Apartment Therapy Unplggd Ohdeedoh Re-Nest The Kitchn

eatbuhi's Profile

Display Name: eatbuhi
Member Since: 11/30/09
Are all of these comments spam? For non-spam comments, please email us at help@apartmenttherapy.com

Latest Comments...

Sorry - "far too lacking"


Artificial Food Coloring: Harmless Fun or Health Risk?
4/14/11 4:05 PM

Reading comprehension is far to lacking these days... It does not say ANYWHERE that they will not list food dyes on package labels. It SAYS they will not put WARNING LABELS on those packages implying what said food dyes may or may not do to some people.


Artificial Food Coloring: Harmless Fun or Health Risk?
4/14/11 4:04 PM

Hey pikku.sukka - how exactly are you being screwed? You say you don't live in the US, so how does this affect you?

Plus, you seem to be aware of what you're allergic to - do you really need a label telling you that something you already know you're allergic to will cause you to have an allergic reaction? Most of us don't need our hands held that much...

I'm allergic to penicillin - when bread goes moldy in my kitchen I DON'T EAT IT. I don't go looking to have the government smack down on the bakery that made it because they didn't warn me about the dangers of bread molds to people who are allergic to bread molds...


Artificial Food Coloring: Harmless Fun or Health Risk?
4/13/11 3:31 PM

Oh no! I have to make a decision on my own about what to eat/not to eat? Why as the FDA forsaken us? They must have been reading that awful Ralph Waldo Emerson guy again. Something should be done...


Artificial Food Coloring: Harmless Fun or Health Risk?
4/13/11 10:54 AM

Wrote a post about nira and how to use it last Fall:
http://eatbufordhighway.com/cooking/cooking-with-nira/


Ingredient Spotlight: Nira (Garlic Chives) | Apartment Therapy The Kitchn
7/21/10 8:51 AM

heatherk - I am a parent, and you are dead on. A child's behaviour is greatly influenced by the behaviour, actions and reactions of the parent. My 8 year old has rarely balked at anything - tomatoes for a while, but now he's all over those. If he didn't like something, I didn't force him to eat it - I don't force myself to eat stuff I don't like. By letting my son see my behaviour towards food (I enjoy it...), he has developed an appreciation for different foods and a healthy craving for variety. Sometimes my son will want to eat lighter or heavier, and I will accommodate that. I give my child quality food. If he chooses not to eat (because of a bad mood, or whatever), that is his prerogative. He'll either get hungry and eat later, or he'll just not eat.

I'm always shocked by parents that cave in a heartbeat and whip out the peanut butter or macaroni when their kid complains a little. (Then again, a these same parents often speak to their children like they are puppies - not intelligent creatures).


For the Toddler's Parents: Gastrokid Book Review 2009 | Apartment Therapy The Kitchn
12/9/09 2:04 PM