Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Grilled Veggies

Easy and beautiful grilled vegetables for gluten-free pasta salad.




 We love the smoky depth from the grilled veggies. If you don't have an outdoor grill, you can grill your veggies using a cast iron grill pan. It works beautifully.   Pick your favorite veggies and add as a side dish to any meal.


Cuban Halibut with Black Bean & Orange Quinoa




INGREDIENTS:

  • 4 4-oz halibut fillets, skin and bones removed
  • Marinade
  • 1 tsp orange zest
  • 1 tsp lime zest
  • Juice 1/2 lime
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt
  • 1/8 tsp ground black pepper
QUINOA
  • 1 tsp peanut oil
  • 1/2 cup diced red onion
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt
  • 1/8 tsp ground black pepper
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed
  • 1 bunch or bag spinach (9 oz), roughly chopped
  • 1 cup uncooked quinoa
  • 1 cup cooked black beans
  • 1 orange, sectioned with juice
  • 1 tsp orange zest
  • 1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Set oven to broil. Place halibut in a large bowl.
  2. Prepare marinade: In a small bowl, mix together orange and lime zests, lime juice, salt and pepper. Pour marinade over halibut and set aside.
  3. Prepare quinoa: In a large sauté pan, heat oil on medium. Add onion, cumin, oregano, salt, pepper and garlic. Cook for 3 minutes, until spices release their aroma and onion begins to soften. If onion starts becoming too brown, add 1/4 cup water. In batches, add spinach and cook, covered, for 3 to 4 minutes, until slightly wilted. Add quinoa and 2 cups water. Increase heat and bring mixture to a boil, then reduce heat to a simmer. Cook, covered, for 10 minutes. Add beans and cook for 5 more minutes. Then gently mix in orange sections and juice, orange zest and cilantro. Heat through for 1 more minute.
  4. Meanwhile, place halibut and marinade on a baking sheet and broil in oven for about 8 minutes. Serve halibut over quinoa mixture.

Meatless Lentil Burger







INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 cup dried green lentils, rinsed
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3/4 cup diced yellow onion
  • 2 celery stalks, minced
  • 1/4 cup leeks, finely diced
  • 2 tbsp ground flaxseed
  • 5 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 3 tbsp unsalted tomato paste
  • 1 tsp chile powder
  • 1 tsp ground turmeric
  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 cup cooked long-grain brown rice
  • 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Preheat oven to 375°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Cook lentils according to package directions.
  2. In a large bowl, mix garlic, onion, celery, leeks, flaxseed, Dijon, tomato paste and spices. When lentils are cooked, mash them with the back of a fork, leaving some whole. Add mashed lentils and rice to bowl. Mix all ingredients together.
  3. Heat oil in a medium saucepan on medium-high. While oil is heating, form lentil-rice mixture into 6 lentil patties. Add them to pan and cook for 2 to 3 minutes per side, until light brown. Transfer patties to prepared baking sheet and cook in oven for 15 minutes to warm through. Serve with a side salad and topped with diced tomatoes and avocado, if desired.
NOTE: There is no need to sandwich these burgers between a bun since you’ll be consuming a healthy amount of fiber thanks to the brown rice and lentils. 

Veggie Satay with Cucumber Quinoa Salad


   







INGREDIENTS:

  • 1/2 cup nonfat plain Greek-style yogurt, divided
  • 1/2 cup light coconut milk
  • 1 tbsp minced ginger root
  • 1 large clove garlic, minced and pressed into a paste with flat side of a knife
  • 2 tsp curry powder
  • 1/8 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt
  • 1/4 tsp fresh ground black pepper
  • 3 large scallions, white parts minced and green parts thinly sliced, divided
  • 2 medium zucchini, quartered and sliced into 1-inch chunks
  • 1 12-oz block firm tofu, pressed and cut into 1-inch cubes (about 2 cups)
  • 1 bunch asparagus, trimmed and sliced into 2-inch pieces
  • 1 tbsp natural unsalted peanut butter
QUINOA SALAD
  • 1 cup quinoa
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt
  • 1/4 tsp fresh ground black pepper
  • 1 large cucumber, halved, seeds scraped out and diced small (about 2 cups)
  • 1/4 lb sugar snap peas, sliced diagonally into ¼-inch pieces (about 1 cup)

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. In a large mixing bowl, combine ¼ cup yogurt with coconut milk, ginger, garlic, curry powder, cayenne, salt, black pepper and minced scallions (white parts). Add zucchini and tofu and toss gently to coat. Marinate for 30 minutes at room temperature (refrigerate if marinating for longer).
  2. Meanwhile, prepare quinoa salad: In a medium saucepan on medium-high, bring 1 2/3 cups water to a boil. Stir in quinoa, cover, reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes. Remove from heat and keep quinoa covered for 10 more minutes.
  3. Transfer cooked quinoa to a large, wide serving bowl and let cool to room temperature. Stir in salt, black pepper, sliced scallions (green parts), cucumber and sugar snap peas. Set aside at room temperature until ready to serve (refrigerate if making ahead of time).
  4. Heat a large grill pan on high until very hot. Grill asparagus for 3 to 5 minutes, until just tender. Transfer to a bowl and keep covered. Grill zucchini until just tender, about 2 minutes per side. Add to bowl with asparagus. Grill tofu cubes on 2 sides until grill marks are visible, about 2 minutes per side. Add to bowl with vegetables and keep covered. Reserve marinade.
  5. Whisk remaining 1/4 cup yogurt and peanut butter into leftover marinade. Place grilled vegetables over top of quinoa salad, drizzle with marinade sauce and serve.

Dark Chocolate Pudding


INGREDIENTS:

  • 2 tbsp arrowroot powder
  • 2 cups low-fat plain unsweetened soy milk, divided
  • 1/4 cup agave nectar
  • 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup dark chocolate chips (70% cocoa or greater)
  • 2 tbsp dark chocolate curls or shavings for garnish (70% cocoa or greater), optional

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. In a small bowl, stir together arrowroot and 2 tbsp soy milk until no lumps remain. Set aside.

  2. In a medium saucepan, whisk remaining soy milk, agave, cocoa and vanilla until combined. Bring to a simmer on medium heat. Add chocolate chips and stir until completely melted, 2 to 4 minutes. Add arrowroot mixture, whisking constantly until thickened, 45 seconds to 1 minute. Divide among serving dishes and refrigerate until set, about 1 hour. If desired, garnish each with chocolate curls, dividing evenly.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Butt workout


Tip-Top Toner

Stand with feet wider than shoulder-width apart, toes out, hands on hips. Squat until thighs are parallel to floor, then lift both heels (as shown). Lower heels for 1 rep. Repeat.







Tip-Top Toner

Stand with feet wider than shoulder-width apart, toes out, hands on hips. Squat until thighs are parallel to floor, then lift both heels (as shown). Lower heels for 1 rep. Repeat.

Soccer Sculptor

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, hands on hips. Squat, then stand and forcefully bring right leg across and in front of body, leading with heel, as if kicking a ball, left arm swinging in front, right arm behind (as shown). Return to start. Switch sides to complete 1 rep. Repeat.





 

 

Bicycle Buffer

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, hands behind head. Squat, then stand, lifting left knee across body (as shown) toward right elbow at center. Return to start. Switch sides to complete 1 rep. Repeat.
  • works butt, thighs, abs, obliques

Get-Lean Lift

Stand with feet hip-width apart. Squat deeply, extending arms behind torso. Stand, then raise left leg and lower chest until parallel to floor, extending arms forward (as shown). Hold for 1 count, then return to start. Switch sides to complete 1 rep. Repeat.



                                                         

Wall Whittler

Squat with back to wall, feet together, thighs parallel to floor, hands on hips. Maintain back and butt contact with wall as you lift left knee toward chest (as shown). Return to start. Switch leg to complete 1 rep. Repeat.



The Perfect Squat
Perfect your form with these tips from Kim.
Go low: Drive butt back (as though sitting on a chair), keeping thighs parallel to floor and knees over toes.
Get grounded: Position feet shoulder-width apart and slightly turned out with your weight on heels. You should be able to wiggle toes.
Open up: Place hands behind head. Lift chest, and draw shoulders back and down.
Stay in line: Keep a neutral spine without arching your back; engage your stomach.

Gingered Carrots and Red Onions with Broccoli

YOU CAN SUBSTITUTE broccoli with your freshest vegetable. Use baby carrots to speed up the prep time.


Ingredients:

2 garlic cloves
1 tbsp. ginger, peeled
2 medium carrots
½ large red onion
½ bunch broccoli
1 tbsp. olive oil
½ tsp. paprika
⅛ tsp. red pepper flakes
1 tsp. fresh parsley
½ tsp. sea salt

Instructions:

Combine garlic and peeled ginger in food processor, then mince. Peel and julienne the carrots. Slice the red onion the same size as the carrots. Cut the broccoli into bite size florets.
In a large sauté pan heat the olive oil over medium to high heat. Add the ginger, garlic, carrots, red onions, paprika, and red pepper flakes and sauté for 2–3 minutes. Add the broccoli and sauté for 2–3 more minutes.
Add the parsley and season with sea salt.

Makes: 4 servings
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cook time: 10 minutes

Black Bean Salad

Recipe: Black Bean Salad

by
LIKE ANY BEAN SALAD, this one is best made ahead of time so the flavors can reach their full potential before serving.



Ingredients:

2 c. red onion
2 c. yellow onion
1 jalapeno pepper
5 garlic cloves
¼ c. carrots
⅓ c. celery                                                           
2 green onions or scallions (white parts only)
1 can (16 ounces) organic black beans
For the dressing
4 tbsp. lemon juice
¼ tsp. cumin
½ tsp. fresh oregano
¼ tsp. cayenne pepper
3 tbsp. olive oil

Ingredients:

Julienne the red and yellow onions. Mince the jalapeno and garlic. Peel and dice the carrots and celery. Thinly slice the green onions. Drain and rinse the black beans.
On medium heat, in a sauté pan, heat a small amount of the olive oil. Add the red and yellow onions and sauté for 4–5 minutes. Turn down the heat and cook the onions for an additional 15 minutes or until they are brown and caramelized. Stir frequently so the onions cook evenly—don’t burn. Add the jalapenos and garlic and cook for 5 additional minutes so the garlic browns slightly. Cool mixture.
In a large bowl, mix thoroughly the beans, green onion, carrots, celery, and sautéed onion mixture.
Dressing: In a small bowl, add the lemon juice, cumin, oregano and cayenne pepper. Slowly whisk in olive oil.
Pour dressing over black bean mixture. Gently mix until dressing thoroughly covers all beans.


Makes:                        4 servings
Prep time:                   10 minutes
Cook time:                   30 minutes

Quinoa Spring Salad

QUINOA, A MIGHTY FOOD, was first cultivated by the Inca’s over 6,000 years ago in South America and was given the nickname “The Mother Grain”. Because of its nutrient-dense profile (high in protein and several minerals), it was given to women while they were nursing. Quinoa is actually a seed of a leafy plant but substitutes well as a low allergen, non-gluten, whole grain. It makes a nice alternative to wheat or rice. Because of its mild flavor, it blends well with various vegetables, nuts, seeds or beans. It is great served warm, at room temperature or chilled.


Quinoa Spring Salad:

Ingredients:
1 c. quinoa
1 ¾ c. water
½ tsp. salt
¼ c. raw nuts or seeds (ex. pumpkin, sunflower, pecans, cashews)
¼ c. extra-virgin olive oil
¼ c. lemon juice
6 tbs. chopped fresh herbs
pinch of sea salt
1 heart of Romaine lettuce (washed with the stem slightly trimmed), or other mix greens
Additional Ingredients:

Cabbage
Dried fruit/berries
Apple
Olives
Red onion

Instructions:

Rinse quinoa with warm water and drain. Place on dry skillet and toast evenly until grain releases a “nutty” aroma. Place in medium size pot with water and salt and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until all water has evaporated.
Place nuts or seeds on dry skillet and toast over medium flame but moving constantly. Nuts should evenly brown, about 5-8 minutes. Remove and allow to cool.
Combine olive oil, lemon juice, fresh herbs and salt, mix well. Rinse and prepare vegetables (chop, dice, shred). When quinoa has cooled, combine with dressing, nuts or seeds and vegetables and toss. Start with about half the dressing and slowly increase until desired flavor is achieved. You may not use all the dressing. Place finished salad on a bed of romaine lettuce or other greens. Serve at room temperature or chilled.

Makes: 4 servings
Preparation time: 30 minutes


                                                         

Lemon-Dill Wild Salmon

THIS EASY SALMON ENTREE can be grilled as well, if preferred. The rich flavor of the fish is complemented by the fresh herb mixture. Enjoy!

Ingredients:

3 garlic cloves
1 tbsp. olive oil
2 tbsp. lemon juice
½ tsp fresh dill weed                                      
½ tsp. fresh parsley
½ tsp. fresh tarragon
1 lb. wild salmon

 Instructions:

re-heat oven to 325 degrees.
Mince the garlic. Combine the garlic, olive oil, lemon juice, and herbs in a bowl. Mix.
Rub a cookie sheet or spray with olive oil to prevent sticking (or cover the pan with parchment paper). Place salmon, skin-side down, on the sheet pan. Evenly spread the herb mixture over the salmon. Bake for approximately 15–20 minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork: internal temperature of the salmon should be 155 degrees.

Makes:  4 servings
Prep time:  5 minutes
Cook time:  20 minutes

Moroccan Spiced Carrots with Shallots

USE THIS MOROCCAN-inspired flavoring style when cooking any of your favorite vegetables.

Ingredients
½ c. shallots
1 lb. carrots
1 tbsp. olive oil
¼ tsp. cumin
1 tsp. fresh cilantro
½ tsp. fresh mint                                            
¼ tsp paprika
½ tsp. fresh parsley
¼ tsp. red pepper flakes
1 tsp. sea salt

Instructions: 

Dice the shallots. Peel the carrots and julienne by hand or food processor.
In a large sauté pan, heat oil olive on medium-high heat. Add carrots and shallots, sauté 2–3 minutes. Add all herbs and spices, cook an additional 2–3 minutes or until carrots are tender, but firm.
Serve warm or chilled.


Makes:  4 servings
Prep time:  10 minutes
Cook time:  10 minutes

Quinoa and Garbanzo Bean Salad

THIS SAVORY DISH is best made ahead, so that the flavors can meld. Quinoa can be cooked in a rice cooker as well.




Ingredients:

¾ c. quinoa grain
1 ½ c. water for preparing quinoa grain
½ c. onion
½ c. poblano pepper
¼ c. green onions or scallions (about 3 stalks)
¾ c. canned chick peas
For the dressing
2 tbsp. lemon juice
2 tbsp. olive oil
½ tsp. chili powder
½ tsp. fresh oregano
1 tsp. fresh parsley
½ tsp. sea salt

Instructions:

Bring water to a boil. Add quinoa and stir. Turn down heat to low. Cover. Simmer covered 25–30 minutes, until all water is absorbed and quinoa is tender. Cool cooked quinoa.
Dice the onions and poblano. Slice the green onions. Drain canned chick peas and rinse.
Heat a small amount of the oil olive, sauté onion and pepper over medium heat for 2–5 minutes or until onions are slightly soft.
In a large bowl, mix thoroughly onion-pepper mixture, green onions, cooked quinoa, and chick peas.
Dressing: In a small bowl, add lemon juice, chili powder, oregano, parsley, and sea salt. Slow whisk in the remaining olive oil.
Pour dressing over quinoa-chickpea mixture. Gently mix until dressing thoroughly covers all the salad.


Makes:  4 servings
Prep time:  10 minutes
Cook time:  30 minutes

Chickpeas with Olive Oil, Lemon, Sea Salt, and Pepper

This is a tasty treat and it’s easy to prepare. Just open a can of chick peas, rinse, add your ingredients, and eat.



Tuscan Bean Dish

Ingredients:

1 can (15 oz.) white cannellini or navy beans
Extra-virgin olive oil, to taste
Fresh rosemary, to taste
Sea salt, to taste

Open the can of beans and heat them.  Add extra-virgin olive oil, sea salt, and some fresh rosemary. You can add sautéed or steamed veggies as well if you wish.


Snacks: Raw Veggies and Hummus/Nuts orSeeds/ Steamed Veggies

Raw Veggies and Hummus
This is super easy. Just chop up raw veggies and dip them in hummus for a delicious and refreshing snack. You can buy hummus at most stores (but don’t forget to read the label to see what’s in it), or you can make your own by following this recipe:

Ingredients
1 can (14 oz.) chick peas, skinned                               
2 tbsp. tahini
1 tsp. garlic, pressed
3 tbsp. lemon juice
½ tsp. cumin
1 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
Sea salt, to taste

Instructions:

Put the skinned chickpeas in a blender or food processor with the tahini, garlic, lemon juice, and cumin and blend until smooth. Add sea salt to taste. If the mixture seems a little stiff or too dry for your blender to cope with it, then just add a little water. Drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil.  Makes about 1 cup.

Seeds and Nuts
Seeds and nuts are filled with healthy omega-3 fats. These are the fats most Americans are deficient in, and nuts will help you fill that deficiency. Snack on almonds, walnuts, pecans, macadamia nuts, or pumpkin seeds.






Steamed Vegetables
Steam some extra veggies when preparing dinner, spice them up with a little olive oil, lemon juice, and sea salt , and snack on those throughout the day.



                                                          


.

Grilled Rosemary Chicken Breast

YOU CAN MARINATE the chicken in herbs and oil for up to 2 hours before cooking. This chicken can be baked, grilled, or broiled. Bake in the oven at 350 degrees for 20–30 minutes or until juices run clear and internal temperature is 168 degrees.

Ingredients:

4 five-oz. boneless, skinless chicken breasts
1 garlic clove
2 tsp. fresh rosemary                                                           
1 tsp. fresh parsley
1 tbsp. olive oil
⅛ tsp. cayenne pepper
½ tsp. sea salt

Instructions:

Pre-heat grill to 350 degrees or medium-hot fire.
Trim chicken breast of any fat.
Mince the garlic clove. Chop rosemary and parsley fine. Combine the garlic, olive oil, cayenne pepper, chopped herbs, and salt in a bowl. Place the chicken breasts in the same bowl and let marinate for 10–15 minutes, if desired.
Grill the chicken breast for a total 10–12 minutes, turning once half way through. Chicken should be firm to the touch and opaque throughout: internal temperature of the chicken breast should be 168 degrees.

Makes: 4 servings
Prep time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 15 minutes

Curried and Coconut Chicken Breast

YOU CAN MARINATE the chicken in the curry spices and coconut milk for up to 2 hours before cooking. This chicken can be baked, grilled, or broiled.

Ingredients:

4 five-oz. boneless, skinless chicken breasts
1 garlic clove
1 tsp. fresh ginger
½ stalk green onion or scallion (green part only)
1 tsp. fresh parsley
2 tsp. curry spice
½ tsp. sea salt
⅛ tsp. cayenne pepper
1 tbsp. coconut milk
2tsp shredded coconut
2 tsp. olive oil

Instructions:

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.
Coconut Curry Chicken RecipeTrim chicken breast of any fat.
Mince the garlic clove, ginger, green onion, and parsley then combine in a bowl. Add the curry spice, salt, cayenne pepper, and coconut milk to the same bowl and combine evenly.
Place the chicken breasts in the bowl and let marinate for 10–15 minutes if desired.
Rub a cookie sheet or spray with olive oil to prevent sticking (or cover the pan with parchment paper). Place the chicken breasts on the sheet pan.
Bake for approximately 20-30 minutes or until juices run clear: internal temperature of the chicken breast should be 168 degrees.

Makes: 4 servings
Prep time: 20 minutes
Cook time: 20–30 minutes

Cajun Black-Eyed Peas

Ingredients:

⅓ cup red onion
7 stalks green onions or scallions
3 tbsp. fresh cilantro
4 tsp. poblano pepper
2 garlic cloves
1 tbsp. olive oil
¾ c.  organic vegetable broth
2 cans (30 ounces) black eyed peas
1 tbsp. lemon juice
½ tsp. cayenne pepper
⅛ tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
Sea salt, to taste

Instructions:

Dice by hand or food processor the red onion, green onion, cilantro and poblano pepper. Mince the garlic.
In a large pot heat olive oil over medium heat until hot. Add all onions, garlic, and poblano pepper. Sauté the vegetables for 2–3 minutes until aromatic then add the vegetable broth.
Pour beans from can into strainer and rinse with cold water.
Add the beans, lemon juice, and all spices and herbs to the vegetable broth. Simmer 20–25 minutes while stirring occasionally until beans and vegetables are soft.
Remove from heat and either enjoy warm or chill and serve.

Makes:  4 servings
Prep time:  15 minutes
Cook time:  30 minutes

Double Duty Toning Exercises

http://www.fitnessmagazine.com/workout/express/20-minute/multitasking-toning-exercises/?page=1

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Stopping Addiction to Sugar: Willpower or Genetics?

by
WE ARE ALL PROGRAMMED TO LIKE SUGAR. New research shows some are genetically much more prone to sugar and food addiction than others. I have observed this in my patients, but now it is becoming clear why some have more trouble kicking the sugar habit than others.
As I reviewed in my previous article on food addiction, the science demonstrating that people can be biologically addicted to sugar in the same way we can be addicted to heroin, cocaine or nicotine is clear. Bingeing and addictive behaviors are eerily similar in alcoholics and sugar addicts. In fact, most recovering alcoholics often switch to another easily available drug: sugar.
It seems that we all vary a bit in our capacity for pleasure. Some us need a lot more stimulation to feel pleasure driving us to a range of addictive pleasures that stimulate our reward center in the brain – drug and alcohol addictions, compulsive gambling, sex addiction and, of course, sugar, food addiction and compulsive eating. We often see these as moral failures or results of character defects. In fact, it may be that addicts of all stripes are simply unlucky and born with unfortunate genetic variations in our reward and pleasure mechanisms.
Despite being stuck with the sugar addiction low pleasure gene, you may be able to modify its activity by modulating your brain chemistry and receptor function with the use of specific nutrients …
The Genetics of Pleasure
In our brain, a little receptor, the dopamine receptor D2 or DRD2 for short, must be activated or switched on for us to feel pleasure. The amino acid dopamine triggers this response. Sugar and other stimulating addictions increase dopamine in the short term. The only problem is it appears that those with sugar addictions, compulsive eating, and obesity have DRD2 systems that need much more stimulation to feel pleasure. Those who have sugar addiction, it seems have fewer D2 dopamine receptors and they need extra stimulation to make them “turn on”.(i)
Functional MRI studies of teenagers, both lean and obese, found that the obese teenagers whose brains didn’t light up as much in the dopamine reward centers were more likely to be obese and gain weight later.(ii) They also were more likely to have the DRD2 gene that coded for fewer receptors.
Some studies have pointed to drugs or nutrients that can modulate this defective dopamine reward response. In one study, naltrexone, an opioid blocker (blocks the effects of heroin and morphine on the brain) was used in sugar addicts. When they took this drug, which prevented them from getting the temporary high from sugar, they craved less and ate less.
We also know that amphetamines are natural appetite suppressants and reduce cravings. That is why children who take stimulant ADHD drugs (which are actually just fancy amphetamines) that stimulate dopamine receptors have trouble gaining enough weight as they grow.
There are also some promising studies of nutraceuticals(iii) that can modulate dopamine receptor function and appetite regulation.(iv) Bruce Ames, PhD found that high levels nutrients can reduce disease in people with 50 different gene variants, nutrients may modulate the function of our genes, improve their function, or affect the activity of enzymes that genes produce.(v) In fact, one third of our entire DNA has one simple job: To code for and produce enzymes controlled by nutrient co-factors. This means that nutrients have a powerful ability to modify the expression of your genes. This is the important field of nutrigenomics.
Overcoming Your Addiction to Sugar
Despite being stuck with the sugar addiction low pleasure gene, you may be able to modify its activity by modulating your brain chemistry and receptor function with the use of specific nutrients that either improve gene expression, or modify the activity, the enzymes, or the receptors, even if they are somewhat impaired.
I have used some of these in my practice, such as glutamine and other amino acids, with success. Regulation of hormones and neurotransmitters that affect appetite and cravings is complex and involves many factors including how quickly food spikes our blood sugar, stress, getting enough sleep, nutritional deficiencies, chemicals such as artificial sweeteners, food sensitivities which drive inflammation, and more.
For those with personal struggles with food addiction, remember it is not a moral failing or lack of willpower. Here are a five suggestions I offer my patients to help them break their food addictions.
1. Balance your blood sugar: Research studies say that low blood sugar levels are associated with LOWER overall blood flow to the brain, which means more BAD decisions. To keep your blood sugar stable:
  • Eat a nutritious breakfast with some protein like eggs, protein shakes, or nut butters. Studies repeatedly show that eating a healthy breakfast helps people maintain weight loss.
  • Also, have smaller meals throughout the day. Eat every 3-4 hours and have some protein with each snack or meal (lean animal protein, nuts, seeds, beans).
  • Avoid eating 3 hours before bedtime.
2. Eliminate sugar and artificial sweeteners and your cravings will go away: Go cold turkey. If you are addicted to narcotics or alcohol you can’t simply just cut down. You have to stop for you brain to reset. Eliminate refined sugars, sodas, fruit juices, and artificial sweeteners from your diet. These are all drugs that will fuel cravings.
3. Determine if hidden food allergies are triggering your cravings. We often crave the very foods that we have a hidden allergy to. For a simple allergy elimination program, consider trying The UltraSimple Diet, or The UltraSimple Diet Challenge Home Study Coaching Program.
4. Get 7-8 hours of sleep. Research shows that lack of sleep increases cravings.
5. Optimize your nutrient status with craving cutting supplements
  • Optimize your vitamin D level: According to one study, when Vitamin D levels are low, the hormone that helps turn off your appetite doesn’t work and people feel hungry all the time, no matter how much they eat.
  • Optimize omega 3s: Low levels of omega three fatty acids are involved in normal brain cell function, insulin control and inflammation.
  • Consider taking natural supplements for cravings control. Glutamine, tyrosine, 5-HTP are amino acids that help reduce cravings. Stress reducing herbs such as Rhodiola can help. Chromium balances blood sugar and can help take the edge off cravings. Glucomannan fiber is very helpful to reduce the spikes in sugar and insulin that drive cravings and hunger.
To your good health,
Mark Hyman, MD

How to Rewire Your Brain to End Food Cravings

by

I’m a food Addict. We all are. Our brains are biologically driven to seek and devour high-calorie, fatty foods. The difference is that I have learned how to control those primitive parts of my brain. Anyone can this if they know how. In this article, I will share 3 steps to help you counteract those primitive parts of your brain that have you chasing high-calorie, nutrient-poor foods. But before you can update your brain’s biological software, you’ve got to understand why it developed in the first place.

Calories = Survival

The brain’s desire to binge on rich food is a genetic holdover from the days of hunter-gatherers. Given what scientists know today about our early ancestors it makes sense that our brains are hardwired to fixate on high-calorie foods. It’s a survival mechanism. Eating as many calories as possible, whenever possible, allowed our ancestors to store excess calories as fat and survive lean times. That approach worked well for 2.4 million years, but today it’s making us sick and fat.
That’s because our brains haven’t evolved as fast as our food environment. The human brain evolved over 2.5 million years. And, with the exception of the last 10,000 years, people only ate animals they could hunt and wild-plants they could gather. Imagine if you could only eat what you caught or picked! The variety of foods hunter-gatherers ate paled in comparison to the 40,000 different food items we can buy in the average big-box grocery store today(1).
No cinnamon buns for them!
And whereas we have easy access to food 24/7, drive-thru meals were not an option for hunter-gatherers. Not to mention that hunting and gathering was hard work. Early humans expended lots of calories acquiring their food, so they needed to eat high-calorie foods to offset the loss. The average hunter-gatherer got up to 60 percent of his calories from animal foods, such as muscle meat, fat, and organ meat, and the other 40 percent from plants(2).
That balance between protein and carbohydrates in the diet is where the problem lies, but it’s not what you think. Carbohydrates have gotten a bad rap, but they are the single most important nutrient for long-term health and weight loss. But I’m not talking about bagels and donuts. I’m talking about plant foods that more closely resemble what our ancestors ate. Hunter-gatherers ate fruit, tubers, seeds, and nuts. These are whole foods. They are full of fiber, vitamins, minerals and disease- and weight-busting colorful phytochemicals. They also take time to digest. Therefore, they raise blood sugar slowly, which balances metabolism and offers a steady stream of energy. Whole foods have all the right information and turn on all the right genes.
But the past 10,000 years saw the advent of both agriculture and industrialization. And, in the blink of an eye (by evolutionary standards), the human diet got turned upside down. Today, 60 percent of our calories come from things that hunter-gatherers wouldn’t even recognize as food. The bulk of those items—cereal grains, sugary drinks, refined oils and dressings—are simple carbohydrates(3). The primitive brain sees an endless supply of easy energy. Left unchecked, our bodies pay the price. The result is a two-fronted epidemic of obesity and diabetes in our country—what I call diabesity.

The Blood Sugar Cascade

When you eat simple carbohydrates, whether as sugar or as starch, they pass almost instantaneously from the gut into the bloodstream. Within seconds blood sugar levels start to rise. To counter the increase in sugar, the body releases insulin. Insulin is the key that unlocks the cells and allows sugar to enter. As sugar enters the cells, the amount of sugar in the blood declines and the body restores homeostasis.
An abundance of simple sugars in the diet goads the body into releasing more and more insulin. Eventually, the cellular locks get worn down from overuse. Like a key that’s lost its teeth, insulin loses its ability to easily open the cellular door. The cells become numb to the effects of insulin. As a result, the body pumps out more and more of the hormone to keep its blood sugar levels in check. Eventually, this cycle leads to a dangerous condition called insulin resistance. Insulin resistance—at the root of diabesity—causes you to gain belly fat, raises your blood pressure, messes up your cholesterol, makes you infertile, kills your sex drive, makes you depressed, tired, and demented, and even causes cancer.

3 Ways to Reprogram your Brain

Luckily there are ways to rewire the primitive parts of your brain by making good food choices. Here are 3 ways to get started. For more suggestions on how to wrestle control from your reptilian brain, see Chapter 15 of The Blood Sugar Solution.
  • Balance blood sugar. Blood sugar highs and lows drive primitive food cravings. If you get famished between meals, that’s a sign that your blood sugar is crashing. When blood sugar is low, you’ll eat anything. To better balance blood sugar, eat a small meal or snack that includes healthy protein, like seeds or nuts, every 3 to 4 hours.
  • Eliminate liquid calories and artificial sweeteners. Early humans didn’t reach for soda or fruit juices when they got thirsty. Sodas are full of chemicals and high fructose corn syrup. Processed fruit juices are awash in sugar. Try sticking with water and green tea. Green tea contains plant chemicals that are good for your health. And, last but not least, don’t succumb to the diet-drink trap. The artificial sweeteners in diet drinks fool the body into thinking it is ingesting sugar, which creates the same insulin spike as regular sugar.
  • Eat a high-quality protein at breakfast. Ideally, you’re eating quality protein at every meal, but, if you need to prioritize one meal, choose breakfast. Studies show that waking up to a healthy protein, such as eggs, nuts, seeds, nut butters or a protein shake (see my UltraShake recipe) help people lose weight, reduce cravings and burn calories.
Ultimately, you may not control your genes but you do control what and how you eat. Since taking control and changing my diet, my brain no longer caves into the cravings and urgings that seduce the reptilian brain. The most powerful tool you have to transform your health is your fork! Use it well and you will thrive.
To learn more please see The Blood Sugar Solution. Get one book or get two and give one to someone you love – you might be saving their life. When you purchase the book from this link you will automatically receive access to the following special bonuses:
  • Special Report—Diabetes and Alzheimer’s: The Truth About “Type 3 Diabetes” and How You Can Avoid It.
  • More Delicious Recipes: 15 Additional Ways to Make The Blood Sugar Solution as Tasty as It’s Healthy!
  • Dr. Hyman’s UltraWellness Nutrition Coaching – FREE for 30 days!
  • Hour 1 of The Blood Sugar Solution Workshop DVD
To your good health,
Mark Hyman, MD
References:
(1) “What to Eat,” Marion Nestle, p 17
(2) “Plant-animal subsistence ratios and macronutrient energy estimations in worldwide hunter-gatherer diets,” L Cordain, et al American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2000; 71
(3) “Plant-animal subsistence ratios and macronutrient energy estimations in worldwide hunter-gatherer diets,” L Cordain, et al American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2000; 71

Why the New Surgical Cure for Diabetes Will Fail!

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Two seemingly groundbreaking studies, published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine found that type 2 diabetes, or “diabesity”, could be cured with gastric bypass surgery.  The flurry of media attention and medical commentary hail this as a great advance in the fight against diabetes.  The cure was finally discovered for what was always thought to be a progressive incurable disease. But is this really a step backwards?  Yes, and here’s why.
No one is asking the most obvious question.  How did the surgery cure the diabetes? Did the surgeons simply cut out the diabetes like a cancerous tumor?
No.  The patients in the studies changed their diet. They changed what they put in their stomach and that’s something that doesn’t require surgery to change.  If they had surgery and they didn’t stop binging on donuts and soda they would get violently ill and vomit and have diarrhea.  That’s enough to scare anyone skinny. If I designed a study that gave someone an electric shock every time they ate too much or the wrong thing, I could reverse diabetes in a few weeks. But you can get the benefits of a gastric bypass without the pain of surgery, vomiting and malnutrition.
Most don’t realize that after gastric bypass diabetes can disappear within a week or two while people are still morbidly obese.  How does that happen?  It is because food is the most powerful drug on the planet and real whole fresh food and can turn on thousands of healing genes and hundreds of healing hormones and molecules that create health within days or weeks.  In fact, what you put on your fork is more powerful than anything you can find in a prescription bottle.
The researchers asked the wrong question. It should not have been does surgery work better than medication, but does surgery work better than intensive lifestyle and diet change.
Astonishingly, the researchers just compared surgery to medication, which has been proven over and over not to reverse diabetes, and often promotes progressive worsening of the diabetes. Patients who get on insulin gain weight, and their blood pressure and cholesterol go up. And in recent studies, those who had the most aggressive medical therapy to lower blood sugar had higher rates of heart attack and death.
These two new studies on gastric bypass should have included a treatment group that had intensive lifestyle therapy as well as medical therapy or surgery.
Lifestyle change and changes in diet work faster, better and cheaper than any medication and are as effective or more effective than gastric bypass without any side effects or long term complications. These changes are not easy, but then neither is gastric bypass.
A recent study entitled Reversal of type 2 diabetes: normalization of beta cell function in association with decrease pancreas and liver triglycerides proved that diet alone could reverse type 2 diabetes. The bottom line: A dramatic diet change (protein shake, low glycemic load, plant-based low-calorie diet but no exercise) in diabetics reversed most features of diabetes within one week and all features by eight weeks. That’s right; diabetes was reversed in one week. That’s more powerful than any drug known to modern science and as or more effective than gastric bypass.  But since it was a diet study, it got no press or attention. Other research proves that intensive lifestyle therapy can achieve the same results.
We don’t have to heal with steel, we can heal with meals.
As I write this, new guidelines and insurance coverage for this new surgical diabetes cure are in motion.  But this is a grave mistake. One in four people over 65 years old, nearly one in five African Americans and almost one out of ten of our whole population have type 2 diabetes. By 2050 there will be one in three Americans with type 2 diabetes.
Recommending gastric bypass as a national solution for our diabetes epidemic is bad medicine and bad economics. If the nearly 30 million diabetics in America took advantage of this new miracle cure at $25,000 a pop, it would cost three quarters of a trillion dollars ($750,000,000,000).  If we paid people $100 a pound to lose weight we would still be better off. To treat the nearly 400 million diabetics around the globe that would cost $10 trillion.  Does this make any sense?
Shrinking someone’s stomach to the size of a walnut with surgery is one way to battle obesity and diabetes and may be lifesaving for a few, but it doesn’t address the underlying causes. And many will regain the weight because they didn’t change their understanding of their bodies or relationship to food.
Clearly, weight loss is critical and important for obtaining optimal health. However, what we are finding in patients who have gastric bypass surgery is that even a dramatic change in diet in a short period of time creates dramatic metabolic changes.
All the parameters that we thought were related to obesity, such as high blood sugar, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, inflammation, and clotting, are dramatically reduced even without significant weight loss because of the rapid effects of dietary changes that control which genes get turned on or off. This is called nutrigenomics – the way food talks to your genes. While weight loss is important, what’s more important is the quality of food you put in your body – food is information that quickly changes your metabolism and genes.
Unless we address the root causes – what we eat, our sedentary lifestyle and the social and environmental conditions that drive obesity and disease–we will have tens of millions of more diabetics lining up for stomach stapling!  The only ones to benefit would be the bariatric surgeons, the makers of the surgical instruments and the hospitals who are paid handsomely.
To paraphrase President Clinton, “It’s the Food, Stupid!”
My book, The Blood Sugar Solution, is a personal plan for individuals to get healthy, for us to get healthy together in our communities, and for us to take back our health as a society.  Obesity and diabetes is a social disease and we need a social cure, not a surgical one.
My personal hope is that together we can create a national conversation about a real, practical solution for the prevention, treatment, and reversal of our diabesity epidemic.
To learn more and to get a free sneak preview of the book go to www.drhyman.com.
Now I’d like to hear from you …
Do you think we should promote a gastric bypass as a national strategy to deal with the diabetes epidemic?
How have you reversed diabetes with food?
Have you had gastric bypass and did you maintain the weight loss? Or gain it back?

To your good health,
Mark Hyman, MD

Skinny Fat People: Why Being Skinny Doesn’t Protect Us Against Diabetes and Death

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In a shocking new study published online in Pediatrics this week, researchers found that from 2000 to 2008, the number of teenagers aged 12 to 19 with pre-diabetes or diabetes increased from 9% to 23%.
Yikes, one in four kids have either pre-diabetes or diabetes – what I like to call diabesity. How did this happen? Just 15 years ago, less than 3% of new cases of childhood diabetes were type 2 (or what we used to call adult onset), now it is nearly 50% of all new cases of diabetes in kids.
In this study of 3,383 children, aged 12 to 19, the most shocking finding was not just the exploding rates of pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes in children, which alone should make us all stop whatever we are doing and become health activists,  it was the fact that 13% of kids of normal weight were either pre-diabetic or diabetic.
We need to stand up in our homes, communities and schools and create healthy environments for kids. We need to take back our kids taste buds, our kitchens and our homes, which have been hijacked by the food industry and ban anything except real food.
We need to lobby to change food marketing to kids, tax soda, limit access to junk food in our schools and neighborhoods and protect our children, their future, our global economic competitiveness, and our national security.
Sick kids have been shown to have an achievement gap doing less well in school and throughout their lives.  And a full 75% of military recruits are not fit to serve.
Calls for more exercise will be heard because no one opposes more exercise. It doesn’t decrease profits for anyone!   But a kid would have to run 4 miles a day for one week to burn off one fast food meal. You can’t exercise your way out of a bad diet.
Michelle Obama’s laudable initiative should not be called “Let’s Move” it should be called “Let’s Eat Real Food”.  The food industry needs to be called to task, exposed and severely regulated to halt this epidemic.
Better to have a nanny state than a failed state crippled by the costs of obesity and diabetes with a population that is sick and disabled. When one in three Medicare dollars is spent on type 2 diabetes, and we will spend $3.4 trillion over the next ten years to treat pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes, incremental changes will not suffice.
Personal responsibility is not the answer.  Is a six year old with a fatty liver, diabetes and high blood pressure to blame for his or her condition?
Yes, the explosion of obesity, pre-diabetes and diabetes in kids is a national crisis.  But something else was even more troubling to me in this study.  Something that is not in the media reports, but I found it in the fine print in the study.
It was this.
The kids who were normal weight ALSO had higher rates of diabetes and cardiac risk factors.  In fact a full 37% of normal weight kids had one or more cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol.  Ponder this, of the skinny kids:
  • 18% had elevated blood pressure
  • 13% had elevated blood sugar (pre-diabetes or diabetes)
  • 10% had elevated cholesterol
But isn’t being overweight the cause of high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes?  Well yes. But here’s the rub.  You don’t have to be overweight to have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, pre-diabetes or diabetes.
This is as true for adults as it is for children.  While most of those overweight in this country have diabesity (pre-diabetes or diabetes), which is what actually causes high blood pressure and cholesterol, so do 40% of the skinny people.
They are in fact skinny fat people.  They are normal weight, but metabolically obese with all the same risks of disease and death as the obese.  I was just shocked to see this was true in kids as well.  One in seven normal weight kids has pre-diabetes or type 2 diabetes.
How does this happen? It is not just too many calories.  It is about the type, quality and source of those calories.
The single biggest myth held fast by physicians, nutritionists, government bodies and the media (as was shown clearly in the recent HBO special The Weight of the Nation co-sponsored with the Institute of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention) is that all calories are created equal.
Just eat less and exercise more. Balance calories in/calories out. It is just physics – who can argue with Newton and the first law of thermodynamics.
Biology is more complex.  In a vacuum all calories are the same.  Burn 1,000 calories of Oreo cookies and 1,000 calories of broccoli in a lab and they release the same amount of energy.  So they are the same, right?  True, but only in a vacuum; not when they are processed by your metabolism.
In fact food contains not just calories but more importantly food contains information that controls dozens of hormones, thousands of genes and tens of thousands of protein networks that control everything from your appetite to the rate of fat burning or storage to cholesterol synthesis and more.
The food industry has created secret combinations of sugar, fat and salt in junk food that trigger biological addiction – which is why you “can’t just eat one” potato chip, but you can easily just eat one serving of broccoli. Who binges on asparagus? But almost everyone has eaten a whole bag of cookies.
The quality of the food you eat is critically important, independent of the calories.  Eating junk will put on junk around your middle – even if it is invisible.  We call the fat inside your belly “VAT” or visceral adipose tissue.
And even if you are normal weight, as was the case for many of these children in the study, you can have pre-diabetes or diabetes.  You become a skinny fat person.
A surgeon friend of mine recently told me that even in people of normal weight, he found belly’s full of fat – caked around their colon, liver, kidneys, and draped over all their organs.  This is caused by our industrial diet full of high fructose corn syrup, added sugars, trans-fats, flour and processed food.
The average American eats 29 pounds of French fries, 23 pounds of pizza, 24 pounds of ice cream and consumes 53 gallons of soda, 24 pounds of artificial sweeteners, 2.736 pounds of salt and 90,700 mg of caffeine per year.  Do we really think we can create health in that toxic environment?
That is why we need to “unjunk” our food, and particularly our children’s food.  Yes, it is horrible that in less than a decade we have gone from one in ten kids to almost one in four kids with pre-diabetes or diabetes. Even the skinny kids are affected because of the toxic industrial food-like substances that provide too much energy and not enough good information.
But here’s the problem.  We don’t have a coordinated national effort, nor do our elected officials have the political willpower to buck the food industry lobby and protect our children.
In a recommendation issued in 2010, the US Preventive Services Task Force proposed to screen children aged older than 6 years for obesity and refer them to comprehensive, moderate to intense behavioral interventions for weight control.
There are two glaring problems with this strategy.  First there are no places to refer these patients because most doctors know almost nothing about nutrition and lifestyle. And our health care system does not have any infrastructure or systems for comprehensive lifestyle interventions.
And second, if kids change and their environment doesn’t they will fail. If they go home to staples of soda, donuts and frozen pizza, and they go to schools with deep fryers and microwaves and walls of junk food, and they live in neighborhoods with convenience stores and fast food outlets but no vegetables or fruit in sight, and their parents don’t know how to cook or teach them how to care for their bodies, how can they succeed?
And if getting together to play with friends means games on Facebook any lifestyle intervention will fail.
Obesity is contagious. It is a social disease.  But health is also contagious and we need to start infecting our communities and neighborhoods with health.  I encourage each of you to be health activists.
We can’t wait for anyone else to solve this problem – not government or corporations. We need to democratize and decentralize health.
Each of us can make changes in the circle of our own lives where we live, eat, learn, work, play and pray.  I have created a simple website for us all to share our collective intelligence on how to solve this  – www.takebackourhealth.org.
Share what you are doing in your homes, in your schools, at work or in our democracy to take back our health – collectively we can solve this. Our children are depending on us!!
Now I’d like to hear from you…
What have you done to create a healthy environment for the children in your community?
Do you know what your children are eating at school or do you pack a healthy lunch for them?
Have you taught your children to eat healthy and how to cook with real food ingredients?

To your good health,
Mark Hyman, MD