How much water you should drink varies. Your age, activity level, health issues, and lifestyle affect what’s right for you.
In this week’s poem, “two cents plain,” Anna Wrobel finds solace in of a glass of seltzer (for which the title is an old Brooklyn catch-phrase) and a wartime act of chance and humanity that resulted ...
For those of us who never stayed awake through an organic chemistry class, terpenes are metabolites in the essential oils of ...
Many sugary drinks are marketed to kids using cartoons and bright colors. Dr. Chen suggests putting lemon or cucumber in ...
When walking down a sunny Jerusalem street with my father, he would attach clip-on sunglasses to his bifocals. When we would walk into an office or store, he would just flip them up so that he could l ...
Polar has no shortage of flavors rounding out its seltzer lineup. We taste-tested 20 of these flavors and ranked them all ...
Gayle Guyardo , the host of the nationally syndicated health and wellness show Bloom, shares with us ways carbonated beverages could aid with weight loss, on today's Bloom Boost.
Do a little math and you’ll see that in normal use, a bottle full of carbonated water runs you 49 cents. Aerflo says that’s about 50 percent less than buying commercially available seltzer.
New research suggests that carbonated water may offer a small boost to weight loss by speeding up digestion, improving glucose absorption, and helping with satiety. However, experts emphasize that ...