Sprouts… Living Food at its Best by Isabell Shipard

Image 4 Sprouts are very special. Sprouts are live food, comprising essential and balanced nutrients for alive people, as life proceeds from life. Life and health go together. Good health is precious. A lass I was speaking with, summed it up so well, saying, “Our body is such an exquisite gift”. What a wonderful and thought provoking statement. Every person needs to work at maintaining health, therefore, we need to learn all we can about nutrients and how the body functions.

My interest in sprouts began over 30 years ago, when I read a riddle that fascinated me. It caught my attention and started my
interest in wanting to learn all I could about sprouts. The riddle went…

What will:
• grow in any climate at any time of the year
• that requires neither soil or sunshine, but is still rich in
vitamins and minerals
• has not been subject to chemical sprays while growing
• is extremely economical and in preparation has no waste
• rivals meat in nutritive value
• can be grown indoors within a minimum amount of
space
• multiplies 400% or more in 5 days
• matures in 3-5 days…

the answer… sprouts!

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Eggs Don’t Cause Heart Attacks — Sugar Does

Sweet It’s over. The debate is settled.

It’s sugar, not fat, that causes heart attacks.

Oops. Fifty years of doctors’ advice and government eating guidelines have been wrong. We’ve been told to swap eggs for cereal. But that recommendation is dead wrong. In fact, it’s very likely that this bad advice has killed millions of Americans.

A rigorously done new study shows that those with the highest sugar intake had a four-fold increase in their risk of heart attacks compared to those with the lowest intakes. That’s 400 percent! Just one 20-ounce soda increases your risk of a heart attack by about 30 percent.

This study of more than 40,000 people, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, accounted for all other potential risk factors including total calories, overall diet quality, smoking, cholesterol, high blood pressure, obesity and alcohol.

This follows on the heels of decades of research that has been mostly ignored by the medical establishment and policy makers. In fact, the Institute of Medicine recommends getting no more than 25 percent of your total calories from added sugar. Really? This study showed that your risk of heart attacks doubles if sugar makes up 20 percent of your calories.

Yet more than 70 percent of Americans consume 10 percent of their daily calories from sugar. And about 10 percent of Americans consume one in every four of their calories from sugar.

Failed Dietary Guidelines

U.S. Dietary Guidelines provide no limit for added sugar, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) still lists sugar as a “generally regarded as safe” (GRAS) substance. That classification lets the food industry add unlimited amounts of sugar to our food. At least the American Heart Association recommends that our daily diet contain no more than 5 percent to 7.5 percent added sugar. Yet most of us are eating a lot more. Most of us don’t know that a serving of tomato sauce has more sugar than a serving of Oreo cookies, or that fruit yogurt has more sugar than a Coke, or that most breakfast cereals — even those made with whole grain — are 75 percent sugar. That’s not breakfast, it’s dessert!

This is a major paradigm shift. For years, we’ve been brainwashed into thinking that fat causes heart attacks and raises cholesterol, and that sugar is harmless except as a source of empty calories. They are not empty calories. As it turns out, sugar calories are deadly calories. Sugar causes heart attacks, obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cancer and dementia, and is the leading cause of liver failure in America.

The biggest culprit is sugar-sweetened beverages, including sodas, juices, sports drinks, teas and coffees. They are by far the single biggest source of sugar calories in our diet. In fact, more than 37 percent of our sugar calories come from soda. The average teenage boy consumes 34 teaspoons of sugar a day, or about 544 calories from sugar. Even more troubling, this isn’t just putting kids at risk for heart attacks at some remote later date in their lives. It’s killing them before their 20th birthday.

This new research syncs with decades of data on how sugar causes insulin resistance, high triglycerides, lower HDL (good) cholesterol and dangerous small LDL (bad) cholesterol. It also triggers the inflammation we now know is at the root of heart disease.

And fats, including saturated fats, have been unfairly blamed. With the exception of trans fats, fats are actually protective. This includes omega-3 fats, nuts and olive oil, which was proven to reduce heart attack risk by more than 30 percent in a recent large randomized controlled study.

Here’s the simple fact: Sugar calories are worse than other calories. All calories are not created equal. A recent study of more than 175 countries found that increasing overall calories didn’t increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes, but increasing sugar calories did — dramatically.

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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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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.

How To Buy The Healthiest Yogurt

Yogurt Yogurt has earned itself a reputation as a true health-food superstar. But know this: “Yogurt can turn into junk food really quickly,” says Caroline Kaufman, RDN, a nutrition expert in San Francisco and an expert panelist for the Health Must-Eat List. Even if you skip the obvious offenders, like yogurts with crushed cookies or candy toppings, some pile on the sugar and excess calories. With so many choices out there — since 2010 alone, 671 new yogurt products have hit store shelves — how can you be sure you’re choosing wisely? These guidelines will lead you to the standouts.

Keep it simple.

To make yogurt, all that’s needed is milk and two live bacterial cultures, Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus, which turn the milk into yogurt via fermentation. “Beyond that, a few added extras for flavor, like a little sugar or some fruit, are fine,” Kaufman says. Steer clear of products that have long lists of ingredients with things you can’t pronounce or wouldn’t expect to see in yogurt, like hydrogenated oils and artificial sweeteners.

Look for good bugs.

Probiotics — good bacteria similar to the ones living in your digestive tract — are yogurt’s key ingredient. These beneficial bugs have been shown to help with digestion and gut health. But surprisingly, not all yogurt sold in stores actually contains “live and active cultures,” as the bacteria in yogurt are known. Some companies heat-treat yogurt after culturing, which kills off bacteria, both good and bad, to make it more shelf-stable and reduce tartness.

Make calcium count.

Yogurt is a stellar source of bone-building calcium, but the amount can vary from brand to brand. Aim for one that has at least 15 percent of the daily value for calcium; the yogurts on our list contain anywhere from 15 to 35 percent.

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