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Re: chocolate? milk

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I really do not think that chocolate is all that bad. Chocolate actually has a mineral that we need in it. I cannot remember what now but it is a trace mineral that is not in very many foods, my sister who is studying to be a nutritionist purposely purchases chocolate for making chocolate milk for her 2 year old. Well you can get organic chocolate sauce. Which is what she uses.

a

----- Original Message -----

From: C.

Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2001 8:29 PM

Subject: chocolate? milk

OK! I have sufficiently managed to keep cold cereal out of the house forthree months. My husband and son managed to make our last bottle ofhershey's chocolate syrup last that long as well! I don't think that Ican keep chocolate milk out of the house. Does anyone know if the carobsauce on p.550 might work? If not are there any other things anyone canthink of that are in line w/NT?Thanks! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*keep your eyes wide, the chance won't come again*amandacop wife & mimmy2angels jack 01/20/98 obhosp daphne 12/02/00 uc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~________________________________________________________________GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit:http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

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Chocolate actually has some health benefits to it. Yes it has caffeine in it

but if I recall it's 1/10th of what is in a cup of coffee so use chocolate in

moderation and enjoy. Just take the sugar out of it (substitute stevia, raw

honey, maple syrup, etc) Carob just isn't a decent substitute for chocolate.

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Thanks paula, that's good to know. I was hoping to hear something like

that. I made hot cocoa tonight for them out of some left over bakers

cocoa, sweetened w/sucanat and vanilla. Way better than anything that

ever came out of a foil lined envelope! And now they won't wine about

never having treats....

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*keep your eyes wide, the chance won't come again*

love, amanda

cop wife & mimmy2angels jack 01/20/98 obhosp

daphne 12/02/00 uc

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

________________________________________________________________

GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!

Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!

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Hi ,

One thing that you might want to note about chocolate is that it inhibits

calcium and iron uptake. You may still want to look into alternatives.

B.

On Tue, 3 Apr 2001 19:29:10 -0600 " C. " <c-dot@...> writes:

> OK! I have sufficiently managed to keep cold cereal out of the house

> for

> three months. My husband and son managed to make our last bottle

> of

> hershey's chocolate syrup last that long as well! I don't think

> that I

> can keep chocolate milk out of the house. Does anyone know if the

> carob

> sauce on p.550 might work? If not are there any other things anyone

> can

> think of that are in line w/NT?

> Thanks!

> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

> *keep your eyes wide, the chance won't come again*

> amanda

> cop wife & mimmy2angels jack 01/20/98 obhosp

> daphne 12/02/00 uc

> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

>

> ________________________________________________________________

> GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!

> Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!

> Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit:

> http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.

>

>

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Excellent article! Will check out the website as well.

I was in Arizona last week and ran across a dark chocolate cocoa powder at a

health food store. It's fabulous! It's like the chocolate used to make Oreo

cookies. It's not bitter in flavor and needs a lot less sweetening than

normal cocoa does. I was able to dip my finger in and sample it without the

normal YIKES after tasting unsweetened cocoa. I made some ice cream from

creme fraiche using the dark cocoa and there's no comparison. It's kind of a

funny gray color but topped with a few crispy almonds no one notices the

color. Now to just find it locally. There wasn't a label on it as it was in

a big bin but if it's available there it must be at other stores as well.

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Hi ,

Alot of info about about copper and reference to chocolate. I have read at

other sites that the darker chocolate, semisweet has more copper! Maybe this

was the trace element someone mentioned? Read the whole article Very

interesting!

>From: BrenRuble@...

>Subject: Re: chocolate? milk

>

>Chocolate actually has some health benefits to it. ******

COPPER

Copper (Cu) is a trace element that is essential for most animals, including

humans. The influence of copper upon human health is due to the fact it is

part of enzymes, which are proteins that help biochemical reactions occur in

every cell. Copper is involved in the absorption, storage and metabolism of

iron. The symptoms of a copper deficiency are similar to iron deficiency

anemia. Copper may be absorbed by both the stomach and small intestinal

mucosa, with most absorbed by the small intestine. Copper is found in the

blood bound to proteins.

Copper is utilized by most cells as a component of enzymes involved in

energy production (cytochrome oxidase) and in the protection of cells from

free radical damage (superoxide dismutase). Copper is also involved with an

enzyme that strengthens connective tissue (lysyl oxidase) and in brain

neurotransmitters (dopamine hydroxylase and peptidyl alpha amidating

monoxygenase). One of the proteins, ceruloplasmin, transports copper as well

as helps convert iron to a form that can be transported to other tissues.

The average level of copper stored in the body is from 50 to 120 mg, with

most of this in the liver. Excess dietary copper can also lead to high

copper levels in the kidney. However, under normal situations, not much

copper is excreted via the urine. Most copper is excreted via bile that is

released into the gastrointestinal tract, with minimal copper reabsorbed by

intestinal cells. The uptake of copper and elimination through the bile

allows copper to be conserved and tightly regulated.

Deficiencies: Animals that are fed diets deficient in copper often exhibit

anemia, cardiac abnormalities such as blood vessel and heart rupture,

abnormal EKG's and have elevated levels of serum cholesterol, triglycerides

and glucose. A lifetime of marginal diet copper in humans is thought to lead

to heart disease. Copper deficiency has been observed in premature infants

and infants suffering from malnutrition. Overt symptoms in adults are rare,

but may occur with long term shortage or, possibly, in those who consume

zinc supplements for a period of time.

Diet recommendations: The estimated safe and adequate intake for copper is

1.5 - 3.0 mg/day. Many survey studies show that Americans consume about 1.0

mg or less of copper per day. Copper is found in foods such as nuts [0.2 to

0.5 mg/28 g (1 Tbsp.)], shellfish (1.0 to 3.7 mg/serving), organ meats (3.8

mg/serving of beef liver) and legumes (0.2 mg/serving). Grains, grain

products and chocolate have appreciable levels of copper. While these food

items are good to excellent sources of copper, the absolute amount of copper

absorbed may be influenced by other dietary components.

Copper absorption may be decreased by excess dietary iron or zinc.

Conversely, too much copper may cause an iron deficiency. Vitamin C

supplementation results in decreased copper status. In rats, large doses of

vitamin C can lead to copper deficiency. Other dietary components have an

influence upon copper status, but not necessarily absorption. Feeding rats

either sucrose or fructose, as opposed to glucose or cornstarch, decreases

copper status and exacerbates the signs of copper deficiency.

Toxicity: Cases of copper toxicity are rare but may occur. Excess copper

consumption may lead to liver damage. Intake of supplements exceeding 3 mg

copper/day for a protracted period of time may be cause for concern. Doses

of 10 mg/day over several weeks may lead to toxic symptoms, such as weakness

and nausea.

Genetic Conditions relating to copper: There are two well known genetic

diseases affecting copper metabolism. Menkes' kinky-hair disease is a

problem with copper transport or absorption. 's disease is

characterized by increased liver copper content, leading to severe hepatic

damage, followed by increased brain copper levels and neurological problems.

Menkes' disease results in pathology resembling copper-deficiency, as

opposed to the pathology of 's disease, which resembles

copper-toxicity. The Menkes' gene codes for a P-type ATPase that has a

mutation that prevents copper absorption in the intestine.

http://www.altmedicine.com/app/registeruser.cfm

This is a site that has alot of information!!

Regards

_________________________________________________________________

Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com

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> Excellent article! Will check out the website as well.

Chocolate Protects against Heart Disease

Hi ,

Now don't go hog wild!!!

Great news for chocolate lovers it tastes delicious and protects you

from heart disease. Researchers have found that chocolate contains a

chemical called procyanidin, a chemical belonging to the polyphenolic

group. These chemicals, which can be found in fruit and vegetables,

are known to protect against coronary heart disease. Dr Schramm

gave volunteers chocolate to investigate if procyanidins can help to

keep the cardiovascular system in shape. Results showed that the

chocolate eaters demonstrated a significant reduction in blood

leukotriene, a chemical that encourages platelets to adhere to each

other, thus increasing the risk of blood clot formation. The authors

concluded that frequent consumption of procyanidins could help to

keep the heart healthy.

SOURCE/REFERENCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2001; 73: 36-

40

**** http://www.altmedicine.com/app/registeruser.cfm

Regards

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Glad to know I'm not the only one who's unwilling to

give up chocolate. I know the theobromine is supposed

to not be so great for you, but for me, chocolate is a

mental health food. And I do think it has good health

qualities, as well (the minerals and such already

mentioned). I don't eat it in the candy form with all

kinds of bad fats and refined sugar (plus usually a

whole list of un-pronounceables and preservatives),

but I do use organic cocoa powder occasionally

(combined with a natural sweetener).

Aubin

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