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Showing posts with label Diet Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diet Tips. Show all posts

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Eat Like Jillian

The Biggest Loser trainer—and SELF's newest contributing editor!—is always go-go-going. What you see on TV is only a slice of Jillian Michaels's life. When she's offscreen, she's still whipping her contestants (and herself!) into shape.

How does this powerhouse fuel her jam-packed schedule? She prioritizes. "If I didn't work out and watch what I ate, I'd easily be 200 pounds," she admits. "I'm not the girl who loves to go to the gym. And I'm not the girl who loves broccoli, either. But I am the girl who feels potent, capable and confident when she feels strong, and I don't want to give that up. To me, it's about building a better body." Find out what a fitness guru really eats with SELF's day in the diet of Jillian Michaels.

Breakfast
To start the day off right, Michaels stocks up on carbs for long-lasting energy. "Breakfast is usually whole-grain Ezekiel English Muffins with almond butter," she says. "And I eat two whole English Muffins, about 500 calories."

Try these breakfast recipes!

Lunch
"For lunch, I'll usually have some sort of fish and veggies," says Michaels, who usually eats with her Biggest Loser contestants. "Salmon carpaccio and a vegetable or salad. But if it comes with cheese, I won't eat the cheese."

Try these salmon recipes!

Snack
For a quick afternoon pick-me-up, "I'll have hummus and carrot sticks or chips and salsa or an orange and raw almonds or Brazil nuts," she says. "A little bit of protein and a little bit of carbs." No matter what she's munching on, you can bet it'll be the healthiest option. "The things that are in Doritos! That thing is like a cancer wafer. I'll pass. I'll have baked corn chips instead."

Try these snack ideas!

Dinner
"I try to cut out carbs whenever possible," Michaels says of her final meal. "And I eat organic whenever possible. I work with organic chefs who help me on my website and we create recipes and test them out. I eat fish a lot."

Try these organic dinners!

Sweet treat
"I try to get my dark chocolate in somewhere throughout the day," she admits. "I have to have it. I work it into my calorie allowance and I will always have 200 calories of chocolate...always!"

Try these 250-calorie dessert recipes!

Source: Self.com/FoodDiet
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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Some new research tried to figure out what might help post-menopausal women achieve long-term weight loss. And it turns out that adding produce to their diet didn’t show up as especially helpful in the short term, but in the long term it mattered.

The researchers didn’t find that eating fried chicken was just fine as long as it came with a side of broccoli. What they found was that some behaviors are hard to maintain forever, and adding produce might be easier than avoiding all fried foods for the long haul.

“People are so motivated when they start a weight-loss program. You can say, ‘I’m never going to eat another piece of pie,’ and you see the pounds coming off,” Bethany Barone Gibbs, the lead investigator, said in a statement. “Eating fruits and vegetables may not make as big a difference in your caloric intake. But that small change can build up and give you a better long-term result, because it’s not as hard to do as giving up French fries forever.”

The study, published Tuesday in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, looked at overweight post-menopausal women.

Barone Gibbs, an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh department of health and physical activity, said several factors work against long-term weight loss.
“Not only does motivation decrease after you start losing weight, there are physiological changes, including a decreased resting metabolic rate. Appetite-related hormones increase. Researchers studying the brain are now finding that you have enhanced rewards and increased motivation to eat when you’ve lost weight,” she says.

For older women, the additional decline in energy expenditure makes maintaining weight loss even tougher. Traditional behavioral treatments for obesity, focused on

Read Full Article: LAtimes.com/Health
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We asked Harvard Medical School's associate director of nutrition, the author of the book "Break Through Your Set Point: How to Finally Lose the Weight you Want and Keep It Off," Dr. George L. Blackburn, for tips on how to cut 500 calories from your diet.

Leave bites behind at every meal
This step, Blackburn says, is a "painless way to walk away from your meal feeling satisfied without really feeling like you are cutting back."

"It's effective because every bite counts, and when you leave some behind at each meal, at the end of the day you have cut potentially a few hundred calories here and there vs. trying to cut back all at one sitting."

Aim for a balance of protein/carbohydrates/fat at meals and snacks
Mindlessly munching on "low-calorie" foods can add up, so avoid reaching for foods simply because they are touted as being low calorie, Blackburn says.

"Aim to get a balance of carbohydrate, protein, and fats at your meals and snacks. Protein and fat will help you feel fuller than eating carbohydrates alone, so combining, say, a piece of fruit with nuts provides the perfect combination of satiety-producing complex carbohydrates, protein, and fat."

Don't try to cut back on calories by skipping meals
Blackburn says simply: "This tactic doesn't work."

"Generally after skipping meals you leave yourself over hungry and you are more apt to fall prey to consuming larger quantities of food at your next meal. It's much more difficult to not only control your portions after skipping a meal, but controlling your food choices. When your body is craving fuel you are much less likely to reach for healthy, balanced options, but instead to reach for something that's fast and fatty and can really hit the spot."

Check in using a food tracking app
"Simply seeing how many calories a food provides can prompt you to eat less," Blackburn says.

"Label reading is step number one, but if you have access to an online tracker or mobile app, you can easily see your calorie bank filling up over the course of the day. Tracking what you eat, as you eat it, as the day goes on helps you stay in control of your calorie bank. It helps you determine if that extra bag of chips with the sub is really worth it and it helps you minimize the likelihood that you will over consume beyond what your body truly needs."

Volumize
Incorporate high volume foods like fruits, vegetables, soups, salads and water. "This strategy helps because when you fill up on foods with a high volume (higher water and fiber content) you feel fuller, generally on fewer calories," Blackburn says. "Pile the plate high with veggies for lots of volume, not a lot of calories."

Source: Read Full Article: Boston.com
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