donnellysdogs
Master
- Messages
- 13,233
- Location
- Northampton
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
- Dislikes
- People that can't listen to other people's opinions.
People that can't say sorry.
No, my blood pressure has always been 110/60.
Heart rate is a steady 60.
Exercise can take it to over 160 though, if I try hard enough.
The machines usually scream at me though, so I've starting lying about my age to them.
LolNo, my blood pressure has always been 110/60.
Heart rate is a steady 60.
Exercise can take it to over 160 though, if I try hard enough.
The machines usually scream at me though, so I've starting lying about my age to them.
We have a Tassimo machine which is okay - Mr Chook loves his lattes but I haven't yet found a coffee type that I like more than a good quality instant.
I used to have one of those yellow drip filter things (cost next to nothing) which made amazing coffee - you just put a filter paper and ground beans in to it and pour over water and it dripped in to the mug. Then the dog got it and it never worked properly after it had been chewed.
I agree. Decaf always give me reflux and an acid stomach. No matter how great the beans areBe careful with decaff... there is a horrible chemical used to adjust the beans to decaff.. some brands are supposedly decaffeinated through water.. we buy the beans that are supposedly water decaffeinated. They reckon the chemical is negligible afterwards but the documentary I watched regarding the decaff pelrocess put me off decaff as healthy option permanently. I will never knowingly drink decaff again unless its water treated...
I was also drinking copious amounts like you thinking it was ok because it was decaff..
I was lucky enough to be given a DeLonghi machine about three years ago. It has an integral steamer and uses ESE pods or ground coffee, and it's excellent. I must have made nigh on 600 coffees....! It used to be a w/e ritual to have at least 2 each day, which of course used a lot of milk. I did perfect something approximating a flat white but haven't used it since diagnosis. I'm going to experiment with using watered-down cream and see what happens, as I miss the whole 'zen' thing of making the coffee.My trusty Philips still works splendidly, but it's white in colour and is showing signs of age, so I'd like to change it. I only use my coffeemaker in the morning on workdays, and probably twice on my days off, so I don't need a super heavy-duty unit. I'm looking at a small pump system.
I have heard DeLonghi or Krups are reliable or similar machine like on cozzy .. I'd like to stick with the organic beans and powder we use for cafetiere coffee.
I find watering down the cream and giving it a whisk produces a really good flat white if you water it down less you get closer to a cappuccino as fat holds the bubbles!I was lucky enough to be given a DeLonghi machine about three years ago. It has an integral steamer and uses ESE pods or ground coffee, and it's excellent. I must have made nigh on 600 coffees....! It used to be a w/e ritual to have at least 2 each day, which of course used a lot of milk. I did perfect something approximating a flat white but haven't used it since diagnosis. I'm going to experiment with using watered-down cream and see what happens, as I miss the whole 'zen' thing of making the coffee.
Hi @shelley262 - thank you for your reply - I am definitely going to try that. It sounds like your method will give an even better FW than before: sanity is restored!I find watering down the cream and giving it a whisk produces a really good flat white if you water it down less you get closer to a cappuccino as fat holds the bubbles!
It will at least be a very very low carb coffee unlike the milk version! I keep going on coffee but it’s a different drink if the cream is undiluted I find and I’m worried - maybe wrongly - that if I drink too much cream, given my coffee habit, that I may stall on the weight loss. EnjoyHi @shelley262 - thank you for your reply - I am definitely going to try that. It sounds like your method will give an even better FW than before: sanity is restored!
I am happy with my large cafetière, £4 from Wilko, no pods, no filter papers. I too have been boycotting Nestlé for many years. Now if I could just bring myself to shell out the extra for organic coffee my position would be bombproof, at least until some bright researcher proves that coffee raises bg.Never in a million years would I use anything from Nestle (the baby killer company) or anything that involves pods, no matter how biodegradable they claim to be.
I have an electric percolator that is just perfect and I buy bags of freshly ground coffee from a local company called St Martens at a fraction of the cost on the high street.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?