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February 19, 2013

COFFEE

Word for the Day     a morning coffee

the sweetness
of a bitter morning coffee
wakes me
and takes me
through the day    
Robyn 

BEING ME   What do I like to drink?
I enjoy a ginger beer on occasion, a shandy if the weather is very hot, wine with a special meal and I especially enjoy my morning cup of energising brewed coffee. But mostly I drink water. Filtered rain water when it is available. 

What did Moses drink in the desert?
Moses and the two and a half million Hebrew people journeying for 40 years through the Sinai desert drank water. There would have been the need for an enormous amount of water for the survival of so many people.

There are Old Testament and New Testament references to Moses striking a Rock from which water gushed to form a river. One Old Testament record says: They did not thirst when He (God) led them through the deserts. He made the water flow out of the rock for them. He split the rock and the water gushed forth. Isaiah 48:21 Another reference says: He opened the rock and water flowed out; It ran in the dry places like a river. Psalm 105:41 The apostle Paul refers to the rock which followed the Hebrews through the desert: ...and all drank the same spiritual drink, for they were drinking from a spiritual rock which followed them; and the rock was Christ."  1 Corinthians 10:4 




 Home and Garden plus   Coffee

Coffee is loaded with antioxidants, which means your cup of get-up-and-go in the morning could keep your motor running for much longer than you thought.

Many people do not realize that coffee is the largest source of antioxidants in their diet.
— Dr. Donald Hensrud, chair of preventive, occupational and aerospace medicine at the Mayo Clinic



Research has found that coffee offers a long list of potential health benefits, including possibly reducing the risk of diabetes, heart disease, Parkinson’s disease, cirrhosis of the liver and even Alzheimer’s.
Why? The answer may lie in the army of antioxidants coffee contains.
“Many people do not realize that coffee is the largest source of antioxidants in their diet,” said Dr. Donald Hensrud, chair of preventive, occupational and aerospace medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

The Research

Numerous studies have shown that coffee is good for the heart. The Iowa Women’s Health Study, an ongoing study as of May 2011, followed 27,000 women from age 55 to 69. In that study, researchers from the University of Minnesota found that women who drink one to three cups of coffee a day reduce their risk of heart disease by 24 percent compared with those who abstain from drinking coffee.
In a study conducted at Spain's Autonomous University of Madrid, researchers tracked 129,000 men and women over 20 years and found that study participants who consumed several cups of coffee a day were less likely to die of heart disease than those who drank none. Among women taking part in the study, those who drank four to five cups a day were 34 percent less likely to die of heart disease than those women who drank no coffee. Men who drank five cups were 44 percent less likely to die of heart disease than men who drank no coffee.
Of apparent wider significance, however, was an overarching decrease in the mortality rate of the coffee-drinking participants.
According to an article published by NewScientist.com, the researchers noted that the same group of coffee-drinking women experienced 26 percent fewer deaths from any cause during the period of the study, and there were 35 percent fewer deaths from any cause among the same group of coffee-drinking men.
Reports of the study's conclusions appeared during the summer of 2008. At that time, Esther Lopez-Garcia, an epidemiologist at Autonomous University and the leader of the study, cautioned against acting on the findings until additional research was conducted.
Researchers are still trying to determine exactly why coffee might be beneficial, but it appears that antioxidants may help block inflammation and limit cell damage, both of which are associated with cardiovascular disease, Hensrud said.
The antioxidants in coffee are known as polyphenols and they are also found in fruits, vegetables, red wine and chocolate. A 2005 study found that Americans get far more antioxidants from coffee than from any other source.

How Much?

A magic number does not exist, doctors say, but the benefits of drinking coffee appear to taper off after six cups. That does not mean everyone should guzzle six cups a day, said Dr. John P. Higgins, a cardiologist and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston. In a recent study, Higgins found more than 200 milligrams of caffeine, the amount found in about two cups of coffee, can cause the heart rate to quicken and blood pressure to rise.
“There is nothing wrong with coffee in moderation,” Higgins said. “But excessive caffeine can have adverse effects even on young, healthy people.”
Caffeine can disrupt sleep because it blocks the release of adenosine, a chemical believed to induce sleepiness, said Dr. Richard Castriotta, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Houston’s Memorial Hermann Hospital. Some are affected more than others, with the half-life of the effect of a cup of coffee averaging three to seven hours. Some people are affected for up to 14 hours.
“We see people who suffer insomnia get stuck in a vicious cycle,” said Castriotta, who is also a professor of medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston. “They need caffeine to function during the day, but it’s disrupting their sleep cycle at night.”
Castriotta recommends that patients who suffer from insomnia avoid all caffeine. Once the problem is resolved, slowly reintroduce caffeine, he advises, to determine if it caused the insomnia.
Teenagers form another group that could be more susceptible to the negative effects of caffeine, such as irritability or sleeplessness. “If kids are drinking coffee all the time rather than milk and water,” Hensrud said, “that could be a problem.”

Changing Science

For years, coffee was linked to increased rates of pancreatic cancer, heart disease and high blood pressure.

Why the sudden change? Doctors and researchers cite a few reasons.
“Medicine, especially nutrition science, is constantly changing as we learn more,” Hensrud said.
Coffee is particularly complex, he said, containing hundreds of different compounds, some of which — such as antioxidants — are beneficial. Some, however, are not. And different people metabolize the same substance differently. Also, Hensrud added, earlier research didn't always take into account high-risk behaviors, such as drinking and smoking, which often go hand in hand with heavy coffee drinking.



May we each enjoy the drink of our choice

from Robyn 
                                                                           




Robin in a flowering gum
Painted by Brenda, Robyn’s mum