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Friday 31 March 2017

Some foods can be reheated khayyn, But why ever not?

Some foods can be reheated khayyn, But why ever not?


Then there is a common habit of prepared foods that we use in our homes warm when you need them again, thinking that would save the remaining survivors to eat this favorable but some experts say the health foods again it becomes poisonous because of extreme heat can cause damage to humans and the first time must cook at a low temperature, otherwise it loses its efficacy if they are foods which are to be used to re-heat and why should not I? Let us know-
Chicken 


If chicken is one or two days after re-heating can be used to create many problems for large amounts of this protein are found in the digestive system are the best way to secure that chicken khayyn- put it in cold salads or sandwiches.
Spinach 

The green leaves of vegetables like spinach are found in large quantities in the iron and nayryts but when nitrates can cause cancer to humans who pass an option if you warm it is.
Eggs 

Creates problems for breakfast desire diet is full of toxic substances ever created a warm eggs to warm the eggs do not have to re-sell the eggs to high temperatures cahyy- protein digestive system is

Rice 

Save more rice developed at room temperature after some time again to eat food because it can cause puayzng not die after reheated that there are some bacteria for fresh seasoning and fresh khayyy-
Turnips 

Turnip is a normal diet and this book is used in many homes, but because of high levels of nitrates found in this vegetable turnip can not warm up too much time, because this way it is poisonous
Oils 

Do not use the oil as it becomes akrut, grapes seeds or flax seed oil once again hot and smelly because it is not bad to cook hot food not only from oil to enhance the flavor of any dish spraying oil on the Navigation
Beets 


Huge amounts of nitrates are found in beets like spinach: This can give rise to several problems: its too hot for even better if you left it to cool food .

Twisted Bliss

           Twisted Bliss






WWE Superstar Alexa Bliss wants you to know three things:
1. Twice in her young life she has found herself inches from death.
2. In one instance, Disney World saved her life, literally.
3. She doesn't plan on going back there anytime soon. The pearly gates, that is. Disney has become a pretty regular thing.
But more on all that later.
***
Ask anyone what they first notice about Alexa "Lexi" Kaufman, now Bliss, you'll get the same answer, right down the line: that face. Sure, it's pretty -- big blue eyes, pert nose, Midwestern corn-fed as the day is long. But that's not what the fans, fighters and WWE brass see (at least, that's not all they see).
SmackDown's reigning heel doesn't just have a good face, she gives good face. With an arched eyebrow and curled lip, the envy of moustache-twirling villains and middle-school girls everywhere, Bliss has alternately stalked, hair-flipped and bodily driven herself to the head of a new generation of female wrestlers.





















As two-time women's SmackDown champion, Bliss, 25, faces off at WrestleMania 33 this weekend against every single wrestler in the division. It won't be the hardest thing she's faced, not by a long shot. That dubious honor goes to the voice in the back of her head.
Precocious, dramatic and athletic from a young age, Kaufman fills family photo albums with wide toothy (or in some cases, toothless) grins. Growing up in a suburb of Columbus, Ohio, she found an outlet for her energy in gymnastics, kickboxing and then All-Star cheerleading.
Like many young teens, she spent what little downtime she had poring over magazines, comparing her body to the bodies she saw in those pages, curve for curve, inch for inch.
"I'd think, 'Why can't I look like these people? What's wrong with me?'" she says. "I'd see girls at school who were in better shape, and I was just always so down on myself."
By age 15, concern with her appearance had evolved into something more insidious. The young teen started eating less and less, winnowing down her already petite 5"1' frame. By 17, she was 90 pounds; when her parents took her to the hospital, doctors recorded her heart rate at a glacial 28 beats per minute, and effectively committed her. She was, they said, 24 hours away from total organ failure and death.
For two and a half days, doctors kept Kaufman awake; falling asleep would have lowered her heart rate enough to kill her. It took six weeks to stabilize her body.
"I was so scared," she says. "I asked the doctor if I was going to die, and he said, 'Well, we're doing what we can right now.' That's not what I wanted to hear."
But what jerked her to attention more than anything was a frank discussion with her parents and hospital staff. "They explained to me that one in four people with eating disorders dies, and that I was very close to being that one. I was very close to becoming a statistic, and what would my life have meant? Maybe one or two people would learn from me, but that was it."
While Kaufman would recover from her scare in high school, and go on to compete in cheerleading her senior year and in college, the strain of athletics, the constant weighing, triggered the voice in her head again, the one doctors told her would never go away. This time she dropped to 85 pounds and left school. Again, the weeks in hospital, the near-death experience, therapists, psychiatrists.
Her second breakthrough came on a family trip to Disney World (which is owned by ESPN's parent company, Walt Disney Co.). Frustrated by the Greek chorus of medical professionals and their assorted prescriptions, she'd taken a break for the annual Kaufman trip to Orlando, Florida. She wasn't expecting clarity, and certainly not in the way it presented itself.
Staring at an uneaten plain chicken breast at a Disney restaurant, Kaufman picked up the scent of her mother's cheese fries. While her family watched, not daring to breathe, she grabbed one and popped it into her mouth. "It was just one of those things that made me comfortable," she says. "So then I just did it. I just ate it."
It wasn't a cure (there's no such thing), but it was therapeutic in a way that all the shrinks hadn't been. Soon after, Kaufman began to rebuild. She wanted to put weight back on, but not with cheese fries, so she sought advice from her personal trainer, who introduced her to the body-building community. She trained for five weeks before appearing at a Natural Ohio Bodybuilding Association competition, where she took first in her division and overall, earning a pro card in the process.
It was enough to get her thinking about next steps. A fan of WWE's Rey Mysterio and the gymnastic prowess of the Lucha Libre wrestling style, Kaufman applied to an open casting call for wrestlers -- to her mother's horror. Her combination of athletic ability and, you know, that face, landed her a contract, and she made her debut at Triple-H-run developmental brand NXT (think of it as WWE's farm team) in May 2013. By August she was a roster member, reborn as Alexa Bliss.
***








In many ways, Alexa Bliss arrived at WWE at just the right moment. The previous year had seen the departure of several Divas -- the moniker given to female wrestlers. While the brand spun it as an opportunity for more women to rise through the ranks, in reality, it was the beginning of the end for the decade-plus-old brand.
While women's professional wrestling dates back to the 1930s in the U.S. (even longer if you count sideshow and county fair attractions), and saw spikes of popularity in the 1950s with the arrival of the The Fabulous Moolah, aka Mary Lillian Ellison, the level of seriousness with which it was treated was inconsistent at best. Female wrestlers, known as Divas from about 2000 on, fought "Bra and Panties" matches -- in which the winner was determined based on who could strip her opponent down to her unmentionables first -- until the early 2000s. Until late last year, the title belt featured a bedazzled butterfly.
If the focus was more on looks than athleticism in the big leagues, at NXT, established in 2012 to train up-and-coming talent in both the physical and dramatic rigors of wrestling, things were starting to change.
"When my husband [WWE Talent EVP Triple H] took over talent development, he really wanted to recruit the most elite athletes in the world, male and female," says Stephanie McMahon, chief brand officer at WWE. "He trained men and women the same way and gave the NXT women the same amount of time to tell their story in the ring. As a result, like any sport or performances, the higher repetitions meant these women were becoming incredible performers and rising to the top.