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What can you eat/drink on a low carb, high protein diet?

Ask:

I would like a list of what you can eat and drink on a low carb, high protein diet. Something like the Atkins diet. A link would be great or just you typing a list. Thanks. Also if and what needs to moderated.

Answer:

During the first 2 weeks, you can have several cups of salads. Jicama, cucumber, celery & radish marinated in sesame oil & hot pepper flakes with rice wine vinegar & artificial sweetener. Make a stir fry with Bok Choy, bean sprouts, bamboo shoots, celery, mushrooms, shirataki noodles & your fav meats. I love eggs and could eat deviled eggs every day. You can smother omelets & meats with mushrooms & peppers & cheese. Meatzza – Meatloaf with pizza toppings (pepperoni, mushrooms, peppers, mozzarella) I prefer very thin sausage patties fried crispy with pizza toppings. Pork rinds & celery sticks are great crunch and can be eaten with dips (avocado/mayo/cayenne is my fav) & tuna/chicken/turkey/egg salads. I love love love my rotisserie and it makes the meats extra tasty. I cook a turkey every couple of months and make soup with the bones (add vinegar to leach minerals) and turkey salads. I’ll cube up some turkey meat mix in a couple of raw eggs add cheese (and broccoli after induction) with cayenne powder & nuke a couple of minutes for nearly instant meal. Flax seed should be eaten 2T daily even in induction.

Ground flax seed (2-3 Tbsp) 1/4 cup of water, cinnamon, artificial sweetener, mix in a raw egg – let sit 10 min to absorb liquid, put some cream cheese in the middle and nuke for 1.5 min. for hot cereal or 2 min. for more of a muffin type thing. Great low carb, high fiber treat.

After the 2 week induction, you add 5 grams of carbs per day every week and add a much greater variety of non starchy vegetables. Change your mindset – eat what you like to eat, just adapt it to low carb –
replace bread with lettuce
replace pasta with cabbage
replace rice with cauliflower
replace potatoes with brocolli
I eat all my favorite Chinese, Italian, even Mexican foods with low carb foods. Cabbage makes an excellent pasta substitute (for me) Make a lasagna with blanched cabbage leaves & thinly fried eggplant instead of noodles. Sugar free pasta sauce over fried cabbage. My fav is chicken cacciatore, I add greens & flaxseed or chia seed for body and also add pizza toppings – pepperoni, mushrooms, lots of mozzarrella. Alfredo sauce is also low carb.

I don’t cook often. I usually make huge batches of food & freeze most of it. I cook meats 20-30# at a time (for just me) I have gone into the forums for recipes (especially when I first started low carb) I was shocked that fried “rice” made with grated cauliflower tasted just like it’s name sake. Shirataki noodles are traditional in Japanese sukiyaki and low carb. I’ve heard faux mashed “taters” made with cauliflower & cream cheese can fool non low carbers. “potato” salad using cauliflower instead. Continue reading What can you eat/drink on a low carb, high protein diet?

Can you have a balanced vegetarian diet without nuts?

Ask:

I have two daughters, one hates meat and the other has said for some while that she would like to be a vegetarian because she can’t bear the thought of eating animals. I really like vegetarian food so it would be no problem for me.

But the daughter who hates meat (and also most vegetables) is very allergic to nuts, both peanuts and some tree nuts. Does anyone know if it would still be possible for her to have a balanced diet, and how?

Answers:

Answer 1:

Yes, easily. Nuts are a fairly good source of protein but they mostly get their calories from fat. They’re a good snack but shouldn’t be the staple source of protein in anyone’s diet – too high in fat and calories.

Try switching all the white and refined grains (white bread, white rice) to whole grains and brown rice. Try new types of whole grains like barley or quinoa. Whole grains are made from the entire grain – most white pasta is made from wheat that has been stripped of the most nutritious, high fiber and high protein layers. In fact, it’s so unhealthy that there are mandates for companies that use white flour to refortify it after the processing takes place. Whole grains are naturally high in protein and fiber and are the natural state of the grain and are head and shoulders above refined grains and “white” bread and pasta products.

Beans and legumes are VERY high in protein, fiber and nutrients. Try different kinds – kidney beans, chickpeas, lentils, split peas. Make soups, stews, chili. You can make burger-like patties out of black beans. They are so versatile and wonderful.

Try soy products – soy is a complete protein that the USDA and FDA both admit to being as substantial and nutritious as animal protein. Buy a few trays of tofu, or go to Whole Foods or another natural foods store and try tempeh (which is a brick of fermented soybeans).

Look up recipes – this is vital to learn how to work with these foods. Just like someone that has never cooked with chicken breast before or has no idea what to do with it would probably cook something that’s a total, hideous mess, the same would happen with never finding out how to use tofu or tempeh. If used properly you can have a huge range of delicious meals – I make tempeh stroganoff, tofu and veggie stir fry, tofu nuggets, etc.

Answer 2:

Yes. Absolutely yes. I have several freinds who have been vegetarian for life who are simillarly afflicted with allergies to nuts. No problem. Simply avoid them.
Whole grains and legumes and beans are foundational to a plant based diet along with complex carbohydrates. These will not only give you a sense of saitity but also give you great energy. You need to eat widely on the vegetable and fruit spectrum also.

Protein Drinks can also help for a quick breakfast boost to get your family set up for a great day.

You need to drink half of your body weight in ounces each day! So if you were to weigh 120 pounds you would need to drink 60 ounces of water daily and no, not all at once. 5 – 12ounce glasses of water will do it perfectly.

Here is a list of definitions and acceptable things to eat in each category which may help you understand the perameters of each.

Lacto Vegetarians — and I am one — eat no eggs and no egg products knowing that left to their own devices eggs are embryonic chickens and would become one once hatched. Even unfertilized eggs are categorized as flesh foods. Egg White or Yolk — neither part of the egg is acceptable.

Dairy, in other words milk, rennet-less cheeses, yogurt, kefir, buttermilk and butter are all acceptable because it didn’t hurt the animal. In fact if the cow, or goat, or sheep isn’t milked she is in pain; and it didn’t take the animal’s life to produce the product.

All other fruit and vegetables, whole grains rather than refined flours, beans, legumes, nuts, seeds are acceptable and on the table for everyone of these categories.

Sweeteners include Vegan Cane Sugar
(all other refined granulated sugars are subjected to a process including charred bone) Turbinado Sugar, Raw Sugar or Ghur, Maple Syrup, Agave, Honey (not acceptable to Vegans) Stevia. Barley Malt, Fructose, Brown Rice Syrup and Molasses.

Also as vegetarians we are likely to use sea salt rather than table salt. Organic spices and herbs, nutritional yeast, baking yeast, baking soda and aluminum free baking powder. Eggless Mayonnaise and other condiments are also available to us. There is even a Vegetarian Worcestershire Sauce (one without anchovies)

There are also a multitude of faux meat products from Tofu Pups to Lightlife Gimme Lean Breakfast Sausage, to Tofurky Italian Sausage and Bratwurst, there is Morningstar Meal Starters and Boca Burgers not to mention the faux meat products from Taiwan which are available in ethnic grocery stores — Veggie Beef Chunk, Veggie Fish, Veggie Shrimp, Veggie Crab etc.
But you need to lean to read labels to be sure that there are no egg whites often called ‘albumen’ in any of them. So the obvious point I am trying to make is eat widely on the above list and enjoy whole foods rather than the American penchant for White Flour and White Sugar and stay away from Diet anything — it is loaded with ASPARTAME which is pure poison and deadly — ask anyone suffering from GULF WAR SYNDROME.

Vegans eat no eggs, no dairy, no honey and do not wear leather or exploit animals in any way for any reason.

Lacto Ovo people include eggs in their list of acceptable foods.

No other definition is, strictly speaking, Vegetarian — and personally, I hesitate to include the ovo ones to the club — but then salmonella poisoning and eating flesh foods of any variety are real deterrents for me.

For exceptional recipes for main dishes and even an exceptional collection of eggless desserts (more than 2 dozen eggless cakes, and pies, cookies and eggless froen treats too) and great menu ideas and important information check out this website
Actually, were I you I would invovle your daughters in the kitchen fun. I did that with my four sons and they are all terrific cooks, two of them professionally! And one of them married another Vegetarian Chef. Have fun and enjoy the journey.

 

10 tips to raise healthy kids for busy families

Childhood obesity has taken center stage for many childhood health organizations. As many as 33 percent of children under the age of 18 are obese, reports the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Such statistics are not referring to children that are a few pounds overweight. By definition, a child is obese if he weighs 10 percent more than he should.

To further worry parents about childhood weight gain is the fact that many obese children will live their lives as obese adults and suffer the resulting health consequences. At the same time, many families find it difficult to fit making home cooked meals and daily exercise into their already busy schedule. However, raising kids that make healthy food choices doesn’t have to impose on your busy family life. Sometimes, just small daily decisions can make a huge difference in preventing obesity in your child.

No Soda

Soda drinks do not have any nutritional value and are loaded with sugar and calories that only serve to put on the pounds. Children do not need soda, so just do not give it ever. Offer water, milk, and sometimes 100 percent juice instead.

Fruits and Vegetables with Every Meal

Include at least one fruit or vegetable with every meal and snack, from breakfast to dinner. This not only helps make the meals you feed your child more balanced, it instills a healthy habit of always have fruits and vegetables on the plate. It’s quick and easy to keep bananas, baby carrots, strawberries, and apples on hand to offer with each meal. Keep some frozen peas and carrots for the times you run out of fresh produce. There’s no need to even cook the frozen peas and carrots. Just open the bag and pour some onto the plate. Many kids love having a “treat” of popsicle peas and carrots.

Eliminate the “Clean Your Plate” Rule

Making kids eat everything on their plate, or insisting that they take just one more bite, will only promote unhealthy eating habits. Children naturally know when they are hungry and when they are full. Teaching children to ignore feeling full can lead to overeating and obesity. So if your child takes one bite and does not want any more dinner, then let him be excused from the table. Yes, he probably will be hungry again in an hour. It is normal for children, who have smaller stomachs than adults, to want to eat several small meals throughout the day. You can always save the uneaten dinner for later when he is hungry.

This also applies to the “eat all your dinner or no desert” rule. Again, such rules only encourage overeating. If you do have desert planned, but do not want that to be the only thing your child eats for dinner, try an “eat your vegetables and you can have desert” rule. It’s hard to eat too many vegetables.

Keep Healthy Snacks Within Reach

t is time consuming to constantly make meals and snacks for young kids who graze throughout the day. This is probably why many parents find themselves telling their kids to eat everything on their plate, because they don’t want to fix yet another meal an hour later. Encouraging your kids to listen to their bodies in regards to eating doesn’t have to mean that you are constantly catering to them. Give even your young kids some responsibility in making their own healthy snacks by only putting healthy foods within reach. Keep a can of nuts, whole grain bread, and apples on the kitchen counter. In the refrigerator put baby carrots in the lower produce bin and string cheese, yogurt, and uneaten lunches and dinners on the lower shelves. This way when your child claims to be starving, she can make her own snack with only the healthy choices available to her.Pack Snacks

If you are taking a long road trip or spending the day running errands, your child will likely get hungry much sooner than you. To keep yourself from taking the easy drive-thru route, pack some healthy snacks and a water bottle to take with you.

Turn on Some Music

According to KidsHealth.com, “Kids who watch (television) more than 4 hours a day are more likely to be overweight compared with kids who watch 2 hours or less.” Although the TV and video games can give parents a much-needed break, parking kids in front of the TV or video games without limits is just not healthy. Set limits and turn off the TV and video games when the time is up. Then turn on some loud lively music and get your kids dancing and moving. With music on, you are not going to want the TV on.

Let Your Kids Get Bored

Now that you’ve turned off the TV and video games, it’s almost a guarantee that you are soon to hear “but mom, I’m bored!” And that’s OK. Boredom sparks creativity and activity. Don’t give in to turning on the TV or being the entertainment for your kids. It’s OK to tell your children to go find something to do and leave it at that. When kids are bored is when forts are made, new sports games are invented, trees are climbed, and the imagination takes over.

Be Active with Your Children

Make being active a normal part of the entire family’s life. You may not have time to go to the gym every day, enroll your child in sports that take up every weekend, or have the desire to get up at 5 a.m. to go jogging, but you can still choose to have an active family. Take walks after dinner, explore nature preserves on the weekend, try camping, go swimming at the local pool or lake, keep balls and other active toys in the backyard, make a plan to visit one new park each week, or go bike riding with the kids. Regular exercise is necessary for keeping kids healthy, but doesn’t require huge blocks of time every day. Just make backyard playtime, trips to the park, or walks and bike rides around the block a part of the day. Then save some weekends for more active adventures.

Spend Time with Your Kids

The cause of obesity is not always as simple as just eating too much and not exercising. Problems at school, with family at home, low self-esteem, and depression can also lead to poor eating habits. Make the time to eat dinner as a family and for activities that allow you to just hang out with your child and listen to him. Taking the time to connect with your child will allow you to better help your child through difficult times. Offering support, advice, or just being there to listen gives your child a way to work through problems without relying on food. You’ll also better know your child and be able to recognize if something more serious is going on that needs the attention of a medical professional.

Yearly Doctor Appointments

There are medical conditions, such as thyroid problems, that can make weight gain something that is out of a parent’s control. Do not skip your child’s yearly pediatrician health exam. This is a time to discuss any concerns you may have with your pediatrician about your child’s overall health and to catch health problems you may not know about.

One cause of the recent spike in childhood obesity is certainly our much busier lifestyle. Often both parents work and find grabbing fast food is quick, easy, and cheap. However, such habits will stay with your child for a lifetime. Teaching children to be healthy starts at home and shouldn’t be given a low priority when life gets too busy. Work some of these tips into your daily life and you will be giving your child healthy habits that last a lifetime.

How can i make an effective low-carb diet plan?

Ask:

I’ve tried everything,and honestly, i don’t have time to count calories.How does a low-carb diet work? Has anyone tried it? Does anyone know a list of low-carb foods to help me off to a good start?

Answer:

Hi! I started a low/minimal carb diet in October and within 3 months I have dropped 26 lbs. I am not even exercising any more than usual. It’s really a lot easier than you think.

First you need to clean out your pantry or stash of junk or snacks. No carbonated drinks even if they are diet!

Second make a trip to the grocery store. It’s very easy. You can eat eggs, meat like beef, chicken, fish as much as you want. You can have sour cream, most cheese (just check the contents to be sure there is a 0-2 grams of carbs. You can have fresh romaine lettuce as a salad with some olives, sliced onions, avacado, and salad dressing of choice (ranch or a vinegarette as long as the carb content is below 3 grams of carbs. In dinner you can have a large portion of chicken or beef (you can even have real butter with it) and one cup of veggies.

The tricky part is finding a list of veggies that are low in carbs. But you can have ONE CUP OF cabbage, spinach, broccoli, caulflower, turnip greens, collard greens, or okra at dinner. You can also have a fresh salad again in dinner if you are fond of salads. Just remember to count the carbs.

Avoid bread of any kind, rice, anything sweet like ice cream or cake, and also avoid milk or yogurt until you have lost the amount that you want to lose.

The biggest trick for people is remembering that once you have lost the ideal bit of weight you must continue to carefully integrate the higher carb diet very slowly. The fact is that most people eat a lot of bread. In breakfast you have all sorts of cereals and even just having toast includes higher carbs. Also at lunch many people eat sandwiches or some drive through burger and they are just swimming in carbs, salt, sugar, and fat. And at dinner people like to have some sort of rice or pasta stir fry which tastes good and seems healthy enough but in actuality is loaded in carbs. Continue reading How can i make an effective low-carb diet plan?

How to Maintain a Healthy Diet for Track & Field

You may have heard of the saying, “food is fuel.” What you put into your body ultimately determines how much energy your body will put out.

Every athlete swears by certain foods to give him the boost he needs. The world’s fastest human, Usain Bolt, claims chicken nuggets, Jamaican yams and porridge are his go-to pre-race snacks—but this doesn’t mean you should head to the drive-through before each competition. In reality, there is no specific diet or magic food that will automatically make you faster, stronger or quicker. The best thing to do is eat a variety of healthy, well-balanced meals.

Eating Smart

Here are some of the things you should know to help point you in the right direction:

  1. Do not skip meals.
  2. Eat four to six meals per day or three meals with snacks in between.
  3. Eat snacks. This is ok as long as they are healthy foods.
  4. Always eat breakfast.
  5. Eat a variety of foods: include various carbohydrates (oatmeal, whole grains, pasta, etc.), proteins (chicken, fish, lean beef), legumes, fruits, vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, etc) in your diet.
  6. Eat lots of fruit and vegetables. The richer the color the better, as this is a sign that the food has a high content of vitamins.
  7. Avoid an excessive amount of highly processed foods (high in sugars, oils, fat and flour).
  8. Eat a sufficient amount of protein for your activity level and specific needs.
  9. Eat or drink something within 30 minutes after your workout. This will drastically reduce the time needed to recover.
  10. Drink at least eight glasses of water a day. Better yet, bring a bottle of water with you everywhere, especially to practice.

Eating right will provide a number of benefits, such as consistently better practice sessions (which in turn leads to consistently better races), quicker recovery from practices and races, and increading your body’s ability to prevent injury. You will both feel better, and perform better.

Your Daily Nutrition

With an event-specific sport like track & field, a distance runner will not necessarily eat like a sprinter and a jumper will not eat like a thrower. If you are a long distance runner, you may need to eat more carbohydrates to fuelmuscle, while a sprinter may eat more lean meats to help build muscle tissue. The best thing to keep in mind when you eat throughout the day is to balance out your body’s individual needs based upon your activity or event.

In general, athletes need to include lean proteins (legumes, fish, chicken or beef), carbohydrates, vegetables, fruits and vitamins as part of a balanced, daily diet. Excluding an entire food group can put you at risk of injury, lack of energy, and poor performance.

Proteins and carbohydrates can be found in foods you eat every day. Protein helps repair and build muscle tissue, makes you feel full, and allows your hormones and enzymes to regulate your metabolism and daily body functions. Carbohydrates are converted to glucose in the body, which fuel muscles and give you the energy to both physically train and mentally deal with the stresses of competition. Eat carbohydrates that are whole grain products, this means it contains the entire grain kernel and the fiber, iron and B vitamins have not been removed. Continue reading How to Maintain a Healthy Diet for Track & Field

The 20 Best Weight-Loss Foods

Many runners would like to lose a pound or 2. Maybe 5. Maybe more. Why? That’s easy: to feel better, look better, improve their health, and run farther and faster.

However, losing weight can be surprisingly difficult. In fact, national health surveys show Americans in general are getting fatter. Sure, regular runners should be ahead of the pack, but many are still losing the weight-gain war.

What you need is a simple plan. Here it is, in just two parts: (1) Make a little more time to run; (2) Concentrate on a handful of dietary changes that, over the course of a year, can produce significant weight-loss results.

Below we’ve listed 20 great diet changes that you’ll find easy to achieve. Many of them will help you cut 100 calories or more from a single serving. Now do the math. Say you eat this particular food or meal three times a week. That’s 100 x 3 x 52, or 15,600 calories saved in a year. Which comes to almost 5 pounds, since you’ll lose one pound for every 3,500 calories cut from your food intake.

Make another food substitution, and you’re up to 10 pounds. Beyond that, the sky’s the limit. Here’s your meal-by-meal planner. Don’t skip breakfast. A good breakfast is the most crucial part of any healthy weight-loss effort, as it revs up your energy level and metabolism for the full day.

Homemade raisin bran
Description: Mix one cup of Total cereal, a packet of raisins, and 1 cup nonfat milk. This simple home recipe with 244 calories fortifies you with 100 percent of the Daily Value for most vitamins and minerals, boosts your protein intake by 12 grams, and gives you a sweet, natural fiber and sugar source.
You’ll Save: 50 calories, 6 teaspoons of sugar, and 5 grams of fat compared with ready-to-serve raisin bran doused with a cup of 2-percent milk.

Scrambled whites with greens
Description: This low-fat, scrambled-egg alternative provides 54 grams of high-quality dietary protein in just 255 calories. First, spray your frying pan with fat-free Pam. Then pour the equivalent of four servings of Eggology egg whites (or Second Nature or Egg Beaters egg whites) in a bowl and blend with 1/2 cup spinach and 1/2 cup mushrooms. Heat the pan until the Pam starts to bubble, pour in the eggs, and fry until the eggs are nearly dry.
You’ll Save: 40 calories, 100 milligrams of cholesterol, and 13 grams of fat compared with two normal scrambled eggs.

Balanced Diet Shake
Description: For something cool, tasty, and nutrient-filled in the morning, try a shake or smoothie. The Balanced Diet nutritional drink provides 180 calories with lots of complex carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals in a naturally flavored French vanilla or chocolate royale. Each serving includes 5 grams of dietary fiber and 10 grams of soy, or 40 percent of the daily minimum now recommended by the American Heart Association.
You’ll Save: 60 calories daily and nearly 6 grams of fat compared with many other similar drinks.

Frozen fruit smoothie
Description: You can prepare your own personal antioxidant-filled fruit smoothie like the following one that runner Bruce Shapiro used to lose 30 pounds over the last few years. Combine and blend: one cup frozen, unsweetened blueberries; 1/2 banana; 1/4 cup wheat germ; and water.
You’ll Save: 200 calories for each 2- to 3-cup serving, compared with many store-bought and canned smoothie beverages.

Toasted plain Lender’s Bagel with natural jam
Description: Sure, a frozen bagel can’t match a fresh one, but it’s easier to obtain for many people, and a little toasting brings it to near perfection. Just spread with your favorite natural jam.
You’ll Save: Anywhere from 160 to 360 calories and more than 10 grams of fat compared with similar bagels bought at Dunkin’ Donuts and other outlets where the bagels are spread with cream cheese.
Lunch is the second-most-important meal of the day in your weight-loss plan. It boosts your energy level and regulates your metabolism to keep you on an even keel.

Boca Burger Grilled Vegetable burger
Description: This zesty, soy-based vegetarian alternative to the high-saturated-fat American BBQ staple contains hints of zucchini, red-bell pepper, garlic, onion, and even a couple of cheeses. It tastes great and provides a good dose of protein. Add some lettuce, tomato, ketchup, or your other favorite toppings, and you’ll hardly notice the difference from the traditional burger.
You’ll Save: Up to 180 calories and 19 grams of fat compared with a typically-grilled 3-ounce beef burger. Continue reading The 20 Best Weight-Loss Foods