Photo: svacher, flickr
- If you're a fan of Stella Artois, you may want to drink up now. Beer supplies are running low in Belgium, as InBev, the producer of the lager as well as Leffe and Jupiler, plans to cut 10% of its staff and worker retaliate by striking.
- Malaysian cops seized samples of a coffee with benefits beyond caffeine. Officials claim the special brand contained sildenafl, a component found in the drug Viagra.
- Astronauts are getting the Michelin treatment in space. German chef Harald Wohlfahrt, who has three Michelin stars, created freeze-dried delicacies designed to last for two years and contains extra spices because sense of taste is affected in space.
- Next time you're in search of free food and gustatory entertainment, try one of these 40 food challenges.
- And on the topic of eating for sport, the International House of Pancakes recently brought back its all-you-can-eat pancakes. Right now, the record stands at 46.
Space travel is an amazing thing, but it's quite clear that not everything that we have available on Earth can be made available in space. Gravity is one thing that immediately springs to mind, of course, but astronauts have had problems with food, too. Most end up
Astronauts have a limited array of foods that they can produce themselves while in space, due to both space and environmental restrictions.
Alain Ducasse, one of the most successful restaurateurs in the world and holder of 9 Michelin stars, has begun to prepare meals that will go where no haute cuisine - or even anything worthy of being called a cuisine - has gone before: outer space. The chef is working with the European Space Agency (ESA) and the French National Center for Space Studies to create gourmet foods that can be packaged for consumption on space flights, giving astronauts a taste of something better than the garden variety rations then get now.







