Word: sugar
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...like blueberry. Kreider Farms in Pennsylvania makes a fruity Strawberry Banana and Orange Cream milk (which tastes just like a melted Creamsicle, in a good way). One of Ronnybrook Farm Dairy's best-selling products is its coffee-flavored milk. Made with decaffeinated Brazilian roast coffee, sucannat (an unrefined sugar) and chicory-root extract, it tastes like coffee ice cream. Even doughnut purveyor Krispy Kreme has got into the act at its ubiquitous stores, dispensing hot and cold milks in such flavors as caramel, vanilla, cinnamon, raspberry and their signature "original Kreme...
...regular, but water is even better. And pastries made with artificial sweeteners can still be high in calories if they're high in fat. If you get a Big Mac and fries with that Diet Coke, you're simply going to get fat at a slightly slower rate. Fake sugar is probably not a terrible thing--but it's not so great for you either...
...other an open mouthed kiss. So for the first number, MADONNA, coming off a poorly selling album and an even worse-selling movie, played tonsil hockey with BRITNEY SPEARS, who has had some sales struggles of her own. Then she Dietriched over to CHRISTINA AGUILERA and gave her some sugar too. If the Material Girl's Gap ads don't move some merch, we might see her yanking up her top at the Grammys...
...form of Teas' Tea, a line of unsweetened green teas from Ito En. Its six flavors are brewed from loose leaves and bottled in Japan (check itoen.com to purchase). Taste testers at TIME liked the "popcorn" flavor of Hoji and delicate Pure Green, though the utter lack of sugar startled some palates. Tea is hot these days: sales doubled between 1990 and last year, to $5.3 billion, according to the Tea Council of the U.S.A. But the sharpest increase came from ready-to-drink cold teas, whose sales grew 800% over the same period. If you want a hint...
...years for use in medicine, incense and perfume. Lately it has been touted as a safe alternative to statins and other cholesterol-lowering drugs. But a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association reports the herb is no better at lowering cholesterol than a sugar pill. --By David Bjerklie