[My] Life in Wisconsin

FOOD! Carnivore? Herbivore? Or Omnivore? hehehe



Good Morning All;
Seems as though everyone is talking about food lately- Makes my mouth water to read some of your entries! (Maybe it is because I haven't done the 'real' grocery shopping in a while).

XOXO
Me

Thank you Sophie for sharing this!



The list includes fine food, strange food, everyday food and even some pretty bad food - but a good omnivore should really try it all. :)

The instructions are quite easy...

1) Copy this list into your blog or journal, including these instructions.

2) Bold all the items you’ve eaten.

3) highlight in red any items that you would never consider eating.
_______________________________

  1. Venison

  2. Nettle Tea

  3. Huevos rancheros

  4. Steak tartare

  5. Crocodile

  6. Black pudding

  7. Cheese fondue

  8. Carp

  9. Borscht

 10. Baba ghanoush   Will never do so again-

 11. Calamari

 12. Pho

 13. PB&J sandwich

 14. Aloo gobi
aka: alu gobi, or aloo gobhi  (Cumin, I'll bet).

 15. Hot dog from a street cart   (I live under a rock. Carts won't fit).

 16. Epoisses   too scary.

 17. Black truffle

 18. Chicken and Waffles (only if I ran out of bread)?

 19. Steamed pork buns  huh?

 20. Pistachio ice cream

 21. Heirloom tomatoes

 22. Fresh wild berries

 23. Foie gras   before I knew it's history

 24. Rice and beans Senior Class exchange to Mexico

 25. Brawn, or head cheese  Don't like it.

 26. Raw Scotch Bonnet pepper

 27. Dulce de leche

 28. Oysters

 29. Baklava

 30. Bagna cauda   sounds like barricuda?

 31. Wasabi peas

 32. Clam chowder in a sourdough bowl  Country Kitchen

 33. Salted lassi   Arf?

 34. Sauerkraut    Mmmm (Click Here).

 35. Root beer float

 36. Clotted cream tea

 37. Gumbo

 38. Turtle Soup

 39. Oxtail

 40. Curried goat

 41. Whole insects

 42. Phaal (Its HOT!!!) Then no.

 43. Goat’s milk

 44. Pheasant

 45. Squirrel

 46. Fugu   I haven't eaten it, (I don't think), but there are a few people I could say this to.

 47. Chicken tikka masala

 48. Eel

 49. Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut No.

 50. Sea urchin   No.

 51. Prickly pear   No.

 52. Umeboshi

 53. Abalone

 54. Paneer

 55. McDonald’s Big Mac Meal

 56. Spaetzle

 57. Tongue

 58. Skyline Chili

 59. Poutine A Québecois delicacy: French fries, gravy, and cheese curds

 60. Carob chips

 61. S’mores

 62. Sweetbreads

 63. Kaolin (But I drank a bottle of kaopectate when I was a kid).

 64. Currywurst

 65. Durian

 66. Frogs’ legs

 67. Beignets, churros, elephant ears or funnel cake

 68. Haggis

 69. Fried plantain

 70. Chitterlings, or andouillette

 71. Gazpacho

 72. Caviar and blini

 73. Dog

 74. Gjetost, or brunost (Is this cheerios for ghosts)?

 75. Roadkill

 76. Shoofly pie

 77. Hostess Fruit Pie

 78. Snail

 79. Lapsang souchong

 80. Bellini

 81. Tom yum  (Tom who)?

 82. Eggs Benedict

 83. Pocky (Do I need a vaccine for this)?

 84. Ostrich

 85. Kobe beef   Face it, I will never be rich enough

 86. Hare

 87. Goulash

 
88. Flowers

 89. Horse

 90. Criollo chocolate

 91. Spam

 92. Soft shell crab

 93. Rose harissa

 94. Catfish  Mmmmm

 95. Mole poblano

 96. Bagel and lox

 97. Lobster Thermidor

 98. Polenta

 99. Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee

100. Snake

_______________________________


So, are you hungry now?

Do tell !

XOXO
Me

And just for grins and giggles I have to throw this in...

You Are Milk Pocky
Your attitude: caring and charming
You are smooth and silky... invigorating and natural.
You ignite people's senses. You are very sensual.
You are like comfort food for the soul.
       


To Boob or Not to Boob? What Say You?


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/17/health/17cancer.html?_r=1&hp
In Reversal, Panel Urges Mammograms at 50, Not 40 - NYTimes.com
By GINA KOLATA
Published: November 16, 2009

Most women should start regular breast cancer screening at age 50, not 40, according to new guidelines released Monday by an influential group that provides guidance to doctors, insurance companies and policy makers.

The new recommendations, which do not apply to a small group of women with unusual risk factors for breast cancer, reverse longstanding guidelines and are aimed at reducing harm from overtreatment, the group says. It also says women age 50 to 74 should have mammograms less frequently — every two years, rather than every year. And it said doctors should stop teaching women to examine their breasts on a regular basis.

Just seven years ago, the same group, the United States Preventive Services Task Force, with different members, recommended that women have mammograms every one to two years starting at age 40. It found too little evidence to take a stand on breast self-examinations.

The task force is an independent panel of experts in prevention and primary care appointed by the federal Department of Health and Human Services.

Its new guidelines, which are different from those of some professional and advocacy organizations, are published online in The Annals of Internal Medicine They are likely to touch off yet another round of controversy over the benefits of screening for breast cancer.

Dr. Diana Petitti, vice chairwoman of the task force and a professor of biomedical informatics at Arizona State University, said the guidelines were based on new data and analyses and were aimed at reducing the potential harm from overscreening.

While many women do not think a screening test can be harmful, medical experts say the risks are real. A test can trigger unnecessary further tests, like biopsies, that can create extreme anxiety. And mammograms can find cancers that grow so slowly that they never would be noticed in a woman’s lifetime, resulting in unnecessary treatment.

Over all, the report says, the modest benefit of mammograms — reducing the breast cancer death rate by 15 percent — must be weighed against the harms. And those harms loom larger for women in their 40s, who are 60 percent more likely to experience them than women 50 and older but are less likely to have breast cancer, skewing the risk-benefit equation. The task force concluded that one cancer death is prevented for every 1,904 women age 40 to 49 who are screened for 10 years, compared with one death for every 1,339 women age 50 to 74, and one death for every 377 women age 60 to 69.

The guidelines are not meant for women at increased risk for breast cancer because they have a gene mutation that makes the cancer more likely or because they had extensive chest radiation. The task force said there was not enough information to know whether those women would be helped by more frequent mammograms or by having the test in their 40s. Other experts said women with close relatives with breast cancer were also at high risk.

Dr. Petitti said she knew the new guidelines would be a shock for many women, but, she said, “we have to say what we see based on the science and the data.”

The National Cancer Institute said Monday that it was re-evaluating its guidelines in light of the task force’s report.

But the American Cancer Society and the American College of Radiology both said they were staying with their guidelines advising annual mammograms starting at age 40.

The cancer society, in a statement by Dr. Otis W. Brawley, its chief medical officer, agreed that mammography had risks as well as benefits but, he said, the society’s experts had looked at “virtually all” the task force and additional data and concluded that the benefits of annual mammograms starting at age 40 outweighed the risks.

Other advocacy groups, like the National Breast Cancer Coalition, Breast Cancer Action, and the National Women’s Health Network, welcomed the new guidelines.

“This is our opportunity to look beyond emotions,” said Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition. The task force “is an independent body of experts that took an objective look at the data,” Ms. Visco said. “These are the people we should be listening to when it comes to public health messages.”

Some women, though, were not pleased. “I know so many people who had breast cancer and survived, and what saved their lives was early detection,” Janet Doughty, 44, of San Clemente, Calif., said in a telephone interview. She said she had had an annual mammogram since her late 30s and would not stop now.

The guidelines are not expected to have an immediate effect on insurance coverage but should make health plans less likely to aggressively prompt women in their 40s to have mammograms and older women to have the test annually.

Congress requires Medicare to pay for annual mammograms. Medicare can change its rules to pay for less frequent tests if federal officials direct it to.

Private insurers are required by law in every state except Utah to pay for mammograms for women in their 40s.

But the new guidelines are expected to alter the grading system for health plans, which are used as a marketing tool. Grades are issued by the National Committee for Quality Assurance, a private nonprofit organization, and one measure is the percentage of patients getting mammograms every one to two years starting at age 40.

That will change, said Margaret E. O’Kane, the group’s president, who said it would start grading plans on the number of women over 50 getting mammograms every two years.

The message for most women, said Dr. Karla Kerlikowske, a professor in the department of medicine, epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco, is to forgo routine mammograms if they are in their 40s.

Starting at age 50, Dr. Kerlikowske said, “the message is to get 10 mammograms in a lifetime, one every two years.” That way they get the most benefit and the least harm from the test. If women are healthy, she added, they might consider having mammograms every two years until age 74.

Nearly two-thirds of all women in their 40s had mammograms within the last two years, as did 72 percent of women age 50 to 65, according to an editorial by Dr. Kerlikowske that accompanies the report.

In order to formulate its guidelines, the task force used new data from mammography studies in England and Sweden and also commissioned six groups to make statistical models to analyze the aggregate data. The models were the only way to answer questions like how much extra benefit do women get if they are screened every year, said Donald A. Berry, a statistician at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center and head of one of the modeling groups.

“We said, essentially with one voice, very little,” Dr. Berry said. “So little as to make the harms of additional screening come screaming to the top.”

The harms are nearly cut in half when women have mammograms every other year instead of every year. But the benefits are almost unchanged.

The last time the task force issued guidelines for mammograms, in 2002, the reportwas announced by Tommy G. Thompson, the secretary of health and human services. When the group recommended mammograms for women in their 40s, some charged the report was politically motivated. But Dr. Alfred Berg of the University of Washington, who was the task force chairman at the time, said “there was absolutely zero political influence on what the task force did.”

It was still a tough call to make, Dr. Berg said, adding that “we pointed out that the benefit will be quite small.” In fact, he added, even though mammograms are of greater benefit to older women, they still prevent only a small fraction of breast cancer deaths.

Different women will weigh the harms and benefits differently, Dr. Berg noted, but added that even for women 50 and older, “it would be perfectly rational for a woman to decide she didn’t want to do it.”

Researchers worry the new report will be interpreted as a political effort by the Obama administration to save money on health care costs.

Of course, Dr. Berry noted, if the new guidelines are followed, billions of dollars will be saved.

“But the money was buying something of net negative value,” he said. “This decision is a no-brainer. The economy benefits, but women are the major beneficiaries.”

Roni Caryn Rabin contributed reporting.

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(There are many links that you may want to read too, within the Times link at the top).

Thank You Cab, for the heads up!
http://cab65.multiply.com/journal/item/385

XOXO
Me

Will Condom Recall Lead to Sex Panic?


http://weirdnews.about.com/b/2009/11/12/will-condom-recall-lead-to-sex-panic.htm
Ruh~Roh! "Sum~Ting~Wong!"

XOXO
Me

******* Photo: (Flickr (cc: by-nc-sa): peachy92, file photo)

*******
This, from here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/11/09/2737674.htm

Police in central China have closed a factory producing fake and unsterile condoms and are tracking down over two million of the unsafe contraceptives already on the market, state press say.

The condoms were made in a factory in Hunan province and are believed to have been sold nationwide under a variety of names, including those of well-known makers such as Jissbon and Durex, the China Youth Daily said.

Police have detained suspect manufacturer Li Anping, who allegedly bought condoms wholesale, added an unknown lubricant and crudely packaged them without sterilizing the product, the report said.

Several underage girls worked in the now-shuttered factory, it added.

Li allegedly produced up to 2.16 million condoms before the plant was closed down.

Fake and faulty products remain a major concern in China as unscrupulous manufacturers seek to make profits as the nation's economy booms.

************** From top link...

If you're sexually active and have used condoms, here's some news that's really going to gross you out: Chinese authorities have shut down a condom plant, saying it was producing unsafe and tainted rubbers.
Now, officials are looking for more than two million condoms that were produced by this plant and sold under brand names such as Durex and Jissbon, according to Australia's ABC News.

Officials say manufacturer Li Anping bought wholesale condoms, added an "unknown" lubricant and then repackaged them without sterilizing them. He also had underage girls working in his condom factory, according to the report.

This story is bad enough... but the real question now is how do you recall condoms? If you have the answer... please don't tell me.