Archive for June, 2007

Protein Plus

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

It’s always difficult to know exactly which foods have the most amount of protein in them, especially when you are trying to bulk up and add muscle, or drop body fat. Here is a list of some high protein foods you might consider eating, to achieve your personal fitness goals. The servings below are based on 100g portions unless specified.

The High Achievers: 30g or more

Lean bacon, fried 38.34
Venison, shoulder, roasted 36.28
Bison, roasted, 33.78
Chicken, breast meat, fried 33.44
Beef jerky 33.2
Rabbit, wild, roasted 33.02
Pheasant, meat, roasted 32.40
Chicken, breast meat, roasted 31.02
Pork loin, roast, 30.2


The Hard Hitters: 20g or more

Venison, tenderloin, roasted 29.9
Lamb, shoulder, 29.43
Chicken, breast meat, stewed 28.98
Goose, meat, roasted 28.97
Turkey, light meat, roasted 28.57
Turkey, dark meat, roasted 28.57
Chicken, leg, fried 28.38
Wild boar, roasted 28.30
Ostrich steak, grilled or barbecued 28.12
Beef, top sirloin, fried 28.11
Chicken, leg, roasted 27.03
Chicken, leg, stewed 26.26
Chicken, thigh, 25.94
Lamb heart, 24.97
Cheddar cheese 100g 24.90g
Pumpkin seeds 24.54
Minced meat burger, baked or barbecued (15% fat) 25.93
Pork shoulder, roast, 25.33
Duck, breast meat (boneless) 24.50
Turkey sausage, cooked 23.89
Lamb, kidney, 23.65
Tuna, canned in water, 23.62
Tuna, bluefin, raw, 23.33
Beef, ribs, roasted 22.6
Lamb, tongue, 21.57
Almonds 21.26
Prawns, cooked, 20.91

The Medium Weights: 10g or more

Pork sausage, cooked 19.43
Sunflower seeds, dry roasted 19.33
Italian pork sausage, cooked 19.12
Lamb, leg whole, 18.47
Beef sausage, cooked 18.21
Calamari (squid), fried 17.94
Cured ham 17.44
Peanuts, dry roasted, 17.3
Tofu, fried 17.19
Tahini (used for making houmous) 17
Sesame seeds, toasted, 16.96
Raw egg yolk 1 large 15.86
Walnuts 15.23
Blood sausage (black pudding) 14.60
Brazil nuts 14.32
Liver sausage, liverwurst 14.10
Hazelnuts 13.7
Quinoa 13.10
Whey, sweet, dried 12.93
Whole egg, hard boiled, 1 large 12.58
Whey, acid, dried 11.73
Goose pate, 100g, 11.40
Scrambled egg, 1 large, 11.09
Raw egg white 1 large 10.90

The Featherweights: 10g or less

Lentils, canned 9.02g
Macadamia nuts 7.91
Chickpeas, canned 4.95
Kidney beans, cooked 4.83
Baked beans 4.75
Yoghurt, fruit, non-fat 4.40
Tofu yoghurt 3.5
Shiitake, fried 3.45
Whole milk (3% fat) 100g 3.22g
Sweetcorn, canned 2.64
Potato, baked 2.5
Mushrooms, chestnut 2.5
Goose pate, 1 tbsp, 1.48
Chocolate milk drink with whey 0.64

Smooth Operator

Saturday, June 23rd, 2007

Smoothies are a great way to incorporate lots of healthy foods into your diet in a single drink. Here are some recipes that will help you in different areas of fitness, enabling you to achieve all of your personal fitness goals. A smoothie a day keeps negativity away!

BRAIN BOOSTER SMOOTHIE

The berries here aren’t just super food for your brain; they offer an important cancer-fighting bonus.

1/2 c fresh or frozen blueberries
1/2 c fresh or frozen raspberries
1 c pineapple OJ
1/2 c low-fat vanilla yogurt
1 c ice

BERRY BERRY SMOOTHIE

Using all unsweetened fruit, this recipe delivers an antioxidant whallop without the sugar.

1/2 cup frozen unsweetened raspberries

1/2 cup frozen unsweetened strawberries

3/4 cup unsweetened pineapple juice

1 cup soy milk or 1% milk

MEMORY AID SMOOTHIE

This low-calorie smoothie is a good source of fiber, phytochemicals, and antioxidants. Blueberries in particular contain compounds that can help prevent cataracts, cancer, constipation, and memory loss.

1/2 c orange juice

1 pint nonfat vanilla or peach frozen yogurt

2 1/2 c sliced peaches

3/4 fresh or frozen blueberries

MUSCLE BUILDER SMOOTHIE

This mix features the brawn-building power of protein from both peanut butter and whey.

2 Tbsp peanut butter
1 banana
1/3 c whey protein
1/2 c fat-free chocolate frozen yogurt
1 c fat-free milk

BETA BLAST SMOOTHIE

This smoothie is a muscle-rejuvenating, beta-carotene-filled, orange-colored wonder.

3 small ice cubes

2 apricots (sliced and pitted)

1/2 papaya (frozen in chunks)

1/2 mango (frozen in chunks)

1/2 cup carrots

1 tablespoon honey

HEART HELPER

The fiber from the fruit teams with the artery-protecting antioxidants and healthy monounsaturated fats of the peanut butter to keep your ticker tickin’.

1 banana
1/2 c raspberries
1 Tbsp peanut butter
1/2 c nonfat chocolate frozen yogurt
1 c fat-free milk

KICKSTARTER SHAKE

This recipe helps produce wake-up chemicals in the brain.

1 c skim milk

2 tablespoons frozen orange juice concentrate

1 c strawberries

1 kiwifruit

SMOOTH OPERATOR

The yogurt aids digestion, while the mango and juice boost immune response.

1/2 c pitted cherries
1/2 c mango
1/2 c low-fat vanilla yogurt
1 c pineapple OJ
1 c ice

MOOD MAKER

An all-fruit smoothie, packed with carbs to boost your serotonin levels. Add a handful of flaxseeds for an extra dose of mood-boosting omega-3 fatty acids.

1/2 c fresh or frozen blueberries
1/2 c fresh or frozen mango
1 c pineapple OJ
1 c ice

BETTER BREAKFAST

Less than a minute and you’re drinking a better breakfast.

1 banana

1 peach (cut up)

1/4 c orange juice

1 c ice

Red Raw

Saturday, June 16th, 2007

Beef It Up

Saturday, June 16th, 2007

The BBQ season is upon us, nothing better than a juicy T-Bone. Here’s a great article about what kind of beef to look for and why it’s good for you. Enjoy.

If mad cow disease has you wondering whether eating a burger could turn you into a vegetable, we’ve got good news: There is plenty of safe, healthy, and great-tasting beef out there, if you know what to look for. Sure, it was easier when the only choice you had to make at the meat counter was between prime rib and sirloin. Now you face choosing from “natural,” “organic,” “hormone- and antibiotic-free,” “grass-fed,” and “grass-finished,” along with conventionally raised beef.

But, trust us, this label proliferation is great news for red-meat lovers, especially now that bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, or mad cow disease) has a foothold in this country’s meat supply. Even without the threat of bse, there are plenty of reasons to think twice about conventionally raised beef. Factory-farmed cattle eat feed laced with hormones and antibiotics to fast-forward their growth, which in turn breeds superbacteria that are resistant to the antibiotics humans rely on.

Although in 1997 the United States banned the practice of feeding cattle ground-up spinal tissue and brains from sick animals (which helps spread BSE), cattle still consume protein supplements that can contain beef blood, chicken feathers, and sometimes even manure. Overcrowded living conditions, sloppy slaughtering practices, haphazard inspections…you don’t have to be an animal-rights activist to want to eat differently.

Which brings us back to the good news: All across the country, a new generation of ranchers is using old-fashioned methods such as pasture-feeding and the latest organic farming techniques to produce great-tasting, better-for-you beef. Yes, you might pay more (but we’ve got money-saving tips). Yes, you’re going to have to do some taste tests (but that will be fun!). And yes, we’re going to tell you where to buy it, how to cook it, and exactly what to say the next time you’re biting into a juicy burger and someone asks, “Are you sure you want to eat that?” Just keep reading.

What the Label Says: Natural

What it means: A huge range of things-it can simply mean that the beef hasn’t been altered with food coloring or artificial additives, or that it was raised without the use of antibiotics, hormones, or animal proteins. The price-and quality-of natural beef varies, and both usually correspond to how much special care a producer provides for the cattle. For example, Harris Ranch, in Selma, California, says that its natural beef, raised without hormones or rendered animal proteins, is free of antibiotic residues-but that doesn’t mean the cows weren’t ever fed the drugs.

All beef producers who give their animals antibiotics stop doing so prior to slaughter to avoid antibiotic residue-the law mandates it. Because this kind of natural beef isn’t substantially different from mass-produced beef, it’s not that much more expensive. Other producers take the “natural” claim further. Coleman Natural Meats in Denver, which raises 90,000 head of cattle each year, and Meyer Natural Angus, another large producer in Missoula, Montana, pledge that their animals receive no antibiotics, no hormones, and no animal by-products-ever. This translates into the consumption of more feed (without hormones and antibiotics, the cattle take longer to reach optimum weight) and higher management costs (producers must monitor animals more closely to keep them healthy).

As a result, this kind of beef usually costs about 25 percent more than the regular supermarket variety. At the most natural end of the spectrum are growers such as Bill Niman of Bolinas, California, who waits until cattle are 14 to 16 months old before moving them from grass to grain. (Most factory-farmed beef is switched at six months.) His animals receive shade while they’re in the feedlot, sensitive handling at the slaughterhouse, and also eat no antibiotics, hormones, or animal by-products. But quality and good karma don’t come cheap: Niman’s meat is 30 to 100 percent pricier than what you’ll find in the supermarket.

The bottom line: Most natural beef is grain-fed, producing a sweet, rich flavor that Americans have come to love. The best is free of frightening additives and more environmentally friendly than mainstream meat, but it costs more. To make sure you’re getting the degree of “natural” you want, look for producers’ labels and brochures that give a lot of detail about how their cattle are raised.

What the Label Says: 100% Grass-Fed or Pasture-Finished

What it means: Beef from animals that have spent their whole lives on pasture and are never fattened up with grain. Grass-finished beef is what most people ate before industrial farming took over in the 1950s. Its fans say that grass is more natural and, therefore, better for the cattle, the environment, and your health. “When I eat grass-fed meat, I have a sense that I’m eating the kind of food I’m designed to eat,” says Jo Robinson, creator of the Web site eatwild.com, which is devoted to pastured-raised meat, dairy, and poultry. She may be right: Grass-finished beef is usually lower in fat, calories, and omega-6 fatty acids linked to heart disease. It’s also higher in vitamin E and heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids. (But not that high: You’ll get two to five times more omega-3 fatty acids from grass-fed beef than regular beef, but you’ll get 5,000 percent more from salmon.)

So how does grass-fed taste? It depends on the season, the animal, and the skills of the farmer-especially since many of them are new to this kind of ranching. “You can get meat that’s tough and tastes grassy,” admits Robinson. When cattle graze freely, rather than eating what’s put in their trough, it’s simply harder to produce meat of consistent flavor. Still, when grass-finished beef is good, it’s delicious-lean, tender, and juicy, with a robust taste that many beef lovers prefer. For some this helps justify prices, which can be triple that of supermarket meat.

The bottom line: Eating an occasional grass-finished steak won’t make you much healthier, and locating a producer you like may require a few taste tests. But once you find a great grass-finished steak, you’ll feel a whole lot better about eating beef.

What the Label Says: Organic

What it means: Beef raised on only organic feed (grain or grass) and with no antibiotics, hormones, or animal by-products. In addition, the animals have been provided with “natural living conditions,” including access to pasture even during grain feeding. The price of organic feed (a steer eats more than 30 pounds a day), plus the time and expense required for producers to meet usda organic certification standards, make organic beef expensive-it will cost you three times more than supermarket beef. If you’re a purist, you probably won’t mind. “If I want to eat organic carrots,” says Doug Wallace, who ran Green Circle Organics until it was purchased last year by Sunnyside Farms in Washington, Virginia, “why would I want to eat an animal that didn’t eat organic grain?”

The bottom line: Of all beef labels, “organic” is the only one certified by the USDA, so you know what you’re getting-and what you’re not. Taste is another story: Like many artisanal products, organic meat varies in flavor. Looking for consistent quality? Start with beef sold under a brand name.

Mean Machine

Saturday, June 9th, 2007

Weight machines. Good or bad? Constantly evolving research suggests there are merits and drawbacks of each. Here is some interesting reading courtesy of MensHealth on which machines you should steer well clear of.

Standing-Calf-Raise Machine

Why it’s bad: Most men can handle a substantial amount of weight–often more than they can squat–when doing this exercise because of the small range of motion of the calf raise. This adds up to a lot of unnecessary spinal compression, which can lead to severe back problems.

Smith Machine (for squats)

Why it’s bad: The path the bar follows doesn’t allow for proper spine mechanics, which can place excessive stress on the lower back. That’s because the natural movement of your body during a squat is an arc, not straight up and down. Stick with the free-weight version.

Pec Deck

Why it’s bad: It forces you to abduct your upper arm horizontally–that is, move it away from your body while holding it parallel to the floor–while rotating it backward against a heavy weight. This places tremendous stress on the front portion of your deltoid, which can lead to nerve injuries.



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