Posts Tagged ‘tea’

How some groceries get their names

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

How some groceries get their names

In the last times we have used to, that in our market and directly on our dishes, appear strange, formerly unknown foods. Few of them get new name from us. In most cases we také them with their original names, that is a little adjusted to English. Even in macrobiotic diet, that gives priority to products of local, ergo american at best of origin, does occur range of exotic ingredients thus words. Huge amount of them comes from Japanese. For interest I offer you short guidebook for some of these words with explanations why do they sound like this and not otherwise. Part of them is however etymologicly opaque (kuzu, shoyu, miso, kombu).

Probably the most widespread speciality of orient origin is soya cheese (sometimes also called cottage cheese) tofu. This word is of Chinese origin and is compounded from phrases tó and hu, which do mean “spoilt soya”. Japanese pronunciation is really more closer to tóhu then tófu; in Japanese books of travel we can read, how through villages and cities did cruise boys on bicycles, they were called tófuja-san, thus roughly “mister tofu”, because in the box on carrier they were delivering fresh tofu and sell them to families. When about these tofu carriers replace mobile icecream mans in our countryside. The second mentioned product natto does also include component tó (soya bean in Chinese), but first part of the word does mean probably “cleaned”. My Japanese friend contribute to this: “Do you already know that tohu in cubes does look like “cleaned soya”, but by this name is called natto, that is evidently spoiled, but is called cleaned!” The word for soya - daizu - does mean “big bean”.

You can easily analyse names of seaweeds - nori does mean “ocean moss” by the Chinese characters, that is this word recorded with, but the meaning is not clear from the sound meaning of the Chinese word. Arame is “sparse ocean plant” (arai - sparse + me), whereas wakame “young ocean plant” (wakai - young), but Japanese friend comments again: “If this wakame does grow for example four or five years, we still call it wakame.” By the other seaweeds the names are not so clear, I’ll give notice only about everlasting problem, what to do with hiziki - I have seen already probably four versions spelling, that try to successfully put it well to original. Thus make notice, that right Japanese pronunciation is chižiki. And write is as you want.

Even among vegetables does appeared new product from the world of raising sun - big rooted daikon. And his etymology? Dai is big and kon is root. Nothing very inventive. The same for our favoured umeboshi don’t mean nothing else than dried plumps (ume - plump + boshi - dried). And if we are with the names that don’t boast with resourcefulness, let’s add rubbing bowl suribashi, that Japanese read suribači, because it’s compounded from verb suru - rub and bachi - bowl. If we see written “rubbing bowl suribachi”, it’s the same nonsense as “CD - disc”.

Gomasio, according to original reading gomashio is formed from parts goma - sesame and shio - salt, again nothing spectatular. And the last mention I’ll do about tea. You have probably noticed, that most from macrobiotic recommended teas is ending by cha. Right from this Chinese base have Czech language name for tea - čaj. Japanese do use the same term but they always characterize it somehow, for example by adding kuki, that does mean twig. The same for sencha does mean “roasted tea” and our favorite bancha hides in itself a little of xenophobia, because it could be translated as “alien tea”. And we are home.

People come here for:
tea tofu
soya tea
origin of soya
tofu pronunciation
gomasio meaning
spoilt tofu
macrobiotic groceries
soya and tofu

Coffee

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

COFFEE
Caffeine, the active ingredient in coffee, is a stimulant associated with affecting the nervous system. In medical studies, coffee is generally not associated with cardiovascular disease or most cancers, except possibly pancreatic cancer, but it may affect blood pressure and decrease infertility in women. See Caffeine, Myopia.

• Coffee Raises Blood Pressure and Heart Rate - In a study of the effects of caffeine, researchers at the University of Iowa reported that coffee raised systolic and diastolic blood pressure 3.6 and 5.6 mm/Hg respectively, most notably shortly after ingestion, and heart rate was higher overnight following caffeine consumption.
Source: P. J. Green and J. Suis, “The Effects of Coffeine on Ambulatory Blood Prfessure, Heart Rate, and Moon in Coffee Drinkers,” Journal of Behavioral Medicine 19(2):111-28, 1996.

• Unfiltered Coffee Raises Cholesterol - In a study of different brewing methods, researchers in the Netherlands reported that boiling coffee in the Turkish or Scandinavian way raises LDL cholesterol, the “bad” cholesterol, while filtered coffee does not affect cholesterol. The scientists identi-fied cafestol and kahweol, diterpene lipids, in coffee beans as the cholesterol-raising ingredients, which are retained by a paper filter but extracted by hot water.
Source: R. Urgert and M. B. Katan, “The Cholesterol-Raising Factor from Coffee Beans,” Annual Reveiw of Nutrition 17:305-24, 1997.

• Coffee and Lifestyle - In a study associating lifestyle factors with coffee and tea consumption, researchers reported that coffee drinking is “positively associated with factors that promote coronary heart disease, while drinking tea is associated with a preventive lifestyle.” The survey of 2,400 men and women aged 25 to 64 found that coffee intake was associated with a higher frequency of meat dinners including more fat, more sausages, and more eggs and less fruit. Tea drinking was linked to higher fish, salad, vegetable and fruit consumption. Coffee drinks also exercised less, while tea drinkers exercised more.
Source: Bernhard Schwarz, M.D., et al. “Coffee, Tea, and Lifestyle,” Preventive Medicine 23: 377-384, 1994.

Caffeine

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

CAFFEINE
Caffeine, the active ingredient in coffee, tea, soft drinks, cocoa, chocolate, and 2000 nonprescription drugs, is the world’s most consumed drug. Eighty percent of adults in the U.S. consume it daily in one form or another. Globally, tea is the world’s most popular beverage, followed by coffee and soft drinks. One cup of tea contains about half as much caffeine as a cup of coffee. A 12-ounce can of Coke or Pepsi contains about as much caffeine as a cup of tea or half a cup of coffee. See Coffee, Infectious Disease, Tea.

• Multiple Effects of Caffeine - Caffeine is not a direct stimulant, reports health researcher Stephen Braun. “Instead, it works indirectly by interfering with one of the brain’s main chemical ‘brakes.’ Like a car with a sticky brake pedal, the brain speeds up because it can’t slow down.”
Metabolically, it takes the liver about 5 hours to break down half a given amount of caffeine. Absorbed quickly in the intestine, caffeine crosses all cell membranes and is rapidly diffused into the saliva, semen, breast milk, and amniotic fluid. Caffeine revs up the brain, stimulating mental focus, productivity, and physical performance.
However, in large amounts, caffeine produces the opposite effect, inhibiting neuron firing and acting as a depressant. Caffeine causes the heart to beat more rapidly, constricts some blood vessels and dilates others, and stimulates some muscles to contract and others to expand. Caffeine can curb the appetite, cause weight loss, and serve as a laxative. It increases urine production and can stress the kidneys.
While caffeine releases fat stored in cells, “caffeine may actually make it harder to eat a balanced, healthy diet.” In medical studies, it is associated with increased binge eating, premenstrual syndrome, and possible birth defects and impaired development of children. Decaf, meanwhile, is weakly linked with raising cholesterol, and the solvent processing method, using strong chemicals like methylene chloride or ethyl acetate, may pose risks, though it has been approved by the FDA. Habitual coffee drinkers commonly suffer from withdrawal symptoms, including tiredness, irritability, and grogginess in the morning before they have their first cup of coffee. Caffeine dependence, withdrawal, and addiction were not recognized until recently.
In writing his book, Braun concludes that he has become more conscious of caffeine’s strong, potentially harmful effects. While he still drinks coffee, he is more mindful and takes periodic “caffeine holidays” of one or two weeks at a time.
Source: Stephen Braun, Buzz: The Science and Lore of Alcohol and Caffeine (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996).

Bancha twig tea (Kukicha tea)

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

BANCHA TWIG TEA
Bancha twig tea (also known as kukicha tea) is traditionally eaten in the Far East and has been popularized by the macrobiotic and natural foods movements in the West. It comes from the twigs of the tea bush and is soothing and calming, for children and adults alike.