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The Food Detective Pairs With Angie To Launch A Place For Soy Lovers To Unite.
As soy grows in popularity, soy information sites and places for soy lovers to unit grow on the Internet. Interest in soyfoods is spreading because Americas now realize the vital role soyfoods play in keeping our bodies healthy," says Shirleen Sando, The Food Detective and author of Beyond Low Fat Baking: Cancer Fighting Foods for the Millennium (Skyward Publishing). The Food Detective is guarding Americans health by providing information on dieting, losing weight, good and bad fats, soy, flax, almonds, oats, and other healthier foods. The Food Detective reminds us that soy is important to add to the diet, especially womens diets. In a recent report from The Soy Daily, Janice Peterson, a director of the United Soybean Board (USB) commented, "Breast cancer ranks second among cancer-related deaths in women, and we need to do all we can to understand the benefits soy may have in preventing and treating this and other chronic diseases."
(PRWEB) December 15, 2003 --The time is right," says The Food Detective, for a new and innovative Internet site that provides complete soyfoods information, including dieting tips and advice, dieting newsletters, recipes, books, industry news, articles, soy chat, and more. To chat with soy lovers or get free tips and recipes, log onto www.bestsoy.com. Soon a weekly newsletter will be added that will keep readers abreast of the latest health news as well as healthier dieting techniques that have proven to be successful.
With positive research continuing to demonstrate links between soy isoflavones and decreases in hot flash during menopause, women are eager to learn more of soys benefits. The most natural way to gain positive benefits from soy is by eating soyfoods, since foods interact in the body in different ways than vitamins. Eating soy laced foods or adding soy in creative ways to your diet is a positive step toward better health," says The Food Detective.
"And, many women today rely on soy as an alternative to hormone replacement therapy," says The Food Detective. Recently, The World Health Organization estimates that 1.1 billion women will be age 50 or older by the year 2025, and an unprecedented number of these women will live several decades after menopause. Given the reluctance of many women to undergo estrogen replacement therapy, soy may provide a viable alternative," reports The Soy Daily.
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Contact:
Best Soy
The Food Detective
Info_bestsoy@yahoo.com
Fax: 309-279-7275
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