jlawrence01 wrote:Unless the new TVs are lacking them, EVERY television has an "OFF" switch that allows you to choose what to watch.
I cannot think of the last time I have heard anything about her ... except on THIS board.
stevez wrote:now that he's marred with a kid.
Paula Deen's admission, this morning, that she had been diagnosed with diabetes in 2008 led many commentators to criticize the TV chef's long-running evangelism of heavy foods. In light of the uproar, it's probably not a good time for Deen to be advertising her nonchalance about the consequences of her diet. The fact that Deen chose to contribute a six-word memoir to a collection of such bon mots in the February 2012 issue of O: The Oprah Magazine isn't necessarily unfortunate... but the six words she chose really are.
How did Deen choose to describe her life?
"Might as well eat that cookie."
Not when you have diabetes, Paula!
Athena wrote:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/17/paula-deen-6-word-memoir_n_1211087.htmlPaula Deen's admission, this morning, that she had been diagnosed with diabetes in 2008 led many commentators to criticize the TV chef's long-running evangelism of heavy foods. In light of the uproar, it's probably not a good time for Deen to be advertising her nonchalance about the consequences of her diet. The fact that Deen chose to contribute a six-word memoir to a collection of such bon mots in the February 2012 issue of O: The Oprah Magazine isn't necessarily unfortunate... but the six words she chose really are.
How did Deen choose to describe her life?
"Might as well eat that cookie."
Not when you have diabetes, Paula!
ronnie_suburban wrote:NFriday wrote:It will be interesting to see if Paula continues to promote Smithfield Pork.
Another major factor in my deeply negative feelings about the woman.
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Fresser wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:NFriday wrote:It will be interesting to see if Paula continues to promote Smithfield Pork.
Another major factor in my deeply negative feelings about the woman.
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Perturbed by Paula's pork promotion? Perchance, why, Ronnie?
I'm not even remotely a fan of Smithfield. From what I've read and learned about them, let's just say I actively avoid their products and believe that it's sound policy to do so.
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Evil Ronnie wrote:I'm not even remotely a fan of Smithfield. From what I've read and learned about them, let's just say I actively avoid their products and believe that it's sound policy to do so.
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Hi Ronnie,
I agree with you here, and when I'm out shopping, I go out of my way to avoid almost anything with the above brand name...
And as a native Virginian...I cringe every time I see one of their commercials or magazine ads.
The one exception being an actual dry cured Smithfield ham, which I've read is still produced pretty close to the recipe of yesteryear. To me, it's a disgrace to every time I see a label with the name "Smithfield" on it, on anything other than a real Smithfield ham.
"Genuine Smithfield hams [are those] cut from the carcasses of peanut-fed hogs, raised in the peanut-belt of the Commonwealth of Virginia or the State of North Carolina, and which are cured, treated, smoked, and processed in the town of Smithfield, in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
...Genuine Smithfield hams are hereby defined to be hams processed, treated, smoked, aged, cured by the long-cure, dry salt method of cure; and, aged for a minimum period of six months; such six-month period to commence when the green pork cut is first introduced to dry salt, all such salting, processing, treating, smoking, curing, and aging to be done within the corporate limits of the town of Smithfield, Virginia
The specificity of the statute ensures that the product is not pre-processed anywhere else, and only finished in Virginia, or the town of Smithfield. The locality of the curing process also ensures a uniformity in flavor, since during the curing and aging process the local environment's air quality, humidity, and the local varieties of airborne mold spores (whose enzymes are produced as a byproduct of growth on the ham's rind) produce a unique and repeatable flavor."
I enjoyed some genuine Smithfield ham in Virginia last summer. It's as good as ever to me, and I don't think it's nostalgia on my part. Again, what a shame that the modern corporate world has turned such a fine name to shit.
FRUIT SALAD
INGREDIENTS:
1 lb. bag of Skittles
3 cups ranch dressing
DIRECTIONS:
Mix well. Serve room temperature.
NFriday wrote:When I read the article in the NYT that somebody posted here, I discovered that apparently the diabetes medication she is currently on, runs $500 a month, and so is definitely not a first line drug for diabetes. There were a lot of negative comments about Paula on the NYT
NFriday wrote:When I read the article in the NYT that somebody posted here, I discovered that apparently the diabetes medication she is currently on, runs $500 a month, and so is definitely not a first line drug for diabetes. There were a lot of negative comments about Paula on the NYT
A part of the fantastic This American Life episode on health care, there was a specific 16 minute segment on this issue (specifically how coupons from name-brand pharmaceutical companies distort the price signal of brand vs. generic drugs). Really interesting stuff.NFriday wrote:Part of the reason why health care is so expensive, is because people do not think about how much everything costs, because their insurance picks up the tab. I pay for my own health insurance, and I have a high deductible, so I would let the doctor know that I could not afford it, if she wrote a script for a $500 a month drug.
When I got put on cholesterol medication three years ago, my doctor wanted to put me on Lipitor, which was over $100 a month back then. Now it is around $80 a month, because there is one generic version out. I asked her if she could put me on simvastatin instead, which is a whole lot cheaper, and she agreed to. I get a 90 day supply of simvastatin at Sam's Club for $9.75.
I know there are some instances where you have to go on expensive medication, but in many instances there are cheap generics you can try first. Thanks, Nancy
CHOCOLATE HAZELNUT DESSERT
Your guests will beg for this recipe and it is so easy that I hate to give it away!
1 small jar of Nutella
1 8 ounce carton of Cool Whip (you can use any of the varieties: lite, sugar free, original, fat free)
Remove the ALL of the foil from the top of the Nutella jar. Microwave for 25 seconds. Stir warm Nutella into the Cool Whip.
**You can add a handful of slivered almonds or chopped hazelnuts to the mixture just to give the mixture a crunch. Collins and Carson like it plain right out of the bowl!!
Of course, you must have SWEET TEA with every meal as Southern as this. Tea is better sweetened while hot rather than cold.
Fresser wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:That a smoking diabetic has been advocating this style of eating/cooking in such a zealous manner -- even to children -- really does give credence to Anthony Bourdain's claim from 2011 that "The worst, most dangerous person to America is clearly Paula Deen." And the fact that she's been keeping her condition a secret seems to indicate that she's quite subversive, too."
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This from Anthony Bourdain, the carrot-chomping, teetotalling advocate for healthy eating? Tony just likes to load up his sarcastic sniper rifle and aim at the widest target. He's skinny only by accident.
When I, like Paula, got the diabetic diagnosis from my physician, I didn't trumpet it for the world to hear and smirk at, though I personally don't write Southern cookbooks or consider butter to be a food group. No one heard me utter the word "diabetic" for six months after I was diagnosed--I called it "high blood sugar"--and the word "diabetes" itself still makes me choke. Those who know me from eGullet know I'm fastidious about my diet and exercise, but it took me about six months to accept emotionally that I have a "condition" that, if not cared for, will kill me.
Surely Paula knows that her diet was her downfall, and any talk of her inking a deal with Novartis to pimp her pancreatic function is WAY off-base. I raise my Sweet-and-Low to you, Paula, and welcome you to the oatmeal-eating clan.
So cool it, Bourdain. Hell, I'll even toast you with a Diet-Coke-and-Lime next time you're in town noshing with Ronnie.
bibi rose wrote:The last time I watched Tony-- I forget if it was his new show or a rerun-- someone was handing him a high-fat goody and he said, "I'm already on [some cholesterol drug]." And then he ate the high-fat snack. Unless I was hallucinating, which is always possible. Now it may be that a good portion of the stuff he says is not exactly true but he's not a spokesperson for healthy living by any means. I like Bourdain fine except when he is excoriating people for those kinds of things. That article about fat people which was reprinted in Nasty Bits was hideous.
rickster wrote:I do think her waiting to reveal her disease until she had a deal with a drug company is worthy of criticism.