Bitter Is Better
Posted by Staff (05/26/2012 @ 6:24 pm)

Try something bitter and do your palate a favor.
Our proclivity for sweet foods starts very early on in our development and that desirer for sweetness continues to increase as we age, interfering with our ability to enjoy fruits and vegetables.
We also may be altering our brain chemistry by eating more and more sweeter and sweeter foods. New research shows that the excessive consumption of calorically dense foods changes the way that our brain responds to future foods. The effect is akin to a drug addict’s need for more and more heroin to satisfy his craving.
Experts in food neophobia—the fear of new food—have shown that it can take five to 10 attempts at trying something before you reach the point where you don’t reject it outright. That’s a lot of soapy cilantro to get down the hatch. But patience pays off on the joyous day when a child realizes that she kinda, sorta doesn’t hate broccoli any more.
Trying new foods and eating ethnic foods are just a few of the ways to broaden your pal tae and enjoy all the delicious, nutritious foods which nature has to offer.
It’s That First Bite That Will Do You In
Posted by Staff (04/10/2012 @ 3:30 pm)

Staying away from sweet treats and fried foods may be the best strategy to maintain a healthy lifestyle.
You’ve been eating healthy and avoiding junk food.
There is a kind of momentum which develops where you are gaining will power by exercising your will to stay away from fatty, sugary foods.
But, that first whiff leads to that first bite which can lead to a slippery slope into over indulgence.
There’s a reason this tends to happen almost exclusively with fatty and sugary foods and not, say, lettuce. The saturated fats in foods like bacon and cheese impair your brain’s normal ability to regulate appetite and cravings, so you don’t realize you’re full until you’re completely stuffed, says Kelly McGonigal, Ph.D., a health psychologist at Stanford University and author of The Willpower Instinct. What’s more, that effect on your appetite can last for up to three days, the length of time it takes to flush those fats from your system. So one unhealthy indulgence can end up triggering a major relapse.
Add sugar to the fatty food, ice cream, cake, doughnuts, and you have a double whammy. High-sugar foods increase your levels of ghrelin, a hormone that stimulates appetite and increases cravings. “So you may tell yourself ‘Just one bite’ but find yourself wanting more and more, the more you eat,” says McGonigal.
Moderation is a term that gets tossed around often, however, the definition seems to have a wide range of meaning.
If being around treats could derail your diet, then better to avoid them altogether especially considering that there is no nutritional gain to be had from eating junk food anyway.
Children are Still Consuming Too Much Sugar
Posted by Staff (03/03/2012 @ 2:15 pm)

It is in the home, not schools or at social gatherings where children are being inundated with sweeteners.
Researchers have found that although beverages do account for a large amount of sugar in kids’ diets it is the hidden sugars in foods such as tomato sauce, muffins, cereals and everyday household items.
These sugar calories add up.
Simple carbohydrates such as pasta and breads also contribute to sugar in the diet.
With all the changes being made to food and nutritional guidelines in schools, it seems like the place where children come in contact with the most sugar is at home.
Almost everything we buy has sugar as an ingredient.
Over the course of the day children can consume a week’s worth of sweeteners.
Planning meals and reading labels is the best way to avoid unwanted added ingredients.
Eating meals as a family and introducing fresh fruits and vegetables also help to satisfy sugar cravings.