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While you may love your cup of coffee, if it's spiking your blood sugar levels, it means bad news. According to experts, a ...
The caffeine in coffee can raise blood sugar temporarily. But that's not the full picture. Learn how coffee affects blood ...
On average, an espresso contains around 63 milligrams of caffeine per ounce. Starbucks serves 75 milligrams of caffeine in ...
What Quitting Coffee Taught Me About Savoring Life ...
From apple pie to grasshopper pie to even the banana split, these classic desserts are actually distinctly American, and originated somewhere in America.
The “S’mores” float recreates the campfire classic in beverage form – draft cream soda topped with chocolate ice cream, ...
A study examined coffee drinking habits of over 46,000 people and found that drinking black or minimally sweetened coffee may extend lifespan.
Coffee has been linked to longevity in past studies, with some suggesting that 3 cups is the magic number for living longer. A new study published in Microbial Cell found that the caffeine in ...
Talk to your healthcare provider about your medication list and coffee consumption to determine if you need to avoid coffee or alter when you drink it based on your medication schedule.
Co-owner Andi Macko prepares a cold coffee drink during the reopening of Cup-A-Joe’s Mission Valley location in Raleigh on Tuesday, June 24, 2025. The café closed in 2021 during the pandemic.
Drinking a cup or two of coffee every day may help you live longer -- but only if you skip the heavy cream and sugar, new research suggests.
A new study finds that drinking three cups of coffee could boost your longevity. The results, however, were limited to black coffee and coffee with “low” levels of added sugar and saturated fat.