No Image

It’s All Gravy: Mason Dixie Biscuit Co. Coming to D.C.

July 16, 2014 0

A new operation devoted to all things biscuits is working toward opening in the District. Mason Dixie Biscuit Co. launched a Kickstarter campaign yesterday seeking $27,500 to help fund a pop-up in the Petworth neighborhood. The goal is to eventually open a permanent shop and a cart that will serve Union Market. Behind the venture is […]

No Image

Americans Are Caring Less About Salt

July 16, 2014 0

By Rachael Rettner, Senior Writer
Published: 07/15/2014 05:47 PM EDT on LiveScience

Americans’ interest in low-sodium foods has declined slightly in recent years, and may continue to drop in the future, according to new market research.

In 2010, an estimated 68 percent of Americans said they were trying to cut back on sodium in their diet, but that dropped to an estimated 64 percent in 2013, according to NPD Group, a market research company.

In addition, the percentage of Americans who said they read nutrition labels to find foods’ sodium content dropped from 41 percent to 39 percent over the same three-year period, NPD Group said. [4 Tips for Reducing Sodium in Your Diet]

The findings come as public health messages continue to advocate for people to consume less sodium. The 2010 U.S. federal dietary guidelines recommend that people limit the salt in their diet to 2,300 milligrams per day, and that some people, including middle-age and older adults and people with high blood pressure, limit salt intake to 1,500 mg per day. A 2013 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 90 percent of Americans ages 4 and older consume too much sodium.

“Regardless of the available nutritional information and dietary guidelines, consumers are choosing to focus on what they deem important,” Darren Seifer, a food and beverage industry analyst at NDP, said in a statement. Although people are paying less attention to sodium on nutrition labels, they are paying more attention to protein and sugar, Seifer said.

NPD forecasts that in 2018, the percentage of people who eat foods with low sodium or no salt labels will decrease by 1 percent, compared with 2013 levels.

However, some experts were skeptical about NDP’s interpretation of its findings.

“I think they make a big deal” out of small changes, said Michael F. Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), a nonprofit consumer watchdog group. Jacobsonnoted that the 2010 and 2013 figures cited by NDP differ by just a few percentage points.

Interest in low-sodium foods has grown dramatically over the last decade, Jacobson said, pointing toa 2004 survey from the Food Market Research Institute that found that, at that time, only 7 percent of shoppers looked at the sodium content of their foods, Jacobson said.

“There’s far, far more interest in sodium now than there was 10 years ago, and there will always be year-to-year variations” in the percentage of people who say they are concerned about salt in their diet, Jacobson said.

Still, Jacobsonsaid that, rather than relying on consumers to reduce their sodium intake, food manufacturers and restaurants should lower the amount of sodium in their foods.

“Individuals should read labels and look for lower sodium choices, but the country as a whole has not done that,” Jacobson said. “We’ve had nutrition labeling for 20 years, and it just hasn’t helped reduced sodium intake. The public health solution is to reduce sodium at its source — just don’t put it into the food supply.”

Some chain restaurants have reduced the amount of sodium in their meals slightly in recent years. A CSPI report released earlier this month found that 17 chain restaurants reduced sodium in their foods, on average, by 1.5 percent per year between 2009 and 2013.

CSPI has urged the Food and Drug Administration to set limits on the amount of salt allowed in food. Last month, the FDA said it plans to release sodium targets for the food industry, and meeting the targets will be voluntary.

Follow Rachael Rettner @RachaelRettner. FollowLive Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. ]]>

No Image

Last Night’s Leftovers: Lunch Edition

July 16, 2014 0

New lunch destinations to try [Eater] Where to find and how to make granita this summer [Post] Squid ink cocktails are on the rise. [Zagat] Washington Firehouse turns historic building into Bloomingdale restaurant. [WBJ] Free veggie dogs today from PETA reps clad in lettuce bikinis [Washingtonian] The Navy Yard Oyster Company coming to the Capitol Riverfront. […]

No Image

Drinkable Quinoa Exists And Everything Is Officially Wrong In The World

July 16, 2014 0

Just when you thought quinoa couldn’t get any more obnoxious, drinkable quinoa entered the world. A company called NUWI has just introduced NUWI Quinoa Snacks, a liquid snack of blended quinoa with fruit and vegetables. Remember when yogurt became a drinkable snack? It’s kind of like that, but worse.

The first drinkable quinoa flavors are Apple, Banana, Strawberry and Blueberry, and according to a press release, savory flavors like Carrot & Ginger, Split Peas and Tomato are coming soon. We can hardly wait.

There are so many things wrong with this snack, we don’t really know where to begin. For one, quinoa is delicious when eaten as a solid. It’s light but satisfying, fluffy yet hearty, and it tastes great in sweet (think breakfast) and savory dishes. Turning quinoa into a liquid totally eliminates its unique texture, and we can only imagine what it would do to the taste.

Second, in a press release about NUWI Quinoa Snacks, co-founder of NUWI Gabriel Poblet Maristany describes quinoa as a grain. Sorry, Gabriel, but the part of quinoa that we eat is really a seed. “People are often hesitant at first about this product because it’s unfamiliar territory. But if you stop and think about it, people drink their fruits and vegetables in smoothies and pressed juices, why not drink your grains?” asks Maristany. It’s a fair question, but for one, we like chewing out grains. Fruits and vegetables lend themselves to smoothies because of their high water content, which makes them blender- and juicer-friendly. Grains, not so much. More importantly, quinoa just ain’t a grain, no matter which way you cut it — or liquify it (it’s the seed of a grain).

We thought the quinoa trend peaked at quinoa whiskey. How wrong we were.

NUWI Quinoa Snacks are available for $2.99 per drink in stores in the New York metro area like Whole Foods Market, Gristedes and Fairway.

Here are other places you can find NUWI Quinoa Snacks, according to NUWI’s Facebook page…

nuwi

nuwi2

nuwi3

nuwi4

nuwi

Want to read more from HuffPost Taste? Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Tumblr.

No Image

The Next Generation Of Travel Mugs Will Blow Your Mind

July 16, 2014 0

Are you a coffee fiend? Do you find yourself always en route somewhere? Have you had food or drink spill in your purse/backpack/messenger bag more than once? If you answered yes to all of those questions, you are just the customer for Smash Cup.

The …

No Image

Here’s Another Way You Never Considered Peeling A Mango

July 16, 2014 0

Mangoes are tricky. They have really thin skin that is difficult to peel off and a huge, flat pit running right down the middle that gets in the way of everything. But a new food hack might have just convinced us that mangoes might not be as inaccessib…