Poor man's Gatorade.

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Monocrom

Flashaholic
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Human-beings need Electrolytes.

Don't waste money on Gatorade or fancy powders at GNC stores.
Just make the following drink at home.

- 4 cups clean water.
- 1/4 teaspoon of actual, genuine salt.
- 1 squeeze of lemon juice.

Mix inside an empty 2 liter plastic bottle. Much easier to use a small funnel, and measuring cups/spoons. Pour in 2 cups. Then the salt. Then 2 more cups. Finish up with the lemon juice so it tastes somewhat close to "decent." Shake bottle. Pour into a tall glass. Drink!

Flavor? Slightly better than urine. Who cares, you're getting your much needed Electrolytes and it cost you $0.oo (the economy is in the toilet, everything is obscenely over-priced; and everyone is broke). Enjoy the new Free drink on the CPF Cafe menu.
 
FWIW, the World Health Organization uses the following formula for oral rehydration salts (i.e. medical gatorade):

Per litre of water,
* 2.6g sodium chloride [table salt]
* 1.5g potassium chloride [potassium salt, typical salt substitute]
* 2.9g trisodium citrate [also known as sodium citrate, or E331]
* 13.5g glucose [simple sugar]
 
FWIW, the World Health Organization uses the following formula for oral rehydration salts (i.e. medical gatorade):

Per litre of water,
* 2.6g sodium chloride [table salt]
* 1.5g potassium chloride [potassium salt, typical salt substitute]
* 2.9g trisodium citrate [also known as sodium citrate, or E331]
* 13.5g glucose [simple sugar]
The sugar is important. It’s not for flavor, and it cannot be replaced by an artificial sweetener.
The sugar plays a role in getting the electrolytes through the intestinal wall and into your bloodstream. Without the sugar, you can put the electrolytes in at the top and lose them out the bottom without their ever getting out of your gut.
On the other hand, the sugar does not have to be in the electrolyte mix to be in your gut. If you are eating something sugary/starchy at the same time, then the drink itself does not have to contain sugar.
 
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kid you not,
just yesterday I was talking to a friend about metals our body needs, , rather involved conversation (iron, magnesium, earth etc)

Interesting the things we need for muscles to fire.


Man is the only animal that cannot produce Ascorbic acid on its own, explain that!
anyway, I take 1/2 Vit. C almost everyday.
 
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Human-beings need Electrolytes.

Don't waste money on Gatorade or fancy powders ...
Caught a clearance sale, awhile back, for electrolytes powder at a Vitamin Shoppe store. A small scoop of the stuff in 1gal jug of water, lime juice, shake. Works well enough. With the discounted clearance price, it's a couple pennies for a scoop and will last practically forever, even at 3/4gal to 1gal water a day.

On a typical day, as well, I generally have ~12oz of a fruit/yogurt/milk blend, and a big bowl of soup at some point during the day. The soup is homemade, typically made with a bone stock made from bison marrow/soup bones.

Plenty of sodium, potassium, chloride, natural sugars.

Isn't perfect, but it's a lot better than some do (electrolyte-wise).
 
Never have I ever. 🤨
Urine is 95% water. So, you've come awfully close to tasting it. 😉

Also, if you guys want to add sugar, it's easy to toss in there.
As far as the World Health Organization, its members collectively looked like moronic clowns during the recent COVID pandemic. They were absolutely useless. Take their recommendation with 1/4 of a teaspoon of salt.
 
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Don't laugh,
couple of these with a bag of chips and a bottled water could save your life,,,
well not really😀

1784303629673.png
 
Most multi-vitamins are cheap enough.
Especially if you skip the gummy route.
I take hard pills of a Men's multi-vitamin.
Every little bit helps.
 
To be fair, if you've ever smelled pee, your olfactory system has probably absorbed and processed some amount of vaporized or airborne particulate...same with farts and poop 💩🍺

You're welcome for ruining your day!
LOL
I wish that was the worst thing that all of us experienced during an average day. Life would be so much better if THAT was the worst.
 
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Not to hijack your thread with the multivitamin stuff;
but in the US, we consume an inordinate amount of salt

'Americans consume about 3,400 mg of sodium daily—roughly 1.5 teaspoons of table salt. This far exceeds the federal guidelines, which recommend a maximum of 2,300 mg per day' => hypertension

It would take some doing to become sodium deficient in here
 
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Not to hijack your thread with the multivitamin stuff;
but in the US, we consume an inordinate amount of salt

'Americans consume about 3,400 mg of sodium daily—roughly 1.5 teaspoons of table salt. This far exceeds the federal guidelines, which recommend a maximum of 2,300 mg per day' => hypertension

It would take some doing to become sodium deficient in here
Yeah, the average person does a lot of take-out and restaurant food, along with heavily-processed boxed/jarred foods ... most of which are loaded with enough salt to open a mine.

Myself, I make my own blends, soups, salads, casseroles, few ingredients of which come out of jars or cans, and most of that is of the NoAddedSodium or (if I must) LowSodium varieties. Diligently enough that I need to consider a bit of added electrolytes daily, to round out things. Harder to do, unless DIY cooking nearly all things (which I do), but it's not impossible.
 
Yeah, the average person does a lot of take-out and restaurant food, along with heavily-processed boxed/jarred foods ... most of which are loaded with enough salt to open a mine.

Myself, I make my own blends, soups, salads, casseroles, few ingredients of which come out of jars or cans, and most of that is of the NoAddedSodium or (if I must) LowSodium varieties. Diligently enough that I need to consider a bit of added electrolytes daily, to round out things. Harder to do, unless DIY cooking nearly all things (which I do), but it's not impossible.
It seems that things that release ions often cause certain taste reactions...I wonder what the noble gases, which have no free electrons, would taste like...

And while we're on the topic, there is a spoon that sends a tiny current to trick your tongue into believing it has tasted something salty. I wonder if there's a correlation to ionic bonding there...a quick googie search would probably yield that answer, but food for thought anyway.
 
[...] there is a spoon that sends a tiny current to trick your tongue into believing it has tasted something salty. I wonder if there's a correlation to ionic bonding there...a quick googie search would probably yield that answer, but food for thought anyway.
Spoon.gif
 
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