Thanksgiving But Low Carb

Thanksgiving 2

With thanksgiving just around the corner I guess like many paleo and low carb addicts you’ll be turning your thoughts to what you can eat. Well the food choices you make will depend very much on how long you’ve been following your particular diet. The great thing about following relatively easy diets like low carb or paleo is that making good food choices eventually becomes a choice of habit.

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Mouthwatering Recipes From Low Carb Mag(1st Series)

Here are the first series of step by step pictured guide  low carb recipes for your low carb diet and lifestyle.

Happy low carb cooking!

 

Coconut Crusty Chicken

This is a tasty and comparatively quite quick dish to prepare and although it uses simple ingredients the combination of the ones listed here really have proven to be the best so far. It’s also quite nice as a cold dish so leftovers (if there are any) really aren’t a problem

 

Finished product (7)

Nutrition Facts:

Energy | 315.1 kcal

Protein | 8.6 g

Carbs | 12 g

Fiber | 3.4 g

Fat | 26 g

 

Cod with Tomato Cream Sauce

This really is a special dish! Take your time when you’re making the sauce because you want to end up with the silky smooth tomato sauce that adds that special something to the mild flavour of the cod.

Finished Product (4)

Nutrition Facts:

Energy | 230 kcal

Protein | 19 g

Carbs | 8 g

Fiber | 1 g

Fat | 10 g

 

Steak with Avocado and Pebre Sauce

If you’ve ever visited Chile then you’ll have experienced the popular Chilean sandwich the Churrasco. Traditionally this is a combination of steak with mashed avocado and Pebre Sauce. now obviously for us, a sandwich is really not something we would want. So in order to make it a satisfying steak dinner we’ve substituted steak strips that will satisfy even the most robust of appetites.

Finished product (2)

Nutrition Facts:

Energy | 399.1 kcal

Protein | 21.5 g

Carbs | 14 g

Fiber | 10.2 g

Fat | 30.7 g

 

Here’s more from this series

 

Grain Brain: What A No-Carb Diet Looks Like

Bread Every time you tuck into a bowl of cereal or plate of pasta, you’re killing your brain. That’s the dramatic diagnosis of a U.S. neurologist whose recently published New York Times best seller has captured media headlines for calling wheat, carbohydrates and sugar “the brain’s silent killer.”

According to Dr. David Perlmutter’s book Grain Brain, all carbs — even the ones that are touted as healthy like whole grains — can cause everything from dementia, ADHD and anxiety to chronic headaches and depression.

In fact, the Florida-based neurologist goes so far as to claim that the human requirement for dietary carbs is “none — none whatsoever.”

It’s a theory that goes beyond simply advocating a low-carb diet for weight loss, or a gluten-free diet for those who suffer from celiac disease or gastrointestinal discomfort. Instead, the bold claims turn the pillars of the Western diet on their head, vilifying whole grains and wheat as agents of disease.

Perlmutter’s take on the best dietary way to optimize brain power? A fat-rich, low-carb diet. Foods high on the Glycemic Index and those that contain gluten should be avoided, including foods that have long been touted as healthy forms of carbs such as wheat, rye, bulgur, barley and oats.

In essence, Perlmutter’s prescription for a brain-friendly diet could be described as a variation of the gluten-free diet, the Paleo diet or the Atkins diet. On the last, the doctor tries to differentiate the Grain Brain diet by saying that while the Atkins diet makes no distinction between fatty, grain-fed meats, which are high in inflammatory Omega-6 fats, Perlmutter recommends meat, fowl and fish that are grass-fed, free range or wild caught.

Here’s a sample grocery list for foods allowed on the diet: Follow this link

Mediterranean Diet in Midlife Results in Better Quality of Life in Old Age

Meditteranean diet Investigators from Brigham and Women’s Hospital of the Harvard Medical School, the Harvard School of Public Health and the French National Institute of Health followed 10,670 women who were part of the Nurses’ Health Study, a long-term epidemiological study that started in 1976 and has followed over 230,000 registered nurses to assess risk factors for cancer, cardiovascular disease and other chronic conditions.

The researchers gathered dietary data from these women when they were in their late 50’s and 60’s and then again 15 years later, the participants provided information about their health. Their diet quality was assessed using two questionnaires: the Alternative Healthy Eating Index and the Alternate Mediterranean Diet score.

The results of their analysis showed that women who had a high adherence to a Mediterranean style diet as measured by the Alternate Mediterranean score had a 46% greater chances of healthy aging

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