Lose Weight Starting Today With The #1 Diet On The Internet. Don't Delay. Click Here To Learn More Now
Fat Loss for Idiots 

Posts Tagged “brussels”

The biggest factor in weight loss is your motivation.

It’s more important than which diet you choose. It’s also the biggest reason why diets often fail. Since it’s so important, let’s find out how to make it work for you, not against you.

Most weight loss programs work if you stick with them. The trouble may be that you don’t. Why are programs so hard to stick to? Because you often feel bad when you are trying to follow them – you get hungry, the wrong hormones are coursing through your body, you may be missing a source of comfort, and you may have emotional links to your weight issues. Read the rest of this entry »

Looking to make a change and lose some weight? I have reviewed the top diet on the internet and you can go and read over 200 comments people have made about why this diet has worked well for them, as well as some of the problems.

Tags: blood sugar, brussels, fat burning, food, food turning, hunger problem, insulin level, less food, testosterone

Comments 9 Comments »

We all see all of the colors of the vegetables when we go to the grocery store, but do you know what vitamins, minerals and other nutrients are in the vegetables that we eat base on the color of the vegetable? Here is a list of all of the colors and the nutrients that those colors provide.

More Color More Health

Growing up you may have been told to eat your greens, but what about your reds, oranges, yellows and blues? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the 5 A Day Partnership encourages YOU to “Sample the Spectrum” of the colorful vegetables and fruit available this season. By putting something of every color on your plate or in your lunch bag, you are more likely to eat the 5 to 9 recommended servings of vegetables and fruit every day. Just think: 1 cup of dark, leafy GREENS, ½ cup of RED tomatoes, ½ cup of YELLOW peppers, 6 oz. ORANGE juice and ½ cup of BLUEberries. And you have 5 A Day! It’s quite simple when you Sample the Spectrum.

The more reds, oranges, greens, yellows, and blues you see on the plate, the more health promoting properties you are also getting from your vegetable and fruit choices. Nutrition research shows that colorful vegetables and fruit contain essential vitamins, minerals, fiber, and phytochemicals that your body needs to promote health and help you feel great. Here are the specifics…
Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: birth defects, brussels, cancer, cancers, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, chemical make-up, folic acid, heart disease, orange group, tumors

Comments No Comments »

Mens Fitness magazineMens Health is a great magazine ofr telling it like it is, sometimes with a liitle to much brovado. I think this article is really worth it to read though for food substitutions that can make a real difference.
If you keep eating the way you always have, you’ll never improve on the body you’ve got. And the prognosis — on the mom diet, at least — isn’t good. Look at your dad. That’s why we’re providing you with 15 sneaky ways to improve your diet. Same foods, better results. And nobody needs to be the wiser. Just think of these food strategies as the cork in your bat, the glue on your glove, your own personal, syringe-wielding East German Olympic swim-team coach. Only difference is, each one is simple, nutritionally sound, and perfectly legal in all 50 states.

1. Whey your options
Add a cup of ricotta cheese to your fruit smoothie. Ricotta is a soft, mild cheese that’s made almost entirely of whey, the liquid that separates from curd during the cheese-making process. Whey contains cysteine, an amino acid that helps produce a cancer-fighting antioxidant called glutathione. When Ohio State University researchers treated prostate cells with whey protein, glutathione levels jumped by 64 percent.

2. See red
Got leftover tuna salad? Stuff it into a red bell pepper instead of sandwiching it between two slabs of Wonder bread. Red peppers and other red-fleshed fruits such as tomatoes, watermelons, and ruby-red grapefruit are high in lycopene, a phytochemical that can reduce the risk of prostate cancer by 20 percent. Bake the pepper and you’ll make it even more potent; heat makes lycopene easier for your body to absorb.
Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: Alzheimer's disease, Author, Banish iceberg, Block Center for Integrative Cancer Care, brussels, California, cancer, Cancer Care, chemical compound, Cheryl Forberg, colon cancers, Cynthia Sass, David Grotto, director of nutrition education, Evanston, food, food strategies, food substitutions, food tips, Golf, health-food store, heart attack, heart disease, Illinois, Leonard Bjeldanes, National Cancer Institute, National Institute on Aging, Ohio State University, oil, Olympic, Olympic swim-team coach, professor of nutritional sciences, prostate cancer, prostate cancers, U.S. Department of Agriculture, University of California

Comments No Comments »