Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Science & Tech. Shopping. Sports
Pagophagia (from Greek: pagos, frost/ice, + phagō, to eat [1]) is the compulsive consumption of ice or iced drinks. [2] It is a form of the disorder known as pica, which in Latin refers to a magpie that eats everything indiscriminately. [3]
Ice cream is so special that it doesn't get just one day in its honor, but all of July is actually National Ice Cream Month. It's hard to imagine that eating ice cream would ever be a bad idea ...
A cold-stimulus headache, colloquially known as an ice-cream headache or brain freeze, is a form of brief pain or headache commonly associated with consumption (particularly quick consumption) of cold beverages or foods such as ice cream, popsicles, and snow cones.
Amy Mendelovich, a Russian-born woman, has been eating junk food and drinking 30 cans of cola a day every since she came to America. Despite having a health scare where she found a lump, which was linked to her cola consumption, she was in denial about her addiction and refused to slow down her consumption, and according to the epilogue, she ...
"They find that they get off to a good start and feel better, healthier, more energetic over the course of the day." What cardiologists eat for breakfast: Oatmeal
The more familiar and "flavorful" the food, the greater the effect on the body's setpoint or self-regulating system. So, accordingly, eating flavorful junkfood that is very high in flavor will increase the setpoint while taking 100-400 "flavorless" calories per day between meals will reduce the body's setpoint.
This enabled protein VLCD drinks such as Slim-Fast that provide fewer than 400 calories to avoid warnings by recommending that users "also eat one sensible meal each day". [ 32 ] In 1991, the Federal Trade Commission charged three liquid VLCD companies, Optifast, Medifast and Ultrafast, with deceptive advertising.