6 Healthy tips to lose weight

Posted in FITNESS & TRAINING TIPS, FOOD on May 9th, 2010 by Steven

VEGETABLE JUICE
Here’s a surprising way to supercharge any diet-and your health: Chug a glass of low-sodium vegetable juice every day. In a study of 81 overweight adults at risk for heart disease and diabetes, those who drank at least a cup of low-sodium V8 daily lost four pounds over 12 weeks, while those on the same reduced-fat diet who drank no juice lost one pound.

DROP THE SODAS
Calories from solid foods and liquids both add up, of course. But in a recent multicenter study, the only menu change that had a significant payoff for dieters was cutting back on sugary beverages, says lead author Benjamin Caballero, MD. Reducing intake by just one serving a day took a pound off after six months, enough to add up for people with a soda or fruit-drink habit. And don’t even think of replacing your soda with a diet soda - you’re actually better off with real sugar over aspartame (Nutrasweet, Equal). [read more on aspartame here]

GREEN TEA
Overweight or obese exercisers burned off three more pounds and 7 percent more belly fat when they drank green tea instead of another beverage with the same calories, according to a new multicenter study.

SLEEP MORE
A study of 32 summer students at Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas over three weeks showed that those who slept an extra two hours ate nearly 300 calories less.

MUSHROOMS
When ground beef was swapped out for mushrooms in lasagna, sloppy joes, and chili, adults consumed 400 fewer calories per day, according to a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health study. Researchers estimate that if you’re a heavy meat eater and substitute mushrooms for ground meat in one meal every week, you can lose five pounds in a year.

KEEP IT SIMPLE
Eating foods that are unrefined, organic, and as close to their natural state as possible will lead to a natural reduction in calories.

FOLLOW FACEBOOK HERE
SEE MAIN WEBSITE HERE
MORE ACTION SECRETS ON MAIN BLOG HERE

excerpts compiled by Meaghan Cameron for Reader’s Digest

Tags: ,

10 really sh*tty foods for you

Posted in FITNESS & TRAINING TIPS on April 2nd, 2010 by Steven

I spend a lot of time suggesting healthy foods and exercises for you…so I thought I would take equal opportunity to give you a top 10 list of favorite “American” go-to comfort foods that will help you increase your body fat and raise your cholesterol levels at the same time…

1. Artery Crust

Judging by the label, Marie Callender’s Chicken Pot Pie has 520 calories and 12 grams of saturated fat. But look again. Those numbers are for only in half a pie. Eat the entire pie, as most people probably do, and you’re talking more than 1,040 calories and 24 grams of saturated fat (more than a day’s worth).

2. Triple Bypass


Can’t decide what to pick from a restaurant menu? No worries. Now you can order not just one entrée, but two…or three…all at once. Olive Garden’s Tour Of Italy—Homemade Lasagna, Lightly Breaded Chicken Parmigiana, and Creamy Fettucine Alfredo—comes with 1,450 calories, 33 grams of saturated fat, and 3,830 milligrams of sodium. Add a breadstick (150 calories) and a plate of Garden-Fresh Salad with dressing (350 calories) and you’ll consume 2,000 calories (an entire day’s worth) in a single meal.

3. Salt’s On!


Progresso Traditional, Vegetable Classics, and Rich & Hearty soups are brimming with salt: Half a can averages more than half of a person’s daily quota of salt. Instead, try Progresso’s Reduced Sodium soups. All the flavor, but up to 50 percent less salt than most other canned soups.

4. Extreme Ice Cream


An average half-cup serving of Häagen-Dazs ice cream squeezes half-a-day’s saturated fat and a third-of-a-day’s cholesterol into your artery walls and makes a 300-calorie down payment on your next set of fat cells—if you can stop at a petite half-cup!

5. Factory Reject


The Cheesecake Factory Chris’ Outrageous Chocolate Cake has “layers of moist chocolate cake, chewy brownie, toasted coconut pecan filling, and creamy chocolate chip coconut cheesecake.” Each five-inch-high slice weighs three-quarters of a pound and has 1,550 calories and 32 teaspoons of sugar. By the time you hit the exit, your arteries have 43 grams of saturated fat circulating in them that they didn’t have when you walked in. It’s a though you had ordered three McDonald’s Quarter Pounders for dessert.

6. Burial Grands


No one thinks of cinnamon rolls as health food. But each Pillsbury Grands! Cinnabon Cinnamon Roll with Icing has 310 calories and 2 grams of saturated fat plus 2 ½ grams of trans fat and 23 grams of sugar. Two-and-a-half grams of trans fat (the worst kind you can eat) may not sound like much, but some health experts recommend 2 grams of trans fat as the limit for the entire day. “My heart to yours,” says the package. How sweet of the Pillsbury Bypass Boy to share.

7. Top Secret


Air-popped popcorn is a good-for-you whole-grain snack…but not when Pop Secret gets hold of it. Pop Secret Movie Theater Butter Popcorn Snack Size Bags has 9 grams of bad fat, 6 of which are trans, in just one snack-size bag (6 cups popped). Instead, try Orville Redenbacher’s Smart Pop! or Smart Balance Smart ‘N Healthy!, both of which are trans-fat free.

8. Starbucks on Steroids


The Starbucks Venti (20 oz.) White Chocolate Mocha with 2% milk and whipped cream is more than a mere cup of coffee. It’s worse than a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder with Cheese. Few people have room in their diets for 580 calories and 15 grams of saturated fat that this hefty beverage supplies. But you can save 130 calories and two-thirds of the bad fat if you order it with nonfat milk and no whipped cream.

9. Tortilla Terror


Interested in a Chipotle Chicken Burrito (tortilla, rice, pinto beans, cheese, chicken, sour cream, and salsa)? Think of its 970 calories and 17½ grams of saturated fat and 2,200 mg of sodium as three 6-inch Subway BLT Classic Subs! Getting the burrito with no cheese or sour cream cuts the saturated fat to 5½ grams, but you still end up with 750 calories and more than a day’s worth of sodium. Sorry Jessica…

10. Stone Cold


Into the chocolate-dipped waffle bowl of a Cold Stone Creamery Gotta Have It Founder’s Favorite goes, not just a 12-ounce, softball-sized mound of ice cream, but pecans, brownie pieces, fudge, and caramel. The tab: a startling 1,600 calories and 42 grams of saturated fat. That’s roughly what you’d get if you polished off five single-scoop ice cream cones.

###

Thanks to Center for the Science in the Public Interest for compiling this information. Now don’t think that merely changing brand names is going to solve your problems - take time to investigate what’s going into your body. You wouldn’t put random things in your car’s gas tank, so respect what goes in your tummy. IT’S YOUR BODY.

FOLLOW TWITTER HERE

FOLLOW FACEBOOK HERE

SEE MAIN WEBSITE HERE

MORE ACTION SECRETS ON MAIN BLOG HERE

Tags:

4 foods with bad reps that deserve 2nd looks…

Posted in FITNESS & TRAINING TIPS, FOOD on March 14th, 2010 by Steven

I think that many health and fitness writers are pressured by their editors/publishers to come up with the “next” fad that they often get carried away and too absolute on what to eat or not eat.

Here are four foods that I think have gotten a bad reputation in the “diet world”, but that should actually have a place on your plate…

1. Peanut butter

Misconception: This creamy spread is an indulgence best enjoyed occasionally because it’s high in fat and calories.

Why it’s good for you:At least five major studies confirm that eating peanuts can lower risk for coronary heart disease. So it’s no leap to think that peanut butter confers the same benefits. “Suffice it to say that eating peanut butter or peanuts has been associated with lower total cholesterol, lower ldl or ‘bad’ cholesterol, and lower triglycerides, all of which are associated with lower cardiovascular disease risk,” says Richard Mattes, Ph.D., R.D., a professor of nutrition at Purdue University.

Even better, these health benefits seem to occur without also promoting weight gain. One reason could be that peanut butter is a stick-to-the-ribs kind of food. When Mattes offered a group of volunteers seven different snack foods (including peanut butter, rice cakes, pickles, and almonds), study participants reported that peanut butter or peanuts were much more filling snacks than rice cakes or pickles and tamed hunger for much longer. Sure, peanut butter is high in fat and calories, but if a small amount can quell hunger, that might explain why dieters seem more satisfied with weight-loss plans that include the spread.

But dieting or not, Mattes says a tablespoon or two of peanut butter is all it takes to net a world of benefits for both the heart and waistline. And don’t obsess about peanut butter being a source of trans fats. A study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture finds no detectable trans fats in a standard 2 tablespoon serving. CookingLight.com: Nutrition faceoff: Peanut butter vs. cream cheese

2. Eggs

Misconception: Eggs are high in dietary cholesterol, so they don’t have a place in my heart-healthy diet.

Why they’re good for you: Eggs contain a variety of substances that appear to promote good health. Choline, a nutrient that is critical to brain function, is one example. Eggs, it seems, are one of the richest food sources of choline. Scientists at the University of North Carolina find adding choline to the diets of pregnant animals improves memory performance in their offspring. It may seem like a leap to apply this finding to people, but researchers are already encouraging pregnant women to eat eggs and other choline-rich foods (such as beef liver) during pregnancy.

Eggs are also being studied because they contain lutein and zeaxanthin, antioxidants that may keep eyes healthy and ward off the leading cause of blindness, macular degeneration. A recent report in the Journal of Nutrition suggests that we look at the egg as a whole package: Eggs are inexpensive, contain the highest-quality protein on the planet, and are loaded with small amounts of vital nutrients, including folate, riboflavin, selenium, B12, and choline. At 75 calories apiece, eggs are also a nutrient-dense food that makes a smart and low-calorie contribution to any menu.

3. Avocado

Misconception: I shouldn’t eat avocados because they’re high in fat.

Why they’re good for you: A lot of attention centers on the fact that avocados are rich in monounsaturated fat, the heart-healthy kind. Yet scientists are now more interested in the active compounds in avocados that might help prevent cancer. One recent study found that those compounds can inhibit the growth of prostate cancer cells in the laboratory. While conducting the study, these researchers found avocados are loaded with a variety of antioxidants, including familiar disease-fighting compounds such as lutein, beta-carotene, and vitamin E.

Another recently discovered benefit is that avocados help the body absorb phytochemicals from other foods. Researchers from Ohio State University recently reported that pairing avocados with salsa or salad allows for better absorption of antioxidants in those foods. The lycopene in tomatoes or the beta-carotene in carrots may be better absorbed if there’s a slice or two of avocado in the bowl. Scientists suspect that the fat content of avocados helps the body absorb these antioxidants. CookingLight.com: Good fats vs. bad fats

4. Mushrooms

Misconception: Mushrooms are a low-calorie food with little nutritional benefit.

Why they’re good for you: They may be 90 percent water and have only 18 calories per cup, but mushrooms are getting serious scientific attention. Laboratory reports and animal studies show that compounds in mushrooms may do everything from bolster immune function to suppress breast and prostate cancers to decrease tumor size. And now, Penn State researchers find that mushrooms, from the humble button to the giant portobello, harbor large amounts of an antioxidant called L-ergothioneine. The scientific buzz is that fungi, for the moment, are the only foods that contain this compound.

While scientists work to figure out how these findings will translate to dietary advice, there are plenty of reasons to enjoy mushrooms. Clare Hasler, Ph.D., a well-known expert in functional foods and executive director of the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science at the University of California, Davis, points out that mushrooms offer a healthy helping of the blood pressure- lowering mineral potassium. “Most people might be surprised to learn that while orange juice is touted as one of the highest potassium foods, one medium portobello mushroom actually has more potassium,” she says. “And five white button mushrooms have more potassium than an orange.”

This list is excerpted from Cooking Light magazine. By Maureen Callahan.

BACK TO STEVEN’S MAIN BLOG HERE

TWITTER HERE

FACEBOOK HERE

Tags: ,