[unable to retrieve full-text content]
Square Will Eat ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ Platform Afterpay for $29 Billion GizmodoSquare Will Eat ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ Platform Afterpay for $29 Billion - Gizmodo
Read More
[unable to retrieve full-text content]
Square Will Eat ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ Platform Afterpay for $29 Billion Gizmodo
Fort Bend ISD students will receive free breakfast and lunch during the 2021-22 school year. (Courtesy Adobe Stock)
This is made possible due to a waiver extension from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that allows schools to serve free meals to all children. In a news release from April, the USDA said schools that choose this option will receive a higher-than-normal reimbursement for each meal, which will help them provide more nutritious meals.
“Students’ success in the classroom goes hand in hand with their ability to access basic needs like healthy and nutritious meals,” Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in the release. “It’s critical that our efforts to reopen schools quickly and safely include programs that provide access to free, healthy meals for our most vulnerable students, particularly those whose communities have been hardest hit by the pandemic. This program will ensure more students, regardless of their educational setting, can access free, healthy meals as more schools reopen their doors for in-person learning.”
FBISD continues to encourage families to apply for the free and reduced meal program due to its other benefits both for families and the district. The district provides more information on these benefits here, and families can apply here.
The first day of school in FBISD is Aug. 11.
[unable to retrieve full-text content]
Let's Eat: El Burrito Loco celebrates 20 years of lunch on the Square Madison.com
We’ve all seen what American swimming icon Katie Ledecky achieved pool in Tokyo. With two golds and two silvers it was yet another brilliant Olympic medal haul for one of America’s all-time great swimmers.
But In The Village podcast host Elizabeth Beisel asks her former teammate to take us off the pool deck and into the dining room at the Athlete’s Village to learn what fuels Ledecky’s athletic achievements. Ledecky also talks about the hectic shuttle schedule at the village and what’s in the bag she brings to the pool.
In The Village is your podcast day pass inside the Athlete’s Village for an exclusive look at the lives of America’s best athletes. For more episodes of In The Village, check out Apple Podcasts or listen below:
View social media post: https://art19.com/shows/in-the-village-nbc-olympics/episodes/dafd603b-b433-4029-9a55-d74ed6e4787a
Whether you peel them into sections, cut them into slices, or cube them and toss them on a salad, oranges are a healthy and delicious way to load your diet with bright citrus flavor. But it's more than just your palate that will benefit from these delicious additions to your meal plan.
Not only does a single medium orange contain a full day's worth of vitamin C, but these tasty fruits can also do everything from benefit your workouts to lower your risk of certain chronic diseases. Read on to discover the secret side effects of eating oranges you never knew about. And if you want to makeover your menu, check out The 7 Healthiest Foods to Eat Right Now.
If you've been struggling with high cholesterol—or want to keep your cholesterol levels in a healthy range—putting some oranges on your menu might just be the easiest way to achieve that goal.
A study published in Nutrition Research found that consumption of citrus fiber concentrate reduced study subjects' total serum cholesterol levels by 10.6% after just four weeks; another study published in Nutrition Research found that consumption of orange juice lowered LDL, or "bad," cholesterol over a 60-day period.
For more healthy eating news delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our newsletter!
Want to recover more effectively from your workouts? Try adding some oranges to your regular routine. Oranges are an excellent source of vitamin C, which may be able to fend off some of the less pleasant after-effects of workouts. According to a randomized controlled trial published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, among a group of healthy adult men given either vitamin C or a placebo who then performed repetitive exercises, those given the vitamin C reported significantly less muscle soreness within the first 24 hours of exercising.
RELATED: The 6 Best Pre-Workout Foods, According to an Expert
Oranges are an excellent source of citric acid, which may have a preventative effect against certain types of cancer. According to a 2017 study published in Cell Journal, higher concentrations of citric acid were shown to be effective at reducing the proliferation of esophageal cancer cells and causing cellular death.
If you want to keep your digestion moving like clockwork, eating oranges can help. An average-sized orange contains 2.8 grams of fiber, which can help keep your digestive tract moving regularly. In fact, a 2019 study published in Drug Intervention Today found that, among a group of 30 study subjects with constipation, eating orange provided effective relief of symptoms.
Whether you have a family history of cardiovascular problems or simply want to prevent heart health issues down the line, adding some oranges to your menu is a smart choice for your heart.
According to A 2017 review of research published in Nutrients, in studying a group of 13,421 participants in the Seguimiento Universidad de Navarra cohort for an average of 11 years, researchers found that higher vitamin C intake was associated with lower levels of both cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular disease-related death.
For more ways to boost your heart health, check out The Best Foods That Can Help Lower Your Risk of Heart Disease.
If you have other risk factors for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), you may want to limit your orange intake. Studies have linked high fructose consumption to the development of NAFLD, and a study published in Nutrition specifically linked consumption of raw oranges with an increased risk of NAFLD among a group of 27,214 adults studied. In fact, those who ate seven or more oranges a week had a 17% higher risk of developing NAFLD than members of the study's reference population.
And if you want to keep this vital organ healthy, make sure to ditch these Diet Habits That Are Terrible for Your Liver, According to Science.
Read this next:
“This is a prototypical Portland kind of thing,” observed Anne Underwood, sipping a glass of wine in a parking lot lined with food startups offering samples.
Fork Food Lab’s July Summer Sampler had been postponed by a day because of forecasted thunderstorms (that never materialized). Although some of the vendors and ticket-holders couldn’t make the new date work, attendees on July 22 were appreciative of the lack of lines and looking forward to seeing more vendors at the third and final Summer Sampler in August.
“This right here is worth it,” said Donna Boudreau of South Portland, pointing to Cap’n Bill’s lobster roll cart.
Food business incubator Fork Food Lab was established in 2016. Today, 40 member companies share commercial kitchen facilities on Parris Street in the Bayside neighborhood of Portland.
Bill Lennell, in a food cart masquerading as a fishing boat, passed out fresh hot dog buns overflowing with nothing but lobster meat and a bit of lettuce.
Tickets to the Summer Sampler were $10 and included a tote bag and a complimentary beer, wine or seltzer. Empanada Club offered samples of Argentinian street food. Chefette Toni served up shepherd’s pie and fresh salad. Simmer and Bloom herbal-infused cookies shared subtle little bites of hibiscus and black sesame. And Galactic Hobo hot sauce promised a “far-out” experience.
“This is giving me delicious ideas for when I entertain my family coming to visit,” said Diane Lawton of Portland.
Sally McKibben of Portland appreciates having a commercial kitchen for startups in town. “They make the greatest things,” she said. “And sometimes they turn their businesses into food trucks.”
At least a dozen of those startups will be sampling their specialties Aug. 18 from 4-7 p.m. Tickets are $10 online at forkfoodlab.com.
“We’ll definitely be back for the August one,” said Stephanie Korupp of Cape Elizabeth. “For sure.”
Amy Paradysz is a freelance writer and photographer based in Scarborough. She can be reached at [email protected].

In recent years, worries over eating eggs seem to have receded from public consciousness. But has the thinking about eggs really changed? Not if you ask nutrition experts.
“The egg issue remains relevant,” says Linda Van Horn, professor and chief of the nutrition division in the Department of Preventive Medicine in the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University. For those already at risk for heart disease and diabetes, “the choices to eat eggs remain especially important,” she says.
It’s still risky to eat too many eggs, but you don’t have to give them up entirely. How many you can eat depends on your health status. The American Heart Association recommends up to one egg a day for most people, fewer for people with high blood cholesterol, especially those with diabetes or who are at risk for heart failure, and up to two eggs a day for older people with normal cholesterol levels and who eat a healthy diet.
The misimpression that some people have — that eggs now can be eaten with abandon — probably grew out of a shift in emphasis, as experts began to warn less about the cardiovascular effects of cholesterol-containing products such as eggs and more about the risks posed by other foods in the American diet. They specifically targeted those loaded with saturated fats, red meat for example, which actually pose a greater cholesterol-raising threat.
But the bottom line on eggs remains the same. You still need to be cautious.
“Back in the 1960s and ’70s, eggs were seen as Public Enemy No. 1 for the heart, largely because scientists had discovered that high blood cholesterol levels raise the risk of heart disease, and eggs are high in cholesterol,” says Bonnie Liebman, director of nutrition at the Center for Science in the Public Interest. “However, the saturated fat in foods like red meat, butter, cheese, and other full-fat dairy raise blood cholesterol more than the cholesterol in eggs. So eggs initially got more than their share of the blame than they deserved.”
It’s important to understand the difference between dietary cholesterol, which is the amount of cholesterol already present in a food before you eat it — eggs or shrimp, for example — and serum (or blood) cholesterol, which is low-density lipoprotein, or LDL cholesterol (the “bad” cholesterol), manufactured by the body through the action of saturated fats.
“This is the concept that people often don’t get, which is that saturated fat will raise serum cholesterol in the body more than dietary cholesterol,” says Donald Hensrud, associate professor of preventive medicine and nutrition at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and consultant to the Mayo Clinic’s division of general internal medicine. “Saturated fat is the main dietary nutrient that raises serum cholesterol.”
Van Horn agrees. “Saturated fat has twice the LDL cholesterol raising effect as dietary cholesterol, but the two together further complicate the risk,” she says. “The two together are synergistically bad for raising LDL cholesterol.”
So you can have your high dietary cholesterol eggs occasionally. But skip the bacon, sausage and buttered toast — all high in saturated fat — that often go along with them. If you eat those with your eggs, you are flirting with danger.
(Don’t confuse saturated fats with trans fats, which are also unhealthy and raise LDL cholesterol. Artificial trans fats are the product of a food industry manufacturing process that adds hydrogen to vegetable oil. The Food and Drug Administration banned companies from adding artificial trans fats to foods, effective in 2018, although trans fats do occur naturally in high-fat meat and dairy products, which also contain considerable saturated fats.)
U.S. dietary guidelines take aim at sugar for children and adults
The public’s confusion about dietary cholesterol probably arose after two sets of U.S. Dietary Guidelines released in 2015 and 2020 failed to highlight the dangers of dietary cholesterol in the recommendations, unlike the 2010 recommendations. (The guidelines are updated every five years.)
Instead, the 2015 guidelines declared that dietary cholesterol was no longer “a nutrient of concern,” although they stressed that “this change does not suggest that dietary cholesterol is no longer important to consider when building healthy eating patterns.”
Many experts believe the change recognized that Americans’ intake of dietary cholesterol had by then already dropped below the recommended 300 milligrams a day, so further recommendations weren’t needed.
Still, “many people thought they could now consume whatever they want,” says Andrew Freeman, immediate past chair of the nutrition and lifestyle work group for the American College of Cardiology, and director of clinical cardiology, cardiovascular prevention and wellness, and associate professor of medicine, at National Jewish Health in Denver. “From a public health perspective, it raised a lot of problems.”
The 2020 guidelines urge Americans to keep saturated, trans fats and dietary cholesterol as low as possible without compromising nutrition, Liebman says. But “they do not give eggs a clean bill of health,” she says. “My sense is that the guidelines were trying to focus on an overall healthy diet rather than individual foods.”
Experts say you should be cautious about eggs if you have high LDL and hypertension, or diabetes. Recent studies have reinforced the perils of egg consumption when it comes both to cardiovascular health and overall mortality risk. (One egg contains about 185 mg of dietary cholesterol, all in the yolk, so stick to the all-protein egg white if you want to play it safe.)
“Eggs are a wonderful source of dietary protein for someone who is not overweight, has no family history of heart disease or other risk factors,” says Van Horn, who co-wrote one of the recent studies and chaired the 2010 guidelines advisory committee. “This changes if you are 55 or older and you have an LDL over 150, have hypertension, are taking a [cholesterol-lowering] statin and are overweight. If you have risk factors, I would have no more than two or three [yolks] a week. If you have no risk factors, eating four or five egg yolks a week is unlikely to be detrimental, as long as you can eat them without the typical high saturated fat that usually accompanies them, like bacon, sausage or buttered toast.”
These breakfast additions, high in saturated fat, create “the perfect storm,” says Van Horn, who also served as a member of the 2020 dietary guidelines advisory committee. “A cholesterol bonanza.”
Taking antihypertensives and cholesterol-lowering medications does not eliminate the risk, since the study found that eating eggs raises the potential of death from all causes, not just cardiovascular disease, she says.
Most nutrition experts believe that the heart association’s recommendations represent a safe approach.
“I think [they are] reasonable,” Liebman says. “Most people are not likely to go back to eating two eggs every morning for breakfast, like many folks did in the 1950s.”
Liebman says the best way to lower blood cholesterol is to replace saturated fats with unsaturated fats, like those found in fish, nuts, avocado and most oils except palm and coconut.
Moreover, she says most health authorities recommend “a healthy dietary pattern, rather than focus on a few foods like eggs,” she says. “That pattern, often described as a Mediterranean-style or DASH-style diet, is rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat or fat-free dairy, seafood, poultry, nuts, seeds and liquid vegetable oils, and low in red and processed meats, refined grains and added sugars.”
Freeman, however, advises his patients to completely give up eggs. “One egg isn’t going to kill you on the spot, but why eat something that adds even a tiny bit of risk?” he says. “Risk is cumulative.”
He suggests eating egg whites or egg substitutes, including plant-based alternatives.
“They are tasty and satisfying,” he says. “Put them on a slice of whole grain bread with some cucumber and sprouts, and you have something absolutely delicious.”
Not everyone is willing to go that far.
“I like eggs,” Van Horn says. “My family likes eggs. I don’t have any trouble feeding my family eggs — but I know the overview of everything they eat. A couple of eggs periodically isn’t going to be harmful. But you will never find sausage or bacon in my house.”
Read more
Food for thought — and health. The right diet for patients can improve outcomes and reduce costs.
Healthy eating strategies from abroad to incorporate into your diet
The lives of our favourite celebrities are a source of much curiosity and intrigue among us. We often wonder how these stars stay in such ...
Invalid username/password.
Please check your email to confirm and complete your registration.
Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.