Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

Top 10 reasons why the teens gain weight

From a list of ten possible causes of weight gain – ones experts feel play a role in the obesiy epidemic – I asked the teens to chec off the five main reasons for their weight gain. At least 75% cited the first three causes; each of the other causes was checked by at least 25% of the teens. No teen gave just one reason for weight gain; some checked them all. Here’s how the reasons rank, according to how often they were checked.

Reason #1: Too much snacking. Molly S feels that oversnacking was the number one cause of her weight gain. Now, her mother says, “we have nothing very snack food related in the cupboard. Ice cream, cookies, chips, et cetera, have been replaced by fruits.”

Reason #2: Portion sizes too large. Erin D says that her portions were three times larger when she was overweight than they are today. “Now,” she says, “when I go to fast-food restaurants, I can’t eat a whole value meal. I’m satisfied with a kid’s meal.”

Reason #3: Not enough exercise. Victor F was able to lose 50 pounds by exercising four or five times a week, as well as by learning about and practicing good nutrition. Three years later, he still finds time to exercise regularly, even though he’s in medical school.

Reason #4: Ate too many sweets and desserts: Wes G, who feels that his number one reason for gaining weight was eating too many sugary foods, says that a major difference for him now is cutting out his nightly “giant bowl of ice cream.” (He still eats occasionally.)

Reason #5: Emotional causes (eating when lonely, bored, or sad). Sari M became overweight when her father left the family. Now when she feels like eating for emotional reasons, she usually goes to a coffee house, “where the drinks are all fairly low calorie and I can be around people and friends who will hopefully cheer me up.”

Reason #6: Spent too much time in front of the TF, computer, and/or video games. Christine F says that too much TV and computer time were the major culprits in her weight gain. The most important thing she did to lose weight was “exercised! It took a while to get motivated, but as soon as there were visible results, I was hooked.”

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Guidelines for low-fat eating

The following guidelines should help you design and stick to a well-balanced diet:

  • When choosing breads, cereals, rice, and pasta, always choose whole-grain, high-fiber, low-fat varieties, preferably without added sugar, coloring, or unnecessary preservatives. Choose brown rice over white rice, and whole-grain pastas over pastas made from white flour.
  • Eat your vegetables and fruits fresh and, preferably, raw as often as possible. Water-soluble vitamins such as vitamin C may leach out of foods during cooking, be damaged by overprocessing, or be destroyed when foods are overcooked. Even fat-soluble vitamins, which are fairly stable during low-temperature cooking, can be affected by frying. For this reason, it is best to steam or microwave vegetables rather than boiling or frying them. And, unless produce is organically grown, be sure to peel or thoroughly wash it before eating to reduce such unwanted elements as waxes and pesticides residue.
  • Select low-fat and nonfat varieties of milk, yogurt, and cheese. These provide the most nutrients and the least amount of fat. When eating meat, poultry, or fish, choose the leanest cuts available, trim off any excess fat, and bake or broil the foods instead of frying them.

Select as few foods as possible from the fats, oils, and sweets category. When you do use fats and oils, choose monosaturated and polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated ones. Limit your intake of sweets. Choose fresh fruits instead of cakes, cookies, and other high-fat desserts.

Food labeling

Food labels are required to include a “Nutrition Facts” section that identifies how many servings are found in each container, and how much of the following components each serving contains:

Total Calories Sodium Vitamin A
Calories from fat Total carbohydrates Vitamin C
Total fat Dietary fiber Calcium
Saturated fat Sugars Iron
Cholestrol Protein

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Understanding fats

Fats have been classified into three major categories – saturated fats, polyunsaturated fats, and monosaturated fats. This classification is based on the number of hydrogen atoms each has in its chemical structure.

Saturated fats, which are usually solid at room temperature, are found primarily in animal products, including fatty meats like beef, veal, lamb, pork, and ham; and in dairy items such as whole milk, cream, ice cream, and cheese. For example, the white marbling you can see in a piece of beef is saturated fat. Some types of vegetable products – including coconut oil, palm kernel oil, and vegetable shortening – are also high in saturates.

The liver uses saturated fats to manufacture cholestrol. Therefore, excessive dietary intake of saturated fats can significantly raise the blood cholestrol level, especially in people how have an inherited tendency toward high blood cholestrol.

Guidelines issued by the National Cholestrol Education Program (NCEP) and widely supported by most experts recommend that your intake of saturated fats should be kept below 10 percent of your total calorie intake. However, for people who have severe problems with high blood cholestrol, even that level may be too high.

Polyunsaturated fats are found in greatest abundance in corn, soybean, saffflower, and sunflower oils. Certain fish oils, particularly those containing the omega-3 fatty acids, are also high in polyunsaturates. Unlike the saturated fats, plyunsaturates may actually lower your total blood cholestrol level. In doing so, however, large amounts of polyunsaturates also have a tendency to reduce your HDLs – your “good cholestrol.” For this reason – and because, like all fats, polyunsaturates are high in calories for their weight and volume – the NCEP guidelines state that your intake of polyunsaturated fats should not exceed 10 percent of your total calorie intake.

Monosaturated fats are found mostly in vegetable and nut oils such as olive, peanut, and Canola (rapeseed). These fats appear to reduce blood levels of LDL cholestrol without affecting HDLs in any way. However, this positive impact upon LDL cholestrol is relatively modest. The NCEP guidelines recommend that your intake of monosaturated fats be kept between 10 and 15 percent of your total calorie intake.

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Understanding cholestrol

Your body requires fat and cholestrol to maintain good health. During infancy and childhood, fat is essential for normal brain development; throughout life, it is essential to provide energy and support growth. Cholestrol is used to build the walls of cells throughout the body and to manufacture essential substances like hormones and vitamin D. So it is important to have some fat and cholestrol available in your body at all times. But you can get too much of a good thing, and when the amount of fat and cholestrol you consume becomes excessive, health problems can begin to appear.

It is important to recognize that although fat and cholestrol are essential for good health, you do not always need to get these substances from your diet. After two years of age, in fact, the body requires only small amounts of dietary fat, and needs no dietary cholestrol at all, as the liver is capable of manufacturing whatever is necessary. In spite of this, most of us consume very large amounts of both fat and cholestrol – in many cases, enough to increase our health risks significantly. Excessive fat intake is an important causative factor in obesity, high blood pressure, coronary artery disease, and colon cancer. Excessive dietary cholestrol increases the risk of heart attack and stroke. How do these substances contribute to these life-threatening disorders? To understand this it is necessary to learn a little more about the actions of fat and cholestrol within the body.

Understanding cholestrol

Cholestrol is a white, waxy, fatty substance that is produced by the liver and is also present in foods of animal origin, including beef, poultry, fish, cheese, eggs, and dairy products. In general, the more cholestrol you put into your body by eating such foods, the higher hte level of cholestrol in your blood will be. But dietary cholestrol is not the only thing that determines your blood cholestrol level. Dietary fat – especially saturated fat – and the cholestrol that your liver manufactures on its own also play important roles.

Pure cholestrol cannot mix with or dissolve in solutions like water and blood, so it is combined in the liver with other substances – fats and proteins – to form particles that are capable of moving through the bloodstream. These particles, called lipoproteins, carry cholestrol from the liver to the parts of the body where its is needed, and then bring it back again for removal from the body. A distinction has been made between two principal types of lipoproteins: the low-density lipoproteins (called LDLs, or LDL cholestrol) and the high-density lipoproteins (called (HDLs, or HDL cholestrol). The levels of each of these forms of cholestrol in the blood can be measured separately. Together, they make up most of your “total blood cholestrol,” or “total cholestrol.”

Low-Density Lipoproteins (LDLs)

Low-density lipoproteins contain mostly cholestrol and protein. These LDLs are removed from the bloodstream by cells throughout the body, and then are broken down into their original elements, which are used for essential bodily functions. However, some people’s systems remove LDLs more slowly than others, causing the level of LDLs – and thus cholestrol – to build up in their blood. This tendency to remove LDLs and cholestrol quickly or slowly is inherited.

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Weight loss: Energy supply and demand

Your body needs energy to operate
We will start with energy because weight loss is all about how your body uses and stores energy.

Basal Metabolism: Your body needs a certain amount of energy to function – to power your heart, lungs, brain, kidneys, and other organs and keep them in good repair. The amount of energy you use when you are completely at rest is called your basal metabolism. The rate at which you burn energy when you are completely rest is called your basal metabolism. The rate at which you burn energy when you are completely at rest is called your basal metabolism rate (BMR).

Each person has his own BMR determined partly by heredity and partly by lifestyle. Your heredity sets the upper and lower limits of your BMR. You can maximize your BMR within this range by doing daily aerobic exercise and by eating a lot of nutrient-dense, fiber-rich carbohydrates. The higher your BMR, the faster and more easily you lose weight.

Physical Activity: Unlike your basal metabolic rate, physical activity is not fixed within a range. The more exercise you do, the more energy you need to fuel it.

Total energy needs: Your total energy needs are the sum of your basal metabolism plus the amount of physical activity you do. The higher your BMR and the more active you are, the more energy you need.

Food Supplies Energy
Where does your body get energy to power your basal metabolism + physical activity? Just as energy stored in batteries powers machines to do work, energy stored in the food you eat powers your body.

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Few tips to keep yourself fit

Keep your Carbohydrates Tank on Full
When you eat a meal, some of the carbohydrate you consume tops up the glycogen stores. If you skimp on carbohydrates because you are following a low-calorie, low-carbohydrate, and/or high-protein diet, your glycogen stores will be inadequate and you will feel it. You will have diminished energy, stamina, and endurance.

Excess Carbohydrate Calories Don’t Turn to Fat
Although scientific research has proven over and over that excess carbohydrates are burned and released as heat, people still believe that carbohydrates turn to fat. Scientific experiments have shown that only if you were to eat more than 2200 calories of pure carbohydrate in addition to your normal daily total calorie intake for 5 to 6 days in a row might the excess carbohydrates possibly turn to fat. This is called glycogen loading and is not so easy to do.

Protein: Overrated
The role of protein in our diets is greatly misunderstood. Although many people associate rippling muscles with a diet of steaks and chops, the protein you eat doesn’t build bulging biceps and triceps. It is used to rebuild muscle.

We tend to think of muscle as a permanent structure, but it is constantly being broken down and rebuilt (in response to use). When muscle is broken down, protein is released and burned. Since only small amounts of muscle are broken down and rebuilt each day, you don’t need much protein in your diet. Scientific research has shown that adults need only about 12-15% of their calories from protein. And no matter what we eat, we generally get that amount.

Most Americans eat more than enough protein for good health. Consuming too much protein can put stress on the kidneys. In addition, since many people equate high-quality protein with red meat, and since red meat is filled with saturated fat, by eating lots of red meat you may be raising your cholestrol level and putting your heart at risk.

Diets don’t work

Dieting woman

Dieting woman

One of the most ineffective and curious of all human experiences is the process of dieting. When else do people deprive and discipline themselves for days, weeks, and even months to achieve a certain goal, only to see that goal sabotaged the minute it is achieved? And as if this experience isn’t frustrating enough, many dieters put themselves through this process regularly, enthusiastically losing a few pounds for a short time, only to gain them back. These dieters are draining themselves mentally, spiritually, physically, and emotionally, always searching, spiritually, physically, and emotionally, always searching, yet never quite finding the permanent result they seek. And this frequent, unsuccessful quest creates the undue stress and emotional havoc that dieters know too well.

What exactly is a diet, anyway? People indulge themselves and indulge themselves until they can’t look at themselves in the mirror or until their clothes no longer fit. Then they grudgingly force themselves to “diet” to make up for these past indulgences. It’s like running out and locking your garage after someone has driven off in your car. It’s too late; the damage is done. The “remedy” for these indulgences is usually deprivation, and almost every one of the “diet cures” on the market today requires the dieter to take off pounds at any cost. Diet schemes are an extremely expensive way to lose weight. Many times their real cost is a person’s well-being.

Why don’t diets work? The answer actually is quite simple. What do you think about when you’re on a diet? Just as I did, you are usually thinking about what you’re going to eat when the ordeal is finally over. How can you possibly succeed on your diet when all you are thinking about is food? Depriving yourself is not the answer to healthy, permanent weight loss. It usually causes you to binge later on, which complicates the problem. Deprivation and binging become a vicious cycle, and that’s just one of the many problems with dieting.

Another is that diets are temporary; therefore, the results have to be temporary! Do you want to be permanently slim or temporarily slim? Temporary measures bring about temporary results. Have you ever heard anyone say, “I’ve been on every diet that’s ever come on the market, and nothing seems to work”? Why have they been on every diet? They’ve been on every diet without success because dieting is the wrong approach! Diets fail because of the regimentation involved. Very few of us can be regimented successfully for long when it comes to food. Yet many people, not having an alternative, continue to do what they have always done – diet – because they’ve never been presented with any viable alternative. They continue their search for that one panacea that will end – once and for all – their battle of the bulge.

When we go on a diet, our systems are thrown into turmoil while they try to adapt to a new regimen. They then must readapt to old patterns when the regimen ends. It’s like taking a metal rod and bending it over and over again. Eventually it will become weak and break. If you jerk your body back and forth over and over again by dieting, it will become weak and break down.

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Broccoli and cheese Omelet

This is a delicious twist on the basic cheese omelet. The broccoli and shallots add a subtle sweetness to the nutty taste of swiss.

Ingredients: 1 cup broccoli florets (chopped), 1/4 cup shallots (minced), 1 tablespoon water, butter-flavored cooking spray, 1 cup egg substitute, 4 ources low-fat Swiss, diced salt and pepper to taste.

  1. Mix broccoli, shallots, and water in a small microwaveable bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and microwave on HIGH for 3.5 minutes, until broccoli is soft.
  2. In a medium saucepan, heat cooking spray until hot but not smoking. Pour in egg substitute and swirl to coat bottom of pan.
  3. Place 1/4 diced cheese on one half of omelet and cover cheese with 2 tablespoons of broccoli mixture. Fold untilled half of omelet over filling, lower heat, cover pan, and cook for 1-2 minutes, until cheese melts.
  4. Slide omelet onto plate and keep warm. Re-spray skillet and repeat for all omelets. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Makes 4 omelets.

Cooking Tip: For individual omelets, beat 1/4 cup egg substitute with 1 teaspoon water until frothy.

Serving guidelines

For Lap-Band: Weeks 1-4: Puree 1/2 – 1 omelet until smooth. Weeks 5+: Serve 1/2 – 1 omelet as is.

For Bypass: Weeks 1 -4: Puree 1/2 – 1 omelet until smooth. Weeks 5+: Serve 1/2 omelet as is.

For BPD-DS: Weeks 1-3: Puree 1/2 – 1 omelet until smooth. Weeks 4+: Serve 1 omelet as is.

For others: Serve 1 omelet as is.

Nutrition meter:

Calories: 122,21; Protein: 15.36g; Fat: 4.07g; Carbohydrates: 4.64g; Cholestrol: 15mg; Fiber: 0.05g; Sodium: 168.99mg

Two cool low (saturated) fat recipes

The crucial role of fat
It all comes down to fat. Fat supplies food with flavor, as well as helps to distribute the flavors of foods throughout your mouth. For instance, if you’ve ever tried to cut calories by serving vegetables plain rather tha drenched in butter, you’ve experienced fat’s facilitator role. Once you start to reduce the amount of fat in your favorite recipes, you need to up the taste in other ways.

Marvelous marinades
Clever health-conscious cooks have a repertoire of easy tips and techniques for losing the fat, but not the flavor. Consider marinades: If you’re a steak-lover, you know that lean cuts of meat like London broil are practically inedible if they are’nt marinated. Marinades work their magic thanks to the enzymes in their acidic ingredients – vinegar, citrus juice, wine, even yogurt – that help tenderzie lean cuts.

Chicken and fish reap the benefits of marinating as well. Because these foods are more tender than most meats, you’ll want to use a less acidic marinade or marinate them just briefly. Heed this advice; otherwise, they’ll be partially cooked before you get them near the heat. (Think of seviche, the Latin American seafood dish in which raw fish actually “cooks” in its lime juice marinade!)

Super stocks
In classic French cuisine, stocks are so important that they are known as the fond du cuisine – the foundation of cooking. If you’ver ever made a pot of soup with the bones from a roast and vegetables, you know how much more flavor a homemade stock provides. Although stocks from cans or cubes are certainly convenient, don’t be intimidated by making stock from scratch – not only is it easy, but it’s economical and environmental as well. Just stockpile vegetable peelings and trimmings, along with chicken or beef bones, in sealable plastic bags and freeze until you have the time to make your stock.

Delicious dressings
If you are drowning your greens in bottled salad dressing, it’s time to change your ways. Homemade dressings have flavors that their store-bought counterparts just can’t match. Many are simple to make; use these recipes as a starting point.

Once you’ve gotten the basics down, do a little experimentation: Try a fruit or herb vinegar, or use lemon or orange juice. Replace the oil with broth and a bit of honey (this helps to mimic the texture fat provides). Use different herbs or replace the mustard with horseradish.

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How good is butter for your health?

Butter stick

Butter stick

What could be better than a slice of fresh bread slathered with butter? Rich, buttery shortbreat, perhaps? A fish doused in a bath of brown butter and capers? Or simple pan juices enriched with a swirl of butter? In the kitchen, butter is a tasty and very useful fat. Butter melts at just below body temperature, giving it a luscious sensation on the tongue, and it imparts a rich, creamy taste. Just a litle butter adds flavor to everything we eat. Butter is also an excellent flavor carrier: spike it with garlic and herbs or sugar and orange and it delivers those flavors to everything it touches.

Love is like butter. It is good with bread. - Yiddish Proverb

Butter is unique in the world of fat. Unlike other animal fats, it doesn’t require that we kill an animal to obtain it, and without us it wouldn’t exist. But just what is butter, exactly? The science behind the transformation of liquid milk into a solid fat is not completely understood. Anyone who has been distracted while whipping cream knows how quickly it can turn to butter. Whipped too long, cream changes from a stable foam into a combination of fatty globules and a watery liquid, or buttermilk. Those fatty globules are not pure fat, but an emulsion of butterfat, water, and milk solids. The fat content of butter is naturally about 82% – this is the European standard for butter – although it can range upto 86%, depending on the cow and its diet. In North America, butter’s minimum fat content is set at 80%, so water is often added to lower the butterfat to the legal minimum. What’s in the other 20% of butter? Mostly water – around 18%, which explains the sizzle when butter hits a hot pan – and the rest is milk solids. Those milk solids will burn in the pan if the butter gets too hot, which is why butter is not the best fat for frying.

Guns will make us powerful; butter will only make us fat. - Hermann Goering

Butter is a very complex fat, containing more than 500 fatty acids and 400 volatile compounds, all of which determine its flavor. The breed of cow, its diet, and the season all affect the taste, texture, and look of butter. Most of us have forgotten that butter, like many foods, is seasonal.

If you take the cow’s milk and butter, you must accept her kicks, too. - Indian Proverb

In spring and early summer, butter is deeper yellow because the cows eat grass at this time of year, which has a high percentage of orange and yellow carotenes. The pasture is also filled with herbs and flowers, which gives the butter floral and herbal notes. In winter, the cow’s diet is supplemented with silage, so the butter is pale, higher in fat, firmer and milder in taste. There is a direct link between what the cow eats and the flavor of its butter, but most of us have never tasted herbs or flowers in our butter.

Butter spoils no meat. - Danish Proverb

Before the advent of refrigeration, butter shipped to towns and cities was highly salted to preserve it, but it still often went rancid and was sometimes adulterated. Only those who lived in the countryside and churned their own enjoyed the taste of fresh butter. Butter’s delicate flavor is so easily overwhelmed that most of us don’t know what good, fresh butter from grassfed cows tastes like.

To promise more butter than bread; to promise the best. - French Proverb

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