Pagine: [1 2] > | Research on diet tips for translators - help needed Iniziatore argomento: Marta Maojo
| Marta Maojo Australia Local time: 09:21 Da Spagnolo a Inglese
I am preparing a webinar about diet for translators. has anyone tried a coffee substitute that is satisfying? | | | Hi, yes -- tea, and ginger water with lemon and honey | Nov 25, 2013 |
These are great. I drink quite a lot of black tea with lemon and sugar or honey, so it has caffeine as well, but it is apparently quite good for you. Some coffee -- like two, three cups a day is apparently good too.
[Edited at 2013-11-25 17:18 GMT] | | | Morano El-Kholy Egitto Local time: 02:21 Membro (2011) Da Inglese a Arabo + ... | Samuel Murray Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:21 Membro (2006) Da Inglese a Afrikaans + ... Yes, caffeine pills | Nov 25, 2013 |
Marta Maojo wrote: Has anyone tried a coffee substitute that is satisfying? Well, I suppose you could get some chocolate milk, warm it up, add some water to dilute it, and dissolve caffeine pills in it. But I think drinking coffee as usual would be cheaper. | |
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| Inge Luus Sudafrica Local time: 01:21 Membro (2008) Da Tedesco a Inglese + ... Panax ginseng tea | Nov 25, 2013 |
Coffee doesn't beat this in my book (and that, coming from someone who used to drink 6 cups of coffee a day!). Have been drinking this now for about 4 months now (just 1 or 2 cups of an organic, fair trade variety is all that I need). Not really missing coffee either. Just need the right brand of tea with the right amount of Ginseng.
[Edited at 2013-11-25 20:25 GMT] | | | Tatty Local time: 01:21 Da Spagnolo a Inglese + ...
Good stuff, I drink lots of it and it doesn't stain my teeth. BTW, one of the advantages to working from home is that you can do any hair-brained diet you please... | | | Re: caffeine | Nov 25, 2013 |
Perhaps find out about ways of brewing coffee which make it go in more easily, damage the stomach and the other organs less etc. Guarana/yerba mate might be a better substitute but would need to be experimented with on the individual translator level. | |
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Lingua 5B Bosnia-Erzegovina Local time: 01:21 Membro (2009) Da Inglese a Croato + ... Agree about the ginger water | Nov 26, 2013 |
Putting some fresh ginger in water may be something worth trying, instead of coffee. I also like matcha. Yerba mate didn't give me the same kind of boost, ie. the boost fades away after an hour, whereas with coffee it keeps me for 6 hours (and I'm talking about a mild coffee blend with lots of milk). Diet should be balanced, but since we are sitting a lot probably the highly digestible kind like fibers, proteins and minimizing the CH. Does ginseng cause any side effects... See more Putting some fresh ginger in water may be something worth trying, instead of coffee. I also like matcha. Yerba mate didn't give me the same kind of boost, ie. the boost fades away after an hour, whereas with coffee it keeps me for 6 hours (and I'm talking about a mild coffee blend with lots of milk). Diet should be balanced, but since we are sitting a lot probably the highly digestible kind like fibers, proteins and minimizing the CH. Does ginseng cause any side effects? I was going to taste it but was concerned about side effects. I usually still need one cup of coffee a day (Ness with plenty of milk, I actually make it with milk only, no water added). ▲ Collapse | | | Heinrich Pesch Finlandia Local time: 02:21 Membro (2003) Da Finlandese a Tedesco + ...
Why drink coffee? I drink coffee when I get it for free included in a meal or when my wife brews for herself, to keep her company. I don't need any substitute because I drink the real thing: water. | | | Tom in London Regno Unito Local time: 00:21 Membro (2008) Da Italiano a Inglese
Tatty wrote: Good stuff, I drink lots of it and it doesn't stain my teeth. BTW, one of the advantages to working from home is that you can do any hair-brained diet you please... I think you mean "harebrained".... http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/harebrained I assumed that this thread was intended to be about the translator's diet as a whole, but it seems to have become restricted to just hot drinks, types of coffee, etc. I only have one espresso in the morning and another after lunch. Any more than 2 espressos per day is bad for your heart, as any Italian will tell you. Apart from that I never eat or drink anything when working. How about a wider discussion of suitable diets for those who lead the very sedentary and unhealthy life of the translator? What should I be eating/not eating?
[Edited at 2013-11-26 08:20 GMT] | | | Suzan Hamer Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:21 Inglese + ... Yeah, Tom, but | Nov 26, 2013 |
Tom in London wrote: Tatty wrote: Good stuff, I drink lots of it and it doesn't stain my teeth. BTW, one of the advantages to working from home is that you can do any hair-brained diet you please... I think you mean "harebrained".... http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/harebrained don't you just love the picture that "hair-brained" creates in your mind? | |
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Tom in London Regno Unito Local time: 00:21 Membro (2008) Da Italiano a Inglese
Suzan Hamer wrote: don't you just love the picture that "hair-brained" creates in your mind? Not really, Suzan; I am trying imagine my hair growing on the inside of my head, rather than on the outside. Keeping my hair clean and un-yucky would be a bit of a problem. And it would squeeze my brain, which might be painful.
[Edited at 2013-11-26 09:33 GMT] | | | Ty Kendall Regno Unito Local time: 00:21 Da Ebraico a Inglese Surely coffee doesn't make or break a diet..... | Nov 26, 2013 |
It's a bit like when you go to a fast-food place, order a fat-filled feast and then ask for a diet coke. @Heinrich Admittedly I don't drink enough water, but I find it hard when living in a cold country. When I wake up and see my breath in the air, I crave a hot drink (usually tea) not a glass of water. When I am in Israel my water consumption skyrockets and hot drinks are kept to a minimum. So it guess it evens itself out. | | | Samuel Murray Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:21 Membro (2006) Da Inglese a Afrikaans + ...
Marta Maojo wrote: Has anyone tried a coffee substitute that is satisfying? Why do you want a substitute for coffee? What is it about coffee that you want to avoid? The caffeine? The sugar? The milk? The high cost? Tooth decay? Bad breath? Several of the substitutes mentioned so far cost far more than ordinary coffee, so clearly for those translators the high cost isn't what they're trying to avoid. But what do *you* want to avoid? I suspect different translators in different countries may want to avoid it for different reasons. In some places, coffee is drunk with milk and sugar, but in others, it is taken unsweetened and unfattened. In some places, coffee is usually made in a coffee machine, using a processed cartridge, but in others, it is brewed in a pot or a plunger, and still others use powdered coffee (or coffee mixtures) that dissolve in boiling water. In some countries, coffee is drunk in thimbles of less than 100 ml, whereas in others coffee isn't really coffee unless the mug contains at least 500 ml.
[Edited at 2013-11-26 10:42 GMT] | | | Pagine: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Research on diet tips for translators - help needed Protemos translation business management system | Create your account in minutes, and start working! 3-month trial for agencies, and free for freelancers!
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