Great Nutrition Tips


March 4, 2009: 8:56 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Recently, when listening to a speaker on improving health habits, I heard a phrase that really rang true for me.

The nutrition expert offered the audience a simple guideline to use when making food choices: “Please don’t bring bad food into this body.”

The phrase struck me because it was such a simple, non-judgmental way to remind us all that we have choices. We can grab a bag of lunch at the nearest greasy fast-food joint or we can go to all the trouble of choosing something fresh. But the concept has use far beyond our diets.

Whether or not we choose to think about it, our day-to-day lives are full of choices. Fast food or fresh. Anger or forgiveness. Self pity or service to others.

Every thought or feeling, in every moment, can be something that we choose.

Heady? Mabybe. But think about the choices that you will have today. You’ve already chosen to get up. And to read the paper. There, that’s two. We can also make choices about the company we keep–are our friendships “give and take?” Are the people we invest our time with those on whom we can rely when we need something? Do they pick us up when we’re down? or just “pile on” with the rest of the world? We all have choices about the people with whom we spend our time.

What about families? Even if they’re far away, you can connect with kids and grandkids in lots of positive ways. For example, soon you’ll be hearing more about “ethical wills”–these are not documents about how we want to die, but instead, collections of thoughts and stories that will help those we leave behind know what mattered to us.

There are people who think that they have a choice about nothing … and those who think that they have a choice about everything. I think that the truth is somewhere in between. We may not always like the things that happen to or around us, but we can always choose not to waste the opportunities for learning that they provide.

Please don’t bring junk food thoughts like “I can’t, I’m too old” into this head.

Lawrence Bienemann is a program coordinator for RSVP in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. He also speaks and writes about issues related to aging well and can be reached by e-mail at lawrenceb@rcn.com.

February 27, 2009: 11:07 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Liquid vitamins are the same vitamins that you find in any supermarket or health store, but are suspended in a liquid mixture. This new method of taking liquid nutritional supplements is becoming extraordinarily popular in today’s progressive healthcare marketplace. The average consumer wants the most for their money and is becoming more knowledgeable about products or services that offer the most benefit. It is no wonder more people are adding liquid vitamins and minerals to their daily supplementation.

People are discovering that liquid vitamins and nutritional supplements are much easier to take and ingest than the traditional pill form. If you’ve ever taken lots of vitamin supplements or medications you might know how uncomfortable it can be to swallow and digest a handful of “horse pills”. Researchers are also discovering that liquid vitamins may be more effective than swallowing pills. The liquid vitamin and mineral form doesn’t need to be broken down by our digestive system and is much more readily absorbed by our bodies.
Supplementing your body with liquid minerals and vitamin nutrients can help create the optimal environment in the body for maximal life expectancy by replenishing nutritional deficiencies. There are some Eastern cultures that have people routinely living to ages in the range of 120 to 140 years old (ex: the Hunzas). The common link that these amazing cultures share to make these astounding life-spans possible is the daily ingestion of, and farmland cultivation with “glacial milk”. This “glacial milk” is ordinary water that is naturally combined with high amounts of essential and rare minerals and other nutrients.

There’s no doubt that liquid vitamins are growing in popularity as more people discover them. More and more liquid vitamin products are hitting the health market as consumers are changing the way they want to take their nutritional supplements.

Judy Brown is a director of http://www.lifenatural.com, http://www.lifenatural.com/liquidvitamins.htm and http://www.corticel.com which all have a focus on liquid vitamins, weight loss and natural health issues.

February 26, 2009: 10:49 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

It’s never become more apparent than in the 21st century that the earth is saturated with poisons. It’s nearly impossible to avoid them, despite our best attempts.

The media, coupled with the “all-knowing experts,” advise us to steer clear of pesticides, household cleaners, processed foods, food additives, preservatives, and gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles.

If it were up to them, we would all be living in the mountains of Montana, growing our own food, drinking aquifer-supplied water, and driving a hybrid car (or riding a horse). While this might be an ideal way to live, unfortunately for you and me, it’s likely not possible.

That’s why it’s even more important to build up and support our immune systems and make healthy choices when it comes to what we eat, what types of foods we choose to have in our homes, and which foods we provide for our children.

I don’t want to sound paranoid. And my desire is not to make you eliminate all of the things that are a part of our everyday lives. I will, however, offer you the following scientific evidence and guidelines for avoiding what I believe to be the most toxic substances to our bodies, which drain our energy!

Sugar and hydrogenated fats. These two toxins, which are consumed by the billions of tons each year, literally drain our mental and physical energy and infect us like a poison.

Here’s a brief explanation of each and how they negatively affect us:

“Sugar makes you irritable, hyperactive, and causes premature aging…”SUGAR
Sugar is the most consumed substance on the planet. Whether it’s in the form of fructose, sucrose, dextrose, corn syrup, maltodextrin, or confectionary sugarthis poison negatively affects our mood and behavior. It makes us want more and leaves us cranky when we don’t have it.

Scientific evidence has shown that sugar, in any form, depletes essential B vitamins and lowers your body’s resistance to bacteria, viruses, and yeasts. Sugar makes you irritable, hyperactive, and causes premature aging through a process called glycosylation (pronounced gly ko si lay shun). And to no surprise, sugar is the number one culprit to adult-onset (Type II) diabetes, which is typically self-induced as a result of a life laden with sugar. At this point, the body is no longer capable of disposing of insulin properly, which becomes a serious risk factor for heart disease.

The Insulin “Roller Coaster” Ride

When you eat sugar, it enters your bloodstream all at once, instead of slowly as it would as part of a whole-food, naturally occurring meal. Insulin is then immediately secreted and shuttles the sugar away into cells within muscle or adipose tissue (fat). Now that there is not enough sugar in your bloodstream, your brain senses that you are in a time of famine and sends a message to the adrenal glands to release adrenaline and cortisol.

Adrenaline releases energy from sugar stored in your liver and muscles, and cortisol begins to break down your own muscle mass into sugar like I shared earlier. This sequence of events is called the insulin -> adrenaline -> cortisol cycle. It’s a vicious “roller coaster” ride for your body, and the worst part is that afterwards, it leaves you feeling lethargic, cranky, and surprisingly, craving even more refined, sugary foods.

Thus, the cycle starts over again. As you can see, it’s a downward spiral to poor health and even poorer energy levels.

HYDROGENATED FATS

We have heard it said that we eat too much fat and that fat consumption has risen in the last 20 years, and we are becoming an increasingly obese nation. While the later of these statements is true, statistics have since proven the former is false. See, fat consumption has not changed: what has changed is the type of fats people eat.

Today, more and more people are getting the majority of their fats from “manmade” hydrogenated fats and other harmful polyunsaturated oils such as palm and corn oil. As long as 20, 30, or 50 years ago, people ate a diet which consisted of more naturally occurring fats and oils, such as butter, coconut oil, lard, olive oil, and tallow (fats from red meat and lamb).

“…fat consumption has not changed: what has changed is the type of fats people eat.” Now, our diets are polluted with hydrogenated fats. These types of fats have been clearly linked to slowing our bodies’ metabolic processes and have also been shown to cause heart disease and cancer.

The reason these fats are particularly harmful to us is because polyunsaturated and hydrogenated oils have been subjected to damaging industrial processes (literally restructuring them), which has rendered them toxic. Their new “trans molecular structure” has not, until recently, been incorporated into human physiology and is therefore unrecognizable to the human body. Since their introduction to our diets, just in the last century, these unhealthy oils have been linked to heart disease, cancer, and other degenerative diseases.

The best examples of a polyunsaturated oil is corn, cottonseed, canola, vegetable… and any derivative of hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils.

Make no mistake, these toxic fats should be avoided at all costs.

By avoiding sugar and hydrogenated fats, you will:

Improve concentration and mental clarity (along with short-term memory);

Enhance your immune system;

Slow the aging process;

Reduce fat on the abdomen area;

Eliminate future “junk-food” cravings.
The way I see it, the real problem is the food industrywhich thrives on the sales of sugar and “fake” fat-containing foods.

They have succeeded in brainwashing the public and suppressing the scientific findings that eating whole foods, which contain little to no sugar, and meats and oils, which contain naturally occurring saturated fats do not contribute to heart disease (like they claim) and are, in fact, a healthy way to boost your metabolism, stabilize your cholesterol levels, improve your immune system, and provide energy and structural integrity to literally every living cell in your body.

Therefore, to avoid these toxins…

Here’s all you do tomorrow:

Daily Energy Exercise: Rid Toxins from Your Life
Take about 10 minutes to check the food labels and ingredients panels on the foods in your cupboards, refrigerator, and on the counters in your kitchen.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR?
Any foods that list sugar, dextrose, sucrose, fructose, corn syrup, or maltodextrin as the first, second, or third ingredient. These are typically things like soda, breakfast cereals, and white-flour products like bread.

Any foods that list hydrogenated, partially hydrogenated, or corn, palm, or cottonseed oils. These are typically things like processed, frozen, and nearly all deep-fried foods and even some nutrition bars and most meal replacements/protein drinks. (Not Eat-Smart, however!)

Make a special trip to the grocery store to pick up items to replace these harmful toxic foods.

Instead of soda, use water (preferably), sugar-free Crystal Light, iced tea, or on occasion even diet soda.

Instead of breakfast cereals, use whole oats or grits.

Instead of white-flour products, use whole-wheat or soy-flour type products.

Simply instruct yourself that you WILL NOT eat deep fried foods any longer (like French fries, chips, etc.). Deep-fried foods and the oils they’re cooked in have no nutritional health benefits whatsoever.

Replace your salad dressings and cooking oils with healthy oils like flaxseed oil, olive oil, sesame oil, and walnut oil.

Read your labels carefully… manufacturers are tricky about trying to hide these harmful ingredients. (Now you know why!)

At only 33 years old, Stephen Adele has been helping individuals from all walks of life create measurable results in their physiques and performance over the last 15 years and has rapidly become a respected authority. He has published numerous articles for magazines around the world, been quoted in several trade publications, appeared on radio shows, conducted seminars around the globe, and is the CEO of the prestigious supplement manufacturer, iSatori Technologies.

Stephen now also shares his insights, expertise, and inside connections in two of the fastest growing publications in the industry, Real SOLUTIONS email newsletter and Real SOLUTIONS magazine, and has recently co-authored the consumers’ guides 7 Never-Before-Told Secrets Everyone Should Know Before Buying Supplements, The 21-Day Ultimate Energy Plan, The Lean System Success Plan, and MAXIMUM GROWTH, Volume II.

Over the years, Stephen’s philosophy has remained unchanged: “The greatest gift you can give yourself is the gift of a strong mind, which can yield extraordinary dividends in the form of a stronger, healthie

February 25, 2009: 12:04 pm: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

While there are seemingly endless ways to increase your energy and stay on track with your weight new, here’s a list of my favorite 10 (plus 2 bonus) foods that will help you with both. Which ones are YOU using?

Print this out and check those you already do, and note those you should “give some
attention to.”

___ 1. Water - sipped throughout the day. Consistent sipping over
random gulping keeps your kidneys thoroughly hydrated. If your kidneys are not
hydrated your liver has to step in and take over “de-toxing” and isn’t fully available
to perform it’s main duty: metabolizing fat into energy. Less energy, more fat for
you.

___ 2. Green Tea. This drink does have caffeine, but nearly as much as
coffee and where coffee’s acid content can reel havoc on the stomach (taking away
your energy) green tea provides you with antioxidants (because the leaves are
steamed and rolled in preparation, rather than crushed like black tea leaves).

___ 3. Nuts. Yes, they’re fattening if abused, but I can tell you they work
to boost your energy - almonds, walnuts and cashews to be exact. Studies show a
small dose of healthy, essential fatty acids can increase your energy by up to 10
times! Give ‘em a try and test it.

___ 4. Healthy Oils Speaking of fats … your body needs them for healthy
hair, skin and nails and ton improve digestion. This all means more energy. Not just
any fat is a good fat. Stay away from hydrogenated oils (processed and fast food)
and use flax, coconut, olive, almond, walnut and sesame for cooking and salad
dressings.)

___ 5. Peppermint. As natural as you can get it (so, no, those stripped
candies don’t count). Tea and extract form. Add either to hot water and feel
instantly refreshed. Increases perspiration and improves digestion.

___ 6. Figs. Excellent for strengthening the stomach and lubricating the
lung and large intestine. For all fruits the fig has the highest sugar content so don’t
over do it, but this baby can beat out a candy bar as far as benefits - any day.

___ 7. Grains. One of the most powerful ways to get your carbohydrates.
They stabilize blood sugar levels AND contain all the major nutrient groups when
eaten in their whole form - including protein - how about that!

___ 8. White Beans. Energize the colon and the lungs. Also a great
preventive approach to heart disease among other ailments.

___ 9. Chi Seeds. A wonder food. Next to the flax seed, it is the highest
concentrated source of Omega 3’s. Known as an endurance food with Native
Americans it relieves constipation, reduces nervousness and heightens focus.

___ 10. Shitake Mushrooms. A power-house of benefits: boost
immunity, strengthen the heart, ease allergies, help to eliminate sugar cravings,
reduce cholesterol … contain a sufficient amount of protein.

___ BONUS* Coconut Water. This is one of my favorite secrets. It is the
all-natural energy drink. High in natural electrolytes it is an energy burst and a
major re-hydration tool. When buying be sure that the ONLY ingredient is coconut
water. If anything else is included you aren’t getting the benefit.

___ BONUS* Umeboshi - Salt Plum. A fantastic condiment that is high in
citric acid and a natural antibiotic. Great for reducing fatigue, colds and flues. Can
be added to tea for an energy boost or to help with digestion. Buy in its whole form
for the most benefit.

Heather Dominick - EzineArticles Expert Author

Heather Dominick, “The Energy Expert” is an energy~nutrition
specialist with over 10 years of teaching and coaching experience. Heather’s
primary focus is in helping others identify sources for increasing physical
energy and making permanent lifestyle changes. To sign up to receive your own 20
minute Energy Make-over, for her freebie how-to articles and no-charge teleclasses
on creating your most energized life, visit http://www.individual-health.net

: 10:31 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

The papaya is an amazingly rich source of the proteolytic enzymes. These are the chemicals that enable the digestion of protein. Papain, which is the most important of these enzymes in the papaya, is extracted and dried as a powder for use to aid the digestion, and it is often used as a meat tenderizer, the enzyme partially breaking down the meat fibers - digesting them in fact.

Many experts, such as Dr Lytton-Bernard, have claimed rejuvenating properties for papaya, especially for the control of premature ageing. It may be that it works simply because a poor digestion leaves the body without the correct nutrients. Those who find it almost impossible to digest anything frequently find that papaya used regularly, either in tablet or juice form, marks the turning point in the climb back to vitality and good health.

As a cleanser you can take a quarter pint (150ml) of papaya juice alternated each hour for twelve hours by the same amount of cucumber or green bean juice. Papaya loses some of the enzymes as it ripens, so if you have the choice select them green. They are easy to obtain in most parts of America but are not found in British greengrocers very often. Fortunately there has been a rapid expansion in the numbers of specialist shops providing for the needs of the Indian and West Indian communities where papayas can be bought.

Papaya contains arginine which is known to be essential for male fertility and also carpain, an enzyme thought to be good for the heart. Fibrin also occurs and this substance is not commonly found in the plant kingdom; in man it forms part of the blood clotting process. The papaya is an excellent source of vitamin C, with 82mg per 100g (4oz), and is rich in carotene.

After treatment with antibiotics the use of papaya juice will quickly assist the restoration of the normal bacteria in the gut which will have been destroyed by the treatment. Papaya is good for many digestive disorders and is excellent for improving poor digestion. It has also been recommended as part of the treatment for cancer. Therapeutically it can often be combined with pineapple juice in which there is another important enzyme bromelain.

The skin of the papaya is a first class external treatment for skin wounds and places that do not heal quickly. The pulp from the juicer can be used for this and as a poultice.

Kevin Pederson has been managing a number of natural home remedies websites which have information on home based natural cures and remedies for common problems as well as the value and importance of papaya .

February 14, 2009: 8:40 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Few people in our Western Civilization have ever heard of Goji juice. In the past 2 years in the United States, the popularity of Goji products have skyrocketed. As the Baby Boomer Generation is entering into their 60’s, health problems and concerns are reaching unprecedented levels. Why the sudden popularity of Goji juice?

For one thing, it is one of the most nutritionally dense food source known on earth. Secondly, it is considered to be the richest source of antioxidants in our planet as well. Thirdly, it is said to possess 4 unique polysaccharides not found in many other food sources. There are many Goji Berry juice products on the market today, some state they are 98% juice.

If you read the fine print however, you will discover that the other fruit juices in the product are not just for flavoring, but often make up well more than 50% of the contents. When purchasing Goji juice, it is recommended that the percentage of pure Goji juice be available on the label or in their literature so you have something to go by.

A good thing about all goji juice is that the taste is great. There is not many times where something that is good for your health tastes so good. It is hard to describe the taste of goji juice it is some where between pear and cranberry juice but you will have to taste it your self to tell. Most bottles are in 32oz. Sizes and the recommended daily dose is 1oz.

Tim O’shea has been practicing and researching nutrition and health related products for many years. Since goji berry juice has become more popular in the US in the recent years his research has been guide mostly in that direction. This product and more can be found at http://www.gojiberries.us

: 8:13 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Iron is an important mineral which enters into the vital activity of the blood and glands. Iron exists chiefly as haemoglobin in the blood. It distributes the oxygen inhaled into the lungs to all the cells. It is the master mineral which creates warmth, vitality, and stamina. It is required for the healthy complexion and for building up resistance in the body.

The chief sources of iron are grapes, raisins, spinach, all green vegetables, whole grain, cereals,
dried beans, dark coloured fruits, beets, dates, liver and egg yolk. The Indian Council of Medical
Research has recommended an allowance of 20 to 30 mg. of iron in a balanced diet for an adult.

Iron deficiency is generally caused by severe blood loss, malnutrition, infections and by
excessive use of drugs and chemicals. Deficiency of dietary iron may cause nutritional-anaemia,
lowered resistance to disease, a general run down condition, pale complexion, shortness of
breath on manual exertion, and loss of interest in sex.

Iron is the classic remedy for anaemia. However, there are several forms of anaemia, and iron
deficiency anaemia is only one. If one is taking iron pills due to insufficient intake of iron in the
normal diet, one should also take atleast 40 mg. of folic acid or folate every day, along with 10 to
25 mg. of vitamin B12. Both these vitamins are essential in building healthy blood cells.

To learn more about the energy principle in healing, please read:

Cost-free Miracle Asthma Cure
Overcome Type I Diabetes and Type II Diabetes Naturally
Alternative Treatments for Incurable Diseases made easy

February 11, 2009: 5:08 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

One of the major health benefits of preparing foods at home from fresh ingredients
is that you have control over the ingredients in the dishes you prepare. You want the
highest quality ingredients, the foods that will bring the most health to your body
and your family, so you choose fresh, whole natural foods, perhaps organically-
grown. But what about the salt you use?

How Refined Salt Affects Your Health

Salt, as it occurs in the Earth, is a complex crystal containing eighty-four elements
that are vital to life. These include sodium, magnesium, silicum, chloride, calcium,
titanium, manganese, iron, copper, zinc, selenium, zirconium, silver, iodine,
platinum, gold, and many more. These nutrients are the same elements originally
found existing in the “primal ocean” where all life originated, and the same elements
our bodies need for good health.

By contrast, refined table salt contains none of its original minerals. To make refined
table salt, natural salt from the sea or mines is refined to pure sodium chloride.
Then sodium ferro cyanide and green ferric ammonium citrate are added as anti-
caking agents. If you purchase iodized salt, it also contains potassium iodine,
dextrose (that’s refined sugar) to help stabilize the iodine, and sodium carbonate to
preservative the color of the salt. Instead of building health, eating refined salt
destroys body health.

Whether or not we are aware of the dangers of sodium chloride, our bodies
recognize sodium chloride as an unnatural substance–a poison–and try to
eliminate it as quickly as possible. The problem is, we eat more salt than our bodies
can process out, which leads to edema, or excess fluid in the body tissue. This is
why doctors tell us to avoid salt. If there is more sodium chloride in a body than it
can neutralize with edema, the body get rids of the excess sodium chloride by
making it into new crystals. These are deposited directly in the bones and joints and
are known as arthritis, gout, and kidney and gall bladder stones. Refined salt also
contributes to high blood pressure, which greatly increases the risk of developing
heart disease or stroke.

About 93 percent of the salt produced throughout the world is used directly for
industrial purposes. It is essential to make products such as laundry detergent,
varnish, plastics and other products.

For these industrial uses, chemical processes require pure sodium chloride. To
obtain sodium chloride, all the essential minerals and trace elements that make
natural salt so vital to life are removed discarded as impurities.

Because sodium chloride is already being produced for industrial purposes in
massive amounts, it is the cheapest salt available. Thus refined sodium chloride has
become our common table salt.

Refined Salt in Food Products

Industrial sodium chloride also functions as an inexpensive food preservative. Its
low cost is the reason so many ready-to-eat food products are heavily salted.
Sodium chloride inhibits the natural breakdown of the food, increasing its shelf life
of foods that would naturally spoil very quickly. Since foods break down in our
bodies with the same processes nature uses to break foods down outside of our
bodies, sodium chloride in food products also makes them more difficult to digest.

When we are cooking at home, it’s important to be able to identify which foods we
are eating contain refined salt.

Some foods containing refined salt are obvious, such as potato chips, pretzels,
other snack foods, and salted nuts.

Processed meats, such as bacon, ham, hot dogs, and salami also contain a lot of
refined salt.

Also watch out for refined salt in condiments such as catsup, pickles, mustard,
mayonnaise, and salad dressings.

Canned soups and soups made with bouillon cubes are full of refined salt.

Think we’re done with the list? Remember butter and cheeses contain refined salt
too.

Natural Salt is Healthy Salt

The health affects associated with salt–edema, arthritis, gout, kidney and gall
bladder stones, high blood pressure, heart disease and stroke–are the result of
eating refined sodium chloride, not from eating natural salt.

When we eat natural, living salt, which contains all its original elements, our bodies
receive the salt they need to thrive. It’s easy to just use natural salt in any recipe
instead of refined salt. It’s healthier for your body and tastes better too.

But what about all those convenience foods that contain salt?

Here’s a recipe that you can try that is very easy. You can make this chicken soup
with natural salt, then freeze it in serving-size containers so you’ll have it on hand
to heat up just like a can of soup. Though it takes some cooking time, the
preparation time is very short, so you can put it together and let it cook while you
do something else. Your family will love this warm, nutritious soup.

CHICKEN VEGETABLE SOUP

1 roasting chicken

(or you can use inexpensive parts like wings and thighs)

4 medium onions

6 large carrots

6 stalks of celery

natural salt

pepper

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

2. Remove any innards that may be in the chicken cavity, rinse the chicken inside
and out.

3. Put the chicken in a roasting pan and season with natural salt and pepper.

4. Roast for about two hours (depending on size), or until the juices run clear when
you poke a meaty section with a knife.

5. Remove the chicken from the oven and allow to cool.

6. Pull most of the chicken meat from the bones and set aside.

7. Put the chicken bones and roasted skin into a large soup pot. Roughly chop 2
onions, 3 carrots, and 3 stalks of celery, and add them to the pot.

8. Add water to cover the chicken and vegetables.

9. Over high heat, bring the soup to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for about
an hour.

10. Strain bones and vegetables from the broth. Discard bones and vegetables, and
allow stock to cool. If you wish to remove the fat, refrigerate to solidify the fat, then
skim it off with a spoon.

11. When you are ready to make the soup, chop the remaining vegetables and add
them to the stock. Bring to a boil and cook the vegetables until tender. Then add the
chicken meat and cook for a few minutes until warmed. Season to taste with natural
salt.

NOTE: If the stock doesn’t have enough flavor, the next time you make it, reduce the
stock in volume by continuing to simmer the strained stock over low heat. The more
you reduce the stock, the stronger the flavor will be. You can reduce the stock until
it is very concentrated and freeze it into ice cubes, as an easy way to always have
soup stock on hand.

Hilde Bschorr is the Owner of Himalayan Living Salt, an online purveyor of natural,
unrefined, living salt products.

February 8, 2009: 3:18 pm: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Two recent studies found that cocoa contains chemicals called flavan-3-ols, which have been associated to lowering blood pressure and increasing function of the blood vessels cells. By consequence, drinking or eating cocoa not only lowers blood pressure, but also diminishes the risk of cardiovascular disease in elderly men, helping them live longer.

Researchers concluded that cocoa is a rich source of antioxidants, therefore its action may also have a positive effect to other disease that are linked to oxidative stress (e.g. pulmonary diseases and certain types of cancer).

The team studied 470 men aged over 65 and asked them questions about their daily intake of cocoa. Based on over 15 year examination of cocoa’s relationship to cardiovascular health within this group, this research team found that men who consumed cocoa regularly had considerable lower blood pressure than those who did not. On the other hand, those men with highest cocoa consumption were at half risk to die from cardiovascular disease in comparison with the others. More than that, their risk remained lower and related to smoking habits, weight, calorie intake, weight, physical activity levels, alcohol consumption and other factors.

The conclusion was that high cocoa and chocolate consumption makes men less likely to die of any cause.

The problem is cocoa is rarely tolerable in large amounts and therefore the suggested therapeutic amount is about 100g of dark chocolate per day.

Valerian D is a freelance writer interested in issues such as nutrition and diets.

: 1:08 am: adminGreat Nutrition Tips

Constipation is a condition whereby the fecal matter traveling through your colon remains too long in your colon before traveling out of the rectum. You become aware that you are constipated if you have difficulty passing motion or take a few days to do one purge.

That said, if you are suffering from constipation, you have been advised to eat more fruits and vegetables to increase your fiber intake.

For fruit, have you considered having papaya as a constipation remedy or including it as part of your regular diet?

As a natural remedy, papaya not only aids digestion but also helps prevent constipation. It provides relief from piles and also has anti-cancer properties. Papaya has also been shown to lower cholesterol levels, prevents the formation of urinary stones, prevents intestinal infection by parasites and aids in the proper functioning of the body’s immune system. For lactating mothers, according to traditional beliefs, papaya also helps to stimulate milk production.
Papayas contain papain, an enzyme that helps digest proteins (especially food with gluten). Concentrated amounts can especially be found in unripe papaya. This enzyme helps prevent the accumulation of mucoprotein (partially digested protein) in the body and lymphatic system. In fact, papain has been extracted to make dietary supplements for digestion. Thus, the unripe papaya is considered to have more healing powers for constipation than the ripe one.

Papayas are a good source of fiber. Its fiber is able to keep cancer-causing toxins in the colon away from the healthy colon cells. Those who are experiencing constipation or at risk of colon cancer should consider taking more papaya. Papaya’s folate, vitamin C, vitamin A, beta-carontene and vitamin E have been linked with reduced risk of colon cancer.

Additionally, the antioxidant nutrients found in papaya have also been proven to reduce muscle inflammation and the healing of burns and wounds.

The papaya fruit is slightly sweet, with a musky smell to it. It is now mainly cultivated in the warm tropical parts of the world but can easily be found in many supermarkets.

To prevent constipation and for all stated health benefits, here are three simple papaya recipes:

1. Papaya Milk Energy drink. Cut papaya and blend with milk in a 50/50 mix. Add honey if desired. Papaya milk is a good energy drink for growing children.

2. Papaya Salad (Thai Style). Shred green papaya and cut some tomatoes. For dressing, add chopped garlic, 2 tablespoon fish sauce, 1 tablespoon lime juice, cilantro, Thai basil, 1 teaspoon chopped mint, chili padi (optional) and sugar to taste.

3. Unripe papaya juice. Peel off skin and put in blender. This recipe is especially good for the lymphatic system and after a meal that is heavy in gluten.

Including papaya as part of your regular diet is a great idea for a healthy functioning body.

Sandra Kim Leong believes in using natural food and nutrition remedies for common health ailments. For more information, please visit her article resource site at www.food-diet-remedy.com.

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