How The Corporate World Fuels Our Junk Food Addiction

Dinner “They don’t talk about addiction in the food industry even though they traffic in addiction. They talk about cravability,” explains writer and activist Michael Pollan in the latest RSA short.

And that cravability doesn’t come cheap — at least, not for the people eating the food.

When Pollan began learning about nutrition, he found that the single biggest factor in whether a person was eating healthily was where that person was getting their meals. Were they cooking food for themselves, or letting a corporation do the work for them?

Watch the video to learn about why outsourcing your dietary choices could be costly to your health.

Paleo diet for 2014?

Healthy groceriesWhat is the diet you should be following in 2014? It might be the paleo diet, the most googled diet of 2013. But what is it exactly? The paleo diet endorses eating foods similar to those hunter-gatherers consumed about 2.5 million years ago, during the Paleolithic era. According to Dr. Loren Cordain, one of the world’s leading experts on the natural human diet, it entails eating the foods of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, such as fresh meats, fresh fruits, vegetables, and healthy oils, such as avocado and olive. According to his research, hunter-gatherers were able to avoid obesity, cardiovascular disease (heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, atherosclerosis), type 2 diabetes, cancer, autoimmune diseases (multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, etc.), osteoporosis, acne, myopia (nearsightedness), muscular degeneration, glaucoma, varicose veins, hemorrhoids, diverticulosis, gastric reflux, and gout — all diseases and illnesses that have reached epidemic proportions in Western societies.

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The Paleo Diet: 13 Facts About Eating Like A Hunter-Gatherer

Paleo Eat like a Neanderthal? It doesn’t sound appealing on first read, but the so-called paleo diet — supposedly influenced by the way our hunter-gatherer ancestors ate — has become increasingly popular over the past few years.

There are a lot of misconceptions about the diet, and some variations among those who follow it, but at its core it’s a diet based on healthy animal protein, nuts, and vegetables, with no or restricted grains and legumes, seed oils, and high-sugar fruits and vegetables.

“It’s a nutrient dense, hypoallergenic way to eat,” says Toronto’s Sarah Ramsden, a nutritionist and paleo fan. Ramsden changed her diet after receiving a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disorder, about five years ago. One year after being diagnosed, Ramsden turned down medication for the condition.

“I wasn’t really wanting or willing to be on medication for the rest of my life,” she says. Instead, she turned to paleo, and says that eating a whole, unprocessed, low-inflammation diet has changed her health tremendously — something that inspired her to study nutrition and led to her current career.

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Low Carb Avocado Series 4

Low Carb Avocado is a multiseries step by step pictured guide on how to create wonderful low carb dishes using avocado.

Here is the third series of compilation that will give your low carb diet more delicious and easy options to choose from.

Happy low carb cooking!

 

Creamy Avo Dog

A quick and easy way to serve up a delicious low carb hot dog sandwich. Certainly a must try!

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 308.0 kcal

Protein 8.9 g

Carbs 21.5 g

Fiber 3.1 g

Fat 9.3 g

Water 60.9

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Avocado Breakfast Burrito

A quick -to fix burrito that’s filled with delicious avocado, bell pepper, and cheese, makes a fast and delicious breakfast on the go.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 390.0 kcal

Protein 13.7 g

Carbs 15.5 g

Fiber 6.2 g

Fat 32.3 g

Water 119.4 g

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Avocado Stuffed Grilled Milkfish

You can’t beat the amazing flavor of this avocado fish dish. Very versatile – you can use any fresh fish that’s available to you in your area.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 954.3 kcal

Protein 107.9 g

Carbs 19.5 g

Fiber 10.7 g

Fat 49.3 g

Water 651.2 g

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Avocanana Smoothie

A really easy-to-do smoothie. Refreshing, nutritious and perfect for breakfast treat.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 132.7 kcal

Protein 2.7 g

Carbs 20.6 g

Fiber 2.7 g

Fat 5.3 g

Water 100.8 g

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Beef Steak With Avocado Sauce

This avocado dish is really quick and easy to do. A creamy avocado mixture makes a great sauce for the seasoned beef steak in this main dish recipe.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 327.7 kcal

Protein 32.6 g

Carbs 12.3 g

Fiber 5.2 g

Fat 17.0 g

Water 233.4 g

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Beer-Battered Fried Avocado with Salsa

Simple yet deliciously deep fried avocado wedges – a healthy and yummy low carb finger food.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 377.9 kcal

Protein 10.3 g

Carbs 16.3 g

Fiber 11.1 g

Fat 30.0 g

Water 174.8 g

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Berry Nice Avocado Breakfast Smoothie

Healthy and convenient. – A delicious smoothie ideal fuel-on-the-go for breakfast.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 152.6 kcal

Protein 2.0 g

Carbs 21.9 g

Fiber 5.1 g

Water 157.7 g

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Chicken Lettuce Cups with Avocado Bacon Dressing

A great substitute for a tortilla wrap with bacon

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 446.6 kcal

Protein 59.1 g

Carbs 5.9 g

Fiber 2.5 g

Fat 20.5 g

Water 209.9 g

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Creamy Bacon And Avocado Soup

A super-easy and hearty soup recipe for the colder nights. Rich, creamy and comforting dish you’ll surely enjoy.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 311.4 kcal

Protein 8.3 g

Carbs 13.6 g

Fiber 5.4 g

Fat 25.4 g

Water 196.6 g

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Cucumber and Avocado Rolls With Mustard-Soy Sauce

This avocado dish is really quick and easy to do. A perfect combination of taste and texture. Rich,nutty, tart, sweet and salty. Excellent as a light starter or side dish to your main course.

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Nutrition Facts:

Energy 188.7 kcal

Protein 4.2 g

Carbs 20.7 g

Fiber 3.6 g

Fat 9.1 g

Water 65.8 g

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Watch out for more delicious low carb avocado dish on our next series.

Fat Does Not Make You Fat

Fat If you’re feeling completely confused about whether you should cut fat from your diet, you are not alone.  But here’s the bottom line: Fat does not make you fat or sick.

So, why do so many people believe that fat is bad for you and causes heart attacks?  This all started in the Dr. Key’s Seven Countries Study decades ago that examined heart risk based on lifestyle and dietary habits.  He found that in the countries where people ate more fat — especially saturated fat — there were more cases of heart disease, and he concluded that the fat caused the disease.  But here’s the problem with this study: Correlation is not causation.  Just because both fat intake and heart disease were higher among the same population doesn’t mean the heart disease was caused by the fat consumption.  Here’s another way to look at it: Every day, you wake up and the sun comes up, but although these events happen at the same time, you waking up doesn’t cause the sun to come up.  A study that observed this would show a 100 percent correlation between these two events, but it would be wrong to conclude that you caused the sun to rise.

Because of studies like this, we became sidetracked into believing that saturated fat causes heart disease.  But in fact, we are now learning that sugar is the true culprit, not fat.  A review of all the research on saturated fat published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found there was no correlation between saturated fat and heart disease.  And a recent editorial in the British Journal of Medicine hammers home the same point and shatters the myth that fat causes obesity and heart disease.  Researchers have found that, while it’s true that lowering saturated fat in the diet may lower total cholesterol, it’s actually lowering the good kind of cholesterol, the light, fluffy, buoyant HDL that’s not a problem.  When people eat less fat, they tend to eat more starch or sugar instead, and this actually increases their levels of dangerous cholesterol, the small, dense cholesterol that causes heart attacks.

In fact, studies show that 75 percent of people who end up in the emergency room with a heart attack have normal overall cholesterol levels.  What they do have is pre-diabetes or Type 2 diabetes.  So, what’s the conclusion here?  Eating a diet with good quality fat and protein prevents and even reverses diabetes and pre-diabetes (diabesity).  And eating sugar and refined carbs cause diabesity.

So, I encourage you to look at the issue of fat and sugar in a totally different way.  Don’t cut out the fat; enjoy it!

Thanksgiving For Special Diets: How To Make A Meal Everyone Can Eat

Thanksgiving What happens when a vegan, a person on the Paleo diet and a gluten-free eater sit down together to a Thanksgiving dinner?

It sounds like the intro to a joke, but it’s a real conundrum for the many people who have guests and loved ones with multiple dietary restrictions. Though it can be tough to plan a meal in which every guest can eat everything, there are several strategies that can make Turkey Day dining healthy and nutritious for everyone, experts say.

“The biggest thing is just keeping it simple,” said Cassie from DietitianCassie.com(whose last name is Bjork), a registered, licensed dietitian and health coach. “The shorter the ingredient list, the better.”

Creating a meal with lots of side dishes that emphasize fruits and veggies can also make the Thanksgiving menu a crowd-pleaser, Cassie said.

Simple meals

Those who follow the Paleo diet typically shun grains, sugars, dairy and processed foods, and instead try to eat foods that ancient hunter-gatherers would have eaten before the agricultural revolution. Those foods usually include fish, wild game and poultry, as well as fruits, vegetables and eggs. (Some on the diet also eat nuts.)

For those folks, simple staples such as green-bean casserole or mashed cauliflower work well. The green beans can be made with a healthy serving of coconut oil and homemade mushroom soup. Turkey is an easy staple that Paleo dieters can enjoy while getting adequate protein and fat, Cassie told LiveScience.

Other dishes can be modified to make them Paleo-friendly. For instance, sweet-potato casserole can be made without the marshmallows and cream.

Carb-conscious

Many people (including people on the Paleo diet) now follow a gluten-free diet, avoiding any foods that contain the protein gluten.

Still others are struggling with type 2 diabetes and must stick to a low-carb diet as a result.

For all these groups, it’s best to steer clear of white flour as a thickener, but either coconut or almond flour can be used as a substitute.

For dessert, make a coconut-milk, pumpkin custard instead of a pie, she said.

And for those who eat nuts, one option is to make the crust out of nuts, Franziska Spritzler, a registered dietitian and diabetes educator who runs lowcarbdietitian.com, wrote in an email. Having some unsweetened whipped cream on the side can provide a satisfying, low-carb treat, she said.

Even without the sweet treats, there are plenty of other options on the traditional Thanksgiving table for the carb-conscious.

“Turkey is virtually carb-free and an excellent source of protein,” Spritzler wrote. “Green beans, salad and other low-carb vegetables are important to consume because they provide fiber and phytonutrients (plant nutrients) that have beneficial health effects.”

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