roadfix
Chef Extraordinaire
I hate flavored coffee as well. I like the simple life, I like my coffee black as well, no cream, no sweetener.
I think when I was about 7 or 8 my parents talked me into trying no sugar in my hot beverages, tea and coffee. I think they wanted me to cut my sugar intake was I was pretty hyper. After a few days I acquired the unsweetened taste and have been drinking black ever since, including tea.
I consumed sodas too. They contained caffeine and sugar as well. There were no such thing as Diet Coke, which I consume daily today.I'm a no sugar, no cream person when it comes to coffee or tea, which I don't drink too much, anyway. But my parents didn't feed them to me when I was a kid. Do you ever wonder how much was sugar and how much was caffein? At that age? Caffeine and sugar, at 7 years old?
I had a lot of fun figuring out how to use rhubarb in other dishes besides pie, cobbler, sauce. I would never have thought to combine rhubarb with cucumber, but it was very good. Nor would I have added rhubarb to curry. All the dishes were very tasty. Tonight, I tossed one stalk of chopped rhubarb in our tossed salad. Something I wouldn't have thought to do before. And, with 9 rhubarb plants, pie, cobbler, and sauce can get old really fast.This is an interesting thread!
I am not opposed to adding things to old favorites or coming up with new combinations. The thing that bothers me is the use of artificial flavors to do it. We are exposed to so many artificial flavors that when we encounter the real thing it does not always measure up. The lemon is not lemony enough and the chocolate does not provide the ultimate chocolate experience etc...
Most of it was cooked (4 stalks not, maybe 1/2 lb), and our research was 25 lb. re: toxicity. I used about 2 lb of rhubarb for the various dishes.You might want to be careful about eating too much raw rhubarb. It contains oxalic acid which is toxic, although it's arguable that it would take eating a huge amount of rhubarb to notice the toxic effects. Might be particularly bad for pregnant women (the fetuses actually) but caution should be used when eating raw rhubarb.
Cooking destroys the toxic effects.