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Common Fitness Blunders – Part 2

Even Experienced Exercisers Can Be Guilty of These

— By Joe Downie, Certified Physical Fitness Instructor

Blunder #3: Believing the Myths

There are too many to count. Fitness myths are created for many reasons, but are mainly the result of people unknowingly spreading inaccurate information. Sometimes they are blatant sales approaches to try to get you to buy the latest book, training sessions, or exercise contraption.

There is no miracle solution. The great thing about exercise, just like life, is that there are many different ways to success. Figure out a way that works for you, but don’t fall into the trap and believe these myths.

  • Myth #1: You will burn more fat if you exercise at a slower intensity. I’m not sure how this started. Maybe the theory behind it believes that exercising at a slow intensity will help you sustain your exercise and create consistency– which, again, is very important. The problem is you will only condition yourself at a very low level, which won’t help you burn the necessary calories you need to lose weight. Yes, it’s good to start out with this theory in mind so you don’t burn yourself out. But it’s paramount that you increase your intensity over time.
  • Myth #2: Use light weight to tone your muscles. This always seems to imply that you shouldn’t lift more than what you consider “light”. Maybe it’s 5, 10, or even 15 pounds, but you shouldn’t necessarily put a limit on what you should lift. Instead you should put a minimum and maximum on how many times you perform an exercise. Weight should always be relative to how many repetitions you can do. If you can only do 4-6 reps with proper form, the weight is too heavy. If you can do 15-20 reps and feel like you could easily do more, even if you are lifting 100 lbs, you are using a weight that is too light. This doesn’t mean you have to push yourself so hard that you don’t want to ever exercise again. But you should push yourself to the point where you couldn’t do another rep without breaking form the majority of the time if you want to achieve a toned body. Of course, beginners are recommended to work your way up to this point.
  • Myth #3: Abdominal exercises will help get rid of the fat around your belly. The key to lowering your body fat is burning calories. The best way to torch calories is through cardio. The core muscles are very important to strengthen but unfortunately you don’t burn many calories by working them. Therefore, spending most of your exercise time each workout on abdominal exercises doesn’t make sense. You will burn many more calories and lose overall body fat in all areas of your body by working your larger muscle groups… quadriceps, upper back, chest, shoulders and hamstring/buttocks. Riding a bike, running on a treadmill, or doing the elliptical works all of these large muscle groups, but it’s also important to add a bit more resistance with strength training exercises.
  • Myth #4: You have to be an athlete to exercise. Exercise has always been linked directly with athletes because it helps them condition themselves to improve their performance. Unfortunately, exercise hasn’t been linked with the improvement of everyday life as much as it should. Every person benefits from exercise. There are hundreds, if not thousands of different ways to exercise… find the right training that links to your lifestyle.
Blunder #4: Not Being Consistent

One of the biggest blunders of an exercise program is the lack of consistency. It’s very similar to climbing a mountain. There may be all sorts of reasons why you want to climb your “mountain”— to lose weight, to gain energy, to improve health, or to fit into your favorite jeans.

You exercise for 2 weeks, then you have to work overtime, so you take a whole week off. You get back to the gym for another week, and you’re feeling great. A couple days later, you have to go to your son’s basketball game, and a few days later, your parents are in town for the weekend. Your exercise quickly falls low on the priority list. Does this sound familiar? You might get over the foothills of your mountain with this approach, but there’s no chance you’ll ever see that beautiful view you have in your mind.

Does that mean you have to exercise every day to be consistent? NO! It means that you need a plan that incorporates fitness into your weekly schedule. This way you continue to climb upwards. The key is not letting yourself tumble back down to the bottom, so even holding steady or just taking one step forward is enough.

Maybe your forward progress starts with 2 days of exercise for 20 minutes until you reach the foothills. Yes, it might take you longer to get over the foothills this way, as opposed to working out 6 days a week for an hour, but it’s a process that allows you to adapt and adjust your current lifestyle to incorporate change for the long haul. When you’re ready to tackle that first small mountain, bump it up to 3 days of exercise for 25 minutes. You can actually enjoy the process because it doesn’t take everything out of you to get this far, and you find yourself excited to add to your program. This excitement is the motivation that will eventually lead you as far as you want to go. A good view to shoot for is 5 days a week for at least 30 minutes.

At some point something will come up in life that knocks you back down a little bit. It’s only natural that your excitement level can plummet when this happens. But if you expect it and are prepared, you can limit the impact it has on your climb. All the successful climbers understand it’s part of the process. They LEARN from whatever knocks them back so it doesn’t hurt them again at another point along the journey.

Learning how to overcome a tumble, slowly building on your plan, and using excitement as motivation are keys to making exercise a part of your lifestyle. This lifestyle will help you climb that mountain and enjoy the view from the top. From there, it’s all about maintenance.

Common Fitness Blunders – Part 2 Read More »

Is Your Microwave Cooking Making You Sick?

A look at how microwaved food can negatively affect your health

by Catherine Ebeling – RN, BSN & Mike Geary – Certified Nutrition Specialist
co-authors – The Fat Burning Kitchen

microwaved food is evilDo you know what (besides a television) is in almost every home in America? It’s a microwave oven. Because microwave ovens are quick and easy and don’t take up much space, they are used for meal preparation in the home, at the office, and even restaurants. Even your favorite healthy restaurant may depend on these electrical devices to quickly heat up or cook foods. So, the question here is —

Are microwave ovens safe, and is it ok to eat the food cooked in them?

Before we look at the science of how microwaved food can affect your blood chemistry and negatively affect your health, let’s look at a bigger picture, common-sense thought process about this…

If you think about it from this perspective, the human digestive system evolved over tens of thousands of years to digest food that was either raw or cooked in water or by heat.  However, food cooked via microwaves is a totally alien and unknown cooking method to the human digestive system.

It’s just common sense that such a radically different cooking method will alter the chemistry of the food to negatively impact our health.

Now onto a little more science…

Let’s take a look at how microwaves ovens work

Microwaves are a part of the whole electromagnetic spectrum of energy that includes light waves and radio waves. They travel at the speed of light–which is about 186,282 miles per second. So how does that oven heat up the food so fast?

Inside the microwave oven, there is a “magnetron” which is a tube full of electrons. The electrons in the microwave oven react with magnetic and electronic energy and become micro wavelengths. This is the radiation that interacts with the molecules in food.

Food molecules have a positive and negative end, kind of like the way a magnet has a north and a south polarity. The electrons from the magnetron produce wavelengths that react with the positive and negative parts of the food molecules. The food molecules then start vibrating, up to several million times a second. This molecular “vibration” is what creates the heat in the food.

This agitiation deforms the molecules in food and creates new unnatural radiolytic compounds previously unknown to nature. These strange foreign compounds in microwaved food have been shown to damage the blood, the digestive system, and our immune systems.

Microwave ovens have been actually been around for about 40 or so years, but so far, only a couple of in-depth scientific studies have been done on them.

Research showing negative health impacts of eating microwaved food

Extensive research, though, was conducted in both Switzerland and Russia on microwaved foods and their effects on the human body. Both studies concluded that microwaving foods significantly deteriorated the nutrient value of the food, distorted protein molecules in the food, and created new, radically unnatural compounds. Most alarming, however, was that the subjects’ health deteriorated from eating the microwaved foods.

Their findings included:

  • Blood hemoglobin (the extremely important oxygen-carrying component of the blood) decreased significantly after eating microwaved foods.
  • White blood cell count rose, (as it does in response to an infection).
  • LDL cholesterol (the bad cholesterol) increased, and HDL cholesterol (the good cholesterol) decreased.
  • Carcinogenic (cancer-causing) agents in foods increased.
  • Higher incidence of digestive system cancers.

The Russian scientists found the microwave oven significantly scary enough to actually ban its use–up until recently.

When food is cooked in a microwave oven, it has:

  • Significantly less B vitamins, vitamin C, vitamin E, essential minerals and fats.
  • Broken down and de-natured proteins.
  • Loss of vital enzymes and phytochemicals.

And here is a really interesting study—done on grain germination:

The grain watered with microwaved (and cooled) water would not not even germinate or grow! It’s pretty obvious that microwaving changed the water chemically and destroyed its ability to nourish a plant.

Ok, so maybe it’s ok to just heat leftovers in the microwave oven once in a while?

NO! Actually, food heated in a microwave is heated unevenly creating super-heated spots and cool spots. Those cool spots may actually harbor bacterial growth such as salmonella, and you end up with food poisoning.

In addition, when you use plastic containers or plastic wrap in contact with your food, you end up getting all sorts of nasty chemicals like di(ethylhexyl)adepate, or DEHA, (a carcinogen), Bisphenol-A or BPA (a cancer-causing agent in plastics) and xenoestrogens (synthetic estrogens) in your food!

In one recent study, it was found that carcinogenic ingredients in plastic wrap were 10,000 times the FDA limit for safety!

Exposure to BPA, used in the manufacture of polycarbonate and other plastics, has been shown to cause reproductive problems and erectile dysfunction, and has been linked with cardiovascular disease and diabetes in humans.

Xenoestrogens are really nasty synthetic estrogens that seem to show up everywhere. In men, xenoestrogens can cause low sperm counts and feminization (like the dreaded “man boobs”) and breast cancer and reproductive problems in women. Xenoestrogens promote weight gain around the belly and chest in men, and in women, it shows up as fat in the butt, hips, thighs and the back of arms.

So, in addition to being really unhealthy, microwaved foods can make you fat!

Parents should never warm breast milk or formula in the microwave oven—not only can it superheat the milk and burn the baby, but microwaving destroys the very valuable nutrients, enzymes and protein vital to babies’ growth!

And here is something really scary: in 1991, a patient received blood that had been warmed in a microwave oven. That patient died of a severe anaphylactic reaction to the blood. The microwaving created something totally unrecognizable by the body!

If you want to be safe, healthy and LEAN, avoid your microwave—totally.  Personally, I threw out my microwave about 6 years ago and haven’t even missed it!

There are far healthier and better alternatives:

  • Eat vegetables and fruit raw preferably, or if cooked, sauté lightly (with a little water and some grass-fed butter) or steam until tender crisp in a pan on the stove.
  • Heat water for tea, etc in a pan or tea-kettle instead of the microwave—or, better yet– is to get a steaming hot water tap—I love these things!
  • Plan ahead and defrost frozen foods in the refrigerator.
  • Heat up ALL leftovers over low heat in a pan or in a toaster oven in aluminum foil (it still only takes 4-5 minutes to heat leftovers)
  • If you must use a microwave (and I don’t know why you would!), use only glass containers instead of plastic.

Or you may want to try this–small countertop convection ovens are great for cooking foods faster and more evenly than a regular oven or on the stove. My favorite little convection oven is the Flavorwave oven from US Wellness Meats, a GREAT site for grass-fed beef too!

You can actually cook a frozen 15-oz. ribeye is in 20 minutes, and it is delicious; browned, tender and juicy. These little convection ovens will broil, bake, fry, roast, grill or steam your favorite foods, including meat, chicken, and vegetable. It takes 20-30% less time than a regular oven, and uses about 75% less energy.

This is a far healthier option than a cancer-causing, nutrient-robbing, microwave oven!

Is Your Microwave Cooking Making You Sick? Read More »

Common Fitness Blunders – Part 1

Even Experienced Exercisers Can Be Guilty of These

— By Joe Downie, Certified Physical Fitness Instructor

Both beginners and experienced exercises can be guilty of a few fitness blunders from time to time. Some may even become a regular part of your fitness routine, much like a bad habit. But, to get the best results from all your hard work, it’s important that you don’t find yourself creating a fitness routine filled with mistakes. This can set you up for injury, lack of results, boredom and plateaus. Analyze your fitness routine on a regular basis and ask yourself if you fall into any of these common blunders.

Blunder #1: Skipping the Warm Up, Cool Down, and Stretches

This is one of the most common bad habits of exercisers! You finally committed yourself to a fitness routine, and you don’t want to waste any time, so you jump right into your work out without warming up, cooling down, or stretching. After all, those low-intensity segments are meaningless and a waste of time, right?

NOT TRUE! Warming up, cooling down and stretching should be the foundation of your exercise program. They should be viewed as a transition into (and out of) exercise, allowing your body and mind to prepare for running, jumping, or strength training. Here is what you gain from proper warm-up, cool downs and stretching sessions:

  • Your muscles and connective tissue loosen to prepare for the stress of exercise
  • Oxygen and blood flow to your muscles and connective tissue increases, providing fuel for better muscular performance
  • Tension in your body decreases
  • Breathing patterns establish, helping relax the body during exercise
  • Joints are lubricated to allow for better performance
  • Muscle soreness is prevented and/or reduced during and after your workout
  • Better body awareness
  • Quicker reaction time
  • Improved posture
  • Improved coordination
  • Quicker recovery
  • Decreased muscle soreness

You’ve probably exercised without warming up properly, for example, and maybe nothing horrible happened. It may seem unnecessary, but consistently skipping it will limit your gains and put you at risk for injury. You could even be injured without even knowing it since you may not feel any pain right away.

Fix it Tip: Try to warm up with a low impact exercise for 5-10 minutes. A light sweat is a good indicator of your body temperature rising. Follow your workout with 5-10 minutes light exercise to cool down, and stretching, head to toe. Most of your flexibility benefits will come from your post-exercise stretch because your muscles will be so warm.

Blunder #2: Looking For Instant Gratification

We are a culture of instant gratification seekers! Expecting fast results from a new diet and fitness plan is very common. Unfortunately it is one of the worst mindsets a beginner can create. You know about all the great benefits of exercise, like increased energy, weight loss, and better health. You exercise for a week straight, wake up the following Monday completely wiped out, a couple pounds heavier (because the exercise made you so hungry), and you have a cold. What gives?

Exercise definitely provides many great benefits, but the results are often seen weeks or even months after you begin. When you are consistent:

  • Your metabolism speeds up to allow for weight loss
  • Your body will adjust to the stress of exercise and you’ll feel more rejuvenated
  • Your immune system improves to help prevent sickness
  • Your strength and endurance improves, making exercise (and daily tasks) easier
  • Your mood and energy levels stabilize throughout the day
  • You sleep better at night
  • You look and feel better!

Fix it Tips: Don’t throw up your hands if you don’t see what you are looking for. Analyze what you are doing and try to make adjustments. It’s worth it.

  • Try to focus on other improvement besides weight loss–how you feel, how much you’ve learned, how you have more energy, etc.
  • Keep in mind that progress may be slow in the beginning. It probably took you many years to gain the weight you are trying to lose. You can’t expect to take it off in a fraction of the time. Plus, slow and steady weight loss (about 1-2 pounds per week) is healthier–AND you’re more likely to keep it off when it happens at this rate.
  • Get support and encouragement from a buddy, your friends and family, or on the message boards. Sometimes a kind word is all you need to stop you from giving up.

 

Common Fitness Blunders – Part 1 Read More »

10 (Painless) Ways to Upgrade Your Diet

By: Adam Baer

Humans tend to eat the same foods over and over, but small changes in diet can have big effects. Here’s how to eat outside the box.

Lower Your Blood Pressure and Cholesterol

How: Eat shiitakes and maitakes instead of button mushrooms. Nutritionally speaking, earthy-flavored shiitakes and maitakes are to button mushrooms as whole grain is to Wonder bread. A growing body of research links the Japanese fungi, which are packed with antioxidants and laced with selenium, to lower cholesterol and blood pressure, anti-tumor activity, and possibly better prostate health, says Donald Abrams, M.D., director of clinical programs at the University of California at San Francisco’s Osher Center for Integrative Medicine. Buttons, as well as criminis and portobellos (which are the same species), don’t have these benefits.

The upgrade: Chad S. Luethje, executive chef at Red Mountain Spa, in St. George, Utah, has two favorite recipes: The easiest—sautéed mushrooms with truffle oil—takes 5 minutes: Slice and cook 1 lb. shiitakes and maitakes (also known as “hen of the woods”) for a few minutes over medium heat with 1 Tbsp. olive oil and ½ cup chopped chives. Add a splash of white truffle oil once it’s hot; serve. More ambitious, but still straightforward, is his 10-minute mushroom broth: Simmer 1 pint vegetable stock while you’re sautéing 1 lb. chopped mushrooms and ¼ cup diced leeks. Add stock to veggies when they’re soft. Simmer for 5 minutes more, add a splash of white truffle oil, and serve.

Shrink Your Belly Fat

How: Eat grass-fed beef instead of corn-fed beef. Now you can have your red meat and eat it too. The fact that grass-fed beef is leaner and contains fewer hormones and antibiotics than regular beef is reason enough to upgrade. But what seals the deal is that grass-fed beef contains more conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), which has been shown to reduce abdominal fat while building lean muscle. What’s more, the ratio of detrimental omega-6 fatty acids to beneficial omega-3 fatty acids in grass-fed beef is about half that of corn-fed beef, says registered dietitian Susan Bowerman, assistant director of UCLA’s Center for Human Nutrition. That’s important because omega-6s can cause inflammation, increasing risk for heart disease and cancer.

The upgrade: Cook and slice a roast, and you will have leftovers you can keep in the freezer for quick sandwich fillers, says Laurie Erickson, wellness chef at coastal Georgia’s Sea Island Spa. “Put a slab of beef in a roasting pan, sprinkle it with salt and pepper, and cook at 350°F or 400°F until the meat thermometer reads 120°F for medium rare,” she says. “But be aware that there isn’t a lot of fat in grass-fed beef, so it’s going to become dry if you overcook it.” Another option is to use ground grass-fed sirloin in your regular meatloaf recipe or in burgers or bolognese sauce. If you can’t find grass-fed beef in your supermarket, check out eatwild.com, lacensebeef.com, or americangrassfedbeef.com.

Stay Trim and Ward Off Diabetes

How: Eat red lentils instead of mashed potatoes. Despite their diminutive size, red lentils out-punch potatoes in three key nutritional ways: “They’re packed with much more protein and fiber,” says registered dietitian Stacy Kennedy, senior clinical nutritionist at Harvard’s Dana Farber Cancer Center. That’s important, but it’s not their greatest strength. As men hit their forties, says Randy Horwitz, M.D., Ph.D., medical director of the program in integrative medicine at the University of Arizona, they can develop metabolic syndrome: hypertension, obesity, and even diabetes. Eating high-glycemic carbohydrates, such as potatoes, can lead to this predicament. Lentils, however, are absorbed much more slowly and have less of an impact on blood sugar.

The upgrade: “I would take this in an Indian mash direction,” says Lee Gross, formerly Gwyneth Paltrow’s personal chef and now the executive chef at Los Angeles’s macrobiotic M. Café de Chaya. “Heat a few tablespoons of olive oil in a saucepan. Throw in 1 tsp. cumin seeds, 2 bay leaves, half a cinnamon stick, and ¼ tsp. black mustard seeds. Fry the spices until they begin to pop. Add 3 Tbsp. minced ginger and a few cloves of minced garlic, along with 1 tsp. curry powder, then fry for 1 minute. Add 1 cup rinsed and dried red lentils. Then add 2 cups vegetable broth, chicken broth, or water. Bring it to a boil and simmer for 20 to 25 minutes until the lentils dissolve. You may substitute an Ethiopian berber spice blend of coriander, onion, chilis, ginger, and paprika.” Refrigerate leftovers and eat it as a dip the next day.

Supercharge Your Vitamin Intake

How: Drink pomegranate juice instead of orange juice. Criticizing vitamin C-rich OJ used to be like taking a shot at Alan Greenspan’s economic policy. But the truth is, pomegranate juice has a greater disease-preventing capacity because of its off-the-charts antioxidant content. “It also looks like pomegranates have the ability to reduce the risk of developing certain cancers, including prostate cancer,” says Bowerman. Drinking 100 percent juice may actually be better than eating a pomegranate, she says, because the juice is squeezed from the whole fruit, so you get the nutrients from the seeds as well as from the peel, which is packed with phytochemicals.

The upgrade: “I like mixing 4 oz. 100 percent pomegranate juice concentrate with sparkling water,” says Erickson. “Add a twist of lime for freshness.” The concentrate has a lot less sugar than regular juice and more flavor, she says. Die-hard OJ lovers can mix pomegranate concentrate with their morning juice. You can also use pomegranate concentrate to deglaze sautéed chicken and pork dishes: Simply add 4 to 6 oz. to the pan after cooking and stir. Concentrates are available online at health-food sites such as brownwoodacres.com and dynamichealth.com.

Stimulate Your Brain

How: Eat wild salmon instead of albacore. Wild sockeye or red salmon beats out albacore tuna for two reasons, both of which are related to what it eats: plankton, rather than other fish or cornmeal. It has 1.25 grams of omega-3s per 100 grams, which is 30 percent more than albacore, and it has 90 percent less mercury, according to the FDA. (To check the mercury count of other fish, go to gotmercury.org.) Omega-3 fatty acids are a natural anti-inflammatory, which is beneficial for cholesterol, brain health, and reducing the risk of many chronic diseases. Sockeye cannot be farmed and is always wild. It’s a good choice whether it’s canned, fresh, frozen, or smoked, says Andrew Weil, M.D.

The upgrade: “Green-tea-poached wild salmon is quick and easy,” says Luethje. “For four servings, make 4½ cups of strong tea and use it as poaching liquid. Add the juice of 1½ lemons as well as the lemon zest. Put the liquid in a pan and submerge four 4-oz. fillets of fish. Poach for 7 minutes at just below a simmer. Then chill the salmon, and serve over sautéed kale.” Another upgrade is to use canned wild salmon in place of tuna. Combine a can of wild salmon with a dollop of Dijon mustard and some chopped dill and parsley in sandwiches; use it in a quickie whole-wheat pasta salad; or mix it into whole-wheat mac and cheese.

Pack On More Muscle

How: Eat quinoa instead of pasta. Pronounced “KEE-nwah,” this Incan seed is the rare high-in-fiber whole grain that is easy to cook. Fiber’s importance goes beyond regulating digestion: It also reduces the risk of heart disease and diabetes. “Quinoa has significantly more fiber than pasta, plus it’s rich in iron and protein,” says Bowerman. “And it takes only 15 minutes to prepare.” Its chemical content also intrigues nutritionists. “It’s high in lysine and rich in methionine, amino acids that are in short supply in soy protein and vegetable protein,” she says.

The upgrade: To cook it, boil 1 cup quinoa to 2 cups water. It fluffs up when it’s done. Maria Hines, chef and owner of Tilth, an acclaimed organic restaurant in Seattle, favors a simple herbed quinoa dish. Boil the quinoa. In a separate skillet, add 1 Tbsp. olive oil and sauté 2 cloves chopped garlic, 2 shallots, the juice of half a lemon, ½ cup fresh chives, and ½ cup basil. When the garlic starts to brown, add the quinoa and stir for 2 minutes; serve. Quinoa is also a good base for salads, says Luethje. He combines 1 cup chilled quinoa (sometimes cooked in chicken broth to add flavor) with 1 cup grilled marinated vegetables or grilled chicken breast, and ¼ cup black beans or garbanzos. He tops it with ¼ cup cotija cheese.

Boost Your Liver

How: Eat kale instead of green beans. Once relegated to ornamental status because of its brightly colored leaves, kale is enjoying a renaissance. A dark, leafy cruciferous vegetable in the same family as broccoli, kale is loaded with beta-carotene, vitamins C and E, calcium, and lutein, and it’s extremely high in antioxidants. “Green beans are rich in fiber, but kale has a much higher concentration of phytonutrients and cancer-fighting indole-3 carbinol compounds,” says Kennedy. “And it keeps the liver healthy by providing a natural detoxification, helping to regulate liver enzymes that assist in the clearing of toxins.” Plus, kale has a high amount of folate, which is good for blood cells.

The upgrade: The knock on kale is its metallic taste, when served British-style (i.e., boiled to a pulp). Lately, though, chefs are sautéing it and using baby kale leaves, which have a buttery taste. Hines keeps her kale simple, sautéing it with 2 cloves garlic, 2 shallots, and ½ cup white wine. Sauté it until the wine evaporates, and finish with a squeeze of lemon juice and a dash of red chili flakes. Other chefs are using different kinds of kale. “Dinosaur or Tuscan kale, for instance, is delicious,” says Gross, “but red Russian is my favorite.” He uses it in a Thai peanut dish. Combine 3 Tbsp. soy sauce, 2 Tbsp. peanut butter, a few tablespoons of honey, 1 Tbsp. minced ginger, 1 clove minced garlic, and 1 Tbsp. crushed red chili flakes in a bowl. Mix it up, and use to dress the freshly blanched or steamed kale. Sprinkle chopped peanuts on top to serve.

Attain a Better Caffeine Buzz

How: Drink green tea instead of coffee. When it comes to a caffeine rush, green tea is the tortoise and coffee is the hare. Along with providing a gentler, more sustained buzz, green tea is easier on your heart (coffee can raise blood pressure) and stomach (coffee can cause an acid-reflux response), and it’s loaded with antioxidants. “Green tea is packed with the polyphenol EGCG, which helps prevent cancer,” says Dr. Abrams. No wonder you can now find green tea even at Starbucks.

The upgrade: Traditionally, the Japanese drink green tea—either brewed in bags or made from a potent powder called matcha—straight with no milk or sugar. Good Earth (goodearthteas.com) makes a high-quality tea-bag blend. Recently, it has become popular to turn matcha into a hot latte or ice-blended latte. “I steam soy milk—usually Vitasoy, because it makes a rich froth—and then I brew a strong shot of matcha powder and sweeten it with agave syrup,” says Gross. O-Cha is considered the premier powdered green tea (o-cha.com). Do three parts milk to one part tea.

Strengthen Your Immune System

How: Eat soybeans instead of potato chips. Immunity-boosting, heart-protecting, and superfilling, soybeans prove that “healthy snack food” is not an oxymoron. “Soybeans are rich in fiber, iron, protein, and omega-3s,” says Kennedy. “And they give you not only standard protein, but also plant-based protein, which is the most healthy for your immune system. It’s also a complete protein, meaning it gives you all the amino acids you need to build muscle without the less desirable aspects of red meat. What’s more, soybean protein satiates you better than a carbohydrate snack, and your system absorbs the compounds slowly so you won’t be susceptible to energy swings.”

The upgrade: Steam these sweet and mildly nutty beans in a pot or in the microwave, and then salt lightly. “For a bargain, purchase them frozen in the pod,” says Erickson. “Add a few drops of water and microwave on high for 5 minutes.” Soybeans can also be used in dips with crudités, she says. “Combine 1½ cups canned white beans with 1½ cups cooked edamame, 2½ Tbsp. lemon juice, ¼ cup olive oil, 3 cloves garlic, and a dash of salt. Blend it in a food processor.”

Protect Your Heart, Lose Your Gut

How: Drink organic red wine instead of beer. A variety of research has determined that red wine has heart-protecting qualities, but a new study shows that organic domestic red wine is the best. It has the highest levels of resveratrol, which improves cardiovascular health, and very high antioxidant activity, which can help prevent cancer. “The red grapes from other countries have higher levels of pesticides,” says Kennedy. “One negative aspect of pesticides is that they inhibit the plant from fully developing its own immune system, so the phytonutrients in the fruit are decreased.” Teetotalers can reap the benefits of organic red wine by drinking organic domestic grape juice instead.

The upgrade: Organic red wine does not age as well as conventional wines, so it is wise to drink them as soon as you can. Try merlots from northern California’s Bonterra vineyard (bonterra.com) and pinot noirs from Oregon’s Ponzi vineyard (ponziwines.com). To find other popular vineyards, visit the Organic Wine Company (ecowine.com).

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My “Superhuman Smoothie” Recipe — for extreme health

by Mike Geary – Certified Personal Trainer, Certified Nutrition Specialist

I’ve made this smoothie for some friends recently, and they joked that this was some sort of “superhuman smoothie” because it was so healthy, they hadn’t even heard of half of the ingredients before.  They also said that it was not only incredibly delicious, but gave them insane amounts of energy.

I will warn you right off the bat… this could probably qualify as one of the healthiest smoothies on the planet, but based on the types of “exotic” ingredients, it’s definitely not cheap.  But if you’re willing to invest in the highest quality food ingredients for your own “extreme health”, this smoothie can be part of your arsenal!

I’m also fully aware that some people in some areas of the country (or the world) may not have access to a health food store that has all of these ingredients.  However, if you live near any major urban area in any modernized country, or even if you’re in a rural area but have access to a great health food store, you can find almost every ingredient.

I also firmly believe that the combination of SuperFood ingredients in this smoothie can really go a long way towards strengthening your immune system, giving you loads of energy, and also helping to burn body fat, build lean muscle, and control your appetite and cravings.  There’s even some ingredients that can help boost libido, lower blood pressure, and more!

That’s why I said this smoothie was only if you wanted EXTREME HEALTH!

And if you remember one of my concepts I always preach is obtaining the highest micro-nutrient density possible per unit of calories… this smoothie would rank at the top in that category!  It’s also insanely high in antioxidants.

The “Superhuman Smoothie” Recipe for Extreme Health

Depending on your body size, the quantities in this recipe may actually be enough for 2 servings.  In a blender, mix together:

  • 1 cup unsweetened almond milk (very low in sugar if you get the unsweetened variety)
  • 1 cup coconut milk drink (if you can’t find the “coconut milk drink”, you can use 1/3 cup canned coconut milk with 2/3 cup water, since canned coconut milk is much thicker and creamier than “coconut milk drink”)
  • 1 packet unsweetened frozen acai puree (you can find unsweetened acai frozen puree here or at many health food stores)
  • A couple handfuls of frozen goji berries or other mixed berries (I’ve found frozen goji berries at Whole Foods stores… don’t use dried goji berries as they’ll make big chunks in your smoothie.  The frozen goji berries taste better too.  You can read more about the superfood status of goji berries here)
  • A small handful of frozen spinach
  • 1 packet of stevia (a natural non-caloric sweetener I like to use since I’m strictly against the use of artificial sweeteners)
  • 2 teaspoons of chia seeds (one of the most nutrient-dense foods you can eat…loaded with rare antioxidants, soluble fiber, protein, vitamins, minerals, and super high in omega-3’s)
  • 2 teaspoons of hemp seeds (significant amounts of zinc, magnesium, phosphorus and other minerals, as well as a high quality protein and omega-3 fatty acids)
  • 1 scoop of Boku SuperFoods powder (this stuff has to be the most amazing SuperFood mixture I’ve found yet!)
  • 1 teaspoon of spirulina powder  (good source of unique antioxidants, tons of B-vitamins, carotenoids, protein, and strengthens the immune system)
  • 2 teaspoons of raw cacao nibs (one of the highest antioxidant foods available; can help reduce blood pressure and improve overall cardiovascular function)
  • 1 teaspoon of raw organic cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon of raw Maca powder (nutrient-rich, made from a south american root; purported to help increase libido; adaptogen that can help the body deal with stress)
  • 1 scoop of chocolate Raw Grass-fed whey protein (this is one of the only truly RAW and grass-fed whey proteins I’ve found)
  • 1 tablespoon of raw almond butter

Blend all the ingredients until thick and smooth.  I add the powdered ingredients after the blender is already running so that they mix easier.

This smoothie is so powerfully healthy for your body, you’ll notice a consistent “super-energy” throughout the day without spikes and crashes if you start each day with one of these.  Also, if you consciously think about how nutritious this smoothie is, your body will actually get even better results, because of the power of the mind (placebo effect).

My “Superhuman Smoothie” Recipe — for extreme health Read More »