Tag Pepsi

Linkapalooza 03-25-09: Food

chiles

Years ago, I got a reputation at work for being a lover of hot and spicy food. It was somewhat falsely deserved, however. I do indeed enjoy a dish with a little kick to it once in a while, and I am not one to pass up a dish because it is spicy, but I’m not one of those people who feels compelled to slather everything I eat with hot sauce or to engage in competitive throat-burning by always trying to go “one hotter”. That way madness lies. Anyway, you might very well wonder how chile peppers came to grow in such a wide range of concentrations of capsaicin, the chemical that makes peppers hot. This article in the latest Smithsonian Magazine goes with a University of Washington biologist to the wilds of Bolivia, which is the origin point for all the peppers we know today, to look for environmental/evolutionary explanations for capsaicin concentration and comes up with an answer that hadn’t been considered before: capsaicin is a fungicide, and peppers that grow in moister conditions develop more capsaicin to retard molds and other fungi.

The BBC reports that the champagne maker Perrier-Jouet recently held a special event to uncork one of the world’s oldest extant bottle of champagne. The champagne was bottled in 1825, and was one of three bottles remaining from that vintage. To the surprise and delight of the wine tasters on hand, it was still drinkable, if no longer all that bubbly. The remarks of the tasters in the BBC story are tactful and well-considered, to be sure, though I’m not too sure about the ones who professed that the ancient wine was better than a modern bottle. The guests also sampled champagnes from the 1840s and 1870s at the same event.

News From Home — Jonathan Bloom, who writes the Wasted Food blog, reports that he visited St. Joseph’s College in Standish, ME yesterday to observe the college’s effort to reduce food waste in their cafeteria by going trayless. The idea is that if students don’t have trays that they can pile up with lots of food, they will take less and thus waste less by not leaving food uneaten. The program has been in use since 2007, and it sounds like the on-campus students have come to accept it, if not openly embrace it. (Note: I taught as an adjunct at St. Joseph’s College about 15 years ago.) Americans in particular have a very long way to go in terms of recognizing how much food we waste, and a social engineering method like this is relatively painless and effective.

In a similar vein of learning to rethink our food habits, more and more people are beginning to take interest in CSA’s (“Community Supported Agriculture”). Not all of us have a green thumb like Michelle Obama, and many urban dwellers don’t have anyplace to grown their own veggies, so the idea of a CSA is that you pay a share to some folks who ARE working a vegetable garden, and in return they give you some of the produce they harvest. It’s a good system, but, as people who have been on the receiving end will tell you, sometimes you get too much of one thing, or not enough of something else, or you might end up with veggies you don’t normally eat. At Slate today, food write Catherine Price talks about learning how to deal with getting 30 pound of turnips in your CSA box or what to do with kale.

That’s just one of the several “locavorian dilemmas” one might have to learn to face. Another is food safety. Doug Powell, who writes the evocatively-named BarfBlog, points out that there is a tendency to associate locally-grown food with greater food safety, but that in reality locally-produced food products may even pose greater risks of contamination for the very reason we prize them: because they’re fresher and more likely not to contain preservatives, the chance of spoilage either from age or improper storage is greater. Locality is not a guarantee of safety.

While we’re talking about paying attention to what you put in your mouth, did you see this Boston Globe story a few weeks ago about how commercially-produced orange juice is made? It’s an interview with author Alissa Hamilton, who has just published a book called “Squeezed: What You Don’t Know About Orange Juice”, which may do to the orange juice business what “Fast Food Nation” did to McDonald’s. It certainly does make commercial orange juice (yes, even the “pure premium” stuff) sound like just one more crud-laden, over-processed, junk item you can live without.

pepsi-natural

And that brings me to the last link for this post: trying to cash in on the success of Pepsi “Raw” in Europe, Pepsi is planning to roll out three varieties of Pepsi sweetened with good old fashioned cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup. They’re going to call it “Pepsi Natural” here in the U.S.. It’s supposedly available right now in selected markets (Boston is not one of them, unfortunately) and is not intended to be a “limited-edition” product like some of the flavored varieties but instead a permanent addition to the product line. I suppose that means those of us who don’t live in the test markets will have to wait six months or so. It’s also worth noting that this product is NOT the same as the “Kosher-for-Passover” version of Pepsi, due to some of the other ingredients.

This is clearly the thin edge of the wedge in the coming backlash against HFCS. I’m sure you’ve seen the insulting “HFCS is good for you” commercials that have been running since last fall that suggest that just because you’re too stupid to remember why high-fructose corn syrup is bad for you, it must be perfectly OKAY. Cadbury-Schweppes, which owns Snapple, has also announced that they are replacing HFCS in their products with cane/beet sugar. But, as this activist website points out, it’s necessary to keep in mind that too much sugar is just as bad for you as too much HFCS, just in different ways.

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Linkapalooza 2/23/09 – Food

(Ed. note: I’ll start including dates on these “linkapalooza”-style posts, because it makes it hard to find a specific one)


I guess there’s a bit of a Mario Battali backlash brewing among the foodies. Doug at BarfBlog has this rather unflattering post which is mostly directed at the thoughtlessness of R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe, but manages to throw in a couple of good slams at Mario, too. And Slashfood tattles on Mario’s molto vulgaro behavior in front of the King and Queen of Spain (cue Moxy Früvous here). Serious Eats failed to chime in, but that’s probably because Mario’s a contributor there, and you don’t want to aggravate your celebrity buddies.


The New York Times reports that the brand management people at PepsiCo-owned Tropicana have decided to give up on the recent redesign of their packaging and go back to the older graphics due to lots of complaints from customers. Well, maybe not LOTS of customers, but some very loyal and (I presume) loud ones, anyway. Mutual Friend of Torrez, David Wertheimer may or may not have been one of those loud and loyal few, but he sums up the problem with the new packaging pretty accurately: the old cartons made it very easy to tell which sub-variety of Tropicana juice you were buying, but the new packaging makes it next to impossible, and that pisses off anyone who has to waste time searching for it in the grocery store.
I wish the people who redesigned the labeling for Pepsi itself would take a lesson from this. The redesign of the labels on the assorted Pepsi soda products sucks ass. The logo has been parodied all over the Internet for looking like everything from a fat guy to someone’s ass crack, and the typeface used for the actual content labels is unreadable. Not long ago, I bought what I thought was a 12-pack of Diet Pepsi, only to get home and find that I had bought caffeine-free Diet Pepsi because the words “caffeine-free” can’t be read on the package, and because they changed the label’s color from the industry-default “brown means decaf” to white. Bastiges! At the same time, I have also read that Pepsi plans to bring out a temporary promotion with “throwback” versions of regular Pepsi and Mountain Dew made with real cane sugar instead of HFCS, and I notice in that article that they also plan to use the older logos (in the case of Pepsi, a very old logo). Pepsi did very well with its “Pepsi Raw” promotion in international markets last year, and despite those stupid pro-HFCS ads all over television, there is a lot of well-founded opposition to the over-prevalence of HFCS.
Oh, and while the attention has been focused on PepsiCo, the Coca-Cola Company somewhat quietly announced that they will drop the word “Classic” from their Coke packaging. Considering that the reason they put it there in the first place, namely the ill-fated New Coke, died almost 20 years ago, I’d say they’re a little slow on the uptake.


Häagen-Dazs is trying to make a play for the “simple foods” crowd by marketing several flavors of ice cream under a label called “Five”, meant to stand for there only being five ingredients in those blends: milk, cream, sugar, egg, and whatever flavoring the ice cream has, That’s all you really need for any ice cream, but you’d be extremely hard pressed to find any national brand of ice cream that doesn’t contain things like carrageenan or guar gum to “enhance mouthfeel” and assorted other food additives to prolong shelf-life and retard ice crystal formation. But wait, you say…I remember those commercials for Breyers Ice Cream where they specifically said they didn’t have any of those other things. Well, yes you do, grasshopper, and so do I, but those commercials are from the distant past. You see, in 1993 Breyers was bought up by the conglomerate Unilever, and while they left things alone for a while, eventually their greedy little desires got the better of them and they started adding a substance called “tara gum” , and then finally gave up pretending and moved on to using guar (check the ingredients of, say, plain vanilla). But…but…but what about Ben & Jerry’s? Surely those aging hippies would NEVER use additives! Mais non, mon cher, Unilever also owns Ben & Jerry’s nowadays (though they keep Ben around for appearances’ sake) and that wholesome Vermont hippie shtick is just so much horsehockey. Now, for the big bucks, guess who owns Häagen-Dazs…I think you can see where this is going.


There is no food more uninspiring than the commercially-grown supermarket-grade tomato. All but flavorless, with a texture somewhere between gelatinous and rubbery, they are picked green, refrigerated for weeks, and sprayed with ethylene gas to turn red even though they are nowhere close to ripe. All in the name of looking perfect on a grocery store display. But as bland and blah as they are, the industry that produces them engages in the modern-day equivalent of legalized slavery to get them to market. This eye-opening story in the latest Gourmet magazine explains that 90% of the tomatoes sold in the U.S. during the winter months come from Immokalee, Florida and that practically all of the growers there systematically intimidate, abuse, and hold against their will tens of thousands of legal and illegal immigrant farm workers. A local action group called the Coalition of Immokalee Workers is making slow headway against the abuses of the growers but is still trying to convince the Republican governor of Florida, Charlie Crist, to take enforceable legal action (fat chance).
I have enough links for another Food Linkapalooza post later in the week, so stay tuned for more!

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Potent Potables For $200, Alex

I should have saved that AccidentalWine.com link for this post, but oh well…

Remember “Drank”? It was the “slow-you down” answer to the “pick-you-up” energy drinks, borrowing its name and its grape flavor from a home-brew intoxicant made out of cough syrup favored among the hip-hop crowd. I, personally, would be a little chary about drinking anything that was supposed to remind people of cough syrup hooch, but not too long ago the brave souls at The Consumerist did a taste test. They consumed it straight and also mixed with vodka (the rationale being that Red Bull is often mixed with vodka), but decided it really didn’t taste any different than any other grape soda. As far as “slowing your roll”, the taste-tester couldn’t come to any positive conclusions, even though the drink does contain the natural sedatives valerian root and melatonin. If you really need a grape drink to make you sleepy, maybe you’d better go visit AccidentalWine.com after all.

Pepsi is bringing out a line of their SoBe drink sweetened with Stevia extract instead of HFCS or other popular sweeteners (artificial or otherwise). Stevia is a plant which produces an extract many times sweeter than cane sugar but is non-caloric. It’s very popular among the health food crowd as an alternative to sugar, but the FDA has been very reluctant to approve use of Stevia in food products due to intense pressure from the sugar industry, the corn industry, and the chemical companies who produce popular artificial sweeteners. They have, however, backed off more recently as counterpressure from soft drink manufacturers has grown stronger as public awareness of the obesity epidemic and the potential link to HFCS has increased. Not surprisingly, CocaCola is also rolling out some Stevia-sweetened products as well. Apparently its tougher to get a good-tasting cola syrup with the Stevia sweeteners, so no immediate plans to use it in the signature cola drinks.

Among thr varied and sundry medications I take every day, the medication I take for my high cholesterol, Lipitor, comes with an explicit warning not to consume grapefruit while taking the medication. Indeed, many of the statin drugs given for cholesterol advise patients to avoid grapefruit, and so do a number of other drugs. Not being a huge eater of grapefruit in the first place, it hasn’t been terribly hard to comply, but I had never really heard or read a thorough explanation of WHY grapefruit is contraindicated until I read this article. Grapefruit in particular, but other fruits and fruit juices as well (including the near-ubiquitous apple juice and orange juice) contain compounds that can increase the absorption of some drugs to the point of causing overdose even on a normal dose of the medications. And to complicate things even more, the same fruits and juices have other compounds which can DECREASE the absorption of entirely different medications, making them ineffective. As many as 50 commonly prescribed medications are susceptible to the “grapefruit effect” of unintentional overdose, but now more studies must be done to see how many meds are affected in the other extreme, too. Meanwhile, it sounds like a good idea to avoid grapefruits, apples and oranges all together if you are someone who takes daily medication for high cholesterol or hypertension, or if you are taking cancer-fighting drugs, anti-biotics, or even allergy medicine.

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Give It To Me Raw, Baby

Junk Food Blog has a link to this site which follows the trademark registration world, which tells us that Pepsi has registered the name “Pepsi RAW” for potential use as the name of a new formula that will return to using cane sugar syrup instead of high-fructose corn syrup.

Coke and Pepsi switched from cane sugar to HFCS in the mid-1980s, but with Coke in particular there has been much demand lately for a return to cane sugar as the sweetener. Some Coke bottlers use cane sugar for limited products such as the so-called “Kosher Coke” sold at Passover, and it’s widely known that Coke made in Mexico uses cane sugar, creating a lot of demand in markets near the Mexican border. Jones Soda and Boylan’s both make cane sugar-based colas that have been big sellers, so clearly there’s demand. There’s also a lot of criticism about the overuse of HFCS in all sorts of food products, but I see this as being more addressing the niche product demand rather than any health concerns.

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