 2001 Simon McNeil |
Are Canned Foods Good For You? |
Food Processing July 2009 Toops & Fusaro |
Exhibitor Highlights from the IFT 2009 Show A list of exhibitors thought to have had some of the most innovative products. |
American Family Physician January 15, 2006 Olendzki, Speed & Domino |
Nutritional Assessment and Counseling for Prevention and Treatment of Cardiovascular Disease Physicians face several barriers to counseling their patients about nutrition, including conflicting evidence of the benefit of counseling, limited training and understanding of the topic, and imperfect and varied guidelines to follow. |
AskMen.com July 19, 2015 K. Aleisha Fetters |
Benefits Of Gluten Here are four little-known benefits of staying off of the G-free bandwagon. |
Nutra Solutions March 15, 2006 Marcia A. Wade |
Moving Fiber off the Shelves Numerous studies have provided indisputable evidence that additional fiber in the diet helps to reduce coronary heart disease. Since fruits and vegetables are mostly water, eating those types of foods is only one method by which to increase fiber. |
Nutra Solutions March 5, 2005 Archibald & Wade |
The Definitive Dietary Fiber Dietary fiber interest increases across the board... Whole grains struggle for popularity... Low-glycemic claims assisted by fiber use... etc. |
Food Processing April 2006 Kantha Shelke |
Working Whole Grains Into Foodservice Consumers are getting the whole-grain message, but have trouble finding these wholesome products when they dine out. |
AskMen.com Jim Bauer |
8 ingredients to a healthy heart The sooner you start taking measures to prevent heart disease, the better you'll fair later in life. |
Food Processing March 2013 Frances Katz |
Trends in Optimizing your Formulations and Recipes Whether the goal is cost reduction or following consumer trends, even the most honored recipe can be tweaked with new ingredients. |
Prepared Foods June 2, 2006 Marcia A. Wade |
Fiber du Jour Fiber, in its many forms, is influential at abating and controlling a number of chronic diseases. Dietary guidelines do not differentiate between soluble fiber and insoluble fiber, but manufacturers will need to understand their benefits and disadvantages. |
Prepared Foods August 2009 |
R&D: Innovative Coatings Nutritional and health attributes have positioned pulses for use in the rapidly growing markets of nutritionally enhanced and gluten-free foods. |
Food Processing July 2008 Mark Anthony |
Formulating healthier snacks The modern approach to snacking is changing as progressive companies make an effort to lift snacking to its original status |
AskMen.com Malcolm MacMillan |
Going Gluten-Free Do you feel sleepy, heavy and bloated after a big plate of spaghetti? You may have gluten sensitivity or celiac disease. Going gluten-free with your diet might be the only way to overcome this. Here's how. |
National Gardening Michael MacCaskey |
Heirloom Beans Top chefs pick the most flavorful heirloom beans |
AskMen.com William Leigh |
Best Canned Foods Contrary to popular belief, canned foods can be just as nutritious as fresh produce. |
Food Processing June 2011 Mark Anthony |
Food Processors Trying to Formulating Healthier Savory Snacks for Consumers There's no oxymoron there. For many consumers, snacks have become the meal; for others, their diet plan promotes snacking as a means of weight control. |
AskMen.com April 19, 2002 Gregory Cartier |
Protein-Rich Vegetarian Meals Many people notice a positive change in overall health when they make the vegetarian switch. The secret is to prepare meals with fresh and natural ingredients, and refrain from using processed food.... |
Food Processing March 2011 Dave Fusaro |
USDA and HHS Release 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans The final recommendations deviate little from last June's committee report, but they do go softer on sodium. |
Prepared Foods April 1, 2006 Marcia A. Wade |
Fixing the Fiber Gap As the country becomes more aware of its fiber deficiency, manufacturers are looking at ingredients such as inulins, resistant maltodextrins, beta-glucans and pectins to efficiently fill the fiber gap. |
Food Processing October 2008 Mark Anthony |
Consumers Choosing Fit Over Fat Processors are providing -- and wise consumers are choosing -- foods that just may turn around the obesity epidemic. |
Food Processing August 2010 Mark Anthony |
Building Healthier Desserts Processors have been trying for nearly a generation to bridge the gulf between the reality of dessert and the concept of health. |
AskMen.com Abigail Ekue-Smith |
Staying Healthy On A Muslim Diet Muslims follow a halal diet, or "permissible" foods under Muslim dietary law. Here is some more insights on what it means to follow this diet and how to go about staying healthy on a Muslim diet. |
National Gardening |
Preserving Beans If you have more beans than you can use, it's great to put some by for the winter months ahead. Here's a few tips on storing beans. |
Nutra Solutions March 11, 2007 Amanda Archibald |
NutraSolutions' New Products Annual -- Dietary Fiber/Prebiotics Fiber may have been upstaged or overshadowed by its carbohydrate cousin, whole grains. |
American Family Physician February 15, 2004 |
Why should I eat more fiber? Eating foods that are high in fiber can help relieve some problems with constipation, hemorrhoids, diverticulosis, and irritable bowel syndrome. |
Food Processing September 2011 Mark Anthony |
The New Look of Fiber Fiber, as a natural dietary component, continues to garner attention, and as a versatile food additive it can enhance the attraction of almost any product. |
Food Processing August 2006 Feder & Fusaro |
Special Report: `Nutrition technology' expo Health and nourishment were the key ingredients at June's IFT show. |
BusinessWeek May 9, 2005 Catherine Arnst |
Putting The New Food Pyramid To Work Here's how to use the USDA's food guidelines to cook up a beneficial diet. |