Sunday, August 26, 2007

WEEKLY BUSINESSMAN MENU for September - October 2007


WEEKLY BUSINESSMAN MENU for September - October 2007


Week #1: American Special

Clam Chowder

Meat Loaf with Mashed Potatoes

Avocado Salad

Old-Fashioned Apple Pie


Week #2: Asian Special

Chinese Vegetable Noodle Soup -or- Egg Foo Young

Lemon or Orange Flavored (Sweet and Sour) Chicken

Mandarin Chicken Salad w/ peas and stir-fried noodles

German Chocolate Pie


Week #3: Italian Special

Italian Tomato Bisque

Pasta (with meatballs and side order of garlic bread)

Caesar Salad

Apple and Cinnamon Pie


Week #4: Indiana Businessman Special

Corn Chowder with Roasted Red Peppers

Seasoned London broil

Organic Green Salad

Pumpkin Pie


Beverage Choice:

Iced tea (Green or Black)

Lemonade Iced Tea (Green or Black)

Plain Lemonade (with no artificial ingredients)


# # #


Please contact us for food availability, latest delivery
date and time, weekly pricing and any special request.


Always check our web site for latest menu changes.




Wednesday, August 22, 2007

The Importance of Eating Healthy (1)



Global Delights believes in the following principle:
"To live well, it starts with eating well."

We
uses only high quality olive oil and vegetable oil.



###
Indianapolis Journal
Yes, Deep-Fried Oreos, but Not in Trans Fats
By MONICA DAVEY

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 17 The deep-fried Combo Plate may be a little more healthful this year at the Great Indiana State Fair. So say the fair’s leaders, who, taking a step rarely seen in the realm of corn dogs and fried pickles, have banned oils with trans fats from all the fryers that line the grounds here.

The change is only the latest in a string of bans on artificial trans fats. Tied to health problems including heart disease, they have been banished by national restaurant chains, snack brands and New York City, which forbids restaurants to use them in food preparation.

But this is perhaps the most unlikely locale yet: the nation’s classic summer fair, long seen as one final safe haven from the health police.

Along the steamy thoroughfare here, where only sensitive palates can distinguish among the various cuts of potato (curly fries, ribbon fries and the old standby, French), fairgoers seemed pleased with the switch. The food tasted the same, they said happily. And if this meant they could indulge without guilt or have one more helping, so much the better.

At the Great Indiana State Fair,
where almost anything fried is king,
the oil must be trans-fat free.



This is a slice of heaven, said Ryan Howell, 31, as he cradled his Combo Plate, which, for the record, consists of one battered Snickers bar, two battered Oreos and a battered Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup all deep-fried in oil that is trans-fat free, thank goodness.

This was an issue we wanted to tackle, said Cindy Hoye, executive director of the fair, which spent the winter months testing various oils and, despite the fears of some concessionaires about possible changes to taste or costs or tradition, concluded that trans-fat-free oils created what Ms. Hoye called a better product.

National fair officials say Indiana and at least one other fair, the Western Washington, have led the way on a health issue that is only now creating a buzz in the fair industry. During a national convention of fair officials in Las Vegas this November, Indiana representatives are to offer a workshop, Going Trans-Fat Free, which, the convention program promises, will answer the question What is all the craze about?

Some concessionaires here said trans-fat-free oils seemed to leave less of a varnish buildup on their French fry baskets and corn dog equipment. But Chris Coffman, who helps his brother, Sam, operate a stand that sells the fried-dough snack called elephant ears, was none too pleased with the new ways.

The oil they are now using has to be changed more often, Mr. Coffman said (although some other concessionaires said their new oils in fact required less changing). And he worried, briefly, that the ban might also apply to the margarine that the Coffmans use to make cinnamon sugar stick to their doughy confections; it does not, fair officials ruled.

And that, Mr. Coffman said, is the silly part of the whole ban: it will barely skim the surface of fair food’s inherently and proudly unhealthful nature, he said.

It’s craziness, said Mr. Coffman, 45, who says he eats fair food every day but who appears surprisingly trim. They’re using this for a marketing ploy. It’s a way to convince people that they can eat more that somehow all of this is safe now and you can eat all you want when we all know that’s not true.

The calorie count? The state fair does not require vendors to provide those numbers, and no one here would venture any guesses. But figures from the Web site CalorieKing.com suggest that a Combo Plate, for instance, comes to well over 700 calories. That is more than a third of the entire daily caloric intake recommended by the Department of Agriculture for a 30-year-old woman who is 5-foot-6 and 130 pounds and who exercises less than 30 minutes a day.

Ms. Hoye, the fair’s executive director, pointed out some healthful (if, judging from the customer lines, less popular) offerings of salads and tomato juice here. But she was quick to acknowledge that trans-fat-free oils will not turn standard state fair cuisine into health food.

When you are having fair food, you are having fun, she said. You’re probably still going to use some calories out here. Look, we can’t control what goes in an Oreo, but we can say what goes in our fryers out here.

Jeremy Orme, who runs Fried Creations, the home of the Combo Plate, introduced a new item at this year’s fair: deep-fried Pepsi. He rolls out his Pepsi-based dough, dips it in a batter made with Pepsi and deep-fries it for 90 seconds. His oil, made of soybeans, is trans-fat free as required, and on the front of his booth he has posted a local newspaper’s account about the fair’s trans-fat ban.

Jeremy Orme's stand is the home of the
Combo Plate: a Snickers,
two Oreos and
a Reese's, all battered and deep-fried.


But inside the booth, where the air is dense with oil, workers chuckle about the whole concept. And Mr. Orme himself rarely eats what he cooks here.

I stay away from fried foods, he said.

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/us/21fat.html

Saturday, August 18, 2007

The Importance of Eating Healthy (2)

New Menus, New Mission for Breakfast

Published: September 17, 2007

PITY the executive whose life is filled with crammed planes, missed connections and a workday that begins early and lasts as long as the Internet connection holds up.


Mark Graham for The New York Times

Hibiscus frappés are served as palate cleansers at the Omni Mandalay Hotel in Irving, Tex.


CJ Gunther for The New York Times

Waiter Oscar Pino with “superfood” breakfasts at a Westin in Waltham, Mass.

Against that backdrop, the food that starts a business traveler’s day is particularly important. And the hotel industry is catching on, creating menus that emphasize health, renewal and, especially, a better grade of coffee.

Hotel cooks are brewing coffee from organic sources and preparing healthier so-called functional foods. And though no hotel would be caught without bacon and eggs on its breakfast menu, increasingly the bacon is from pigs that were raised humanely and the eggs from cage-free chickens.

“I don’t think the habits of the guests are changing, but what they’re looking for is changing,” said Stephen Rosenstock, senior vice president for brand standards at Omni Hotels.

The chain is taking advantage of the sustainability trend with its Art of Breakfast program, introduced this year. It features environmentally friendly, shade-grown coffee and pork from a family-owned Colorado ranch that uses certified humane methods. And lots of whole grains.

“People are eating better and looking for more balance,” Mr. Rosenstock said.

Balance is the catchphrase at Westin hotels. Menus focus on “superfoods,” 14 functional foods outlined in the book “SuperFoods Rx,” which are supposed to be eaten in combinations with other foods for maximum benefits.

The initiative, which is in 25 Westin hotels and will become chainwide next year, encourages travelers trying to beat insomnia to drink smoothies made from bananas and soy milk. Those trying to stay alert in a new time zone can order a high-protein breakfast.

“The egg white omelet is popular, but it’s the egg white omelet with the spring green salad,” said Colleen Keating, a general manager at the Westin Waltham-Boston. “They don’t want to pair it with hash browns.”

The program is part of an overall approach to renewal, which is intended, in part, to soothe road-weary business travelers, who toil in their rooms late into the evening.

“The laptop has done this to us,” Ms. Keating said. As a result, travelers are looking for ways to take care of themselves. “We’ve moved from power to balance.”

Hotels are equally obsessed with breakfast programs that are about speed. Several hotel managers call it the Starbucks effect — when business travelers are not sitting down to an egg-white, whole-grain sustainable breakfast, they want a good cup of coffee and something easy to eat as they head out the door.

“The emphasis is on convenience,” said Vanessa Bortnick of Kimpton Hotels and Restaurants, which is based in San Francisco. People want food that is light but delicious, like a muffin and a latte, as long as the muffin is whole grain and the coffee is from a quality roaster, she said.

“The power breakfast that takes an hour doesn’t seem to be an option anymore,” Ms. Bortnick said.

Those power breakfasts of the 1990s, where executives lingered over a late breakfast of expensive egg dishes and even a Bloody Mary in elite hotel dining rooms, may be rare these days. But so is the idea of breakfast as a meeting Siberia, in which less important clients or last-minute meet-and-greets were relegated to a quick meal with an easy out: “Busy day ahead. Got to run.”

For some businesspeople, breakfast is a prime slot.

Sue Morgan, for example, can’t remember the last time she scheduled a lunch meeting, but she recently had three breakfast meetings in eight days.

She is on top of breakfast trends more than most people because she must be. Ms. Morgan, a 25-year veteran of the restaurant business, is a vice president for food and beverage services at InterContinental Hotels Group. The company runs more than 3,700 hotels in nearly 100 countries and territories.

“With this busy schedule, I am much more hesitant to schedule a lunch,” she said. “Breakfast is more flexible. I can schedule something at 7 instead of 7:30 if we need more time.”

Breakfast is going through big changes at several of the company’s brands, which include Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza Hotels and Resorts and Candlewood Suites. All of Holiday Inn’s nearly 1,000 hotels, for example, serve only coffee that is certified by the Rainforest Alliance.

Although 42 percent of guests want something quicker than a full breakfast, they prefer more than the cinnamon roll that was the star of the chain’s breakfast bar expansion in 2003. A recent makeover of the Express Start breakfast bars included scrambled eggs, cereal, skim milk and fresh fruit.

Those changes are just what business travelers like Carlos Boughton want. He is on the road a lot as a brand manager for Tecate beer, and he is scheduling more business meetings than ever at breakfast, usually over oatmeal, fruit and yogurt.

“It’s easy to say I need to pack this trip with meetings, so let’s have breakfast,” he said. “Even when you say 7 a.m., people say: ‘Sure I’ll have breakfast. Are you buying?’ ”

Mr. Boughton says he still relishes taking a moment alone in the morning. Not only is it relaxing, but is also without stigma. Having a solo dinner feels “kind of lame,” he said. But going downstairs and having breakfast alone? “That’s O.K.”

Thursday, August 16, 2007

More Tips on Drinking Water(3)

# # #

Three Yards and a Drink That Tastes Like Dust

WHEN Tom Glavine, a star pitcher for the New York Mets, earned his milestone 300th victory on a hot and humid night last month, he had a secret weapon.

It was not illegal. It was so safe a baby could use it. In fact, many babies do.

Between innings, Mr. Glavine sipped Pedialyte, a liquid sold alongside diapers in drugstores that is meant to quickly rehydrate toddlers experiencing diarrhea. The neon-tinted fluid that comes in grape and other child-friendly flavors contains electrolytes such as sodium, potassium and glucose, which happen to be the basic ingredients in most sports drinks.

Without an iota of marketing effort from Abbott Laboratories, the maker of Pedialyte, the over-the-counter remedy with a teddy bear on its label has developed a small and devoted following among professional and amateur athletes, a trend that long-distance runners seem to have started sometime in the 1980s.

Athletes are always looking for an edge, even the macho ones who would rather be seen off the field with a Cadillac Escalade than with a teddy bear. But despite that cuddly label, Pedialyte continues to pop up in locker rooms.

If there's some secret formula to victory, and, these days, if it's legal, athletes will try it.

"It'd be different if they were drinking formula," Brad Childress, the head coach of the Minnesota Vikings told The St. Paul Pioneer Press before last season about his players' pre-workout predilection for the baby elixir. "But Pedialyte is used in hospitals throughout the United States for hydration. It's different than just your regular sports drink."

From the beverage cart on the Anaheim Ducks' team flights during the 2007 Stanley Cup playoffs to the training camps of the National Football League teams whose regular season started this weekend, Pedialyte has found its place in the kit bag of professional athletes.

The baby stuff has its converts among amateur athletes, too. Gavin Bannat, 42, the wrestling coach at Wayne Valley High School in New Jersey, discovered Pedialyte last winter when a stomach flu left him dehydrated and wandering a convenience store looking for relief.

Mr. Bannat realized it might work as a sports drink and used it while training for the Jay Challenge, a 31.5-mile mountainous race in July in Vermont, which he completed. He now recommends it to his teenage wrestlers, over the protests of their parents.

"They say it's for babies," Mr. Bannat said. "But I tell them forget the Gatorade. With Pedialyte, the kids can maintain a better electrolyte balance. The kids can work out harder and recover faster."

While Abbott does not market Pedialyte as a sports drink or track its sales to athletes, the company is aware of its off-label use in locker rooms. Dr. Keith Wheeler, a divisional vice president for research and development at the company, says he has done enough research to know Pedialyte will work on the field.

"If you take a 300-pound N.F.L. lineman and put him in 95 degrees with 75 percent humidity," Dr. Wheeler said, "he will dump a volume of electrolytes from his body through sweat that will be equivalent to a child with diarrhea."

As best as most observers can tell, endurance athletes were the first to consume Pedialyte as an adult sports drink in the 1980s. Compared with original Gatorade, Pedialyte has more than twice the sodium per ounce and half the carbohydrates, and it sells for more than double the price.

"Probably the ironman competitors and the ultra runners were the first ones to use the product," said Monique Ryan, a nutrition consultant and the author of "Sports Nutrition for Endurance Athletes." "People started using it when there were fewer products on the market for athletes to choose from to replace sodium."

By the late 1990s, Pedialyte had become a sports-drink rage among National Hockey League players. Other sports followed. After Korey Stringer, a 370-pound offensive tackle for the Vikings, died from complications brought on by heat stroke in 2001 during training camp, the N.F.L. team added Pedialyte to its roster of products to help players stay properly hydrated.

Gatorade noticed. Darren Rovell, the author of "First in Thirst: How Gatorade Turned the Science of Sweat into a Cultural Phenomenon," said the company became so concerned about the increasing use of Pedialyte and other high-sodium products in locker rooms — and the added risk that the trend could catch on with the public — that in 2005 it introduced Gatorade Endurance, a mass market drink with nearly twice as much sodium per serving as traditional Gatorade. Endurance previously had been available only to sports teams. It is the Endurance product that runners of the New York City Marathon now receive at refreshment stations.

Mary Doherty, a spokeswoman for Gatorade, denied that Gatorade Endurance was a response to Pedialyte. "All of our innovation is a result of feedback from professional trainers across all of our college and professional team relationships," she said. "They were expressing a need for a higher sodium product." Gatorade, whose parent company is PepsiCo, has an 80 percent share of the sports drink market, with more than $5 billion in annual sales in the United States, and promotes itself aggressively: In 2004, the company signed an eight-year deal with the N.F.L. for about $45 million annually, Mr. Rovell said.

On Friday the company introduced a new beverage line called G2, which has half the calories of regular Gatorade. Even though G2 will be sold in a section of supermarkets far from Pedialyte, the two share characteristics. G2 has 25 calories per eight-ounce serving, and can ensure athletes arrive on the field with enough salts in their system without delivering a dose of carbohydrates too high for muscles at rest.

Athletes often praise Pedialyte for possessing a sugar content lower than original Gatorade. It has 24 calories per eight ounces, and a 24-ounce bottle costs $7.50. But whether it is better able than Gatorade or any other sports drink to add a few miles an hour to anyone's fastball is still a matter of debate.

"Pedialyte is certainly better for diarrhea than Gatorade," said Bob Murray, the director of the Gatorade Sports Science Institute in Barrington, Ill. "But for on the field, when people are hot and sweaty and want to get the most of out of their bodies, Pedialyte is going to fall short."

Mr. Murray said the main problem with Pedialyte is that it does not contain enough carbohydrates to help feed working muscles.

In a phone interview, Dr. Wheeler of Abbott Laboratories said that Gatorade had too much sucrose, "the wrong kind of carbohydrate," to effectively hydrate athletes, a statement Mr. Murray said years of his company's research proved is untrue.

The scientific debate might be impossible to settle, but Dr. Amy DeFelice, an associate professor of clinical pediatrics at the Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of New York-Presbyterian, who regularly prescribes Pedialyte, said it is, at the least, safe for athletes as long as they have normal kidney function.

Abbott has no plans to make Pedialyte Endurance or to pitch their product to athletes, no matter how many testimonials athletes give.

Even if Abbott did change its strategy, Pedialyte would likely be a tough sell to consumers concerned not only with performance, but with taste, which is not, Mr. Bannat admitted, one of Pedialyte's strong suits.

"It tastes," he said, "like chalk dust."

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/09/fashion/09pedia.html

# # #
Lars Klove for The New York Times

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

The Importance of Water


On an exceptional warm day, carry two bottles of room temperature water (32 oz). Please do not buy bottled water unless you have to. Most of the time it is just tapped water with a brand label around it.

Boil your own water and lets it cool down. Then pour it in your water bottle.
Add some lemon juice to it. Always have two to three bottles of water in the refrig. for emergency purposes. Most people prefer water bottle (Nalgene brand) with the following mark [polycarbonate]" on the bottom of the bottle: - "#2 HDPE", - "#4 LDPE" and - "#5 PP". I have #2's and #4. The Nalgene ATB bottles are made from #4 plastic and according to some sources, this type of plastic is a safe kind. http://www.mercola.com/2004/apr/7/nalgene_water.htm # # # Plastics that are safer to use for storing food and beverages, none of which are known to leach harmful substances include:
  • Polypropylene, designated "#5 PP"
  • High-density polyethylene, designated "#2HDPE" (The best)
  • Low-density polyethylene, designated "#4 LDPE"
# # # When you get a chance, buy a steel water bottle. (It is something that you will use for quite a long time). I keep my steel water bottle under the desk. I usually carry a 16 oz bottle and/or a steel drinking cup in my carrying bag. # # #



August 12, 2007

Water, Water Everywhere, but Guilt by the Bottleful

ON a recent family vacation in Cape Cod, Jenny Pollack, 40, a novelist and public relations associate from Brooklyn, did something she knew she would come to regret. She did it on the spur of the moment. She did it because she felt desperate.

Besides, the giant illuminated Dasani vending machine was just standing there, like a beacon.

So, with her reusable plastic Nalgene bottles dry and her son Charlie working up a thirst in an indoor playground, she broke down and bought a bottle of water. To most people it would be a simple act of self-refreshment, but to Ms. Pollack it was also a minor offense against the planet — think of all the oil used to package, transport and refrigerate that water.

"Something about it felt like a betrayal," said Ms. Pollack, who otherwise does not consider herself an ardent environmentalist. She said she decided to stop buying water after hearing friends talk about the impact of America's bottled water habit. And now she is doing what she can to spread the word.

"I've pretty much said to every single one of my friends, 'Can I tell you my spiel about bottled water?' "

How unlikely, that at the peak of a sweltering summer, people on playgrounds, in parks, and on beaches are suddenly wondering if an ice-cold bottle of fresh water might be a bad thing.

In the last few months, bottled water — generally considered a benign, even beneficial, product — has been increasingly portrayed as an environmental villain by city leaders, activist groups and the media. The argument centers not on water, but oil. It takes 1.5 million barrels a year just to make the plastic water bottles Americans use, according to the Earth Policy Institute in Washington, plus countless barrels to transport it from as far as Fiji and refrigerate it.

The issue took a major stride into mainstream dialogue earlier this summer, after the mayors of San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis and New York began urging people to opt for tap water instead of bottled.

This added momentum to efforts by environmental groups like Corporate Accountability International and Food & Water Watch, which have been lobbying citizens to dump the bottle; environmental organizations had banded together in several states to pressure governments to extend bottle bills to include bottled water. Several prominent restaurateurs, like Alice Waters of Chez Panisse in Berkeley, Calif., made much-publicized moves to drop bottled water from their menus.

AND so people who had come to consider bottled water a great convenience, or even a mark of good taste, are now casting guilty glances at their frosty drinks.

Daphne Domingo Johnson, a life coach who also works for a nonprofit organization in Seattle, said she used to keep a case of bottled water "in my trunk for all times, just because I know the importance of water." Ms. Johnson, 35, said she thought of reusable plastic Nalgene bottles — recently reborn as urban status symbols — as "just for backpackers or athletes."

Now, after reading news reports about the debate over bottled water, Ms. Johnson said, the rare bottles she buys feel "like a guilty pleasure." She helped mount an antibottled water campaign at work, posting fliers trumpeting environmental reasons why people should drink tap water instead of the free Crystal Geyser her employer provides.

She is not alone. In interviews last week with dozens of people on sun-baked streets around the country, former and current bottled water devotees showed a new awareness of the issue's complexities.

Some have already changed their ways.

Melissa Frawley, 38, a banker in Atlanta, said she recently broke her Evian habit after news reports altered her thinking. Environmentalism, she concluded, "is sometimes an inconvenience to us all, but it is something I think we all need to do."

Others who had not changed their habits were nevertheless feeling a new sense of guilt.

Barry Eskandani, 31, an administrative assistant in San Francisco who considers himself a connoisseur of water brands, said that lately his fellow Bay Area residents act as if "you just killed their puppy" if you dare throw a bottle in the garbage.

Bottled water has now overtaken coffee and milk in sales nationally, and is catching up with beer. To some, it's an affordable luxury. To others, a healthy alternative to sugary drinks.

Regardless, many consider it a staple.

Over the last 15 years, the bottled water industry has been astonishingly successful in turning a product that once seemed an indulgence into a daily companion. Savvy marketers even managed to recast this mundane product as a talisman of sexiness — Jennifer Aniston is the new face of Glacéau SmartWater.

But the fickleness of fashion may be tilting against the industry.

In preparation for New York Fashion Week this September, Aveda has an agreement with several design labels, including 3.1 Phillip Lim, Rodarte, Temperley London, Thakoon and Marc Bouwer to use recycled aluminum bottles for the water served to models and stylists backstage.

{* Do not believe in using aluminum bottle to carry water. Always use a Steel water bottle. *}

Word is spreading. An editorial on Aug. 1 in The New York Times, "In Praise of Tap Water," argued against bottled water on the ground that "this country has some of the best public water supplies in the world." The piece was high on the list of the most e-mailed articles for several days.

And the industry is feeling the heat. Last week, the International Bottled Water Association took out full-page newspaper advertisements urging consumers to recycle, not abandon, their bottles and arguing that "when we drink any beverage, it's likely to come out of a bottle or a can."

Some interviewed last week agreed with that viewpoint.

"There are two separate issues — one is water, the other is plastic bottles," said Paul Pentel, a physician in Minneapolis. "We have been trying to steer people away from the liquid candy — juices, pop and everything else," he added. "From that standpoint, water is good, and I'm very hesitant to demonize bottled water."

Indeed, some people wonder why environmentalists have singled out bottled water, and not dish detergent or Wiffle Ball bats.

Jessica Retan, a 22-year-old nanny who lives in Harlem, was sipping from a bottle of Poland Spring in Central Park on a hot Saturday. The waste issue, she said, is "concerning, but there's Coke, shampoo — a lot of things in addition to water that are bottled in plastic. So I'm curious, why just focus on bottled water?"

Gigi Kellett of Corporate Accountability International's Think Outside the Bottle campaign said environmental efforts targeting bottled water are a good starting point because water "is something that people can have access to right out of the taps."

"It's a way to protect the environment and protect your pocketbook," she said, adding that most empty bottles end up not in recycling bins but in the garbage.

All that discarded plastic also bothers Barbara Kancelbaum, a freelance writer in Park Slope. "It's not like the bottles that carry water are worse than bottles carrying Pepsi," said Ms. Kancelbaum, 42, who was so moved by the sight of overflowing garbage cans in Prospect Park that she posted an antibottled water message on an online bulletin board for local mothers. "The problem is that the water industry has exploded, so that there are many, many more bottles being used than there were before."

"The solution," she said, "is not to buy other kinds of drinks. The solution is to bring your own water."

But even the noblest of intentions can wilt in the heat.

Dave Byers, 65, from Silver Spring, Md., discussed the issue with his wife, Pat, on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art on a 90-degree Saturday. "I think it should be banned, actually," he said of bottled water.

As he spoke, he and his wife shared a bottle of Poland Spring. They said they felt bad about it, but it was hot. And they could not find a drinking fountain.

"Water is so ubiquitous," he said, glancing at the bottle. "It seems a little dumb to walk around with a bottle of this."

{* Preparation Precedes Performance. Always be prepared. Carry your own water. *}

Catherine Donaldson-Evans, Amy Goetzman, Kate Hammer, Carol Pogash, Rachel Pomerance and Paula Schwartz contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/12/fashion/12water.html

More Tips on Drinking Water (1)



# # #
The New York Times

October 20, 2005
Marathoners Warned About Too Much Water
By GINA KOLATA

Correction Appended

Dr. Lewis G. Maharam, the medical director for the New York City Marathon and marathons in San Diego, Phoenix, Nashville and Virginia Beach, said he was taking every opportunity this year to educate runners about the biggest threat to their lives on race day - drinking too much water.

He knows the danger: in their zeal to avoid becoming dehydrated, runners may end up drinking so much that they dilute their blood. Water rushes into cells, including cells of the brain. The swollen brain cells press against the skull, and the result can be fatal. The resulting condition is known as hyponatremia - too much water.

"There are no reported cases of dehydration causing death in the history of world running," Maharam said. "But there are plenty of cases of people dying of hyponatremia." No one knows how many have died, said Dr. Arthur Siegel, the chief of internal medicine at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass., and the designated hyponatremia team leader for recent Boston Marathons.

But he said that perhaps a dozen hyponatremia deaths had been recognized, according to informal communications among doctors at recent marathons. So this year, for the first time, the participant handbook for runners in the Nov. 6 New York City Marathon tells them how much to drink - no more than eight ounces of water every 20 minutes. Maharam also makes sure the message is delivered via television shows that feature news about the marathon. He makes an announcement at the start of the marathon about how much to drink. And there will be a flier in the goody bags telling each runner, once again, of the dangers of drinking too much. Even though Gatorade is one of the sponsors and the race features Gatorade's new sports drink, Gatorade Endurance Formula, Maharam said that sports drinks were no better than water. Eight ounces of fluid every 20 minutes is plenty.

But it is a message that is not always heard. Last year, one percent of the more than 35,000 New York City marathoners developed hyponatremia, Maharam said, and although that is a smaller toll than in other cities' marathons, doctors say every one of those life-threatening medical emergencies could have been avoided.

To make matters worse, medical treatments for hyponatremia are often disastrous. Some doctors mistakenly think the runner is dehydrated and give intravenous fluids. The extent of the problem may go far beyond the number of runners who have been hospitalized for it. A recent study of runners in the 2002 Boston Marathon found that 13 percent who finished the race had hyponatremia. And those were runners who thought they were fine and were just participating in a study. If such a runner continued to drink after the marathon, perhaps thinking that feelings of nausea and malaise were due to dehydration, the runner could end up with seizures or slip into a coma, doctors say.

That is what happened to Mark Robinson, a 27-year-old computer programmer from West Roxbury, Mass., who sees his story as a cautionary tale. The day of the 2004 Boston Marathon dawned unusually hot. The race was on April 19, but the temperature was projected to reach nearly 90 degrees. Robinson was concerned. It was his first marathon, he had been training for six months, and he wanted to run it in four hours or less. "I sweat a lot," he said. With weather like that, he worried he might become dehydrated. So he tried to make sure he drank enough. "I drank more than a gallon of water before the race, and then at every rest stop I would stop and have a couple of drinks of water," he said. He was on pace until Mile 19 when, suddenly, he felt nauseous and his legs began to cramp. He forced himself to continue, but by Mile 23 he could no longer run. "I tried to power-walk it in," Robinson said. His parents met him at the finish line, bringing water. He drank two quarts, but he felt worse than ever. Not only was he vomiting and having diarrhea, Robinson said, but "I felt spacey, out of it, almost like I was on drugs."

His parents got a wheelchair and took him to the medical tent, where the person doing triage at the entrance asked if he could stand on his own. He could. He said he was told, "We have people here who are lying down," and was sent away. His parents helped him walk to the subway and took him to their home in Wayland, Mass. All the while, Robinson was drinking water and drinking Gatorade and vomiting.

Robinson said: "I felt completely mentally out of it. It was a strange sensation. Deep down, I knew something really, really wasn't right. It was like a feeling of impending doom. My father wanted me to take a bath, but I didn't want to be alone. I looked at my dad and he was talking and his mouth was kind of going," but, Robinson said, he could no longer hear what his father was saying. Suddenly, Robinson screamed, leaped into the air, and fell down on his shoulder, breaking it. He lay on the floor, unconscious and no longer breathing. His mother called 911 and a helicopter arrived. On the flight to Boston Medical Center, Robinson received intravenous fluids; the medical team thought he was dehydrated. He ended up in a coma, on life support, and woke up four days later. His problem? Hyponatremia - poisoned by drinking too much water.

Robinson still runs, but much shorter distances. "I'll never run a long race again," he said. And forget marathons, he added. "My wife would never give me permission," he said. Dr. Paul Thompson, a cardiologist, a marathon runner and a director of the Athletes' Heart program at Hartford Hospital, said: "Everyone's been told to drink water, drink water, drink water. Water companies want you to drink water like a fish. Then you dilute your blood and your brain starts to swell. You have healthy people running marathons and dying. Has the word gotten out? No."

Even now, more than a year later, Robinson says he is still shaken from his near-death experience after the Boston Marathon. "You would never, ever think that water could kill you," he said. Correction: Oct. 21, 2005, Friday: A sports article yesterday about the danger of drinking water excessively during marathons misstated the toll of hyponatremia, a resulting condition that developed in about 1 percent of the 35,000 runners in the New York City Marathon last year. Dr. Lewis Maharam, medical director of the race, said that a small percentage of those runners had required hospital visits, and two had required an overnight stay; not all were hospitalized.

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/20/sports/sportsspecial/20marathon.html?

More Tips on Drinking Water (2)




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June 4, 2006
Fluids and Exercise

Hydration Angst
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

When Dr. John Cianca of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston took over as the medical director of the Houston Marathon in 1998, what many athletes believed about proper hydration was, in effect, that too much is never enough. And so the Houston Marathon course had 26 water
stations — one every mile. Then, in 1999, four runners collapsed after the race and had to be hospitalized, all of them in critical condition. Cianca was flabbergasted when he got word that each of the runners was suffering from severe hyponatremia, or overhydration. "The thinking back then was that it was difficult to develop hyponatremia during a marathon," Cianca says. "Obviously, that was wrong."

Two deaths in 2002 proved that too much can indeed be way more than enough: First, a 28-year-old woman collapsed near the 22-mile mark of the Boston Marathon. She lapsed into a coma and was declared brain-dead from intracranial swelling caused by hyponatremia. Six
months later, at the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C., a 35-year-old woman collapsed five hours into the race. She died two days later, also from complications of overhydration.

At Cianca's urging, the organizers of the Houston Marathon cut the number of water stations along the course by half in 2003. Some runners were worried at first, but there have been few complaints. "We're doing our best to reduce the availability of fluids," Cianca says. "We're trying to take away the choice to overhydrate."

Welcome to the age of hydration anxiety. Hyponatremia is a big topic in sports medicine and has become a growing concern for race directors. The American College of Sports Medicine, U.S.A. Track & Field, the National Athletic Trainers' Association and the Association of International Marathon Medical Directors have all recently issued revised fluid-intake guidelines that warn athletes not to overdo it.

And in the past year or so newspapers across the land have run headlines like this one from the Chicago Sun-Times: "Drink Tons of Water While Running? Not If You Want to Live."

With this comes the inevitable backlash. "There's a big danger of going too far," says Dr. Larry Kenney, a professor of physiology and kinesiology at Penn State University and a past president of the American College of Sports Medicine. "Some susceptible athletes will hear this and overdo it and not drink enough, or at all."

It used to be so easy: you did your workout, you replenished your fluids. But as physiology continues to teach us, nothing is that simple. Not even a drink of water.

Drinking too much is dangerous because it dilutes the blood's sodium content, which may already be lowered during prolonged exercise, since salt is lost in sweat. Meanwhile, sodium levels within other cells — in the skin, muscles and internal organs — remain constant. To correct the imbalance, osmosis draws water out of the blood, causing the cells to become engorged. Hands and feet balloon. The chest may feel constricted. In extreme cases, the brain can swell, leading to disorientation, fainting, a coma, even death.

Athletes who exercise for relatively short periods of time (less than two hours or so) rarely suffer from hyponatremia. Top finishers in marathons, triathlons and bike races also are not prone to develop symptoms, nor are athletes in fast-paced games like basketball and
tennis. It is, instead, the slow back-of-the-packers who are at risk.

As one doctor noted in The Physician and Sportsmedicine, slower marathon racers were found to have drunk as much as six or seven liters (more than 200 ounces) of fluid during the 26-mile event. By contrast, the top runners rarely drank more than two or three liters.
And unlike the speedsters, the plodders did not work up as much of a sweat, so they took in fluids at a much higher rate than they expended them.

Until quite recently, few people drank to excess. Then came Oprah. Remember her famous 1994 marathon run? She inspired a slew of enthusiastic but decidedly unathletic imitators. They came, they jogged, they walked, they chatted — and they made a day of it. Before Oprah, women tended to finish a marathon in a little more than four hours. Now they finish in closer to five, dutifully hydrating along the way.
How can you tell if you're drinking too much? The first symptom is often a sense that your wedding ring or running shoes are becoming tight, or that your waistband pinches. Overhydrators typically end their workouts weighing more than they did when they started. "You'll see these runners put on as much as four to eight pounds by the end" of a five-hour marathon, all of it from fluid, says Dr. Douglas Casa, the director of athletic-trainer education at the University of Connecticut and an author of U.S.A. Track & Field's hydration guidelines.

The risk of hyponatremia is disproportionately higher in women, although not for any innate physiological reasons. "Women are generally just more conscientious than men," says Dr. Timothy Noakes, a professor of exercise and sports science at the University of Cape Town in South Africa and a longtime crusader against hyponatremia. "Women do what they're told, and they've been told to drink as much as they can hold. So they do." Noakes likes the old-fashioned idea that if you're thirsty it's time to drink. "Athletes are still told, 'Stay ahead of your thirst,' which is terrible advice," he says. "Thirst is nature's way of helping you hydrate correctly. If you drink only when you're thirsty and stop when you're not, you'll be in good shape."

Other physiologists strongly disagree. "By the time you feel thirst, you've typically lost at least 2 percent of your body weight" to dehydration, Casa says. Losing as little as 3 percent of your weight can affect athletic performance, he continues. (Noakes disputes this; his research, he says, suggests that performance is not affected until athletes have lost at least 8 percent of their weight, if then.) Even slightly dehydrated athletes can feel hot, tired, irritable and sluggish. A more extreme case of dehydration can contribute to the development of minor heat exhaustion or even heat stroke. "When you reduce the volume of blood" — as happens if you sweat and don't replace fluid — "the heart has to work harder," Larry Kenney says. Heat builds up in the body. Your sweat rate might drop, increasing internal temperature even more. Like a malfunctioning boiler, the body has to slow down or it will blow.

Children are particularly susceptible to dehydration. "Kids do a pretty poor job of hydrating themselves," says Casa, who, in a study of elementary-school-age soccer players, found that most of them arrived at their summer practices already dehydrated, complaining of thirst and acting listless. Among the most disastrously at risk are youth football players practicing in full gear in full summer heat. "

In the past 10 years, 26 young football players have died from heat stroke (20 high school, 4 college and 2 professional)," according to a report issued this year by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In many instances, the players were severely dehydrated before they collapsed. Each of these deaths could have been avoided, the report concluded (with subtextual pathos), if fluids had been plentiful at the field. So how much should an athlete drink?

Experts like the nabobs at the American College of Sports Medicine no longer make blanket recommendations; each person's physique is too singular.

To put it less delicately, some of us sweat like an ironworker and some don't. "Two people of approximately the same size and athletic ability can have very different sweat rates," Kenney says. If both are told to drink the same amount, it's likely that one or both of them will be drinking too much or not enough. Instead, physiologists now give guidelines for testing individuals' sweat rates and fluid requirements. For one, they say, check your urine. It should be clear and pale. If it's dark or cloudy, you may be dehydrated. Ditto if your skin, when pinched, doesn't replump. Before you exercise, weigh yourself. Monitor how much you drink during your workout, then weigh yourself again afterward. "If you've lost weight, you need to start drinking a little more every hour," Casa says. "If you've gained weight, you need to drink less." At the Houston Marathon, scales are now set at the runner check-in area and also at strategic points along the course itself, so that both the participants and the medical team can record weight gain or loss. As for what to drink, almost any fluid will do. The small amount of salt in sports drinks will not stave off the sodium dilution characteristic of hyponatremia.

In a study conducted by Harvard researchers, runners at the 2002 Boston Marathon who developed hyponatremia were as likely to have overindulged in Gatorade as in water. It was the amount they drank, not the content, that mattered. "For general hydration, if you like water, by all means, drink water," Casa says. "
If you find sports drinks more palatable, drink those."

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/04/sports/playmagazine/04hydration.html

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Thursday, August 2, 2007

Beverages Menu

Coffee **1


Tea **2


Lemonade


Fruit Punch

Breakfast Blaster (Energy Drink)

**1 We serve premium Starbuck coffee.
**2 Lemon is optical with tea.
We usually serve green tea or black tea.

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Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Dessert Menu


Old Fashioned Apple Pie

German Chocolate Cake
(Semi-sweet Chocolate)

Ice Cream
(We serve Ben and Jerry ice cream)


Oatmeal Raisin Cookies with Coconut
(Semi-sweet home-made cookies)

Chocolate Chip Coconut Cookies
(Semi-sweet home-made cookies)

Apple Cinnamon Pie


Please be patient. The Dessert Menu page is currently being updated.