Monday, July 22, 2013

Summertime and Watermelon


Nutritionists have long appreciated the health benefits watermelon provides. Watermelon not only boosts your "health esteem," but it is has excellent levels of vitamins A and C and a good level of vitamin B6.
           
Vitamin A found in watermelon is important for optimal eye health and boosts immunity by enhancing the infection-fighting actions of white blood cells called lymphocytes.
Vitamin B6 found in watermelon helps the immune system produce antibodies. Antibodies are needed to fight many diseases. Vitamin B6 helps maintain normal nerve function and form red blood cells. The body uses it to help break down proteins. The more protein you eat, the more vitamin B6 you need.
Vitamin C in watermelon can help to bolster the immune system's defenses against infections and viruses and can protect a body from harmful free radicals that can accelerate aging and conditions such as cataracts.

A two-cup serving of watermelon is also a source of potassium*, a mineral necessary for water balance and found inside of every cell. People with low potassium levels can experience muscle cramps.

An easy, fast, no-mess meal!
Ingredients
18 1 inch cubes of watermelon
6 cubes of smoked turkey breast
6 cubes of cheddar cheese
6 coffee stirrers or beverage straws
Instructions
Cut watermelon, turkey and cheese in cubes and skewer on stirrers or straws.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Being a Role Model is Not Enough


Many parents think they’re setting a positive role model for their teens by exercising and staying fit, but the kids don’t seem to care, as study in the Journal of Adolescent Health suggest.  A growing body of research indicates that being physically fit in childhood reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in adulthood, but the study found there was little correlation between teens’ fitness levels and the teens, had one or both parents who regularly engaged in physical activity.

The problem with this study is that being a role model is setting a good example, but kids need more than “look at me, see what I am doing” involvement. Have you ever known someone who is a show-off? Well, I have and well it turns me off to, I almost want to do the opposite of what they are doing just to say to them...big deal!

Or how about a role model who is so rigid and over the top about being active? This type of role model is doing more harm than good, who wants to hear about health and fitness 24/7 (well maybe I do) ok back to my example, teens especially don't want this nagging.

The third type of bad role model is a do as I say not as I do, well forget you, you are not even a role model.

Fourth type of role model is a parent who has recently discovered how to eat well and exercise more and immediately wants the entire family to join in. This won't work in the beginning either, especially if you have tried and failed in the past, your family will just sit back and expect you to fail once again.

So what can you do to be a Positive Role Model? Try these steps:

1. Visualize your goal, what does this mean to you? More vegetables, a walking program, lose weight? You know your family better than anyone else, so see your goal and list the steps it will take to get there.

2. Commitment: Are you committed to this goal? What obstacles will you and your family face? What will it take to get your family on board?

3.Communicate. Call the family together, I know it sounds cheesey, but it works, you wouldn't expect a CEO of a company to implement challenges without the staff being on board would you? You are the CEO of your family! Create this goal as a family, listen to what each family member says and allow input from everyone.

4. Follow through. You are the CEO of your family, follow through with every step on your family plan, from grocery shopping to family outings.


5. Stay positive. Always, from obstacles (which are only learning experiences) to rewards (non-food).Before you go to bed every night, be grateful from any steps you took today in making your family life more healthy, and when you wake up think of 3 things you will do today to create a healthier home. Your kids will thank you...someday!

Grandpa's Farm



I've never been overweight. I would say it is partly due to genes, partly due to sports interests growing up, a very active family, twenty years as a personal trainer, and a large part due to good food memories. I grew up visiting my grandparent’s farms. My fondest childhood memories were climbing trees, scaling the backside of the barn to hide in the loft, sailing stick and leaf "boats" down the spring run-off river flowing across the fields and raiding Grandma and Grandpa Walkers garden for fresh tomatoes.
I can recall the taste of baby carrots, pulled forcefully with both hands to free them from their garden captor, rubbed semi-clean on my already-soil-covered jeans, and chomped down to the feathery green stems. I know the sweet, crunchy, carrot flavor with a hint of earthy soil. And peas! The sound of the crisp pod snapping open, pushing the row of green beauties into my mouth where they burst with flavor. I chose the young pods for small, sweet, juicy peas or the larger pods for a bigger pop in my mouth.
We'd eat the garden clean if Grandpa didn't emerge from his hiding place behind the row of trees to shoo us kids away after he'd decided we'd had our fill of food and sneaky fun. We thought we were stealthy in our garden raids, but I know Grandpa was stealthier, and most likely had a good chuckle watching us kids enjoy the garden. Grandpa died last year, and I miss him terribly but those early memories left a deep impression on me.
It is forever embedded in my taste buds along with lettuces, strawberries, raspberries, corn, peas, potatoes, and more. It's that taste that draws me to search out the best organic produce and begin my happy dance at the start of Farmer's Market season.
Some of my earliest and best food memories shaped how I have eaten most of my life, and they continue to shape the memories I help provide for my own kids. Fresh, juicy, ripe, local, organic, natural, delicious, and nutritious whole foods make up most of our meals.

I can only guide what my children eat during their years at home while I prepare their meals. Fortunately, my kids did follow my passion for real whole food, they are healthy eaters, who make wise food choices because the tastes that shaped their taste buds are the ones that came from the fresh flavors of the local markets and gardens that we visit and support; along with the small selection of herbs, fruits, and veggies we plant each spring.  

Monday, July 15, 2013

Why Do I Have Cravings?


You know we all get them around 4:00 o'clock the urge hits you, the chocolate chip cookie is whispering your name. It's crazy but cravings happen to most people and if you understand a little bit about cravings maybe you can outsmart them.
Cravings are not the same as just feeling hungry. Instead, you feel driven to have a chocolate chip cookie every afternoon, or you crave a glass of wine after work. Salty foods and late-night snacks can get to be a habit too.
The majority of women have food cravings — especially for sugary, “simple” carbohydrates, salty foods, and alcohol — and many of us feel powerless against them. But when you “give in” to the desire to eat sugar or drink alcohol, you can be consumed by guilt and remorse.
The word “cravings” is not code for lack of willpower. In many women, cravings are signs of hormonal issues, which are often tied to inadequate nutrition. But cravings can also be related to attempts to lose weight, especially if you have metabolic or physiological imbalances that make it very difficult to drop excess pounds. Some of these imbalances even involve the neurotransmitters in your brain. A third option traces cravings to issues with adrenal function.
Cravings mean that the body has its signals mixed up. When you are tired or sad, you will have low blood sugar and/or low serotonin (a “feel-good” brain neurotransmitter). Hormonal imbalance or weak digestion can lead to low serotonin. Low blood sugar or low serotonin sends a signal to the brain that it needs a pick-me-up. It is this signal — which you don’t consciously control — that causes a craving for sugar or carbohydrates.
Look at the foods, deficits and behaviors in your life that are the underlying causes of your cravings.
The primary causes of cravings are:
1. Emotional stress. Eating can be used as a substitute to fill the void for being bored, uninspired, stressed, problems with relationships or any other emotional triggers.
2. Dieting. If someone told you not to think about pink zebras, your mind would be filled with images of galloping pink zebras. The same goes for dieting -- when you ban certain foods from your diet, you are going to crave the very foods you are trying to avoid, and may end up binging on these outlawed morsels. Which, of course, defeats the whole point of a diet. 
3. Water. Lack of water can send the message that you are thirsty and on the verge of dehydration  Dehydration can manifest as a mild hunger. When you start to get the craving, take a drink of water instead. 
4. Lat of nutrients. If the body has inadequate nutrients, it will produce odd cravings. Low blood sugar can cause carbohydrate cravings, since low glucose levels indicate that the body's glycogen stores have become depleted (often due to heavy exercise or going long periods without eating). 
5. Hormones. When women experience menstruation, pregnancy or menopause, fluctuating testosterone and estrogen levels may cause unique cravings.
6. Evolution. For early humans, high-calorie foods were scarce, and the human brain became programmed to crave these types of foods since they boosted the body's calorie count. Now, when we go a long time without eating, the first thing most people crave is fatty food because high fat foods have more calories than protein- or carbohydrate-rich food, and will quickly make up for lost calories.
7. It's in your head. Some cravings exist due to habit. For instance, your family may have eaten dessert every night after dinner while you were growing up. Now, if dessert doesn't appear every night after dinner, you crave something sweet.Or maybe the cravings are all in your head. The mind is a very powerful tool, and mental associations can often trigger cravings. Passing a bakery on your way home may elicit a craving for donuts, or a billboard ad for McDonald's may trigger a craving for french fries. Certain activities are also linked to cravings. Watching movies, for example, is heavily associated with eating popcorn and candy, so just the mention of a movie can drum up a craving for junk food. 
8. Seasons. Often the body craves food that balance the elements in the season. Spring we crave detox foods like green leafy vegetables, summer-cooling foods, fall, grounding foods like squash, and in winter, heavy foods like chili.
What you can do about cravings?
1. Try to identify why you have the craving first, then make a healthy decision as to what you should drink or eat.
2. Eat breakfast — and make it a healthy one with a source of protein. Add a serving of fruit or a whole grain, and enjoy a big cup of herbal or green tea. You won’t be hungry ‘til lunch.  Why it works
Starving yourself or skipping meals leads to overeating and sends a distress signal to your brain that triggers cravings. Eating regular nutrient-rich meals and snacks, especially breakfast, can help prevent this from happening.
3. Carry a healthy snack with you. When the urge hits you don't rush off to the vending machine or the nearest gas station or fast food, be prepared! Pack, nuts, seeds, granola bar and fruit and of course water.

Live Healthy Everyday!

-Kimberly