H3 Daily

Monday, August 12, 2013

Healthy Recipe: Meyer’s and Peach Topping on Whole Wheat French Toast

wwfrenchtoast

INGREDIENTS
Topping:
4          Peaches, very ripe, sliced medium thickness
2          Tablespoons Brown sugar
3          Tablespoons Meyer’s rum
½         teaspoon Cinnamon
2          Tablespoons Pecans, chopped (optional)

French toast:
4          slices Whole wheat bread
1/2        cup Egg beaters
1          teaspoon Cinnamon, ground
1/4        teaspoon Vanilla extract

Directions

  1. Preheat sauté pan on medium heat.

  2. Add sliced peaches and brown sugar. Once peaches and brown sugar heat and sugar dissolves, add the rum and cinnamon. Let the rum reduce and stir occasionally.

  3. Pecans if wanted can be added at the very end.

  4. Combine egg beaters, cinnamon and vanilla extract into a medium-sized bowl.

  5. Heat a non stick skillet or griddle and spray with canola oil. Dip each slice of bread into       the batter

  6. Place battered slices on skillet or griddle. Lightly brown on each side.

  7. Serve 1 slice with Meyer’s Peach Topping.









 Nutriton  

French     Toast:
Number of Servings: 4
Serving Size: 1 slice
calories: 55 (Peach topping not included)
Fat Grams: 2








    Topping:
Number of     Servings: 6
Serving Size: 1/3 cup
Calories: 90
Fat Grams: 1 (with the pecans)



 

 

Friday, August 9, 2013

Fitness Friday: TABATA and all its benefits!

tabata cycleBy H3 Fitness Director Danielle Dunn

What is Tabata?

Tabata is a cutting-edge approach in the fitness industry. Tabata falls under the category of high intensity training and consists of 20 seconds of maximum intensity exercise, followed by 10 seconds of rest. This cycle is repeated 8 times, totaling four minutes.

 

How did it come about?

Tabata was founded by a Japanese scientist named Izumi Tabata, serving as the head coach for the Japanese speed skating team, and fellow colleagues at a department of physiology in Japan.

 

What is the research behind Tabata?

Dr. Izumi Tabata and his fellow scientists decided to conduct a study at the National Institute of Fitness and Sports in Tokyo to compare moderate intensity training with high intensity training. He conducted the tests on 2 groups of athletes; 1 of the groups used the moderate intensity interval training and the other using high intensity interval training. In group one; the athletes were training in moderate intensity workouts (70% intensity) for five days a week for a total of six weeks with each training session lasting an hour. Group two trained in the high intensity workouts for 4 days a week for a total of 6 weeks with each session lasting 4 minutes, at 20 seconds of intense training (170% intensity) and 10 seconds of rest. Group one had a significant increase in the aerobic system (cardiovascular system), however, the anaerobic system (muscles) gained little or no results at all. Group two showed much improvement in all their athletes. Their aerobic systems increased much more than group ones, and their anaerobic systems increased by 28%. These results indicate that not only did high intensity interval training have more of an impact on the aerobic systems; it had an impact on the anaerobic systems as well.

What are the benefits of 20 second workouts?

20 second stop watch

  • Fat Loss through Increased Metabolic Rate


Intense exercise raises our metabolic rate to about 15 times the basal metabolic rate, or BMR. Since the BMR is the amount of energy your body burns while at rest, any increase to this rate increases the fat that your body burns even when you are not exerting yourself. This high intensity interval training knows as Tabata puts short-lived, but acute stress on the body. When these intense exercises occur on a regular basis, the body increases its BMR to handle the new demands put on it. When you create an Oxygen Debt (for example: heavy panting during tabata) your body has burned off all of the blood sugar (glycogen) it has and needs to replace all of that energy. It does this by burning fat. Instead of trying to use fat while you are exercising, you use carbs as fuel while you are exercising and use fat after the exercise has occurred. The short duration workouts of tabata were shown to burn an average of 5x more calories AFTER their exercise is over.

  • Muscle Tissue Retention


Dieting as a means to weight loss often causes loss of muscle tissue. Tabata places stress on muscle tissue, which tells your body that more muscle tissue is needed. As a result, the ratio of your lean body mass to fat mass goes up, and by choosing exercises that maximize the muscle mass worked, muscle tissue may increase.

  • Anaerobic and Aerobic Capacity Increase


Your body has 2 systems of fuel, there is Aerobic and Anaerobic. Now, the aerobic system is the greatest amount of energy produced by the body in the presence of oxygen. Anaerobic capacity is the maximum amount of energy that can be produced by the body in the absence of oxygen. This anaerobic energy is produced by burning carbohydrates when there is insufficient oxygen in the bloodstream to produce the required energy aerobically. Please note that one does not replace the other! What happens is you start out by burning fuel with your aerobic energy system, and once you go past the point where there is not enough oxygen in your system to provide aerobic energy to your muscles, your anaerobic system kicks in. To get there, you need to get your heart rate up past what is typically referred to as the Target Heart Rate Zone (50-85% of your maximum heart rate (220-age)). You should use a Heart Rate Monitor to measure yourself.

  • Time Savings


With Tabata, you can gain more results in less time. The short duration of a Tabata workout increases an individual's willingness and faithfulness to work out regularly. It would be difficult to deny 4 to 8 minutes a day to your physical fitness. In addition, safety requires close attention to your body's feedback when you exercise intensely which enhances interest in the changes that the exercise routine is making in your body, and thus increased interest helps remove the drudgery of an exercise routine.

 

How effective can Tabata be?

You may be surprised how intense 4 minutes of exercise can feel. The intervals are both time efficient and taxing. This kind of workout is excellent for athletes involved in sports, boxing, MMA, wrestling, and also is effective for fat loss. Intense interval work such as Tabata, will raise the body’s metabolic rate (BMR) long after the exercise session is completed and this post workout fat loss is the end result. Many studies have confirmed that this powerful “after-effect” of interval training is most effective for fat loss than low intensity, continuous exercise, assuming a true maximal effort is applied.

What are the pros and cons of Tabata?

Pros?

Tabata will be improving your aerobic system and anaerobic system at the same time much more than traditional cardio training. With the anaerobic increase and short duration of time needed to complete it, Tabata will also fire up the metabolism during the workout and have an after effect after the workout (meaning even after you are done your Tabata workout, you’ll still be burning calories). Additionally, Tabata also improves mental toughness (or will power) because of the high intensity of it. At first when you do Tabata training, the thought of quitting may occur; however, as you pull through the exercise, you gain physical benefits as well as mental benefits. Remember its 20 seconds of work and then a break is right around the corner!

Cons?

Tabata is very demanding and should not be done too frequently. The typical recommendation is for one or two Tabata workouts per week. As is true for any strenuous exercise a warm-up routine is advisable. Because of the high intensity Tabata requires you to do, it could be dangerous when you perform this exercise when you are prone to strokes and heart attacks. If you know that you have high blood pressure or have had a history of strokes and heart attacks, consult prior with your doctor to see if you are physically capable of performing the Tabata exercise. The other danger about Tabata is that if you’re not careful and are using weights when doing Tabata, depending on the exercise, you could hurt yourself. For example if you are benching real quickly when using Tabata, there’s a chance the bar might slip from your hands. Tabata is performed best with cardio and body weight strength exercises.

What does a basic tabata workout look like?

Any exercise can be incorporated into Tabata training. However the basic outline of the Tabata training method are as follows:
•     4 minutes long (whole Tabata Session)
•     20 seconds of intense training
•     10 seconds of rest
•     Total of 8 sessions or rounds

How do I create my own tabata workout?

A wide variety of exercises are compatible with Tabata, including resistance exercises such as body weight strength exercises and aerobic exercises which can be done indoors or outdoors. A few popular examples are hitting a heavy boxing bag, sprinting, jumping rope, rowing, medicine ball slams, bodyweight calisthenics (squats and pushups). As an example, you can sprint for 20 seconds, walk for 10 seconds, sprint for 20, walk for 10,  continuing until you have completed 8 full sprint/walk sets. To keep time yourself, you can use a large digital clock, personal interval timer, or now music is sold that has the 20 second work phase and 10 second rest phase programmed with verbal cues. Get out and try Tabata!

Thursday, August 8, 2013

FIXATION ON RIGHTEOUS EATING: ORTHOREXIA

orthorexia

As you continue to reach your health goals, nutritious meals are naturally recommended. No matter what eating plan you are following, consuming healthy foods such as vegetables, fruits, whole grains, healthy protein, omega-3 fats, and dairy are typically always encouraged. However, when does it come to the point of becoming obsessive? This may be rare, but it is becoming more common among our population.

A relatively new eating disorder called orthorexia nervosa is when there is a fixation on righteous eating. This can be a rigid style of eating—eating right, being “good,” and self-punishment if temptation wins out (excessive exercise, stricter eating, fasts, etc.). The innocent attempt to eat more healthfully may curtail one to the point where healthy eating is no longer “healthy.” Certain food groups may start disappearing. For example, it starts out by cutting back on all trans-fats (a positive thing) and over time the mentality changes to “fat makes me fat.” Side note-- that is not true. Going out to eat or social events with friends and family cause a lot of anxiety and relationships eventually struggle —all for the control to maintain the highest food quality and purity as possible. The motivation is on health, but healthy food and eating can become the identity. If this may be you or someone in your family see this link: orthorexia nervosa

I am not saying to NOT follow a healthy diet. However, if you are plugging away at your meal planning or grocery shopping and you are diligently focused on creating the “perfect week” to the point you become fearful of adding anything relatively “bad” to your plan, you may need to ask yourself if it is becoming an unhealthy barrier to the enjoyment of other areas in your life. Orthorexia nervosa may be on the extreme “righteous” side of the spectrum, but I am seeing more individuals becoming fearful of calories, eliminating food groups because they are processed a certain way, or cutting back on fruit because it has too much sugar. To me, this sounds pretty exhausting. Below are a few take home messages (all from personal experience):

  1. Put love into your food. Get in the kitchen, take recipes and make them your own, savor your meals, enjoy your food. Developing a healthy relationship with food is crucial.

  2. Stop being your own food police. Punishing yourself for making a “bad” food decision isn’t going to fix why you chose that food in the first place. Instead of trial and error—it is trial and learn. Give yourself some grace just as you would towards others around you.

  3. Take advantage of the support in your life. I’m sure everyone has someone or an outlet that makes them feel more confident, balanced and healthy in their life. For those at home, reaching out to your H3 family can be a good first step…

  4. Check out this video from Good Morning America: Too much healthy not the best thing


Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Wellness Wednesday: Sitting Disease

Sitting Disease by the Numbers

It was back in the late 60’s when Kenneth Cooper M.D. put exercise on the map with his revolutionary book, and introduced the world to “aerobics”. In the following decades literally thousands of studies have confirmed that aerobic exercise does indeed, belong in the same conversation as smoking, nutrition and  stress management as key players in influencing our health status. The research has led to the current recommendation of getting 30 -60 minutes of aerobic (cardio) exercise most days of the week. That level has been clearly associated with reducing the risk of a number of chronic diseases including heart disease, diabetes, and some forms of cancer. As good as that level of exercise is, however, if you spend a lot of time sitting, it may not be enough. In fact a new phrase, sitting disease,  has been coined by scientist to bring attention to this newly recognized public health issue. The point is, that if you sit a lot, meeting the traditional guidelines might not be enough to protect you.  While we don’t necessarily need to “exercise” more we do need to stand and move more or at least more often.

The bottom line is that any movement is better than no movement, and I mean “any”. In fact one study, published in the American Diabetes Association’s journal Diabetes Care, found that as little as 2 minutes, that’s right 2 minutes, of light walking has benefits. David W. Dunstan Ph.D., lead author of the study said that “interrupting sitting time with short bouts of light or moderate intensity walking lowers postprandial (post meal) glucose and insulin levels in overweight /obese adults. This may improve glucose metabolism and potentially be an important public health and clinical intervention strategy for reducing cardiovascular risk.”

So the next time you hear yourself say, I don’t have enough to exercise, if you have 2 minutes, yes you do.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Healthy Recipe: Apple Muesli with Dried Cranberries

Apple Muesli 3

Total Time:  15 minutes plus overnight (chilling)

Ingredients:

2 large Granny Smith Apples, coarsely grated

1 cup Rolled oats

3 T. Flaxseed, ground

1 ¼ cups Greek yogurt, plain, non-fat

1 ¼ cups Coconut water

½ cups Dried Cranberries or Dried Golgi Berries

2 T.Mint leaves, fresh, chopped

2 T. Honey

¼ tsp. Salt

¼ cup Berries

2 T. Maple Cinnamon Granola (H3)

2 T. Chopped walnuts (only vegetarian)

 

Directions:

  1.  Coarsely grate apples to the core over a large bowl.

  2. To the large bowl add the rolled oats, ground flaxseed, coconut water, greek yogurt, dried cranberries and mint and stir until thoroughly combined.

  3. Cover muesli and chill overnight in the refrigerator.

  4. For service, mix the honey and salt into the muesli and scoop ½ cup into appropriate serving dish.  Garnish with 1 T. fresh berries, .5 T. granola, .5 T. nuts and sprig of mint.  .


*This can be prepared through step 2 and refrigerated for up to 2 days.

 

Nutrition:  270 calories for regular; 170 for small (1/2 cup)

Makes:  5 regular/large servings or 8 small versions

Serving Size:  ½ cup small

Serving Size:  2/3 cup large/normal

Friday, August 2, 2013

Fitness Friday: Wake-Up Workout



Do you ever have a work out planned that you end up missing because something else came up? Maybe you had an exhausting day at work and you fell asleep through the allotted time you planned to go to the gym. Sometimes things in life come up that we cannot control or were not expecting, but that’s okay, sometimes we just have to roll with the punches and adapt our plans on the spot. The important thing is to not let those unforeseen circumstances become an excuse and prevent us from achieving our goals. One of my favorite quotes during times like those is, “Beneath an excuse lie many solutions.” Perhaps your new work out is not exactly what you were hoping to do, but doing something is always better than doing nothing. Who knows, maybe this “Wake-Up Workout” will be more enjoyable than you thought!

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Meal Planning Done Right

Preparing a fresh healthy meal for you and your family every night does not need to be daunting and time consuming. Use this table below to help motivate you to try new things while reusing your leftovers.

 







































Grilled ChickenRoasted Pork TenderloinGrilled/Sautéed ShrimpRoasted Vegetables
Chicken QuesadillaBBQ Pulled Pork SandwichShrimp TacosRoasted Vegetable Orzo
Chicken Caesar WrapPulled Pork QuesadillaGrilled Shrimp and Vegetable KebobsVegetable Omelets
Chicken and Penne Pasta with Roasted VegetablesPork Stir FryShrimp/Grilled Vegetable/Hummus WrapStir Fry
Chicken Salad SandwichPork Lettuce Wraps Roasted Vegetable Salad with Arugula
 Pork Tenderloin and Vegetable Stuffed Pepper  

 

































Coconut RiceMashed Potatoes Teriyaki SauceBBQ Sauce
Stir FryGnocchiGrilled FishPulled Pork/Chicken
Tomato and Coconut SoupPotato SouffléSeared ChickenBBQ Chicken Pizza
 Baked Potato SoupStir FryBBQ Grilled Salmon
  Roasted Vegetables 

 

When preparing and planning meals attempt to think ahead, reusing already prepared items is the key to a simple delicious meal. For more fun and new recipes refer to H3daily.com.