Thursday, September 8, 2011

Bacon, Eggs and Fruit Salad Breakfast

Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup liquid-egg substitute
  • 2 slices bacon, turkey
  • 2 pieces tomato slices, medium
  • 3/4 cup melon, cantaloupe, fresh, cubes
  • 1/2 cup fresh grapes (any color)
  • 1/2 cup sliced strawberries, fresh



Preparation

  • Coat nonstick pan with cooking spray; place over medium heat. Pour in egg substitute and season as desired with herbs or salt-free seasoning. Scramble until eggs are cooked through.
  • Cook turkey bacon in a skillet over medium heat to desired crispness. Remove and drain on a paper towel.
  • Serve bacon and eggs with tomato slices on the side.
  • Combine cantaloupe, grapes and strawberries for a fruit salad.
  • Enjoy breakfast with a cup of coffee or tea, or other calorie free beverage.
Calories 310

    Asparagus-Leek Frittata Breakfast

    • 3 ounces fresh asparagus, chopped
    • 1/4 cup leeks, fresh, chopped
    • 1/4 cup mushrooms, sliced
    • 1 egg, large
    • 2 egg whites, uncooked
    • 2 tablespoons Fontina cheese, diced
    • 1/8 teaspoon black pepper
    • 1 1/2 teaspoons Parmesan cheese
    • 6 fluid ounces orange juice



    Preparation

    • Preheat broiler.
    • Trim asparagus and cut on diagonal into 1 inch pieces.
    • Spray a broilerproof nonstick skillet with cooking spray and place over medium heat.
    • Sauté leeks for about 3 minutes; add asparagus and mushrooms and sauté until tender.
    • Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk egg, egg whites, 1 tablespoon of the Fontina cheese and the black pepper.
    • Add egg mixture to skillet; reduce heat to medium-low. Cook until almost set.
    • Remove skillet from heat, sprinkle with remaining Fontina cheese and Parmesan cheese.
    • Heat under broiler until egg is set, frittata is puffed and cheese begins to bubble, about 4 minutes.
    • Allow to sit for a minute or two before inverting onto a serving plate.
    • Enjoy with a glass of orange juice.
    • TIP:
    • Freshly grated or shredded Parmesan cheese works best in this recipe.
     Calories 300

    Wednesday, September 7, 2011

    Salted Caramel Chocolate Shakeology Shake Recipe

    Salted Caramel Chocolate Shakeology Shake Recipe
    1 scoop chocolate Shakeology
    1 cup non-fat milk
    1 tsp. caramel extract
    1 dash sea salt
    Ice to taste
     Order Shakeology here

    Saturday, September 3, 2011

    Does running burn more calories than walking

     

    Exercise! Does running burn more calories than walking?


    A complicated question, often answered wrong even by those who ought to know. We'll take it by steps:
    1. The unschooled view, which springs from the ancient instinct that pain = gain, is that running is better than walking because afterward you're sweating like a horse and gasping for breath.
    2. Those with a semester or two of physics under their belts, on the other hand, reason that since the amount of work involved is the same, running a mile has the same impact as walking an equal distance.
    3. However, this assumes that running and walking are equally efficient means of locomotion. Generally speaking they're not--running requires substantially more energy per unit of distance. Several factors contribute to this. Shall we start with entropy and the second law of thermodynamics? Eh, maybe not. How about aerodynamic drag, which increases with the square of the speed? Probably not something you need to worry about unless you've really been hitting the steroids. Here's something a little more relevant: Analyses of the biomechanics of walking vs. running suggest that walking is a more efficient gait except at higher speeds. The crossover point is somewhere around 5 mph, varying with the individual. At that speed, walking and running are equally efficient. Below the crossover point, running is less efficient, apparently because you lose energy absorbing the impact of the ground with your bent knees. Above it, walking falls behind because of the awkwardness of the racewalking gait. Gait is the critical issue, incidentally--running speed is irrelevant. Subtracting out the energy required just to keep you breathing, you'll use about the same amount of juice finishing the marathon in two hours or four.
    4. To return to our main point, running consumes more calories per unit of distance than walking. For a person who weighs 70 kilograms (about 154 pounds), walking at 5 kilometers per hour (3.1 miles per hour) consumes 50 calories per kilometer, whereas running at 10 kph (6.2 mph) consumes 78 calories per kilometer.
    5. Aha, you say, running is better than walking! Not necessarily, even if we narrowly define "better" as "consumes more calories." When you begin a workout your body is metabolizing carbohydrates, but as the minutes tick by you start burning fat--at minute 50 of light exercise, you're chugging along on a 75/25 fat/carb mix. Sixty percent of your maximum aerobic capacity (reached at roughly 75 percent of maximal heart rate, which is generally calculated as 220 minus your age) is optimal for fat burning; as exercise becomes increasingly strenuous you start burning more carbs. Some have seized on these facts to claim that sustained low- to moderate-intensity exercise is a better way to shed flab than going all out. The point is hotly disputed; I merely note that for the significantly overweight, walking can be easier on the heart, joints, etc.
    6. At any rate, calorie consumption isn't the chief goal of exercise; cardiovascular fitness is. The American College of Sports Medicine says you should exercise three to five times a week in 20- to 60-minute sessions intense enough to raise your pulse to between 60 and 90 percent of your maximal heart rate. Such exercise should be aerobic, meaning something like running, brisk walking, biking, swimming, or cross-country skiing, as opposed to, say, weight training. Is running better than walking for this purpose? Depends. Running is certainly more of a workout per unit of time, but if your idea is that 15 minutes of running equals 30 minutes of walking, forget it--sustained exertion is the key. Then again, while any exercise is better than none, if your wife thinks a no-sweat half-hour amble around the neighborhood is the equivalent of your three-mile run, she's kidding herself too.

    Thursday, September 1, 2011

    Preorder P90X2 Today through me

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    Wednesday, August 31, 2011

    FoodFacts Heath score Shakeology

    The FoodFacts Heath score is an innovative scoring system that evaluates food based on multiple dimensions of nutrition and assigns those foods a numeric rating from 1 to 100, the higher score the better. This is an independent study and they give Shakeoloy a 97. Check it out.

    Results of Shakeology

    Order Shakeology Here