The Paleo Recipe Book Review
If you were looking for a complete, honest and unbiased Paleo Recipe Book review, then you have come to the right place. By now, you have probably heard a lot about the Paleo diet. Over the past few years, this diet has become rather popular. However the guidelines you have to follow are quite strict and you can't have most traditional foods on this diet; this is why you need a cookbook. So if you are a Paleo dieter and you are considering buying this book, then you should read this review first....
Green smoothies can benefit diabetics
Diabetes has become a lifestyle of the dreaded disease in the world today . Only in America, the prevalence of diabetes has nearly doubled in the past twenty years. Numerous studies show that over the past 20 years, the increase in diabetes across the country was 05.05 to 09.03 per cent of the population. This is despite the best facilities for the detection and prevention campaigns diabetes happens in the country. This is due to the lifestyle of the population have changed. People eat unhealthy, too little exercise are always live ....
Teen Dieting
We have the highest teenage and childhood obesity rates today than at any other point in the world’s long history. Much of the blame for this is on the fast food, low energy society that we have become. Far too often we feel that it is safer to keep our children inside our homes rather than out and about in the great outdoors. The things we are doing for the protection of our children are actually detrimental to the health of our children..
Dieting Tips
Some of my dieting tips are not conventional. You can read zillions of tips where they say, don't shop while hungry or just eat less and where has that gotten you?.
Dieting Mistakes Everyone Should Avoid
Losing weight is very difficult, and making mistakes during the process will only make it harder. While everyone is different, there are several tips that are universally useful. Five of them are included in the article below. If you want your next diet to be a success, make sure to pay close attention...
Friday, September 6, 2013
Steps to a Gluten-Free Diet for Improved Mental Health
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Gluten free diet
Monday, September 2, 2013
7 Foods That Sabotage Your Diet
Even when we have the best of intentions, something as simple as a healthy but oversize snack can make us gain weight rather than lose. But finding small ways to save just 100 calories a day can take off 10 pounds in a year. With help from a few nutrition experts, we've put together this list of red-flag foods and some simple strategies to keep them from undermining your weight-loss efforts.
1. PRE-MEASURED PACKS
Are 100-calorie snack packs a part of your stay-slim repertoire? As it turns out, these pre-portioned treats may do more harm than good. When researchers from the Netherlands gave TV-watching students either two large bags of potato chips or several portion-controlled ones, those with the smaller bags ate twice as many chips. If you find yourself reaching for a second 100-calorie bag, leave the empty pack in plain sight: Previous research has shown that people consume less food when they can see what they've already eaten.
2. "DIET" TREATS
Fat-free and sugar-free don't necessarily mean low-calorie. For example, one brand of reduced-fat chocolate chip cookie supplies 47 calories—just 6 less than a regular cookie. Plus, studies show that people who are overweight take in twice as many calories when they eat low-fat snacks rather than the regular versions. If you have a cookie craving, advises Katherine Brooking, RD, a New York City-based dietitian, go for the real thing—but limit yourself to 150 calories' worth.
3. LIQUID CALORIES
A couple of cups of cappuccino (each with 2 teaspoons of sugar) and a couple of cups of tea (each with 2 teaspoons of honey) add up to 150 calories in sweetener alone. Brooking recommends making do with less sweetener or switching to a zero-calorie alternative, like Splenda. Watch out for alcoholic beverages, too. Replace wine or beer with flavored club soda or sparkling water, and you can save big on calories.
4. SUPER-SNACKS
Eating every few hours is a good way to keep your metabolism humming, but it's easy to consume too many calories if you aren't careful. Snacks are the main culprits, particularly if they are too big and too frequent, explains Dawn Jackson Blatner, RD, author of The Flexitarian Diet. Limit yourself to just two snacks a day, at about 150 calories each. And be wary of relying on energy bars as snacks; some deliver as many as 400 calories each. As a rule of thumb, a bar under 200 calories is a snack, Blatner says; anything above that counts as a meal.
5. RICH PROTEINS
Stick with lean proteins because higher-fat versions can have twice as many calories. Even if you measure the proper serving size, just 3 ounces of sirloin supplies 225 calories, nearly half of which come from fat. By comparison, the same amount of skinless turkey contains 144 calories, only 10 of which come from fat. And turkey sausage has 75% less saturated fat than pork sausage. Other lean protein choices include fish and beans.
6. FAT-FREE SALAD DRESSINGS
Often the fat is replaced with sugar, which means that your dressing still may be loaded with calories. Ironically, a salad without fat is not living up to its potential. "You need a little fat to absorb vitamins A, D, E, and K and other nutrients," explains Katherine Tallmadge, RD, spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association. Instead, use smaller amounts of oil-based salad dressings; you'll get good-for-you fats rather than the saturated fat found in some creamy dressings. Look for ingredients like olive oil, vinegar, and herbs.
7. BAKED POTATO CHIPS
Yes, they're lower in fat. They're also high in calories but low in nutrients, with little fiber to fill you up. A better snack choice: popcorn. You'll get the salt and crunch of the chips in this whole grain, plus a healthy dose of fiber, all for about 65% fewer calories per cup. Look for oil-free microwave popcorn or brands that are air-popped or popped in healthful oils such as olive or canola. Adults who munch on popcorn consume up to 2 ½ times more whole grains than those who don't, according to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.













