Beginning Nutrition Basics
Nutrient Dense Foods
What Is Protein?
Different Sources of Protein
How Much Protein Do I Need?
Top 5 Leanest Protein Foods
What Is Carbohydrate?
Different Sources of Carbs
Brown Vs. White Carbs
Good Carbs Vs. Bad Carbs
Importance of Healthy Fats
How Many Carbs Do I Need?
What is Fat?
Different Sources of Fats
How Much Fat Do I Need?
Flax & Essential Fatty Acids
Udos Oil
Vitamins & Minerals
Portion Sizes & Calories
10 Ways to Control Portions
Portion Control Secrets
Super Sized Portions
Get Lean In 12 Weeks
Fat Loss Diets
Low Carb Diets
Mass Gain Diets
Vegetarian Diets
High Carb Diets
Pre-Workout Nutrition
Post-Workout Nutrition
Alpha Lipoic Acid
Antioxidants
Caffeine
Conjugated Linoleic Acid
Green Tea
Amino Acids & BCAAs
Meal Replacement Powders
Whey Protein Powders
Soy Protein Powders
Egg Protein Powders
Rice Protein Powders
Grocery Shopping Tips
Shop The Outer Perimeter
Healthy Shopping List
Healthy Breakfast Ideas
Healthy Lunch Ideas
Healthy Dinner Ideas
Antioxidants & Inflammation
Ayurveda Nutrition
Healthy Snack Idea
Quick Protein Snacks
Fruits And Vegetables
Role of Insulin
Facts on Ephedra
Importance of Fiber
Facts on Cholesterol
Overview of Metabolism
What is BMR?
What is BMI?
Increase Testosterone Levels
What Are Your Calorie
Requirements?
What is Homeostasis?
Myostatin and Muscles
What is Catabolism?
What is Hypertrophy?
Thyroid & Your Metabolism
Tips To Raise Your Metabolism Do You Have a Slow Metabolism?
How Often Should I Eat?
How Many Calories Per Meal?
Meal Frequency And Timing
Small & Frequent Meals
Controlling Hunger
Managing Appetite
Effects of Alcohol
Fasting Overview
Diabetes
Eating Disorders
Effects of Smoking on Fitness
Anorexia Overview
Bulimia Overview
Eating Tips To Get Lean
Fast Food Calories
Healthy Fast Food
Artificial Sweeteners
Natural Sweeteners
Why is Water Important?
10 Reasons To Drink More Water
5 Tips To Stay Hydrated
All About Sports Drink
Why Diets Are Funnny
The Truth About Dieting
Foods Packed With Fiber
Fiber Quick Tips
What Are Net Carbs?
Benefits of Eating Breakfast
Healthy Breakfast Meals
Fill Your Refrigerator Correctly
Healthy Alternatives to Sweets
How to Satisfy the Munchies
Water! Water! Water!
Calorie Packed Beverages
Choose Your Coffee Wisely
Healthy Eating Tips for Busy People
Healthy Foods at Restaurants
Tips on Spicing Up Your Meals
Healthy Whole Grain Choices
Cooking with Quinoa
Get Creative With Healthy Cooking
Reasons to Consume Antioxidants
Foods High in Antioxidants
Power in Peanut Butter
Eating Healthy While Traveling
What does Metabolism Mean?
Fast Healthy Protein Snacks
Change the Word Diet to Lifestyle
Sensible Dairy Food Choices
The Best Yogurt Choices
Benefits of Yogurt
What to Look for When Reading
Nutrition Labels
What does Metabolism Mean?
Increasing Your Metabolism
Special Skin Care Needs
Toxins in Skin Care & Cosmetics
Tuna in Oil vs. Tuna in Brine
Metabolism - Do the Math
Fitness and Alcohol Consumption
Top 10 Carbohydrate Choices
Top 10 Protein Choices
Top 10 Fat Choices
Cholesterol Facts
The Scale Is Your Friend
Navy Beans
Lemons and Their Healing Power
Posts Tagged ‘protein’
Nutrition topics overview
Wednesday, April 15th, 2009Macrobiotic food proteins
Wednesday, April 15th, 2009Macrobiotic
To the question if macrobiotic (or strict vegetarians, vegans) help to improve state of health, couldn’t be answered easily. From the one point is advantage of these nourishing methods high supply of fruits and vegetables and low volume fats in the menu. But big amount of important nutrients is missing. So it depends very much on that, how are your knowledges about sources of proteins, vitamins and minerals, to not be exposed to their deficiency.
Proteins - vegetal foods may be good source of proteins, however it depends on that, how they are combined together. Complete protein is made for example from proteins of soya and wheat.
Minerals - high intake of fibre typical for macrobiotic (so big as 60 g - hence two times the recommended daily dosage) may disrupt absorbtion of calcium, zinc and iron, even in the case when they are enough in the food.
Vitamins - one of the most heavy reproach towards macrobiotic is prohibition of consumption of crops from other climatic zones. That’s why in the winter is not possible to eat south fruits and similar. If we compare the volume of C vitamin in mandarins and apples, it’s sufficient to cover of daily dosage either 2 mandarins or 2 kg of apples. Ofcourse that recommended cabbage is also very good source of vitamin C, but it would be necessary of 200 g fresh cabbage daily and it would mean to it this amount every day. Macrobiotic is so narrowing possibilities of selection in the scope of fruits and vegetables.
As macrobiotic, so vegetarians recommend many health benefical foods (tofu, tempeh, seitan and similar). These foods is however better to line up to mixed menus.
Cholesterol
Wednesday, April 15th, 2009CHOLESTEROL
Cholesterol, a waxy, fatlike substance produced in the liver, contributes to cell membranes, vitamin D, sex and adrenal hormones, bile production, and other metabolic processes. However, in excess, it causes atherosclerosis, or the build up of plaque in artery walls, that can cause a heart attack, stroke, or peripheral artery disease.
High serum cholesterol is associated with consumption of foods high in saturated fat and dietary cholesterol, including eggs, meat, poultry, and dairy foods. Whole grains, beans, soy products, sea vegetables, and other plant quality foods can suppress or lower cholesterol in the blood. Risk of cardiovascular disease is commonly measured by total cholesterol, the ratio of total cholesterol to “good” HDL cholesterol, and various cholesterol fractions. See Beans, Complex Carbohydrates, Heart Disease, High Blood Pressure, Oats, Sesame, Soy Foods, Tarahumara Diet, U.S. Surgeon-General’s Report, Vegetarians, Vitamin B-12, Wakame, Wheat, Whole Grains.
• Pioneer Study Links Diet, Blood Pressure, and Cholesterol - In one of the first studies to show the direct effects of animal food on raising blood pressure, a study of 21 macrobiotic persons by Harvard Medical School researchers found that the addition of 250 grams of beef per day for four weeks to their regular diet of whole grains and vegetables raised serum cholesterol levels 19 percent. Systolic blood pressure also rose significantly. After returning to a low-fat diet, cholesterol and blood pressure values returned to previous levels.
Source: F. M. Sacks et al., “Effects of Ingestion of Meat on Plasma Cholesterol of Vegetarians,” Journal of the American Medical Association 246:640-44, 1981.
• Soy Lowers Cholesterol - Soy protein in tofu, tempeh, and other soy products can significantly lower cholesterol levels in people with moderately high to high levels, according to a review of 38 trial studies. The higher the cholesterol, researchers said, the greater the ability of soy protein to bring it down. The report found that a diet including 47 grams of soy protein a day cut cholesterol levels by an average of 9.3 percent in a month. For those with cholesterols over 300, the count dropped 20 percent. Harmful triglycerides are also blocked by soy protein, the scientists observed.
“Even a 10 to 15 percent reduction in blood cholesterol levels results in a 20 to 30 percent reduction in the risk of coronary heart disease,” said Dr. James W. Anderson of the University of Kentucky and one of the authors of the report. “This has the potential of making a huge impact on American public health.”
Source: Natalie Angier, “Health Benefits from Soy Protein,” New York Times, August 3, 1995.
• Reducing Cholesterol in Children - Top American health officials joined in calling for a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet for everyone over age two to prevent heart disease in later life, not just for adults at risk for heart attacks and other cardiovascular disease. The recommendations, sponsored by a panel convened by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the Cholesterol Education Program and endorsed by a coalition of forty-two major health and medical organizations, called for the cholesterol testing of all children whose parents or grandparents had heart attacks or other cardiovascular problems, including a parent with blood cholesterol over 240.
The panel called for reductions in fat consumption and for intake of more grains, vegetables, and fruit.
Groups that endorsed the report included the American Medical Association, the American College of Physicians, the American Public Health Association, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Source: Warren E. Leary, “Cholesterol Tests Are Recommended for a Quarter of Children,” New York Times, April 9, 1991.
• Low-Fat Diet Reduces Cholesterol - In a study of 1,232 men aged 40 to 49 with high cholesterol who were put on a low-fat diet, researchers found a 13 percent reduction in mean total cholesterol levels in comparison to a control group. At the end of 7.5 years, the incidence of heart attack and sudden death was 47 percent lower in the experimental group. The scientists attributed the changes to reduced cigarette smoking and diet.
Source: I. Hjermann, “Effect of Diet and Smoking Intervention on the Incidence of Coronary Heart Disease: Report from the Oslo Study Group of a Randomised Trial in Healthy Men,” Lancet 2:1303-10, 1981.
• Heart Deaths Decline - America’s declining cholesterol levels and change to a diet lower in fat have coincided with a 54 percent decline in heart disease deaths between 1978 and 1990. During this period, the average cholesterol level in adults dropped from 213 milligrams per deciliter of blood to 205, a 4 percent decline, according to figures compiled by the National Center for Health Statistics.
Studies have shown that for every 1 percent drop in cholesterol level, there is almost a 2 to 4 percent drop in coronary heart disease. The proportion of adults with high cholesterol (over 240) fell from 26 percent to 20 percent during this period.
Source: “Study Shows Drop in Cholesterol Levels in U.S.,” Boston Globe, June 16, 1993.
Children’s lunch programs
Wednesday, April 15th, 2009CHILDREN’S LUNCH PROGRAMS
Several school systems around the United States have introduced brown rice, tofu, and more healthful foods, but as a rule school lunches are still high in fat and cholesterol, dairy, sugar, and highly processed foods.
• Soy Approved for School Lunch Programs - In 1983 the U.S.D.A. approved the use of soy products and other vegetable protein products as partial substitutes for meats in school lunch and some other feeding programs, noting:
• Soy products were comparable with milk in protein quality for preschool and older children.
• Except for premature infants, soy protein can serve as a sole protein source in the human diet.
• Soy foods are high in protease inhibitors that inhibit the action of various enzymes that have been associated with causing cancer.
• Soy formulas are lactose free and may benefit infants and small children who are sensitive to cow-milk protein which can cause diarrhea, emesis, vomiting, and weight loss.
• Soy products can reduce cholesterol and triglycerides in subjects with high lipid levels and protect against heart disease.
• Soy foods are useful in decreasing blood glucose responses compared with other high-fiber foods and may prevent diabetes.
“One desirable way to alter typical American diet patterns to meet the above [National Academy of Science, WHO, USDA] dietary recommendations involves partial replacement of foods of animal origin with cereals and legumes… “Although at the present time soy protein makes up only a small component of the American diet, it is expected that the many positive aspects of soy will result in increasingly greater human use of this legume. A whole variety of low-cost, highly functional soy-protein products are available for use.”
Source: John W. Erdman, Jr. and Elizabeth J. Fordyce, “Soy Products and the Human Diet,” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 49:725-37, 1989.
• Natural Foods in School Cafeterias - The Food Studies Institute in Trumansburg, N.Y., initiates programs in school cafeterias to teach children natural foods cooking and the value of wholesome nutritious foods from around the world. Organizer Antonia Demas reports that children who have a “hands-on sensory experience” of cooking brown rice, lentils, and other healthful foods together “eat things their parents swear they’d never touch.” Her curriculum has been adopted by several schools across the country. For Martin Luther King Day, children made a Soul Stew with black-eyed peas, corn, and kale, after sampling eight different greens. “The rest of the year, I kept hearing from parents that their kids were begging them to buy dandelion greens,” Dr. Demas said.
Source: Karen Baar, “School Lunches: When They Love Even the Greens, New York Times, Sept. 3, 1997 and The Food Studies Institute, 60 Cayuga St., Trumansburg NY 14886; (607) 387-6884.
• The Healthy School Lunch Program - The Healthy School Lunch Program is a network of volunteers around the country which meets with students, teachers, and food service personnel, providing them with information on healthful foods, offering recipes, and assisting in meal preparation. Part of John Robbin’s EarthSave Foundation, the project publishes Healthy School Lunch Action Guide by Susan Campbell and Todd Winant , offering a comprehensive, step-by-step approach to changing school lunch programs in local communities.
Source: The Healthy School Lunch Program, EarthSave, 706 Frederick St., Santa Cruz CA 95062; (408) 423-4069.
• Nutritional Curriculum for Junior High Students - The Rite Bite is a nutritional curriculum designed for junior high students to examine their own lifestyles and learn about vegetarian and natural foods. The 141-page notebook includes teacher lesson guides, background information, and posters, as well as handouts, activities, and fix-at-school recipes for six fun, informative sessions.
Source: The Rite Bite, Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, 5100 Wisconsin Ave., NW, Suite 404, Washington, DC 20016; (202) 686-2210.
• Preschoolers Like Tofu - In tests of the acceptability of tofu in the lunch menus of preschoolers, analysis showed that the nutritional quality of the nine tofu recipes adhered more closely to dietary guidelines than the beef, chicken, eggs, and cheese originally served. The children accepted the tofu well, preferring it to dairy and meat in several dishes including macaroni and cheese, lasagna, tuna casserole, and quiche.
Source: H. L. Ashraf et al., , “Use of Tofu in Preschool Meals,” Journal of the American Dietetic Association 90:114-16, 1990.
• College Students Respond to Tofu - When tofu replaced meat, eggs, and dairy food as the main protein source in twelve recipes in a college cafeteria, researchers found that it increased nutrition and was well accepted by the students. The only two recipes found lacking were those for tofu nuggets, which had a poor texture, and tofu chocolate mint pie. In the latter recipe, students disliked not the tofu but the mint flavoring.
Source: H. L. Ashraf and D. Luczycki, “Acceptability of Tofu-Containing Foods among College Students,” Journal of Nutrition Education 22:137-40, 1990.