Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
What Drinks
26 Answers
I have a fairly physical job and I sweat a lot. As a result, I try to keep the liquid intake to 1.5 litres .
Trouble is, I don't like water....plain water that is. I drink Volvic sugar free lemon and lime flavour water...and quite a bit of it.
But there's now a lot of fuss over artificial sweetners which are in the volvic. I love tea but again, have one sugar in it and it's not always available.
Any suggestions what I could/should drink without using just plain water.
Cheers
Trouble is, I don't like water....plain water that is. I drink Volvic sugar free lemon and lime flavour water...and quite a bit of it.
But there's now a lot of fuss over artificial sweetners which are in the volvic. I love tea but again, have one sugar in it and it's not always available.
Any suggestions what I could/should drink without using just plain water.
Cheers
Answers
Hammerman, I should have said, I'm type 2 too, and it's not sugar I have in coffee, it's canderel, it's the only sweetener I like. There's been a lot of bad press about various sweeteners but the way I look at it is, it's better for me than sugar and I only have it in coffee, which I only drink in the morning. I make up a jug of just plain tap water with a couple of lemons...
18:10 Mon 27th Jun 2016
Atalanta, there is new concern about sweeteners:
But just as it seemed that the evidence was clear, this year some curious new research from Israel was published, suggesting that far from helping to prevent Type 2 diabetes, the artificial sweeteners aspartame, saccharin and sucralose might contribute to it. Healthy mice were given drinking water with one of these three sweeteners added to it. When they measured their blood glucose levels they found that the mice who had consumed sweeteners were showing glucose intolerance, something associated with Type 2 diabetes, while the mice which drank plain water or water containing ordinary sugar didn’t. The reason appeared to lie in the bacteria found in the gut; if they had consumed sweeteners their gut bacteria was changed.
This is a cut and paste from this webpage:
http:// www.bbc .com/fu ture/st ory/201 50127-a re-swee teners- really- bad-for -us
But just as it seemed that the evidence was clear, this year some curious new research from Israel was published, suggesting that far from helping to prevent Type 2 diabetes, the artificial sweeteners aspartame, saccharin and sucralose might contribute to it. Healthy mice were given drinking water with one of these three sweeteners added to it. When they measured their blood glucose levels they found that the mice who had consumed sweeteners were showing glucose intolerance, something associated with Type 2 diabetes, while the mice which drank plain water or water containing ordinary sugar didn’t. The reason appeared to lie in the bacteria found in the gut; if they had consumed sweeteners their gut bacteria was changed.
This is a cut and paste from this webpage:
http://