What foods should I eat training for high school cross country?
May 15, 2010
Filed under Cross Training Answers
Lookin for some stuff to add on to my list.As you can see I dont have much.Just list some foods so I can have a variety to choose from.Thanks!
Breakfast:Oatmeal
Lunch:Turkey Sandwich,baked chips.
Dinner:Chicken and rice,pasta
Snacks:Bananas
What food should I eat while training for cross country?
March 12, 2010
Filed under Cross Training Answers
Lookin for some stuff to add on to my list.As you can see I dont have much.Just list some foods so I can have a variety to choose from.Thanks!
Breakfast:Oatmeal
Lunch:Turkey Sandwich,baked chips.
Dinner:Chicken and rice,pasta
Snacks:Bananas
Can a family eat on $100 a week?
May 23, 2009
Filed under Diet And Nutrition
Feed a family of four for $100 a week — no coupons, no backyard garden or mystery meat.
That was the challenge MSN Money gave me (and, indirectly, my husband and two children).
I knew it wouldn’t be easy. Even a food stamp allowance for a family of four is $117. With gas and corn prices surging, the retail costs of basic items such as milk, apples, pork chops and potatoes have gone up 8.5% in the past year, according to the most recent American Farm Bureau Federation’s Marketbasket Survey.
But with a little planning and the help of a couple of nutritionists, I figured out what to buy and what to leave on the shelf. And no, we didn’t eat beans or pasta every night. The rules:
- All of the food had to come from a major national grocery chain. No low-priced ethnic markets or bag-your-own-groceries warehouse stores. I could have saved even more, but this had to be something everyone could do.
- No coupons. I’m not a big coupon user anyway, and besides, many of these are for things that are too fattening or just too expensive to begin with.
Melinda Fulmer
- No cleaning products or paper goods. There wasn’t enough room in the budget.
- The meals I served had to be relatively healthful. Otherwise, what’s the point?
Did we make it?
First, let’s say that any reduction in my grocery bill was welcome, as most weeks we spend nearly $250 at a grocery store. That’s well above the $182 budget the U.S. government considers "moderate" for a family of our size and ages.
Spending less than half what we normally do was tough. A $100 budget gave us $1.19 a meal per person, obviously not enough for dinners or coffees out and barely enough to put decent meat on our plates.
Did we spend $100 or less? No.
I cheated twice, and both were on items I wasn’t proud of.
The first time, I bought a sodium-packed $1.07 bean burrito at a fast-food place as I rushed off starving to an appointment for my son. The second time was at the end of the week, when I caved to several minutes of back-seat whining for soft-serve ice cream.
Those purchases brought my total expenditures for the week to $105.03, meaning I overspent by about 6 cents a meal per person.
The experts weigh in
With a $100 budget, there’s no room for error. Every meal and snack has to be meticulously planned, and the whole family has to eat it. In my case, with two adults, a toddler and a 4-year-old, that’s a pretty wide swing.
"That’s a real challenge," says Elizabeth Somer, a registered dietitian and the author of "10 Habits That Mess Up a Woman’s Diet."
Why fast foods are bad, even in moderation
May 23, 2009
Filed under Diet And Nutrition
Eating a diet consisting largely of fast food could cause your waistline to bulge more than eating the same amount of fat from healthier sources.
Monkeys fed a diet rich in trans-fats – commonly found in fast foods – grew bigger bellies than those fed a diet rich in unsaturated fats, but containing the same overall number of calories. They also developed signs of insulin resistance, which is an early indicator of diabetes.
Trans-fats, or partially hydrogenated oils, are found in many fast foods and also in baked goods and processed snacks. They dramatically increase the risk of heart disease – even more than saturated fats found in animal products.
Kylie Kavanagh, at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, US, wondered how this "killer fat" would affect the risk of diabetes in 51 vervet monkeys.
She fed one group of monkeys a diet where 8% of their daily calories came from trans-fats and another 27% came from other fats. This is comparable to people who eat a lot of fried food, says Kavanagh. A different group of monkeys was fed the same diet, but the trans-fats were substituted for mono-unsaturated fats, found in olive oil, for example.
Both groups ate the same total calories, which were carefully metered to be just enough for subsistence.
Path to diabetes
After six years on the diet, the trans-fat-fed monkeys had gained 7.2% of their body weight, compared to just 1.8% in the unsaturated group. CT scans also revealed that the trans-fat monkeys carried 30% more abdominal fat, which is risk factor for diabetes and heart disease.
"We were shocked. Despite all our enormous efforts to make sure they didn’t gain weight, they still did. And most of that weight ended up on their tummies," says Kavanagh, who presented her findings at the American Diabetes Association meeting in Washington DC, on Monday. "This is walking them straight down the path to diabetes."
This is the first study to show such a dramatic result on abdominal fat, adds Dariush Mozaffarian at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, US. "The days of thinking about fats just as calories are over," he says.
Partially hydrogenated oils can easily be replaced by other oils during food production. Last week, fast-food giant Wendy’s announced that it was cutting partially hydrogenated oils from its food in the US and Canada, while in January, food manufacturers in US were ordered to label all trans-fats on packaged goods.













