I have just learned that I am gluten intolerant, and
commercial alternatives for gluten free noodles are hard to find, very expensive, don't work well as substitutes, and often don't taste very good either!
I am now on a very high quality coconut milk as I am even reacting to the gum's (guar gum etc) that are in
most commercial alternative milks.
You would expect Seventh Generation to dominate these lists, and although they certainly do appear, the reference gives you many different
healthy commercial alternatives, including some of Seventh Generation's eco-minded competitors and one or two names that most anyone would recognize.
The ALWD Guide to Legal Citation explicitly places them ahead of
named commercial alternatives (including Bloomberg Law and Fastcase) and ignores the leading noncommercial source (LII).
It is sometimes difficult to get homemade cleaners to work just right e.g. for laundry detergents where water / washing machine types can make a difference, but all purpose cleaners, scrubs, glass cleaners etc can all work brilliantly if not better than
commercial alternatives.
A commercial alternative to BPA does exist; Japan has significantly reduced its use of BPA in many canned goods.
Although I do not reach for it often, I do find that it is much safer than some of
its commercial alternatives.
Feed an adequate ration and your puppy will be a lot healthier than those fed
the commercial alternatives.
45 % of respondents report an increase in their use of CanLII relative to
commercial alternatives, while only 3 % report a decrease.
You can almost always find
a commercial alternative for most of the stuff you want to buy.
Personal hotspots «really act as access concentrators to share existing Internet connections,» Rudd told the E-commerce Times, and they «don't provide
a commercial alternative.»