Feb 17

Employing visionary resourcefulness regarding what to do with

How high a toilet stands is another buying decision. More and more toiletsand nearly all in Consumer Reports latest testsare whats known as comfort height. At 17 to 19 inches off the floor, comfort-height toilets are some 2 to 4 inches taller than regular-height toilets and meet the standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Except perhaps for small children, most people find them more comfortable.
You may also want to consider a one-piece toilet, where the tank and bowl are molded seamlessly as a single unit, for its sleeker styling and easier cleaning. Apron-front models also hide the circuitous trap youll typically see below the tank. But youll pay a premium for these models without necessarily getting better performance. And think twice about toilets where the drain hole in the bowl is deep. Our testers found that the relatively small water spot that results is less able to resist stains and odors than the larger water spot that typically occurs with shallower drain holes. You can compare depths at the store with a tape measure; here, shallower tends to be better.
Last week, maybe it was due to a lack of notable obituaries online, but the rumored demise of the Twinkie, due to the chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by parent company Hostess, made all of the headlines. While this was hardly the first time Hostess has been subject to public financial woes, nor is the Twinkie the sole Hostess product (Wonder Bread, Sno Balls, Ding-Dongs, etc.) this bit of news, for many, was the symbolic death of the beloved snack cake C a generation mourns.
The Twinkie, a golden sponge cake with a creamy filling, has long been an icon of junk food and American industrial ingenuity. It is a guilty pleasure, a high caloric pacifier for whiny children, an example of everything that is good and bad about junk food, and a nutritionally worthless, but irresistibly decidedly tasty, snack.
The Twinkie got its humble start in the 1930s with a considerably different recipe, same form factor though. The pre-war Twinkies were made with banana cream filling, not vanilla (to be clear, the Twinkie does not contain a cream center but some hydrogenated concoction). But in World War II, there was a banana shortage, and vanilla became the standard flavor. A single Twinkie has 150 C 160 calories (depending on who you ask), which by itself isnt that bad as far as snacks go. However, it contains 4.5 grams of fat, including 2.5 grams of saturated fat, 19 grams of sugars and no dietary fiber to speak of. Eight out of the 39 ingredients that comprise the Twinkie are derived from corn, including corn starch, glucose, fructose, and the beloved high fructose corn syrup.
Still the Twinkie, as I said before, is an icon and remains as famous for its enduring appeal (although some of that has obviously waned a bit in the past year) as it is for its rumored enduring shelf life. Much has been made about Twinkies holding the ability to be shelf stable indefinitely, and some say to have the ability to survive a nuclear holocaust. But these claims seem highly exaggerated. While a Twinkie, because of its many stabilizers and emulsifiers, will not visibly break down over time, the company claims that a Twinkie has a definitive shelf life of 25 days. So stockpiling these beloved snacks is ill advised.
As I mentioned above, this is hardly the first time Hostess has had financial difficulties and put the fate of the Twinkie in peril (They filed for bankruptcy in 2004). Still, the threat to the future of the Twinkie sent the web-o-sphere into a lather, with everyone from NYT columnist Mark Bittman to NPR correspondents waxing nostalgic about the Twinkie-the-Kid, Hostess, and the embattled Twinkie, of course.

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