London Recycling:
60% more could be recycled. No time to waste. It's time for action. www.recycleforlondon.com
Competition
Win a Luxury Ski Holiday in France ...
Are you a Coffee Addict?

feature

For many Brits, the day starts with a cup of coffee and is followed by a regular supply. Coffee comes in many guises and everyone has their favourite fix.

It’s common knowledge that caffeine produces a high, but did you know that it also has the potential for adverse health effects?  Like alcohol, many experts consider coffee to be a legal drug. People get addicted to the aroma, taste and caffeine buzz. Just a waft from a coffee shop or a wave of tiredness is usually enough to prompt you to order your fifth cup of the day. Like alcoholics, serious coffee drinkers find that they just cannot function without their daily dose, which might seem harmless but is nonetheless a sign of physical addition. If you drink excessive amounts of coffee throughout the day, have you actually considered how it affects your body and consequently your health?

When it comes to understanding the health effects of coffee drinking, it is a confusing issue. On one hand, there are studies that tout the benefits of coffee, on the other hand you only have to note the reaction that it has on your own body to realise that the coffee that you drink is having a marked physical effect.

The next time your drink a cup of coffee, pay a little attention to your body. It wakes you up, it makes your heart beat faster and it makes you wee more often. It does this because coffee over-stimulates your heart, kidneys, adrenal glands and other glands and organs in your body. Like any other stimulant drug, this can’t be that good for you.

It is a known fact that coffee is an addictive stimulant. Some of the common negative side effects of this stimulant include insomnia, indigestion, heartburn, headaches, nervousness, anxiety and fatigue. It may seem to give you more energy when you drink it, but in the end, it exhausts the adrenal glands and wears you out.
Coffee can cause even bigger problems than causing indigestion and headaches. Some of the more serious side effects include elevated blood pressure, elevated cholesterol and elevated triglycerides, the fat swimming around in your blood.

Coffee is also believed to linked with atherosclerosis - the building up of fat and cholesterol plaque in the arteries and veins. If it is linked to the clogging up of the blood vessels in the body, it follows suit that coffee could well contribute to an increased risk of heart attacks and strokes, though many other lifestyle factors will be involved.  Along with animal protein, sugar, salt, alcohol, cigarettes and lack of exercise, coffee is known to leach calcium from the bones, ultimately resulting in an increased risk of the bone dissolving condition osteoporosis. Other studies have also linked coffee with rheumatoid arthritis and some cancers.

Not only can coffee be detrimental to your body and your health, if you fill up on coffee, a common tradition in the mornings, then often you don’t have the appetite to eat foods loaded with good nutrition, such as fresh fruits and whole grain cereals. If you fancy a coffee at 11am and 4pm, your body would really rather have a piece of fresh fruit for a natural, healthy pick-me-up.

If you are suffering any negative side effects from your heavy coffee drinking, be aware that cutting out coffee will cause a few nasty withdrawal symptoms, including jitteriness and headaches. This is just like any withdrawal from an addiction to a stimulant. Not so much cold turkey but cold coffee.

Picture caption: People get addicted to the aroma, taste and caffeine buzz. Just a waft from a freshly brewed cup is usually quite enough to prompt you to order your fifth cup of the day.



 



MyVillage 19th October




Whats on in Kensington
Dec 2006
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
     12
3456789
1011
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Archive features Archive features
Book Chinese & Japanese Restaurants
Mr Wing

Book Indian Restaurants

Shezan Restaurant
Khan's of Kensington
Little India
Zaika
Memories of India
Noor Jahan
The Delhi Brasserie
Kare Kare

Book Italian Restaurants

Papa Luigi's Restaurant
Caffe Uno
Sopranos
The Ark
Fratelli
Med Kitchen - Gloucester Road
Romano
Brunello Restaurant

Book Modern & European Restaurants

Gardens Restaurant @ The Holiday Inn
Babylon
Lessandro
190 Queens Gate
Babylon
Plum Bar & Grill
Launceston Place
Kensington Roof Gardens

Book Other Cuisines

Dione
Piano
Ten Tables
Ten Tables
Lessandro
Slice

Book Thai Restaurants

Blue Lagoon
Thai Square: South Kensington
Thai Origin

Featured Businesses
Feng Sushi
Malabar
Xiong Mao

Features
Singapore food festival
Special chef evenings
Wodka
190 Queens Gate
Eating in Knightbridge
Buy His Lunch!

Restaurant Reader Reviews
Orsini Ristorante-Bar-Caffe'
Moti Mahal Restaurant
The Blythe Road Restaurant
Raison D'etre
Mohsen
Lorenzos
Mediterranean Kitchen
Hare and Tortoise
Jacobs
Scoffs Eating House
Buy Books with Amazon
Cook with Jamie - Jamie Oliver
Humble Pie - Gordon Ramsay
Delia's Vegetarian Collection - Delia Smith
more books

Food News & Features
Chestnuts herald the festive season
BBC Good Food Show
Autumn Eating
Organic Fortnight
A dish best served cold
Al Fresco Dining
The all-round summer superfood
Pour over the balsamic

Healthy Eating
Saving on Organics
Nuts about nuts
How much salt is too much?
Healthy lunch at the office
Five unusual things to do with an avocado
Asparagus: nature's Viagra

Wine & Drinks
Autumn wines for seasonal roasts
Are you a Coffee Addict?
All about espresso machines
Raise a glass to English wines
Salute Italia!

Cuisines
British food
Caribbean Food
Chinese food
French food
Indian food
Italian food
Thai food

Celebrity Chefs
Gordon Ramsay
Jamie Oliver
Nigella Lawson

Competitions
Win a Harrods wine hamper
Win a Luxury Ski Holiday
Win a Xbox 360
Win an iPod Nano
Win a ghd travel bag
Win Lancome products
Win a Sony Vaio laptop