Posts Tagged ‘Food’

Choose Your Eating Habit With Healthy Food

January 22nd, 2010

As you may know, healthy eating habit is necessary for your life. For many people, health is the most expensive thing that should be taken from a lot of methods including how they choose the food to eat. It’s not only about delicious food, but it’s also all about balanced and moderate eating, consisting of healthy meals at least three times per day and exactly with a good menu. People need to eat many different types of foods, not limiting themselves to one specific food type or group. Food as a primary of people need precisely contains a lot of substances inside. Not at all of foods are good. Some of them even cause disease for human being. People need healthy food that can help to prevent or reduce the severity of diseases such as heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and others. It may also help reducing the risk of developing some cancers. A main way of combating obesity and overweight is to eat a healthy food. Choose your eating habit with healthy food isn’t difficult to do. These are some easy tips you can apply in your daily life and even you don’t need to spend much money because it’s cheap food.Eat Plenty Fruits and VegetablesIt is recommended that we eat at least 5 portions, and ideally 7-9 portions, of a variety of fruit or vegetables each day. They contain a lot of fibers which can help you keeping the bowels healthy. Be sure you serve fruit or vegetables at every meal.Eat nutritious healthy food It can give the body all the nutrition it needs in order to maintain good health. It shouldn’t contain any harmful substances. Some other good resources of nutrition are lean meat and protein resources, such as fish, eggs, beans, and nuts. Don’t eat too much fat, choose healthier cooking methodsDeep fried foods aren’t good for you and your family. Choose low fat dairy products and when you want to cook your recipes, try to cook them with better methods, such as broiling, grilling, roasting, and steaming. It’s better than fried ones which can give you fatty supply. But if you want to cook fries, choose liquid oils for cooking instead of solid fats that can be high in saturated and transform fats. Limit fast food and low nutrient snacksYour children usually like eating snacks and fast food such as candy, chips, soda, etc. You should limit it but don’t completely ban your favorite snacks at home. Make them ‘once in a while’ food, so kids don’t feel disappointed. Also beware with sugary drinks. Serve water and low fat milk instead.Eating too much of even healthful foods can lead to weight gain. Watch your portion sizes. It’s easy for food to become a source of conflict, but it’s better for you to change your daily habit of food consuming before disease attack your body. Trying to find more healthy recipe and food will give more benefits for your family life. Health is expensive, once you get healthy, more you can do.

For more information on healthy cheap food, please visit HealthyCheapFood.com, provides The Best and Quirkiest Recipes of Last Year
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The Best Food

January 20th, 2010

Everyone eats so everyone has an opinion about food. But if health is the objective, mere opinion doesn’t count nor does fad or majority rule.

Most people think the average cooked diet based upon official food pyramids is just fine. Some eat predominantly fast food. Others advocate veganism (eating only plant foods), or lacto-ova vegetarianism (plants plus milk and eggs). There are also proponents of special foods such as fresh juices, soybean products and macrobiotic cooked grains and rice.

Everyone can make arguments on behalf of their beliefs. They can cite examples of people who have escaped disease and lived long. Some argue morality and ethics, such as those who say sentient animal life should not be sacrificed for food. Others set their eating practices by the standards of holy writ that eschew certain forms of foods and sanctify others. Others just eat what tastes good and that’s logic enough for them.

Eating beliefs seem to take on an almost religious character. People feel guarded and pretty zealous about food and don’t like others meddling. But since health is intimately linked to what we take into our mouths, thinking, honest reflection and willingness to change are in order.

It is easy to be deceived because wrong food choices may not manifest their full impact until late in life. Nutrition can even pass through genetically to affect later generations. In this regard, food ideas are also like religion in that hundreds of different sects can each claim to have the truth. But none of them needs to fear disproof since adjudication will not occur until everyone is dead and gone to the afterlife.

The body is extremely adaptable and will attempt to survive on whatever it is given. If the food is incorrect there is usually no immediate harm. But the body will eventually be stressed beyond its ability to adapt, resulting in disease, degeneration and loss of vitality. Unfortunately, such consequences are so far removed in time from the eating regimen that caused them that few understand the relationship.

So be careful before subscribing to bold claims about what is or is not good to eat. The true test of any health idea lies too far out into the future. Our best hope then is to be well grounded philosophically before we slide our legs under the dinner table.

How do we develop a healthy eating philosophy and sort through all of the competing eating ideas? I am going to explain here a very simple principle that is so reasonable you need not even look for proofs. Follow along with me and see if you don’t agree.

Consider the following three premises:

1. Just like a tree is genetically adapted to absorb certain nutrients from soil, and a lion is genetically adapted to thrive on prey, and a deer is genetically adapted to browse on vegetation, so too, are humans genetically adapted to certain kinds of food.

2. The majority of foods we are presently exposed to are a product of the Agricultural/Industrial Revolution and occupy a small part of the genetic history of humans. (Refer back to the 276-mile time-line in which only a few inches represent industrial-type eating practices.)

3. The natural, genetically adapted to food for humans must predate them. In other words, how could humans exist before the food they needed to survive existed? We were completely developed biologically prior to agriculture and any method of food processing. That means whatever diet archetypal humans ate was the perfect diet because that was the diet responsible for the existence and development of the incredibly complex human organism. That diet was the milieu, the environmental nutritional womb, if you will, from which we sprung.

If you consider these three premises, the logical conclusion derived from them is that the best food for humans is that food which they would be able to eat as is, as it is found in nature.

Our tissues were designed to be bathed in food nutrients derived from natural living foods, not with dyes, preservatives, synthetics, nutritiously barren starches and refined sugars and oils. Make no mistake; if we are not eating according to this principle, our bodies are in constant deficiency, imbalance and toxin exposure. The result of generations ignoring this principle is an epidemic of obesity, chronic degenerative diseases and the exhaustion of our digestive processes.

A feature of all natural food is that it is raw – alive if you will. This is consistent with the Law of Biogenesis that says life can only come from preexisting life. Life begets life. In spite of scientists’ dreams to the contrary, we have never observed life springing from non-life, nor have we ever even been able to create life from non-life in a laboratory. If we eat living foods, we enhance our own life. If we eat dead, devitalized foods we become devitalized and dead. Granted, this will not happen all at once, but as the adaptive reserves are exhausted we become just like the dead food we eat.

So a fundamental feature of our natural diet was that it was raw. Yes, even the meats, organs, eggs and insects – raw. Remember, we’re far back in time, even before the use of fire (much less the microwave, stove, oven, grill, deep fryer or extruder). Studies of the diets of past cultures and today’s still-primitive societies reveals that they ate exactly as their genes and the environment dictated.

We were not suddenly dropped from outer space onto Earth with fry pans, matches and rotisseries. We began on the forest floor, not in a line to a fast food counter. We had only our natural bodies in a natural world, exactly like every other creature. Every other organism on Earth eats raw foods exactly like they are found in nature. Do you think nature doesn’t notice our decision to change all that?

Would tofu qualify? No, because tofu is found nowhere in nature. Would oatmeal porridge qualify? No, because oatmeal porridge is found nowhere in nature. Would hamburgers, French fries, pop, breakfast cereals, granola, canned foods, candy, sports drinks, muscle building powders, vitamins and minerals, mashed potatoes, carrot cake, croissants, bagels, Jolly Ranchers, Ding Dongs, Cocoa Krispies, Good ‘n Plentys or Fig Newtons qualify? No. None of these are found as such in nature.

For those of you who are by now panicking (if not gagging) at the thought of eating raw foods, yes, there is danger of food-borne pathogens. But if you are careful and clean, the danger is far less than the danger of a lifetime eating devitalized processed foods. Raw natural foods must be safe or our ancestors would have not survived and we would not exist!

It is a choice. When faced with a choice, why not opt for the wisdom of nature? Is it not strange we are the only creatures on the planet to cook our foods? Is it a wonder, given this, that we succumb with every imaginable chronic degenerative disease virtually unknown in creatures eating the raw natural diet?

Simply think of yourself placed in nature in the total absence of modern technology. Ask yourself the question, what would I eat… and what could I eat? You could eat and digest fruits, nuts, insects, a few plants, honey, worms, grubs, eggs, milk and animal flesh. These are about the only food substances in nature humans are capable of digesting without technological (including fire) intervention. These are, in fact, the very foods that are the mainstay of nomadic primitive societies. Only when these foods become scarce do unpalatable, inedible foods such as most grains and vegetables become cooked and processed to change their palatability, neutralize toxins and increase digestibility.

So that is where we have been. But does this have anything to do with us here today in the 21st century microwave age? It has everything to do with us because it is this expansive historical context that served as the womb that shaped and defined us. It is this natural wild setting that occupies the vast majority of our history and predominates our genetics. It is the incubator within which life on planet Earth has developed.

What would have been the predominant food in the wild? Likely prey. Envision yourself placed back in time in that setting with a family to feed. You would be looking for the most calorie- and nutrient-dense foods you could find. That would not be a few wheat seeds, some grass or a root. You would let the herbivores do all the grazing and digestion with their specialized stomachs that are capable of converting essentially any plant material into edible protein and fat. Then you would eat them. I don’t like that either, but that is the way it is.

Pretty simple isn’t it? We should eat what nature provides that we can digest. Yet this is not explained in nutrition textbooks, and PhD nutritionists graduate without even grasping it. It cuts through all the theory, belief, and guesswork. It matches our natural bodies with our natural food.

Our immersion in modern cookery and food processing has misled us. Foods such as granola, tofu, cauliflower and lettuce, which are marketed as the ultimate health foods, are in fact not natural human foods at all. These products either do not exist in nature, are so scarce as to never possibly be a sustaining food, or in their raw precooked form are unpalatable and even toxic.

For example, raw soybeans contain a variety of chemicals that can stunt growth and interfere with the body’s digestive enzymes. Eat enough of them and you’ll die. Modern grain products are a result of agriculture and in their raw form are unpalatable, indigestible and also toxic. In nature one would never find enough kernels of rice, wheat or barley to even make up a meal, even if they were edible in their raw form. (Sprouted seeds and grains are an exception to this since they are digestible, raw and nutritious.)

Who, if they were really, really hungry – and options were available – would eat raw broccoli, cauliflower or lettuce? These foods are only now made palatable by cooking or doctoring with manufactured dressings.

Now this creates somewhat of a dilemma. Knowing what our natural diet is and consuming it are two different things. We are so acclimated to the modern diet that the notion of eating raw meat, for example, is nauseating to most. Nevertheless, as evidenced by primitive (but nutritionally advanced) peoples, raw meat and organs can be eaten with great nutritional benefit to humans, and they are totally digestible and nontoxic. Some cultures even bury raw meats and let them rot (ferment) and then consume them with gusto. These societies are robustly healthy until modern foods encroach. Then, like a dirty bathtub ring, modern degenerative diseases decimate those people at the periphery in contact with modern foods.

It would be very difficult today to achieve the ideal raw, natural diet. But if the basic principle is kept in mind it helps remind us of our origins and points us to the appropriate, genetically adapted-to foods.

This does not mean no processed or cooked foods should be eaten. It simply means that consistently doing so will stress the body’s genetic capabilities and will ultimately result in less than optimal health.

Look around the grocery store (usually the outside aisles) and consider what it is that could be eaten in its natural state. Increase the proportion of those foods. Processed foods should be chosen that compromise natural principles the least and are as close to nature as possible. They should be whole foods, packaged carefully to protect nutrient value and be free of synthetics, refined oils and sugars.

For example, whole milk yogurt that has not been homogenized or pasteurized is ideal. The same thing pasteurized would be next best. The same thing pasteurized and homogenized next. Worst would be non-fat, pasteurized, homogenized, artificially flavored and sugared yogurt (which is, of course, what the majority eat because it tastes most like what they are used to – candy).

Eat the best foods you can find in variety and moderation and you will be doing the best that can be done.

There, you have in a nutshell what has taken me decades of research, study and thinking to discover. It is simple and obvious, but that is the way of all great truths.

For further reading, or for more information about, Dr Wysong and the Wysong Corporation please visit www.wysong.net or write to wysong@wysong.net. For resources on healthier foods for people including snacks, and breakfast cereals please visit www.cerealwysong.com.

Dr. Wysong: A former veterinary clinician and surgeon, college instructor in human anatomy, physiology and the origin of life, inventor of numerous medical, surgical, nutritional, athletic and fitness products and devices, research director for the present company by his name and founder of the philanthropic Wysong Institute. http://www.wysong.net. Also check out http://www.cerealwysong.com.
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Airport Food

January 17th, 2010

I flew out to Utah recently and was shocked by how many people choose to purchase the worst available food in the entire airport. Hordes of people crowded into the fast food vending areas, eating greasy, sugar-injected, over-salted, saturated fat infested crap by the mouthful.

There I was, in Chicago on a layover when I started to feel a little hungry, so I took a little walk to assess my choices.  There was a generic sit-down restaurant, a health-food store, and a fast food joint.  I chose to walk into the health-food store and purchased a meal replacement bar, a fresh fruit cup, and a fresh salad.  I was in and out of the store in just minutes, less time than anyone waiting in line for their heart-attack on a sesame seed bun.  If you haven’t seen the documentary about the guy eating all the fast food from one restaurant in particular, I strongly recommend making your self watch it.  The option was there, I was the only person making the healthier choice.

America really needs to slow down for a few minutes and take a long scrutinizing look at the way we eat and live, we are hurting ourselves on many levels; our bodies are falling apart, we are hurting the health care system, insurance policies are continuously rocketing parallel with the rise in health issues. Pharmaceutical companies are profiting immensely, primarily because we do not know how to, or we are too lazy to take care of ourselves.  We eat crap, we don’t exercise, and we abuse our bodies. Everyone feels like crap, everyone has some kind of health issue or another that could be avoided or corrected by making better lifestyle choices.  Your doctor puts you on a cholesterol lowering medication because you won’t lose excess weight or seriously change your eating habits; that pill seems to work for a few months, and then a side effect occurs that requires some other medication. Sometimes the list goes on like a local drug store inventory record. Every time we feel different or sick we think we need a drug; usually just masking the underlying problem by numbing your existence while potentially causing other adverse health issues.

It is odd to me, that most people are so quick to provide the excuse that they cannot afford to eat healthy, purchase vitamins, or cannot afford to spend money at a local gym, or on purchasing minimal exercise equipment, yet these same people can afford to smoke regularly, purchase coffee regularly, pay for cable in order to sit in a stupor several hours every week, purchase soda or junk food regularly, make several trips to the vending machine a week, go out to lunch a few times a week, and even splurge on an indulgent couple of drinks or cocktails regularly. And as for using time as an excuse; the average American spends more than 4 hours every day on their butts watching some degenerative television programming. It is a matter of priority, not resources. No more excuses, there is no better time than now to improve yourself!  Follow Rob, AKA ExerciseMan, on Twitter.com.  He talks about exercise, diet, and overall health.

I am a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and I work as a personal trainer with everyday people from 8 to 90 years old, and athletes of all ages. I have also studied nutrition for a number of years as it goes hand in hand with personal training. I love to share information that can be beneficial to others on the subject!
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The 10 Top Tips On Cooking Food

January 13th, 2010

If you are as busy as most people you are always looking for ways to feed your family in convenient, fast, yet not-too-expensive ways. Try the following suggestions:1. Cooking several meals for the week at one time. It may take a few hours of your time up front but will pay off in the long run when you come home each evening and have a meal ready to eat in a short amount of time. Try cooking a roast and using part of it as a main meal and then using some for sandwiches, beef stroganoff or as part of a stir-fry. Fry several pounds of hamburger and make a casserole, taco meat and chili to freeze for use later in the week.2. After you return home from the grocery store clean all the fruits and vegetables you can. When it’s time for a meal all you will have to do is cook them or add them to a salad or soup.3. Get ideas from the cooking shows on T.V. There are great shows that show you how to make a healthy meal in a short time.4. Develop a revolving recipe file. If you get bogged down by the idea of having to plan 30 meals a month the recipe file is for you. Let family members choose some of their favorites and put the recipes in a monthly file. Flip to day five or fifteen and there is the meal just waiting to be cooked.5. Enlist the help of the members of your family. As soon as the kids are old enough divide up the cooking responsibilities. Let everyone take turns with specific tasks or the whole meal. Pair these meals with fruit and veggies that have already been washed and cut-up and you are ready for dinner.6. Share the cooking with friends or neighbors. I’ve known people who cook four or five of the same meal and then trade with four or five other people. This works best when people share the same basic ideas on what they like and don’t like. It’s a great idea though for a very easy week of evening meals.7. Save coupons for those convenience things at the grocery store. They have entire entrees and dinners either fresh or frozen. Sometimes they are rather pricy but with the coupons they are good to have on hand for an evening when everyone is running in different directions and time is of the essence.8. It’s O.K. to eat out from time to time. Clip coupons for these occasions and if you have kids keep a look-out for the places that have special prices for children. Some of the fast-food restaurants are trying to offer item choices that are a little more healthy.9. Many larger cities have businesses that prepare food for the evening meal. They seem expensive at first but are so convenient and available for one person or entire families. There are many menu choices and meals cooked for special diets. When you calculate the groceries you buy and the times you eat out each week, this may work for you.10. Combine several of the above ideas into a plan that is best for you.It is possible with a little planning to cook meals that are quick and easy without spending hours in the kitchen every day.

Poor Nutrition Equals Poor Health

January 11th, 2010

Nearly 30% of Americans are now considered obese. This statistic is downright startling! Not only is this trend affecting adults, but it is setting a tone and creating an example for our children. Our busy work lives, money problems, stress and anxiety, combined with the ease and price of obtaining processed or fast foods, all lead to people becoming heavier and unhealthier. We lack time, knowledge and a desire more often than not, to plan ahead, prepare our foods or make good choices.

If that wasn’t enough, the amount of conflicting data and opinions that float around make it even more difficult for us to know what is true and what is false, what we should eat and what we shouldn’t. Each day, reports on new studies arise that debunk a previous study done on a food that was supposed to be a healthy choice. It’s nearly impossible for anyone to keep up with the latest scientific news, and as a result, we take the easy route, give up and turn to easy to prepare, but unhealthy meal choices or the ever popular, fast food.

It’s up to each and every one of us to look after our health. If you’re healthy, you have far more energy to spend with family and friends. You can pursue your interests, take a class, go skydiving, camping, hiking or join a sports team. Your life will be fuller, you will be setting a better example, and the time spent on learning about health and exercising, is paid back tenfold over the long term as you live longer and spend more time with your friends and family.

Possible Health Issues

As you age, weight issues become more and more of a problem. Child obesity rates are soaring, and an unhealthy child usually leads to an unhealthy adult. There are a myriad of health problems that you can fall prey to if you’re overweight. Below are just a few of them.

What Can I do about it?

As you can see from the list above, many of the health risks can be debilitating, and can put your life at serious risk. There are a number of things you can do to prevent this from happening to you.

Knowledge is power. Learning about the types of foods that are good for you is crucial if you want to lose weight. A nutrition coach is your best bet, since it’s their job to be aware of what foods are best, and how they affect your body and teach you what you need to know.

Meal planning and tracking are a great way to ensure proper weight management and progress. Your daily diet is the very first thing you should look at if you want to control weight issues. Included in your daily diet assessment is meal timing. Far too often, people believe that proper nutrition is solely the types of foods you eat. Unfortunately, it is not that simple, as there is far more that goes into it but, good nutrition coaching can make the process more manageable. Programs such as those offered by eFitness for Life do just this. We have one goal, help as many people as possible get in shape and learn about proper nutrition, including supplementation and vitamin and mineral intake.

The first step to weight management is recognizing the issue and seeking help. Many people feel embarrassed by their weight, and instead of asking for help, they continue down the same path, which inevitably leads to a lower quality of life, health problems and shorter life spans. By combining proper nutrition, healthy supplementation and exercise, you can control weight issues, lose fat and gain muscle. It is possible, and eFitness for Life would love the opportunity to help you. Together we can make a difference.

By now, everyone should know the importance of physical fitness and fitness training programs, but not very many of us recognize the true value of healthy meal plans as well. Irrelevant of the types of fitness training you use, be sure you have a balanced healthy diet to go with it.

For those that need a little extra assistance, direction or motivation, visit eFitness for Life now and see how our fitness training plans and weekly diet meal plans can help you make the most of your investment, in the shortest possible time, with the greatest return. Our goal is to teach you the values of physical fitness and how to create healthy meal plans for a lifetime! All done online! All done with certified coaches! Truly, the Future of Fitness! Stop by today and we will be happy to build your starter programs to ensure you learn to live longer, healthier lives.

Learn the benfit of physical fitness and a balanced healthy diet NOW! Get started and provide you and your family with a healthy lifestyle! Risk-Free Trial, take advantage today!

Jason J. Horsley is the CEO/Founder of eFitness for Life an online fitness and nutrition coaching solution that provides an affordable, convenient alternative to conventional, expensive dietitians and personal training. Through both eFitness for Life and Health and Wealth for Life, Jason is using his 15+ years in the fitness industry to help individuals across the globe not only look better, but feel better and live longer. The eFitness for Life team is made up of coaches/trainers around the US, working with clients throughout the world via the World Wide Web and the state-of-the-art eFitnessTracker software!

Visit our new blog at http://www.healthandwealthforlife.net. Tell us what you think.
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Health & Nutrition

January 11th, 2010

 

What are nutrients?

Every molecule in the body is created by Nutrients & there are more than 45 nutrients. These nutrients build molecules, cells, and tissues of the body.

We get energy from Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats that we eat. These are called macronutrients. These macro nutrients are broken down / metabolized to give energy to the body. Vitamins and minerals (called micronutrients) are not themselves metabolized for energy, but they are important in helping the macronutrients convert to energy.

 

What is a healthy diet?

The optimal diet has to be individualized to meet your unique needs. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) food pyramid suggests that we use fat “sparingly,” and that our daily diet include 2 – 3 servings of dairy products; 2 – 3 servings of meat, poultry, fish, eggs, beans, or nuts; 3 – 5 servings of vegetables; 2 – 4 servings of fruit; and 6 – 11 servings of bread, cereal, rice, or pasta.

 

These are general guidelines. Healthy diet is dependent upon many factors like: age, gender, body size, pregnancy, and status of health. A clinical nutritionist or nutritionally oriented doctor can help you determine what type of diet is best for you.

 

While you know it is important to eat a healthy diet, it isn’t always easy to sort through all of the information available about nutrition and food choices.  Nutrition has a vital importance to human well-being.  Nutrition should play a leading role to improve our quality of life. Nutrition is a key for reducing your body fat percentage. 

 

Better nutrition means stronger immune systems, less illness and better health.  Better nutrition is a prime entry point to ending poverty and a milestone to achieving better quality of life.  Safe food and good nutrition are important to all.  Basic nutrition knowledge is constantly taking shape every day, producing new diet trends to an ever growing audience of people who want to know the latest and greatest ways to achieve their physical fitness goals. 

 

Get nutrition facts and discover how you can use dietary recommendations to improve your health.  As you grow older, getting a nutritionally rich diet becomes even more important.  The link between nutrition and health is necessary to achieve optimal health.  Good nutrition is a clear path to optimize our quality of life. An important starting point for achieving optimum health is to achieve optimum nutrition and get the proper nutrients from the food.  Diet and nutrition are the principle preventive measures against diseases. 

 

Reading labels and eating a diet rich in vitamins and nutrients is optimal for healthy nutrition.  Research confirms that good nutrition in the early years of life is crucial for human growth and mental development. The study of human nutrition dates back to the 18th century, when the French chemist Lavoisier discovered that there was a relationship between our metabolism of food and the process of breathing.

 

The field of clinical nutrition has evolved into a practice that is increasingly incorporated into mainstream medical treatment. The term “nutritional supplement” refers to vitamins, minerals, and other food components that are used to support good health and treat illness. 

 

A clinical nutritionist or nutritionally oriented doctor can help you determine what type of diet is best for you. During the initial part of the visit, the clinical nutritionist will ask you questions about your medical history, family history, and personal lifestyle.  In hospitals, nutrition is used to improve the overall health of patients with a wide range of conditions.  Effects of exercise and nutrition on postural balance and risk of falling in elderly people with decreased bone mineral density: randomized controlled trial pilot study. 

 

Proper nutrition is a powerful good: people who are well nourished are more likely to be healthy, productive and able to learn.  Good nutrition benefits families, their communities and the world as a whole. Malnutrition is, by the same logic, devastating.

 

Healthy Lifestyle

 

Healthy people are stronger, are more productive and more able to create opportunities to gradually break the cycles of both poverty and hunger in a sustainable way.  Healthy eating is associated with reduced risk for many diseases, including the three leading causes of death: heart disease, cancer, and stroke.  Healthy eating is fundamental to good health and is a key element in healthy human development, from the prenatal and early childhood years to later life stages. 

 

Healthy eating is equally important in reducing the risk of many chronic diseases.  We spend a lot of money on food, but there are ways to cut costs and still serve healthy delicious meals.  When you choose healthy foods instead of sugary or high-fat foods you can actually improve your health by adding extra phytochemicals and fiber.  Breakfast foods should be healthy but they have a tendency to be high in fats and sugar. 

 

We always hear that breakfast is the most important meal of the day, so why ruin a healthy breakfast.  Good nutrition is vital to good health, disease prevention, and essential for healthy growth and development of children and adolescents.  Fiber is an important part of a healthy diet. 

 

Many of us work very hard to eat healthy meals, but struggle with the urge for candy, cookies, cakes, ice cream and anything else full of sugar and sweetness.  Most experts agree that snacking is a part of a balanced and healthy diet, as long as the snacks don’t pile on empty calories. 

 

When your best efforts go awry, and you order pizza or serve another meal that doesn’t exactly fit into a healthy diet, you still have many options for making it healthier.  Just about everyone knows that fruits and vegetables are a very important part of a healthy diet.  Having a well-stocked pantry and refrigerator can be a busy cook’s best weapon in the war against resorting to fast-food, high-fat, unhealthy meals.  Fresh oil is a source of essential fatty acids, which help keep the skin healthy and the hair shiny. 

 

We believe eating sensibly, combined with appropriate exercise, is the best solution for a healthy lifestyle.

 

Foods

 

When you choose healthy foods instead of sugary or high-fat foods you can actually improve your health by adding extra phytochemicals and fiber. The goal is to balance negative foods with positive foods so that the combined rating for all foods eaten in a single day is positive. 

 

If you want to restrict your caloric intake without feeling hungry, find foods highest in any vitamin or mineral or lowest in carbs, saturated fats, or sugars.  Our general state of health is partially driven by the types of foods we consume. To make vegetable oils suitable for deep frying, the oils are hydrogenated, so trans fats are commonly found in deep-fried foods such as French fries and doughnuts. Trans fats, beyond a limit, are not good for our health. 

 

Hydrogenation solidifies liquid oils and increases the shelf life and the flavor stability of oils and foods that contain them.  Other sources of trans fats are vegetable shortenings, some margarines, crackers, cookies, snack foods, and other foods.  Since trans fats increase a products shelf life, many pre-prepared foods and mixes (for example, some pancake mixes and pizza dough) contain trans fats. 

 

The solution: Whenever possible, eat whole, fresh, and unprocessed foods.  When buying packaged foods, put in at least as much time into reading labels and selecting products as you do when choosing a shower gel or shampoo.  A good diet is central to overall good health, but which are the best foods to include in your meals, and which ones are best avoided. 

 

Fast food has become much more popular of late and all over the world the out cry regarding harms of fast foods is on increase. 

 

Be aware that there is little scientific information about the effect of so-called functional foods –foods to which vitamins, minerals, herbs, or other dietary substances are added — despite their growing popularity in the market place and claims of beneficial effects. 

 

Some common foods, including nuts, wheat gluten, dairy products, fish, shrimp, soy, bananas and eggs may trigger allergic reactions.

 

Fat

 

Fats add taste to meals and give one a feeling of fullness when eaten.  When you choose healthy foods instead of sugary or high-fat foods you can actually improve your health by adding extra phytochemicals and fiber.  Breakfast foods should be healthy but they have a tendency to be high in fats and sugar.  The human brain is almost entirely composed of unsaturated fatty acids. 

 

You deprive yourself of more than fats when you go for the fat-free or low-fat salad dressing.  We need fats to absorb all the beneficial elements of salads and other fruits and vegetables.  Learn which are the right types of fats, to create beautiful, supple skin, and a healthy body. 

 

Eating more whole foods is a good way to replace many of the processed snacks and foods that have a lot of extra sugar, fat (including trans fat), salt, and other things added to them and a lot of good things taken out, like fiber.  In addition to food labeled fat-free and low fat, healthy low fat foods include most fruits and vegetables. 

 

Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats (called macronutrients) are broken down (metabolized) to give the body energy.  For example, lowering fat and cholesterol intake and adding whole grains to the diet can prevent atherosclerosis (plaque build up in the arteries), which can lead to heart disease or stroke. 

 

Fish is high in omega-3 fatty acids, which are essential components of cells and can protect the heart from, for example, fatal arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythm).  Omega-3 fatty acids found in cold water fish (such as herring, tuna, and salmon) have been reported to reduce inflammation and help prevent certain chronic diseases, such as heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. 

 

 

Safe food and good nutrition are important to all. Basic nutrition knowledge is constantly taking shape every day, producing new diet trends to an ever growing audience of people who want to know the latest and greatest ways to achieve their physical fitness goals. 

 

Did you know that you can drastically decrease your chance of heart disease and cancer by eating a healthy diet and following the recommended nutrition guidelines? 

 

 

Proper nutrition is a powerful good: people who are well nourished are more likely to be healthy, productive and able to learn.  Good nutrition benefits families, their communities and the world as a whole.  Malnutrition is, by the same logic, devastating.

 

 

By: Pradeep Mahajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Author is a free-lance writer. He is an engineer-MBA and management consultant by profession & practice. Also visit www.health-fitness-wellness.com for more useful & interesting information on health, fitness & wellness.
This article is available for reprint on your website and/or in your newsletter, provided it is not changed and you include the author’s web-site address.

Diet, Detoxify, Exercise, Supplement, Rest, Sunshine, Positive Thoughts – the 7 Things You Must Do for Your Health

January 10th, 2010

 

The most important of those seven things is most likely your diet. Sometime around 431 B.C., Hippocrates said, “Let food by thy Medicine.” And in 1930 A.D., Victor Rocine said, “If we eat wrongly, no doctor can cure us; if we eat rightly, no doctor is needed.” Both understood the importance of consuming a healthy diet, which includes the right foods for our body. All foods have different properties, so that you need to know how to plan your diet in order to achieve the correct balance specifically for you. Even if you were to eat only healthy foods, you would need to balance what you eat correctly. Of course, few people eat a healthy diet, which only adds to the causes of possible health problems. If you are overweight (which has its own set of problems) and love to procrastinate, you may be doing irreversible damage to your health. So you must start now to make improvements.

If you are thinking that you want to enjoy life to the fullest by eating what you want, when you want, while saying to yourself, “I’ll worry about the consequences later, at least I’ll be enjoying myself now,” it is time to re-evaluate that thought. Eventually, you will no longer be enjoying yourself. Your health will start declining (maybe this has already happened). It may start so slowly you’ll hardly notice, until one day, you realize that your health has deteriorated, and when you go to the doctor, you may find out you have diabetes, cancer, heart disease, or any other of a number of problems.

Years ago, in a photography class, the professor said, “eliminate as many variable as possible to get the best results.” That applies to diet and health as well. There are many variables in the foods we eat – they may contain dyes, acids, artificial flavors and sweeteners, sugar, texturizers, nitrates, nitrites, preservatives, hydrogenated oils, genetic modifications, and more. They may have been grown in poor conditions and have been sitting on store shelves for days. Then you buy them and overcook them. With all these variables, perhaps you can begin to see why you are having problems. Never forget that we are what we eat (and these days, what we are exposed to in the environment). The food we can do something about. Check labels, and the best advice is to not buy nor consume foods with the items listed above. That would include most processed and fast foods. Once you eliminate these items from your diet, your food will actually start to taste better, although it may take several weeks.

After you’ve started eating a healthy diet, you need to cleanse and detoxify your major elimination organs to assist your body in getting rid of toxins you’ve accumulated over the years. This will help keep you toxin free, feeling great, and help prevent disease.

Your diet will probably be the most difficult thing to change. However, there are many resources available on the Internet to help you with your diet and to stay fit forever. If you’re a couch potato, then exercise may be about as difficult, although you probably have the “rest” thing down to a science. A good place to start, after checking with your health practitioner, might be your local gym or a personal trainer. As for supplements, a good multivitamin is a good base to start with, then you may want to add individual nutrients depending on your needs. As for sunshine, early in the day or late afternoon is best. Once your health returns and/or you start feeling better and have more energy, it will become much easier to think positive thoughts, although you should begin immediately as this will help you reach your goals. Please visit http://stayfit4ever.com for more information.

 

Tony received his MS degree in Holistic Nutrition in 1995. He owned a health food/vitamin store for 8 years, and has been in the health nutrition field for 15 years, talking with and helping thousands of people with their health needs.
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Prepare Your Own Food For Health

January 3rd, 2010

If you eat fast food every day for lunch, try having it just every other day. When you start by taking small steps, it does not seem like you are cutting out all of the foods you love and you can take your time to learn about healthy foods which, believe it or not, you can love equally as well. Who would not agree to that old adage – health is wealth.

Life is so much better if you are free of disease and you can enjoy an active life style. Proper diet and adding good exercise can keep many diseases at bay.If the body receives the proper nutrition, it is better for the immune system in it’s fight against infections and free radicals in the body. When your immune system is healthy, if you get ill, recovery is much faster.

Cook at home. Home cooking provides a better control of food and noticeably reduces consumption of trans fat, sugar, salt, and numerous food additives. Commercially prepared foods like hamburgers, hot dogs, fried potatoes, chips, cakes, and crackers are probably the biggest source of trans fats in our diet. Make your own pizzas, burgers, cakes and other things you like. Sure it takes time, but what is your health worth?

cook with the seasons and use ingredients that are as fresh and locally produced as you can get without undue expense or hassle. Organic produce is desired because it is better for you and the dirt. We don’t think about it, but fertile dirt is a precious resource. Without it, we don’t eat.

Cooking at home also provides a more relaxed, laid back, slower atmosphere for the meal. Joy is a wonderful anti-aging remedy, so enjoy and savor your food! When you eat slowly, you taste the food more and you are satisfied with less. Eating slowly gradually reduces your appetite right from the time you start to eat. Mealtime is fun and relaxing. It’s a time to catch up with friends and family and enjoy each others’ company. I believe that it’s really important to be relaxed and ready to eat. Relaxation aids digestion and nutrient absorption.

The hard part about cooking at home is that you sometimes find yourself at a loss for what to make. Here you are going through the cupboards trying to please everyone with something interesting but everyone responds with “no I don’t like that” or “no thats boring” or “no we had that 2 days ago”.

Most of us never know that many of the tasty and rich dishes as well as the side dishes that we relish at parties, receptions and restaurents were in fact prepared very quickly and easily with little effort. Therefore this means that if you have the will and ideas, you too can make many delicious dishes during a special occasion with little time. The trick is to choose a simple meat dish and dress it up with more decadent side dishes. You will be surprised to know that the rich side dishes which were in greater number then the meat dish, were, in fact very simple and easily made while the main meat dish had to be prepared with great culinary skills.

I usually don’t cook with precise measurements and like to vary the dishes seasonally. After you follow a recipe once, play around with seasonings the next time to suite your own tastes better and use what you have on hand. Another useful tip for cooking for special occasions is never cook anything that is foreign to you or you don’t really know about its process as this will take a lot of your time and you may make mistakes.

When you are on a journey to healthier eating and preparing healthy meals, it can be challenging because many of the foods you prepare may seem bland and frankly, boring. To compensate, you turn to seasoning spices, which are a terrific way of adding flair to your healthy meals, making it much easier for you and your whole family to enjoy. When we are trying to eat healthy we often use spices to make our dishes more appealing and exciting.

Dinner is a great classic. That is the time when families bond; daily activities are shared; we reveal our secrets and form lifetime memories. Not enough people make the time for an enjoyable dinner with friends and family and great food. Take-out has taken over. The positive thing to cooking at home is that it’s made with all KNOWN ingredients and your not surprised by what ends up in your dish or what ends up on your waistline.

The author has found a site with something for everyone who is looking for that one special recipe or a book full of special recipes. There is also a club you can join for a continuous supply of new ones. Go to;
http://eathealthyathome2.blogspot.com/

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Fast Food Restaurants- An American Culture

January 2nd, 2010

As a staple of life our need to eat has developed from a basic form of simply feeding our bodies with the fuel it requires, to a complicated art of presentation and taste combined with our intrinsic need to experiment with everything we see, touch, smell and of course taste. The ever-increasing divergence of foods that is now available to us at our local stores and eating-places only help to confuse and tantalise us into new culinary experiments and delights. From the sandwich shop to the award winning restaurants, we can always find a place that prepares and sells the food we want at a reasonable price, although cooking or preparing food for ourselves may be a cheaper or healthier option it never seems to taste the same as our local restaurant. Most people that have cooked their own versions and varieties of local, Chinese, Indian or other international cuisine believes it does not have the same taste or texture and will often opt for a more authentic meal from their local restaurant or take away. Cooking at home has become less of a choice and more of a chore. With the large amount of ready meals available, the option of spending time in the kitchen becomes less and less appealing. People are spending more of their time and money in the world of fast foods and restaurants. Although some believe this to be a bad thing it has fuelled a new market in available meals that are only a phone call away. As long as the health and hygiene departments vet these establishments and our choices are varied, of good quality and healthy their use can be a good alternative to cooking our own meals. With the onset of fast foods and the quick cook and ready cooked meals available along with the ever increasing choice of world cuisine, the enjoyment of these different foods have opened new options to the consumer within the food market. In today’s busy world where leisure time has become more and more important, the less time spent working and preparing to eat allows us more available time for our pursuit of our leisure activities. People who do not have the ability, time or will to cook at home now only have to pick up the phone book or click on the Internet in order to find their local restaurant or fast food retailer that will be more than happy to deliver the freshly prepared hot food ready to eat straight to their door with minimum fuss. Although the fast food retailers compete with each other fiercely, using their special offers and cheaper and healthier alternatives to entice us to their premises, the main stay of traditional restaurants still hold an important part in our lives. Even though these places are vastly out numbered by the fast food industry, we still enjoy sitting down in the nice comfortable and pleasant surroundings of a restaurant and dining on good quality food at a leisurely pace, leaving behind the hustle and bustle of daily life and the fast food rush. Traditional restaurants will always offer us that pleasant alternative to eating at home, ordering take out from our local fast food dispenser or visiting their drive through or small busy café style restaurants. Not forgetting those special occasions or romantic rendezvous, these still command the need for that quiet stylish quality restaurant where we know that the food wine and service will always be excellent and the experience wonderful and charming.

Eating on the Go – Avoid the Fast Food Trap!

December 31st, 2009

“I am on the go” – an expression we often hear, is often accompanied with a bad habit of poor eating choices. With a little bit of behavior change and discipline, ditching the fast food for a healthier alternative can easily be done.

If you are on a bad spiral of being ‘on the go’ coupled with unhealthy fast food eating habits, do yourself a favor and make a change. Here are some tips.

Your best bet is to ‘brown bag’ it. Follow this simple procedure:Step 1: Get a small size cooler, one big enough for a small freezer pack to keep food cool. Step 2: Pack your meals and snacks.

Okay, it is a little more involved than that. What to pack?

Passionately involved with helping others achieve weight loss and fitness goals for 20 years, author David P. Morrow shares all of his discoveries in: “Fat Into The Fire” ‘The simple missing links to maximize metabolism, energy, and yourself’. State Of Mind, Fuel, and Physical. His goal is to provide guidance, motivation, and education.
He offers free monthly e-newsletters at http://fatintothefire.com/ where you will also find a wealth of information regarding health, fitness, and wellness.
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