Great HEALTH drink!

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Fish,

Have you tried this product? How does it taste? What is the cost?

Thanks
 

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Found it for $3.69 at TARGET for a 16 oz bottle.........not cheap.

Drink about 3-4 ounces per serving is all, as it is quite concentrated.

Tastes very much like Welch's grape juice.
 

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Any noticeable benifits Fish?

You say you drink four of these and that counters the four beers per day?

drink.gif
 

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Fish,

Are you using this on a regular basis? Can you tell a difference in any way? I've been looking for a good nutritonal drink like this.

What are some really good energy boost drinks? GNC shakes,are they good?

Thanks
 

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Fish,

I understand it is an antioxident.
Are you using this on a regular basis? Can you tell a difference in any way?

The energy boost question was a seperate question.Just looking @ something like a GNC energy boost shake,any recommendations?

Thanks
 

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Is it available at Walmart?? Think I will go a Redbull and trimspa diet. Near record weight.
too hot to exercies outdoors.?
 

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well its better then eating whats BELOW

***************


Burros proclaims Burger King's Smoky Barbeque and Santa Fe chicken sandwiches the "winners" of the new healthy crop. But feast your eyes on this Smoky Barbeque sandwich for a moment. And remember, eye appeal is half the meal.



sandwich.jpg
 

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My local Target doesn't have it,I'll find out where their nearest distibutor is and give it a try.The site really looks convincing for this product,thanks for the info Fish.
 

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Hey Fish,as another question,do you know of any good energy boost shakes/drinks that really work?

Thanks
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by kyhawk:
Is it available at Walmart?? Think I will go a Redbull and trimspa diet. Near record weight.
too hot to exercies outdoors.?<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Drinking Red Bull for weight loss in counter-productive. The thermogenic properties of Red Bull are mostly off-set by the calories (110). You have to exercise for 10-20 minutes in order to burn those calories.
 

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I never understood the fascination with Red Bull. You can drink coffee and get the same amount of caffeine (yet some nations ban Red Bull because it is too dangerous). Despite what people think, Red Bull doesn't give you super powers. It is simply a strange-tasting carbonated beverage with caffeine and some vitamins.

The Red Bull Myth?

Debra and Patrick Doyle of Aspen, Colo., go skiing every weekend in the winter and, in summer, take long mountain bike rides in the hilly terrain where they live.

What helps this 36-year-old couple feel so energetic?

They say it is the cans of Red Bull they consume every morning.

"It jump-starts my day," Ms. Doyle said of the so-called energy drink, made in Austria and sold in supermarkets and delicatessens around the United States.

Once the province of young extreme athletes and the nightclub crowd, which mixes it with vodka, Red Bull has gone mainstream. Sleepy college students drink it because they say they like its amphetamine-like effect; weekend athletes vouch for the buzz it gives them while exercising.

A Red Bull spokeswoman said 1.5 billion cans of the drink were consumed worldwide in 2003, a 10 percent increase from the previous year. In the United States, Red Bull controls roughly 50 percent of the $1 billion energy drink market.

According to the information printed on its slender blue-and-silver can, Red Bull "improves performance, increases concentration, improves reaction speed and stimulates the metabolism."

But if its ingredients are any guide, the boost provided by Red Bull and other energy drinks — SoBe Adrenaline Rush, Snapple Fire and 180 Orange Citrus Blast, for example — may differ little from the lift offered by a strong cup of joe.

Gatorade and other sports drinks are caffeine-free, low in carbohydrates and high in sodium to replace the electrolytes lost when people sweat. Red Bull and other energy formulas, experts say, deliver mainly a jolt of caffeine and a fairly high dose of calories. Each 8-ounce can of Red Bull has 80 milligrams of caffeine, slightly less than a cup of Starbucks coffee and more than twice as much as a 12-ounce can of Coke.

"Caffeine can be ergogenic — a fancy word for performance enhancing — because it appears to perk up the central nervous system, and that becomes increasingly important as the length of exercise increases," said Lawrence Spriet, professor of human biology and nutritional sciences at the University of Guelph in Ontario, who has studied the effects of caffeine on athletes.

Expectation — and the fact that Red Bull is often chugged rather than sipped — may add to the effect.

Although the International Olympic Committee recently removed caffeine from its list of restricted substances, several countries ban the sale of Red Bull to the public because of its high caffeine level.

Carbohydrates are another main ingredient in Red Bull, which tastes like fizzy cherry cough syrup. In addition to glucuronolactone, a carbohydrate found in plant gums and red wine, a can of Red Bull contains about two teaspoons of sugar. Endurance athletes easily burn up Red Bull's 110 calories. But some doctors have concerns about any drink that contains so much sugar.

"The average Joe weekend warrior, he would have to exercise for 15 to 20 minutes just to burn the calories in this drink," said Dr. Lori Mosca, director of preventive cardiology at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York. "I would not recommend picking up one of these drinks when you're buying lunch at a deli."

Consuming large quantities of carbohydrates in hot weather can compromise hydration by slowing the rate at which fluid is absorbed into the bloodstream, and it can be tough on the stomach, said Douglas Casa, director of athletic training education at the University of Connecticut in Storrs.

"If someone needs calories in those conditions, there are better alternatives than Red Bull," Dr. Casa said. "I recommend rehydrating with a properly formulated sports drink and getting calories from a properly formulated sports bar."

Like other energy drinks, Red Bull also contains healthful-sounding additives like the amino acid taurine and vitamin B, a total of 30 milligrams in the form of niacin, pantothenic acid, B6 and B12. Taurine, which the body produces on its own, is found in high concentrations in the heart. But as Malcolm Watford, director for the graduate program in nutritional sciences at Rutgers University, puts it, "We haven't got a clue to what it does."

Red Bull's director of corporate communications, Patrice Radden, declined to allow anyone from the company to be interviewed. But in an e-mail message from Austria, the company said taurine loss "can occur in some other physiological situations, such as high stress and physical exertion."

The message went on: "Studies also demonstrated increased excretion of taurine in perspiration and urine during physical exertion. Dietary supplementation of taurine during athletics thus seems reasonable."

A 2001 study from the European journal Amino Acids noted an increase in stroke volume (the amount of blood, oxygen and nutrients that the heart can pump to the working muscles) in a group of athletes who drank Red Bull, and not in a group that drank a caffeinated drink without taurine. According to Red Bull, the company did not sponsor the study but provided the drinks.

Many scientists, however, remain skeptical. Dr. Spriet of the University of Guelph is conducting a study on trained cyclists to determine if taurine can affect performance. So far, he said, "it doesn't look like taurine does anything."

Nor is there any scientific evidence that vitamins affect sports performance. "Taking B vitamins won't hurt you," Dr. Watford said. "You just get expensive urine." A can of Red Bull sells at a suggested retail price of $1.99, but bars charge as much as $8 for the drink.

At that price, Red Bull is probably not for the frugal.

"At as much as a dollar an ounce, I certainly wouldn't use a fluid like that during a race," said Dr. William O. Roberts, president-elect of the American College of Sports Medicine and medical director for the Twin Cities Marathon in Minnesota. "I'd rather save the money for after the race and have a good glass of wine."

Still, Red Bull's claim for having performance-enhancing powers may be attractive to people who are very active, or very tired.

"There aren't many easy ways of getting energized," said Dr. Paul D. Thompson, director of preventive cardiology at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut. "Wishing doesn't make it so."
 

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Christmas Time is Martha Stewart's favorite time of the year because Pomegranates are still in season and she loves to make pomegranate juice.

Fish, let's all get together and chip in to send her a couple of crates of this Pom Juice while she's serving time in jail.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by just do it:
Hey Fish,as another question,do you know of any good energy boost shakes/drinks that really work?

Thanks<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

What exactly are you looking for? Are you looking to gain muscle? If so, you can't go wrong with whey protein powder. Drink a shake in the morning, drink another shake about 30 minutes after exercise. If you buy a big tub of powder and make your own shakes, it isn't that expensive.

Whey protein

If you're looking for energy/fat-loss, caffeine is a relatively cheap (and efficient) option. Caffeine is usually the main ingredient in every energy pill/drink on the market. Lots of companies will throw in several fancy ingredients and charge $30 for a bottle of pills, but you're basically paying for the caffeine.

A very effective body-building supplement was the ACE stack. Aspirin, caffeine, ephedra. In fact, the original Stacker formula (and all the Stacker copy-cats) was based on ACE. People have been using the ACE stack for decades. It is simple, but it works. Unfortunately, ephedra is now illegal. But if you want a jolt of energy, ephedra definitely does the trick. Instead of coffee, I used to take Stacker in the morning and wash it down with a Diet Coke. Definitely gave me a buzz.

Now that ephedra is illegal, I think most of the energy-pills (Ripped Fuel, Trim-Spa, Stacker) are a joke. They're now ephedra-free, but they really haven't dropped the price. So they're not as effective, but you're still paying the same price? Doesn't make any sense.

Energy/fat-loss

FYI, I've ordered from Netrition for years. Great selection, great prices.
 

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