Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Jogging to Lose Weight


Ben is six foot tall and used to weigh 360 pounds. Within 10 months of starting his goal to lose weight he was down to 220 pounds. Check out his inspiring story at his site. Here is an excerpt;

My name is Ben Davis. On December 25th, 2008, I decided to get my life together. I weighed 360 pounds and was a miserable person.

Then I started jogging.
Then did a 5K.
The pounds started falling off.
I ran a 10K.
And a sprint triathlon.
Then I did a half-marathon.
I kept losing weight.
And kept running.
Then I did a full marathon.
I decided to keep going.
Then I did an Ironman.

If you want to do something with your life, if you really want to do it, just do it. I promise that you can. You just have to do it. And when you do, you’ll be happier for it.

Mini Apple Gingerbread Cupcakes

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups stone-ground whole wheat flour


  • 1 tsp baking soda


  • ¼ tsp salt


  • 2 tsp ground ginger


  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon


  • ¼ tsp ground cloves


  • ¼ tsp ground nutmeg


  • ⅔ cup low-fat buttermilk


  • ½ cup molasses


  • ⅓ cup canola oil


  • 1 large egg


  • 1 large egg white


  • 1 tsp vanilla extract


  • 1 cup finely chopped apple (sweet apple such as Fuji or Delicious, not Granny Smith)


Preparation:

  • Preheat oven to 350 F. Lightly coat 30 mini-muffin cups with olive oil cooking spray. Set aside.


  • Combine flour. Baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg in medium mixing bowl. Set aside.


  • Whisk buttermilk, molasses, oil, egg, egg white, and vanilla extract in another bowl. Make a well in dry ingredients and pour in liquid mixture. Stir until just combined.


  • Divide batter between prepared muffin pans (there will be about 3 cups of batter).


  • Bake on center rack 15 minutes, or until wooden pick inserted in muffin comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes before removing from pans.


Make 30 Servings:

Weight Loss Recipes Amount per Serving: 70 Calories, 1 g Protein, 10 g carbohydrates, 1 g Fiber, 2 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 90 mg sodium

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Polenta Cornbread

Nothing tastes as good as homemade, nothing.  I've always made cornbread from scratch.  A few years back, we discovered a new way of making it by accident.

One evening for dinner, I went to the fridge to grab the corn meal.  I didn't have enough for the recipe so I announced that we wouldn't be having it.  My oldest daughter asked if we could use polenta instead since it was dried corn. At first I thought that was a crazy idea.  They are two totally different ingredients, right? Nope.  Both are corn meal, poleta is just ground less, it's courser.  If you want to see what I mean, compare the two meals.

Due to the courser corn meal, the bread has a little chew to it.  I'll never go back to regular corn meal for our bread.


San Francisco Polenta Bread 

1 Cup Flour
1 Cup Polenta
3 Teaspoons Baking Powder
1/2 Teaspoon Salt
1/4 Cup Sugar
1 Cup Milk
1/4 Cup Oil
1 Egg, Beaten

Preheat oven to 425' F.  Place all ingredients in mixing bowl and blend.  Pour into 8in square pan and bake 20-25 minutes or until brown.  May also be baked in muffin tins.  Serves 6.

(From the side of the Golden Pheasant Brand Polenta bag)

Impressions from the Wise Traditions Conference

I spent last weekend at the Weston A. Price Foundation Wise Traditions conference in King of Prussia, PA. Here are some highlights:

Spending time with several people in the diet-health community who I’ve been wanting to meet in person, including Chris Masterjohn, Melissa McEwen and John Durant. John and Melissa are the public face of the New York city paleo movement. The four of us spent most of the weekend together tossing around ideas and making merry. I’ve been corresponding with Chris quite a bit lately and we’ve been thinking through some important diet-health questions together. He is brimming with good ideas. I also got to meet Sally Fallon Morell, the founder and president of the WAPF.

Attending talks. The highlight was Chris Masterjohn’s talk “Heart Disease and Molecular Degeneration: the New Paradigm”, in which he described his compelling theory on oxidative damage and cardiovascular disease, among other things. You can read some of his earlier ideas on the subject here. Another talk I really enjoyed was by Anore Jones, who lived with an isolated Inuit group in Alaska for 23 years and ate a mostly traditional hunter-gatherer diet. The food and preparation techniques they used were really interesting, including various techniques for extracting fats and preserving meats, berries and greens by fermentation. Jones has published books on the subject that I suspect would be very interesting, including Nauriat Niginaqtuat, Plants that We Eat, and Iqaluich Niginaqtuat, Fish that We Eat. The latter is freely available on the web here.

I attended a speech by Joel Salatin, the prolific Virginia farmer, writer and agricultural innovator, which was fun. I enjoyed Sally Fallon Morell’s talk on US school lunches and the politics surrounding them. I also attended a talk on food politics by Judith McGeary, a farmer, attorney and and activist, in which she described the reasons to oppose or modify senate bill 510. The gist is that it will be disproportionately hard on small farmers who are already disfavored by current regulations, making high quality food more difficult to obtain, more expensive or even illegal. It’s designed to improve food safety by targeting sources of food-borne pathogens, but how much are we going to have to cripple national food quality and farmer livelihood to achieve this, and will it even be effective? I don’t remember which speaker said this quote, and I’m paraphrasing, but it stuck with me: “I just want to be able to eat the same food my grandmother ate.” In 2010, that’s already difficult to achieve. Will it be impossible in 2030?

Giving my own talk. I thought it went well, although attendance was not as high as I had hoped. The talk was titled “Kakana Dina: Diet and Health in the Pacific Islands”, and in it I examined the relationship between diet and health in Pacific island cultures with different diets and at various stages of modernization. I’ve covered some of this material on my blog, in my posts on Kitava, Tokelau and sweet potato eating cultures in New Guinea, but other material was new and I went into greater detail on food habits and preparation methods. I also dug up a number of historical photos dating back as far as the 1870s.

The food. All the meat was pasture-raised, organic and locally sourced if possible. There was raw pasture-raised cheese, milk and butter. There was wild-caught fish. There were many fermented foods, including sauerkraut, kombucha and sourdough bread. I was really impressed that they were able to put this together for an entire conference.

The vendors. There was an assortment of wholesome and traditional foods, particularly fermented foods, quality dairy and pastured meats. There was an entire farmer’s market on-site on Saturday, with a number of Mennonite vendors selling traditional foods. I bought a bottle of beet kvass, a traditional Russian drink used for flavor and medicine, which was much better than the beet kvass I’ve made myself in the past. Beets are a remarkable food, in part due to their high nitrate content—beet juice has been shown to reduce high blood pressure substantially, possibly by increasing the important signaling molecule nitric oxide. I got to meet Sandeep Agarwal and his family, owners of the company Pure Indian Foods, which domestically produces top-quality pasture-fed ghee (Indian-style clarified butter). They now make tasty spiced ghee in addition to the plain flavor. Sandeep and family donated ghee for the big dinner on Saturday, which was used to cook delicious wild-caught salmon steaks donated by Vital Choice.

There were some elements of the conference that were not to my taste. But overall I’m glad I was able to go, meet some interesting people, give my talk and learn a thing or two.

Cranberry-Ginger Sorbet

Tip: in general, whole fruit is preferable to fruit juice, but the latter can be a great way to add fruity flavor while minimizing the use of added sweeteners.

Weight Loss Recipes : Cranberry-Ginger SorbetIngredients:

  • 2 cups fresh or frozen, thawed, unsweetened cranberries


  • 2 cups Pom Wonderful pomegranate juice


  • 1 tbsp chopped fresh ginger


  • Pinch salt


  • ⅓ cup agave nectar or xylitol


  • ½ tsp pure vanilla extract


Preparation:

  • Combine cranberries, juice, ginger, and salt in 2-quart saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer about 10 minutes, or until berries have popped. Cool slightly and place in bowl of food processor.


  • Add agave nectar and vanilla. Cover and process until completely pureed. Freeze.


Make 6 (½ cup) Servings:

Weight Loss Recipes Amount per Serving: 110 Calories, 0 g Protein, 27 g carbohydrates, 1 g Fiber, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 20 mg sodium

Monday, November 15, 2010

weigh in + fill

Ok so the blogging went off course for a week or so there, sorry!

I was good all month and made inroads into fat loss, and then on about the 2nd of Nov Jane emailed me and said "So you up for the 13th for a fill?"

Argh!

I was sure I had told her that I was attending a wedding on the 13th and we were staying over so it would not be possible but i must have forgotten! Damn it! So I couldnt do the 13th at all.

So we sent a few emails back and forth to see if I could rush down there to her in the depths of Devon and get a fill in a Gordano again... but  it kind of didnt fit with anyone's schedule so I just thought lets just leave it and wait until she was in the area again. I hate putting people out.

But... the prospect of waiting another month.  BOO HOOOOO. I was really down about the mouth as driving down to her house to get a fill would have meant that I could have met up with Caroline from over at Lonicera's adventures in Band Land. That would have been ace. We had planned to get piccies taken of us (waist up!) and have a good old chinwag and she so kindly invited me to stay over too which would have made the 6 hour round trip bearable. But it didn't happen.

I had kind of been working all month for that fill and it was keeping me going thinking about it. I didn't have too much trouble sticking to under 2000 cals but it was not a walk in the park if you know what I mean. I would still like to have snacked, and eaten shite, but I just chose not too. I have limited restriction - like just the one Big Mac rather than 2 - that kinda restriction!

So it was with great delight that on Friday I got an email winking at me asking what time we would get back from the wedding on Sunday. Well thankfully we were going to be in and I got fill I needed. A nice big fat whole millilitre. YAY

So I now have 6ml in my bandito. Its early doors, so I don't know if I have any restriction, but its 3pm and I ain't hungry. That's a rare occurrence. I have had 1 cup of coffee and half of another which is now cold, so this is good going. I am about to eat some sloppy porridge as I have to go to work and don't want to faint and I have also had 3 days of some horrible, bathroom dashing, backyard trotting stomach bug. *ewww*

Suffice it to say I am still weighing decidedly less, although I think I gained a kilo or so during the pissed off patch last week where I didn't blog and didn't Livestrong. Thankfully the lord let my bowels wreck havoc to lose it again. this morning I weigh 118.1kg. A new low since my band restart!

So armed with a nice big fill, and a little weight loss, I am ready to rock again.

Note to self - get a grip and stop eating like a moron when things don't go your way.

Create A Sleep Sanctuary

Outfit your bedroom for a better night’s rest and all those hours spent counting sheep will be a bad dream.

     You know the drill: You’re so tired, you literally fall into bed at the end of the night. But instead of nodding off, you lie there staring at the ceiling while your mind goes a mile a minute. Did you remember to put that report on your boss’s desk? Is that the third ambulance that’s gone by? Your body’s beat but your brain just won’t shut off. “There are so many factors—both internal and external—that can cause you to toss and turn,” says psychologist Michael J.Breus, Ph.D., the author of Beauty sleep: Look Younger; Lose Weight, and Feed Great Through Better Sleep. “Just like you need specific ingredients and utensils to

make your favorite recipe, stocking your bedroom with a few key essentials will make it easier to unwind and nod off.” So get ready to check your stress and other distractions at your bedroom door: Our expert suggestions will help you transform your room into a cozy haven for relaxation sleep, and rejuvenation.

  1. Test-drive a better foundation A saggy, lumpy mattress could be the cause of your missed zzz’s. “Most people think mattresses should last a lifetime, but they don’t—after all, we spend a third of our lives in bed,” says Max Hirshkowitz, Ph.D., director of the Sleep Disorders and Research Center at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston. “Although manufacturers may offer a 20-year warranty, mattresses are a lot like sneakers: They start to wear out long before they actually fall apart. Expect yours to last about eight to 10 years.”

         There’s no hard-and-fast rule about which type of mattress is right for your back, so use the time-tested trial and error method in the store: Lie down and roll around on every one. “It’s not a complicated science. You just don’t want one that’s too firm or too soft,” says Nadya Swedan, M.D., a physical rehabilitation specialist in New York City. “Look for a mattress that keeps your back supported so it’s not overarched or sagging into the padding.”

         Finally, because there’s a wide variety of comfort levels ranging from plush to pillow-top to cushion-firm—and the definitions vary by manufacturer-shop at a store with a large selection and test as many as you can.


  2. Luxuriate in your linens “Soft bedding helps create a soothing sleep environment,” says Andrew Suvalsky, an interior designer in New York City. His eco-friendly pick: the Company Store bamboo and cotton 300-thread-count bedding. The sheets feel silky smooth and the pastel colors are calming.


  3. Keep it dim “Your body needs to be in the dark to produce melatonin, the hormone that helps you fall, and stay, asleep,” says Breus. Ease into it by lowering the light an hour before bed, if you can. Either replace your reading lamp bulb with one that’s 40 watts or install a dimmer switch. If you’re a read-till-you-nod-off type, check out the LightWedge Original book light. It illuminates pages without affecting melatonin production.

         If your window let in a Vegas Strip amount of light, Blackout shades, which have opaque backing, are the best way to create total darkness. Suvalsky recommends Smith + Noble customizable roller shades with blackout fabric because they come in more than 50 colors and patterns to work with any décor. (Prevent light from peeking out between the shade and window by choosing the reverse-roll option when you order.) A less expensive alternative is an eye mask. The Dream Essentials Escape Sleep mask above, blocks all light.


  4. Dress for bed While you may prefer to wear flannel pants and a sweatshirt—or nothing at all—to bed, your wardrobe can affect your slumber, especially if it’s making you uncomfortable. It’s hard to go wrong with silk, though. Besides feeling decadent, this practical fabric “keeps you warmer in winter and cooler in summer, plus it’s less likely to harbor pet dander and dust mites than cotton is,” says Hirshkowitz. We like the silk pajamas from Shanghai Tang, because they move with you as you toss and turn.


  5. Strike the right chord Sixty-seven percent of women say they have problems snoozing at least a few nights a week, according to results from a survey conducted last year by the National Sleep Foundation. And 39% blame their sleeplessness on noise. “The sounds that keep you awake are constantly changing in volume and have intermittent stops and starts, such as you snoring bedmate, street traffic, and loud neighbors,” says Donna Arand, Ph.D., clinical director of the Kettering Medical Center in Kettering, Ohio. Mask the racket with the constant, steady rhythm of a white noise machine The HoMedics SoundSpa relaxation sound machine, recreates ocean waves, crickets on a summer night, and a waterfall to help you nod off. You can also try CD Bedtime Beats, inspired by a study conducted at case Western Reserve University. Researchers there found that participants who listened to tunes that contained 60 to 80 beats per minute drifted off quicker and stayed asleep longer. “If your partner’s snoring is keeping you up, earplugs work best.” says Hirshkowitz. Try the Got Ears? Snoring Relief Kit, which comes with 10 types of earplugs ranging from soft silicone to foam.


  6. Add some greenery “Plants improve air quality, and having a little bit of nature in your bedroom can improve relaxation,” says Arand. “But they can also grow mold. If you’re highly allergic to mold spores, place your plant near a sunny window, keep the soil a little dry, and be diligent about removing dead leaves.” Floras that top the clean-air list include English ivy, peace lilies, and bamboo palm.


  7. Lull with lavender

    You probably already know lavender acts as a natural tension tamer. But research done at Wesleyan University also found that when people inhale lavender oil before bed, they spend more time in the deep, more restorative phases of sleep and report felling more rested upon waking. Dab Naturopathica French Lavender Soothing Bath and Body Oil, on a tissue and tuck it under your pillow or apply it directly to your temples.


    Tip: What to keep out of the bedroom?

    “You want your room to be associated with just two activities: snoozing and sex,” says sleep expert Donna Arand, Ph.D. To create a stress-free sleep sanctum, relegate these anxiety inducers to another space.

    • Clutter “I’ve had clients complain that the piles all over their room keep them awake because they represent unfinished business,” says Houston researcher Max Hirshkowitz, Ph.D. Either tackle your stacks or move them to another room.


    • Your computer “Surfing the Web before bed not only keeps you from falling asleep, it also prevents you from staying asleep,” says psychologist Michael J.Breus, Ph.D. He speculates that exposure to light, interaction with other users, and stimulating content are all factors. If the bedroom is the only place you can log on, be sure the machine is off when you turn in so your screen saver doesn’t distract you.


    • Stressful conversations “Arguing before bed increases anxiety and stress levels and can keep you awake,” says Arand. Vow to save these conversations for a different time and place.


    • Your pets In a survey conducted at the Mayo Clinic Sleep Disorders Center in Rochester, Minnesota, 53% of pet owner said their sleep is disrupted by their pets (21% of dogs and 7% of cats reportedly snore). If you can’t bear the thought of kicking Sparky out of the room, consider getting him a separate bed.




  8. Find your inner Steinbeck Journaling is one of the best ways to get in touch with your creative side, and research has shown that people who write down what they’re grateful for are happier. “Recording your thoughts before bed-time can help you drift off faster because you’re able to sort out and clarify your worries instead of ruminating on them while you’re trying to fall asleep,” says James K. Pennebaker, Ph.D., chair of the psychology department at the University of Texas at Austin and a pioneering researcher in the field of writing therapy. Suffering from writer’s block? Identify your stressors (in-laws, a work project, money problems) and jot down several steps you can take to address them in the Dance Love Sing Live bound journal. Then put down the pen and tuck the journal out of sight.


  9. Breathe easier “A dry mouth and nasal passages can be irritating or make you cough, interrupting sleep,” says Arand. The Enviracaire EWM-220 warm-mist humidifier, has a 2-gallon capacity that lets it run for up to 24 hours. It includes adjustable settings and even turns off when your desired humidity level is reached.


  10. Clear the air Even if you don’t suffer from full-blown allergies, common irritants, like dust mites, pet dander, and particles from cooking smoke, can cause enough mild congestion to affect your slumber. “Protect yourself by vacuuming your mattress and washing your bedding in hot water once a week,” says Hirshkowitz. Critter-proof your pillows and mattress by encasing them in certified organic dust mite-barrier covers.


  11. Ease into the morning “We’re programmed to fall asleep in darkness and then wake up to sunlight,” says Breus. While the jarring sound of a screeching alarm clock may do the job quickly, why not help your body and mind gradually get used to the idea? The Philips Daybreak Duo sunrise-and sunset-stimulator alarm clock, gently wakes you by mimicking a steady sunrise.



Tip: Three ways to rest easier tonight Like mattresses and people, pillows come in many shapes and sizes. “To determine the best type for you, consider what position you sleep in most often and then buy one that’s customized to keep your body aligned correctly,” says Michael Fox, a physical therapist and co-founder of Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation in New York City. His suggestions will help you prevent aches so you can cog more zzz’s

  • If you sleep on your side or back

    Unlike down, the Tempur-Pedic Swedish neck pillow, supports both your head and neck to maintain proper spine alignment. Test out various sizes; your pillow should fill the space between your shoulder and your ear so your head doesn’t tilt up or down.


  • If you sleep on your belly

    Although this may feel comfy, lying with your head turned to the side can compress the joints in your neck, says Fox. To reduce strain, sleep with a large down pillow under your shoulders and chest on the side your head is turned toward. Then place a smaller one under your head so the rotation isn’t as severe.


  • If you’re pregnant

    Baby weight often strains the muscles and ligaments of the hips, pelvis, and lower back. Using a full-body pillow to support your top leg when you lie on your side relieves the tension. We like the Northern Naturals body pillow because it’s good for you and the environment: It’s made from organic cotton and filled with kapok, a natural tree seed fiber from the rain forests.