Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Oct 6, 2010

Nutrition Myths You Should Stop Believing

Nutrition Myths You Should Stop Believing
Some nutrition myths bounce around on crazy e-mail chain letters and pop up on goofy evening news reports. Others fuel the sale of rip-off diet books. Some are so accepted they seem hardwired into our brains. Take deep-fried foods, for example. They’re universally bad for you, right? Well, no. When we challenged ourselves to explore whether fried foods could be made healthy, we discovered that, when done properly, fried foods don’t have to be forever banished from a healthy diet.
The exercise inspired us to take on some other ingrained nutrition misconceptions. We talked with leading nutrition researchers, chefs, and food scientists and did some sleuthing of our own to debunk 6 myths so you can enjoy many once-forbidden foods without that old familiar twinge of guilt.

Myth 1. Added sugar is always bad for you.
Truth Use the sweet stuff to ensure that sugar calories are far from “empty” calories.
Sugar is essential in the kitchen. Consider all that it does for baking, creating a tender cake crumb and ensuring crisp cookies. Then there’s its role in creating airy meringue or soft-textured ice cream. Keep in mind that other sweeteners like “natural” honey are basically refined sugar anyway—and they are all metabolized by your body the same way, as 4 calories per gram. Sugar also balances the flavors in healthy foods that might not taste so great on their own. Don’t go overboard, of course. Most health experts suggest that added sugar supply no more than 10 percent of your total calories—about 200 in a 2,000-calorie diet.

Good news: A little sugar can go a long way.
Adding a wee bit of sugar to balance a too-tart tomato sauce is a good thing; so is a teaspoon of honey on a tart grapefruit half or in plain yogurt. “Add a little bit of sugar to help boost your intake of nutrient-rich foods by making them tastier,” says Jackie Newgent, RD, author of the All-Natural Diabetes Cookbook.
In this refreshing palate cleansing sorbet, sugar tames the tartness of grapefruit juice. And with just two ingredients, it could not be simpler to prepare. A serving delivers about two-thirds of your RDA for vitamin C, and only 145 calories.

Myth 2. Eating eggs raises your cholesterol levels.
Truth Dietary cholesterol found in eggs has little to do with the amount of cholesterol in your body.
The confusion can be boiled down to semantics: The same word, "cholesterol," is used to describe two different things. Dietary cholesterol—the fat-like molecules in animal-based foods like eggs —doesn’t greatly affect the amount of cholesterol circulating in your bloodstream. Your body makes its own cholesterol, so it doesn’t need much of the kind you eat. Instead, what fuels your body’s cholesterol-making machine is certain saturated and trans fats. Eggs contain relatively small amounts of saturated fat. One large egg contains about 1.5 grams saturated fat, a fraction of the amount in the tablespoon of butter many cooks use to cook that egg in. So, cutting eggs out of your diet is a bad idea; they're a rich source of 13 vitamins and minerals.

Good news: Eggs of all kinds are fine.
The kind of cholesterol found in eggs doesn’t affect the cholesterol in your blood, so go ahead and enjoy eggs for breakfast, lunch, or dinner, guilt-free. In healthy people, “the research with eggs has never shown any link of egg consumption with blood lipids or with risk of heart disease,” says Don Layman, PhD, professor emeritus in the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Make this Mexican scrambled egg dish for dinner, brunch, or for a hearty breakfast. Leave all the seeds in the jalapeño if you want a spicier kick, adjust the hot pepper sauce to taste, and throw in your favorite ad-ins to create a satisfying meal for four.

Myth 3: All saturated fats raise blood cholesterol.
Truth New research shows that some saturated fats don't.
Just when we’d all gotten comfortable with the idea that there are good-for-you mono- and polyunsaturated fats (like those found in olive oil and walnuts), along comes new research calling into question the one principle most health professionals thought was sacrosanct: All saturated fat is bad. Researchers have long known that there are many kinds of saturated fats, and they are handled differently by the body when consumed. Stearic acid, a type of saturated fat found naturally in cocoa, dairy products, meats, and poultry, as well as palm and coconut oils, does not raise harmful LDL cholesterol but boosts beneficial HDL cholesterol levels.

Good news: Saturated fat may be better than once thought.
Eating foods like coconut and chocolate that contain stearic acid—an HDL-cholesterol booster that may eventually be called the “good” saturated fat—is healthier than once thought. This is not a license to eat freely of anything containing stearic acid, though, because foods rich in any type of fat tend to be dense in calories, as well.
Given that both chocolate and coconut are not as “bad” as once thought, and given that they taste mighty good together, we baked up a batch of toasty, chocolaty treats to celebrate. Like all sweets with few other nutrients, though, they are treats—perfectly healthy every once in a while.


Myth 4: The only heart-friendly alcohol is red wine.
Truth Beer, wine, and liquors all confer the same health benefits.
The so-called French Paradox elevated red wine to health-food status when researchers thought it was the antioxidants in the drink that protected the foie gras- and cheese-loving French from heart disease.
More recent research, however, has shown that antioxidants aren’t the answer after all. Alcohol—the ethanol itself—raises levels of protective HDL, or good cholesterol, which help protect against plaque buildup in the arteries and reduce clotting factors that contribute to heart attack and stroke, according to Eric Rimm, ScD, associate professor of nutrition at the School of Public Health at Harvard University. Any kind of beverage that contains alcohol, when consumed in moderation (and that means one to two drinks a day), helps reduce heart disease risk.


Myth 5: Adding salt to the pot adds sodium to the food.
Truth Salt added to boiling water may actually make vegetables more nutritious.
Public health messages encouraging us to shake our salt-in-everything habits are, in general, good; sodium is a potential problem even for non-hypertensive people. But it’s easy to overlook how sodium can actually help in recipes.
“Salt in the cooking water reduces the leaching of nutrients from vegetables into the water,” says Harold McGee, author of On Food & Cooking. That means your blanched broccoli, green beans, or asparagus likely retains more nutrients. “It also speeds up the cooking process so you don’t lose as many nutrients from overcooking.” McGee recommends using about 1 teaspoon of salt per cup of water. The amount of sodium absorbed by the food is minuscule.

Myth 6: Fried foods are always too fatty.
Truth Healthy deep-fried food is not an oxymoron.
Here’s how frying works: When food is exposed to hot oil, the moisture inside boils and pushes to the surface and then out into the oil. As moisture leaves, it creates a barrier, minimizing oil absorption—when the frying is done right. Meanwhile, the little oil that does penetrate the food’s surface forms a crisp, tasty crust. To keep foods from soaking up oil, fry according to recipe instructions. For most foods, 375°F is optimal. Oil temperatures that are too low will increase fat absorption. When we added tempura-coated vegetables to cooler-than-optimal oil, the result was greasy and inedible—they absorbed more than 1 cup of oil instead of 1⁄3 cup. So, watch the oil temperature like a hawk using a candy/fry thermometer, and drain cooked foods on a paper towel for a minute or two before diving in.

Good news: You can have fried catfish and hush puppies, too.
Keep in mind that we’re not giving fast-food fried chicken dinners with French fries a passing grade. Such a meal contains an entire day’s worth of calories and sodium, thanks to large portion sizes, excessive breading, and globs of sauces.
But as an occasional treat, home-fried foods have a place in a healthy diet. Use in moderation by pairing with a sensible side or salad. Always choose a healthy oil that’s low in saturated fat—such as peanut, soybean, and canola oils—and follow our step-by-step techniques to frying basics to keep calories and fat as low as possible. In the hands of a careful home cook, a delicately breaded and fried catfish fillet with a few hush puppies can be a perfectly reasonable—and delicious—dinner.
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Oct 3, 2010

Delicious Chocolate Treats

Delicious Chocolate Treats
Forget the run-of-the-mill chocolates like Cadbury's Dairy Milk, Hershey's, Lindt, Ghirardelli etc. These chocolate treats here leave them all behind!
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The word "chocolate" comes from the Aztecs of Mexico, and is derived from the Nahuatl word xocolat which is a combination of the words, xocolli, meaning "bitter", and atl, which is "water". Chocolate was discovered by Mayans of the Yucatán Peninsula, in México about 2,600 years ago or so, as evidence found in ruins suggest.

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Dec 30, 2007

10 Reasons to Move - From sex to long life

After 35 years, you practice sports mainly to maintain your health and good shape. Why? For the following reasons:

1. Impotence:

Frequent physical exercising helps prevent sexual dysfunction as it favors the blood flow. Especially after a certain age.

2. Cholesterol:

Moving is the only drug that rises the "good" cholesterol. Movement stimulates the production of an enzyme which metabolizes both cholesterol and the triglycerides.

3. Diabetes:

It is proven that the physical activity decreases the number of those affected by Type II Diabetes (found in adults).

4. Heart:

An active person presents less risks of suffering a heart attack or from hypertension, but only when the exercising is regulate and moderate. Those that practice sports sporadically and with great intensity ("week-end warriors") may get themselves exposed to problems. Controlled sports is useful for all the cardiovascular apparatus and it is recommended even after a coronary accident. Trained hearts pump more blood with less effort, while the lung capacity is increased.

5. Bones:

It helps fighting osteoporosis and maintaining bone mass at good levels during adult stage. It also prevents fractures in fragile bones.

6. Arthritis:

The patients can reduce the symptoms and feel less pain. Stretching increases flexibility.

7. Memory:

The physical activity – when it is practiced regularly – increases the learning ability, concentration and memory.

8. Mood:

Exercising improves the good mood, decreases stress and it is by itself a source of pleasure. It is recommended against less severe depressions, also increasing self esteem.

9. Longevity:

Practiving sports on a regular basis (between 30 to 45 minutes thrice weekly) decreases the risk of premature death. What seems to stimulate lifespan are running and biking.

10. Cancer:

Daily exercising decreases the risk of suffering of colon or breast cancer by 20 to 40 %, by decreasing certain hormone levels, like estrogens and insulin. The prevention of the colon cancer increases the mobility inside the intestine and the toxins stay less in contact with its wall
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Nov 23, 2007

Keep walking


The Organs of your body have their sensory touches at the bottom of your foot,
if you massage these points you will find relief from aches and pains as you
can see the heart is on the left foot.

Typically they are shown as points and arrows to show which organ it connects to.
It is indeed correct since the nerves connected to these organs terminate here.
This is covered in great details in Acupressure studies or textbooks. God created our
body so well that he thought of even this. He made us walk so that we will always be
pressing these pressure points and thus keeping these organs activated at all times.
So, keep walking...
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healthy n fit

What is being healthy ?
Having or indicating good health in body or mind; free from infirmity or disease


What you need to do to stay healthy ?
1) eat healthy food.Generally, a healthy food. is said to include:Sufficient calories to maintain a person's metabolic and activity needs, but not so excessive as to result in fat storage greater than roughly 30% of body mass

Sufficient quantities of fat, including monounsaturated fat, polyunsaturated fat and saturated fat, with a balance of omega-6 and long-chain omega-3 lipids;
Maintenance of a good ratio between carbohydrates and lipids : four gramms of the first for one gramm of the second.

Avoidance of saturated fatSufficient essential amino acids ("complete protein") to provide cellular replenishment and transport proteins;Essential micronutrients such as vitamins and certain minerals.

Avoiding directly poisonous (e.g. heavy metals) and carcinogenic (e.g. benzene) substances;
Avoiding foods contaminated by human pathogens (e.g. e. coli, tapeworm eggs);
Avoiding chronic high doses of certain foods that are benign or beneficial in small or occasional doses, such as foods or substances with directly toxic properties at high chronic doses (e.g. ethyl alcohol);

foods that may interfere at high doses with other body processes (e.g. refined table salt);
foods that may burden or exhaust normal functions (e.g. refined carbohydrates without adequate


what are healthy food ?Fruits
Tomato
Figs
Lemons/Limes
Vegetables
Onions
Ginger
Garlic
Grains,
Beans and
Nuts
SeafoodShellfish
Crab

2) Drink lots of cold water –
water and human healthWater is important to the mechanics of the human body. The body cannot work without it, just as a car cannot run without gas and oil. In fact, all the cell and organ functions made up in our entire anatomy and physiology depend on water for their functioning.

The human body is a water machine, designed to run primarily on water and minerals.. Every healing and life giving process that happens in our body happens through Water
An inadequate intake of water, or consumption of water laced with contaminants, causes the properties of our blood to change and negatively effects virtually every aspect of our health

Our energy level is impacted largely by our consumption of water. It has been medically proven that just a 5% drop in body fluids will cause a 25 to 30% loss of energy in most people, a 15% drop causes death! It
Water serves as a lubricant
Water forms the base for saliva
Water forms the fluids that surround the joints.
Water regulates the body temperature, as the cooling and heating is distributed through perspiration.
Water helps to alleviate constipation by moving food through the intestinal tract and thereby eliminating waste- the best detox agent.

Regulates metabolism
A healthy recommendation for water consumption would be at least 10-12 glasses each day, with optimum benefits reached at 14 to 16 glasses a day. It’s possibly the best health enhancement habit you can develop and it’s so simple a glass of water every one to two hours. Try it...drink at least 10 glasses of water every day for just one week and you’ll be amazed at how much better you feel!
In addition to the daily maintainence of our bodies, water also plays a key role in the prevention of disease. Drinking eight glasses of water daily can decrease the risk of colon cancer by 45%, bladder cancer by 50% and it can potentially even reduce the risk of breast cancer. And those are just a few examples

With an abundant intake of clean healthy water we allow our body to perform all the healing processes it is naturally capable of.

3) sport, or play with your kids or exercise.
The benefits of doing regular exercise include a reduced risk of: heart disease, stroke, bowel cancer, breast cancer, osteoporosis, and. In addition, many people feel better in themselves. Regular exercise helps you to control your weight, and is also thought to help ease stress, anxiety, and depression.

Healthy body, healthy mind.
'Maintaining a positive outlook, by interacting with others and getting involved in continuous education and training, can contribute to an imporved state of mind. Try to reduce the levels of stress in your life. Meditation, relaxation and effective organization at work can all help us deal with stress. Why not try a yoga class to help reduce stress?

30 minutes of exercise a day
30 minutes per day of modertae exercise is probably the minimum to gain health benefits. Moderate exercise means that you get warm, mildly out of breath, and mildly sweaty. It does not have to be intense. However, a study published in 2003 suggests that the more vigorous the exercise, the better for health - particularly for preventing heart disease. At the University of Leeds we have a range of exciting opportunities to enable you to reach your 30 minutes a day goal. From yoga to badminton, Climbing to Salsa Aerobics, there are activities for everyone to help maintain your healthy mind and body.

4 )Sleeping
Better sleep will result in better health. Most people get on average 6 to 7 hours of sleep a night. But that is not enough. Studies show that people who get more sleep are healthier, lose weight more easily and are happier than those who get little sleep.
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