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2024 m. rugsėjo 19 d., ketvirtadienis

Are Chickpea and Bean Pastas Good for You?


"We asked experts about the health benefits of legume pasta — and how to make it taste good, too.

When Maya Vadiveloo’s 9-year-old decided to become a vegetarian, cooking dinner turned into a challenge.

Dr. Vadiveloo, an associate professor of nutrition at the University of Rhode Island, wanted to make sure her daughter had enough protein and other nutrients. Legumes — a category of vegetables rich in protein, vitamins and minerals — were an easy way to accomplish the goal.

She whipped up meals like sweet-and-sour tofu, black-bean tacos and tofu stir-fry. Her daughter, however, wasn’t always in the mood for tofu or beans.

Buttered pasta is one of her daughter’s favorites, Dr. Vadiveloo said, so she uses pasta made from chickpeas or lentils.

“I try not to trick her,” Dr. Vadiveloo explained, but like most 9-year-olds, her daughter doesn’t always realize that she’s eating legumes in another form.

Pastas made from lentils, chickpeas and beans are a smart way for children and adults alike to consume the nutrients they need. And nutrient-dense pasta is healthier than white pasta, which has little fiber or protein. But you might be wondering: How does a plate of legume pasta compare with the legumes themselves?

Here’s what to know, along with pasta recipes from New York Times Cooking.

Is legume pasta healthy?

You can’t go wrong eating foods like fruits, vegetables and whole grains to get your nutrients, said Emily Haller, a dietitian and lifestyle and culinary medicine program coordinator at Trinity Health in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Legume pastas, however, “are not growing off trees or bushes,” Ms. Haller said; they are inherently processed. But that doesn’t necessarily make them bad for you. Research comparing them with their whole-food counterparts is thin, but experts said they largely offer the same nutritional benefits.

Legumes are a major source of protein, a macronutrient the body needs for almost every essential function, including to fight infections and maintain strong muscles and bones. Some legume pastas contain more than 20 grams per serving.

Legumes, and the pastas made from them, offer other benefits, too. They are packed with micronutrients like iron, B vitamins and magnesium. Eating whole legumes is linked to a lower risk of conditions such as heart disease and colorectal cancer, said Dr. Linda Shiue, a chef and internal medicine physician at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco.

They are also high in fiber, and diets high in fiber are linked to lower cholesterol, fewer spikes in blood sugar and regular bowel movements. The U.S. Department of Agriculture recommends that people consume 14 grams of fiber for every 1,000 calories eaten. Some fiber-rich legume pastas contain more than 11 grams per serving.

There are “pretty much only upsides” to eating legume pasta, Dr. Shiue said.

What’s the catch?

Many legume pastas are made with flour from just one ingredient, like chickpea or red lentil flour, which means they are minimally processed. Still, it’s worth checking the list of ingredients to know what you’re getting.

Some legume pastas contain tapioca, a thickening agent. They may also include xanthan gum, an emulsifier that is found in many ultraprocessed foods and is used to make the texture of legume pasta more appetizing, Dr. Vadiveloo said.

One recent study suggests that emulsifiers like xanthan gum may be associated with an increased risk of Type 2 diabetes. But the Food and Drug Administration considers xanthan gum a safe food additive under specific conditions. And in 2017, a European Food Safety Authority panel determined that xanthan gum was generally considered safe at the concentrations found in food.

Ultimately, experts say, the emerging evidence doesn’t yet warrant much concern. If it helps incorporate more fiber and plant-based protein into your diet, “I personally would feel relatively good about choosing a legume-based pasta, even if it had xanthan gum,” Dr. Vadiveloo said.

One consideration experts mentioned: Eating too much fiber too quickly may make you gassy or bloated, especially if you have gastrointestinal issues such as irritable bowel syndrome, Ms. Haller said.

To minimize symptoms, start with small portions of legumes or legume pasta once or twice a week, said Dr. Rani Polak, a part-time assistant professor of physical medicine at Harvard Medical School who studies home cooking and legume consumption. Raise the frequency to three or four times weekly as your body adjusts, he added.

And don’t forget to stay hydrated, Ms. Haller said. Otherwise, the additional fiber may make you constipated.

How do I make legume pasta tasty?

The texture of legume pasta doesn’t always mimic that of its wheat counterpart: It can feel tacky or mushy, experts said. To avoid this, follow the cooking instructions on the box carefully, Dr. Shiue said, or even undercook the pasta. Also, rinse the pasta in cold water right after boiling. “I find that really works with decreasing any gumminess,” she said." [1]

1. Are Chickpea and Bean Pastas Good for You? Mogg, Katie. New York Times (Online) New York Times Company. Sep 19, 2024.


 

Trumpas perka mėsainius ir moka bitkoinu --- GOP kandidatas į prezidentus priverčia rinkiminę kampaniją sustoti ties kriptovaliutų „tai“ vieta


 

 „NIUJORKAS – buvęs prezidentas įeina į nardymo barą ir klausia: „Kas nori mėsainio?“ Jis išsitraukia „iPhone“ ir atsiskaito ne doleriais, o bitkoinais.

 

 „Istorija kuriama“, – trečiadienį paskelbė Donaldas Trumpas po sandorio PubKey, Grinvič Vilidžo tavernoje, kuri yra kriptovaliutų entuziastų vieta – kylanti finansinė ir politinė jėga, kuri, kaip Trumpas tikisi, padės jam sugrįžti į Baltuosius rūmus. .

 

 Tėvai įkūrėjai turėjo „Fraunces Tavern“ – Manheteno saloną, kuriame Džordžas Vašingtonas užbaigė sėkmingą karą prieš britus. Trumpas turi PubKey.

 

 "PubKey yra bitkoinų revoliucijos gertuvė. Dabar jis yra vienas iš mūsų", - sakė "Bitcoin Magazine" prezidentas Mike'as Germano. 42 metų Germano, buvęs demokratas, lapkritį planuojantis balsuoti už D. Trumpą, užėmė pagrindinę vizito žiūrovo poziciją.

 

 „Tai reikšmingas žingsnis bitkoinų istorijoje. Tai daugiau, nei valiuta, tai judėjimas“, – sakė vienas iš „PubKey“ įkūrėjų 40 metų Andrew Newmanas, kurio bare yra, 12 dolerių kainuojantis, specialus alaus ir stipresnės priemaišos gėrimas.

 

 Trumpas kažkada sakė, kad bitkoinas atrodė, kaip sukčių išmislas tačiau jis įsitraukė į šią pramonę, neseniai vykusioje konferencijoje Nešvilyje, Tenesio valstijoje, ir surinko milijonus dolerių į kampanijos įnašus kriptovaliutomis, nes pažadėjo palankesnę reguliavimo aplinką, jei laimėtų antrą kadenciją.

 

 „Beveik visi pradeda skeptiškai“, – sakė 40 metų Thomas Pacchia, skrybėlę dėvintis, lengvai barzdotas PubKey įkūrėjas, kurio estetiką būtų galima apibūdinti, kaip prašmatnų nardymo barą. "Tačiau kai atliekate darbą ir pasineriate į protokolą, pradedate suprasti tikrai elegantiškus decentralizavimo mechanizmus, kaip veikia kasyba, kaip vykdomos operacijos. Tai nėra lengva suvokti technologiją. Tam tik reikia laiko."

 

 Trečiadienį atlikęs mokėjimą bitkoinais, Trumpas sakė, kad tai vyko greitai ir „gražiai“. Jis sumokėjo maždaug 950 dolerių bitkoinais už mėsainius ir dietinius kokteilius.

 

 Kviestiniai svečiai buvo kupini įspūdžių, kai 78-erių Trumpas įžengė į ankštą Niujorko nardymo barą. Ant raudonų skrybėlių buvo parašyta „Padaryk bitkoiną didžiu vėl“, o ant sienos, šalia senosios mokyklos „boombox“ ir kasečių banko, buvo skaitmeninis žymeklis, rodantis dabartinę vieno bitkoino vertę. Ant sienos buvo iškabintas užrašas: „Centrinio banko skaitmeninės valiutos pavergia“. 

 

Trumpas taip pat pažadėjo sustabdyti bet kokį darbą su centrinio banko skaitmeninėmis valiutomis, jei jis bus perrinktas lapkritį.

 

 „Esu sukrėstas, kai čia ką nors pamatau, tiesą sakant, maniau, kad visi niujorkiečiai jo nekenčia“, – sakė politiškai agnostikas East Village gyventojas, kuris atsisakė skelbti jo vardą, nenorėdamas dar labiau atstumti jo žmonos, Trumpo šalininkės – nuo Trumpo nekenčiančių draugų.

 

 Perduodami marškinėliai Trumpui priminė jo duotą kampanijos pažadą: „Išlaisvink Ross nuo pirmos dienos“, nuoroda į Šilko kelio įkūrėją Rossą Ulbrichtą, kuris 2015 metais buvo nuteistas kalėti iki gyvos galvos už internetinio narkotikų turgaus valdymą. Ulbrichtas tapo vyriausybės perlenkimo simboliu tarp libertarų ir kriptovaliutų fanatikų.

 

 „Jie labai blogai su jumis elgėsi SEC“, – sakė D. Trumpas bare, turėdamas omenyje Vertybinių popierių ir biržų komisijos (SEC) susidorojimą su kriptovaliutų pramone. Bitkoino konferencijoje Trumpas pareiškė, kad atleis SEC pirmininką Gary'į Genslerį pirmą dieną, sugrįžęs į Baltuosius rūmus, o pažadas buvo sutiktas audringais plojimais. Ir tik šią savaitę jis pradėjo kriptovaliutų projektą su jo vyresniaisiais sūnumis Ericu Trumpu ir Donaldu Trumpu jaunesniuoju.

 

 Buvęs prezidentas minioms konferencijose ir renginiuose sakė, kad nori JAV paversti „pasauline kriptovaliutų ir bitkoinų sostine“. Trumpas pažadėjo sukurti „strateginę nacionalinę bitkoinų atsargą“ ir įkurti bitkoinų ir kriptovaliutų prezidento patariamąją tarybą.

 

 Kai kurie PubKey renginio dalyviai pasirodė esantys bitkoinų maksimalistai, kripto slengas skirtas žmonėms, kurie bitkoiną laiko geriausia ir svarbiausia kriptovaliuta. Germano pataisė Trumpą, kai jis mėsainius, kuriuos mokėjo už kriptovaliutų, pavadino „kriptovaliuta“.

 

 „Tai bitkoininis mėsainis“, – šaukė Germano, turėdamas omenyje 17 dolerių kainuojantį delninį įrenginį, kuris standartiškai komplektuojamas su pub padažu, salotomis, svogūnais, pomidorais ir sūriu.

 

 Atrodė, kad skirtumas Trumpas nesuglumino. „Visi, nesvarbu, ar tai bitkoino, ar kitųkriptovaliutų gerbėjai, išeikite ir balsuokite, nes jei balsuosite, mes negalime pralaimėti“, – sakė jis." [1]


1. Business News: Trump Buys the Burgers And Pays With Bitcoin --- GOP presidential nominee makes campaign stop at 'it' spot for crypto. Leary, Alex; Vicky Ge Huang.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 19 Sep 2024: B.6.

Trump Buys the Burgers And Pays With Bitcoin --- GOP presidential nominee makes campaign stop at 'it' spot for crypto


"NEW YORK -- A former president walks into a dive bar and asks, "Who wants a hamburger?" He pulls out an iPhone and pays not with dollars but with bitcoin.

"History in the making," Donald Trump declared Wednesday after making the transaction at PubKey, a Greenwich Village tavern that is the it spot for crypto enthusiasts -- a rising financial and political force that Trump is hoping will help him return to the White House.

The Founding Fathers had Fraunces Tavern, the Manhattan saloon where George Washington closed out a successful war against the Brits. Trump has PubKey.

"PubKey is the drinking hole for the bitcoin revolution. He's now one of us," said Mike Germano, president of Bitcoin Magazine. Germano, 42 years old, a former Democrat who plans to vote for Trump in November, had a prime viewing position for the visit.

"It's a significant step in bitcoin history. It's more than a currency, it's a movement," said PubKey co-founder Andrew Newman, 40, whose bar features a $12 beer-and-shot special.

Trump once said bitcoin seemed like a scam, but he has embraced the industry, appearing at a recent conference in Nashville, Tenn., and raking in millions of dollars in campaign contributions made in cryptocurrencies as he promised a more favorable regulatory climate if he wins a second term.

"Almost everyone starts out as a skeptic," said Thomas Pacchia, 40, the hat-wearing, lightly bearded co-founder of PubKey whose aesthetic could be described as dive-bar chic. "But when you do the work and dive into the protocol, you start to understand the really elegant mechanisms around decentralization, the way mining works, the way that transactions are effectuated. It's not an easy technology to grasp. It just takes time."

After making his bitcoin payment Wednesday, Trump said it went quick and "beautifully." He paid roughly $950 in bitcoin for smash burgers and Diet Cokes.

Invited guests were brimming with excitement when the teetotaling 78-year-old Trump stepped into the cramped New York dive bar. Red hats read, "Make Bitcoin Great Again," and on the wall, near an old-school boombox and a bank of cassettes, was a digital ticker displaying the current value of one bitcoin. A sign on the wall warned, "Central bank digital currencies enslave." Trump has also pledged to halt any work on central bank digital currencies if he is re-elected in November.

"I'm shocked to see anybody here, to be honest. I thought all New Yorkers hated him," said a self-described politically agnostic East Village resident who declined to give his name, not wanting to further alienate his wife -- a Trump supporter -- from her Trump-loathing friends.

T-shirts being passed around reminded Trump of a campaign promise he has made: "Free Ross Day One," a reference to Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, who was sentenced to life in prison in 2015 for running the online drug bazaar. Ulbricht has become a symbol among libertarians and crypto fanatics of government overreach.

"They've been treating you very badly at the SEC," Trump said in the bar, referring to the Securities and Exchange Commission's crackdown on the crypto industry. At the bitcoin conference, Trump said he would fire SEC Chair Gary Gensler on his first day back at the White House, a promise that was met with thunderous applause. And just this week he launched a crypto project with his elder sons, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr.

The former president has told crowds at conferences and events that he wants to make the U.S. the "world capital for crypto and bitcoin." Trump promised the creation of a "strategic national bitcoin stockpile" and the establishment of a bitcoin and crypto presidential advisory council.

Some attendees at the PubKey event appeared to be bitcoin maximalists, crypto slang for people who view bitcoin as the best and most important cryptocurrency. Germano corrected Trump when he called the burgers he paid for "crypto burgers."

"It's a bitcoin burger," Germano shouted, referring to the $17 handheld that comes standard with pub sauce, lettuce, onion, tomato and cheese.

Trump didn't seem fazed by the difference. "Everybody, whether it's bitcoin or crypto, get out and vote, because if you vote, we cannot lose," he said." [1]

1. Business News: Trump Buys the Burgers And Pays With Bitcoin --- GOP presidential nominee makes campaign stop at 'it' spot for crypto. Leary, Alex; Vicky Ge Huang.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 19 Sep 2024: B.6.