After all the good Irish food & drink from Paddy’s Day I figured some of you guys might need a little cleansing food for the weekend. This is a great seasonal dish highlighting some beautiful lamb and veggies that some people may not use or even know of. I grew up eating turnips all the time. They have a delicious sweet nutty flavour. They’re in season right now but with spring just here you should take advantage of these great veggies while they last. Those of you who know my cooking style will know I’m all about simple delicious food and this definitely fits the bill. I didn’t want to mask the great natural flavour of the grass-fed lamb so I just enhanced it with some flavourful fresh garden herbs.
LAMB RECIPE:
Serves 4
2 racks of grass-fed lamb (16 chops)
1/4 tsp salt – use to season before grilling
1/4 tsp pepper – use to season before grilling
Mix all marinade ingredients together and toss lamb chops in marinade for at least 2 hours up to 6 hours, refrigerated.
Remove chops from fridge 1 hour before grilling to let return to room temp.
Preheat grill (outdoor or stove top) on medium for 5 minutes.
Season chops with S&P. Sear for 3-4 minutes on each side for medium rare. Remove from grill and let rest for 3 minutes before serving.
Want that long life to be full of health, vitality and general awesome-ness
Because seriously, who wants to live until 100 if you have to spend the final 20-30 years of your life hooked up to machines and/or driving around in one of those motorized scooters because of your poor lifestyle choices
Sadly, in our modern world, the biggest threat to living a long, healthy, vital and generally awesome life is our lifestyle.
Too little physical activity
Too much sitting
Too much of the wrong foods
Too little of the right foods
Chronic low level stress
Not good.
But, maybe that’s just the way things have to be. Maybe it’s a yin-yang kind of thing.
For all of the benefits of our modern society, there have to be some drawbacks.
Maybe the cost of our technological evolution is a slow, physical de-evolution into WALL-E blobbiness.
Maybe, there is nothing we can we do about it?
personal trainer toronto
wrong.
personal trainer toronto
Here are your options for getting super-fit.
1. Wait for a Technological Solution
Whether it’s a new drug or surgery or medical implant or obesity hygiene device, some people are going to sit and wait for someone else to save them from…themselves.
Cost/Benefit Analysis
Benefits
No exercise
More free time to watch tv and play video games
Eat whatever you want, whenever you want it
Costs
You may die before a “cure” is found
And you may have to spend big bucks on a Comfort Wipe
Our caveman ancestors might not have had an iPad, but they certainly were leaner, stronger & fitter. And, if it wasn’t for their higher infant death rate and the general lack of emergency room doctors, our caveman ancestors would probably have retained a high level of physical fitness well into the senior years.
So, solution #2….
Walk away from all of your modern conveniences, leave your home, walk into the nearest forest and adopt the lifestyle that our paleolithic ancestors thrived upon.
Cost/Benefit Analysis
Benefits
Eating real food (wild game, fruit, berries, nuts, vegetables, roots, water… will make a huge difference on your overall health as well as help you drop a few lbs.
Increased physical activity will drastically improve your overall physical fitness
Less tv, less computer, less video games, less time in the car will improve posture, pain and portliness.
Low level stress will melt away as you ditch your daily commute, your boss, your suit & tie and your need to conform
Costs
No income
Property laws mean that you will likely be arrested for vagrancy or trespassing on private property
Herds of wild buffalo are pretty scarce nowadays, so you might have a problem finding enough food.
Replace low level chronic stress with higher level acute stress – starvation, arrests for vagrancy, etc…
Conclusion
The costs associated with returning to our ancient way of life far outweigh the benefits.
A modern caveman continues to work at his/her job, live in his/her nice warm home but chooses to eliminate or at least minimize those aspects of modern life that are causing us so much trouble
too much screen time – tv, computer, iphone, etc…
too much sitting
not enough physical activity
too many calories
not enough nutrition
Cost/Benefit Analysis
Benefits
Eating real food (wild game, fruit, berries, nuts, vegetables, roots, water… will make a huge difference on your overall health as well as help you drop a few lbs.
Increased physical activity will drastically improve your overall physical fitness
Less tv, less computer, less video games, less time in the car will improve posture, pain and portliness.
Taking a proactive approach to stress reduction will help improve the quality & quantity of your life.
Costs
Individuality – If you like to blend in, being a modern caveman isn’t for you
Grocery Bills – Real food often costs more than the typical processed Standard American Diet. Or at least it requires more imagination and effort to keep costs down.
Cost of physical activity – whether it’s time or money or a combination of the two, exercise is going to hit you in the wallet. Because you aren’t spending your entire day being active, you’re going to need to “exercise”. Whether you choose to run on your own or hire an in-home personal trainer, there is going to a cost – time, money, combination.
Conclusion
Millions of fit, healthy & attractive people are implementing some version of this plan each & every day.
Next week, i will go into some of the options and break them down…benefits, costs, etc…
Michelle Obama and her war against childhood obesity is in the news again.
In the article that she has written an article for this week’s edition of Newsweek, the First Lady outlines her plan to transform America’s youth from fat to fit within the span of a single generation.
And while I personally believe that big social programs such as these are more effective at spending money than affecting any sort of meaningful change, I want to know what you think.
And I made it easy with this handy-dandy Poll Daddy poll.
So, make your selection and then send send this link to all of your Facebook friends, Twitter followers, etc…
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(I have also included the entire article in the post – see below)
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Michelle on a Mission
How we can empower parents, schools, and the community to battle childhood obesity.
By Michelle Obama | NEWSWEEK
Published Mar 14, 2010
From the magazine issue dated Mar 22, 2010
For years, we’ve known about the epidemic of childhood obesity in America. We’ve heard the statistics—how one third of all kids in this country are either overweight or obese. We’ve seen the effects on how our kids feel, and how they feel about themselves. And we know the risks to their health and to our economy—the billions of dollars we spend each year treating obesity-related conditions like heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.
But we also know that it wasn’t always like this. Back when many of us were growing up, we led lives that kept most of us at a pretty healthy weight. We walked to school every day, ran around at recess and gym and for hours before dinner, and ate home-cooked meals that always seemed to have a vegetable on the plate.
For many kids today, those walks to school have been replaced by car and bus rides. Afternoons playing outside have been replaced with afternoons inside with TV, videogames, and the Internet. And with many parents working longer hours, or multiple jobs, they don’t have time for family meals around the table anymore.
It’s now clear that between the pressures of today’s economy and the breakneck pace of modern life, the well-being of our kids has too often gotten lost in the shuffle.
And let’s be honest with ourselves: our kids didn’t do this to themselves. Our kids don’t decide what’s served in the school cafeteria or whether there’s time for gym class or recess. Our kids don’t choose to make food products with tons of sugar and sodium in supersize portions, and then have those products marketed to them everywhere they turn. And no matter how much they beg for fast food and candy, our kids shouldn’t be the ones calling the shots at dinnertime. We’re in charge. We make these decisions.
That’s actually the good news—that we can decide to solve this problem. That’s why we started Let’s Move, a nationwide campaign with a single goal: to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation, so that children born today can reach adulthood at a healthy weight.
Let’s Move is not about trying to turn back the clock to when we were kids, or cooking five-course meals from scratch every night. No one has time for that. And it’s not about saying no to everything either. There’s a place for cookies and ice cream, burgers and fries—that’s part of the fun of childhood.
Instead, Let’s Move is about families making manageable changes that fit with their schedules, their budgets, and their needs and tastes. It’s about giving parents the tools they need to keep their families healthy and fit, and getting more nutritious food—more fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, and less sugar, fat, and salt—into our nation’s schools. It’s about helping grocery stores serve communities that don’t have access to fresh foods, and finding new ways to help our kids stay physically active in school and at home.
Achieving all this won’t be easy. This isn’t something we can fix with a bill in Congress or an executive order from the president. I’ve spoken with many experts about this issue, and not a single one has said that the solution to childhood obesity is to have the government tell people what to do.
Instead, it’s about what all of us can do to help our kids lead active, healthy lives: parents making healthier choices for their families; mayors and governors doing their part to build healthier cities and states; and the private sector doing its part as well—from food manufacturers offering healthier options to retailers understanding that what’s good for kids and families can be good for businesses too.
That’s why I’ve been traveling the country, speaking to groups ranging from PTAs to food manufacturers, to elected officials, to school food-service employees, asking all of them to be a part of Let’s Move. And since this campaign began, several major school suppliers have already agreed to improve the quality of their food, doubling the amount of fresh produce they serve to our children. The nation’s largest beverage companies have agreed to provide clearly visible information about calories on the front of their products, as well as on vending machines and soda fountains. The American Academy of Pediatrics has begun urging its members to screen children for obesity and to actually write out prescriptions for parents detailing how to address it. And we’ve started a Web site—LetsMove.gov—with tips on eating well and staying fit.
Changes like these are only the beginning—and we’ve got a long way to go to reach our goals. But I’m confident that if we each do our part, and all work together, we can ensure that our kids have not just the opportunities they need to succeed, but the strength and endurance to seize those opportunities: to excel in school, pursue the careers of their dreams, keep up with their own kids, and live to see their grandkids grow up—maybe even their great-grandkids too. That is the goal of Let’s Move, and that is my mission as first lady.
Next week is St. Paddy’s Day so all week on my site I’ve been featuring a bunch of healthy Irish recipes. Continuing on with my Irish recipe round up…..Yep, it’s another Irish beef stew. I can’t help it–it’s in my DNA!
You’re probably familiar with my Beef & Guinness version and you may remember I made an Autumn Stew this past year. What’s the difference besides the obvious use of Guinness? Subtle differences like using more types of root veg, pearl onions and no potatoes in the stew itself (making it a perfect St. Paddy’s Paleo dish) are the main differences, which goes to show that you can take the same idea and make it different and seasonal.
In this study, the researchers argued that when it comes to Metabolic Syndrome (hypertension, dyslipidaemia, glucose intolerance, hyperinsulinemia, central adiposity {big belly}, high blood sugar) obesity may actually be a good thing.
Here’s why.
Metabolic Syndrome is a result of our Standard American Diet
The S.A.D. combination of too many calories and the over-consumption of sugar + fat-centric meals causes…
An increase in the secretion of insulin. When this happens on a regular basis, we end up with…
Causes the expression of the lipogenic transcription factor SREBP-1c and its target enzymes and so on and so on and so on until we end up with Metabolic Syndrome and all of the wonderful ailments I mentioned in the previous paragraph.
Sounds pretty grim, doesn’t it?
And the first thing that your doctor is going to tell you if she suspects you have Metabolic Syndrome is to lose weight.
As if obesity is the cause of Metabolic Syndrome.
But, it ain’t.
We know that our bodies respond to our Standard American Diet by increasing the amount of circulating insulin.
This leads to an increase in body-fat.
Common sense tells us that this is bad.
These researchers disagree.
They propose that this new body-fat delays, rather than causes, the metabolic syndrome induced by chronic caloric surplus.
They argue that subcutaneous fat in general exerts a positive effect on insulin sensitivity. Subcutaneous fat is the body-fat that exists between your muscles and your skin – we’re not talking that solid “beer belly” kind of fat.
This “healthy” type of adipose tissue is genetically determined and has a strong sexually dimorphic component as well. Females, at any given body mass index, are protected against insulin resistance more than males.
And if we prevent insulin resistance…we prevent Metabolic Syndrome.
To test this hypothesis further, the researchers bred obesity resistance mice with with db/db mice, which normally become obese and develop severe metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes (T2DM) by the age of 8–10 weeks.
Sucks to be a db/db mouse.
They ended up with some mice who stayed lean despite their voracious appetites.
Unfortunately, these mice developed Metabolic Syndrome in 4 weeks instead of the typical 8-10 weeks.
The researchers concluded that body-fat is a normal response designed to permit stockpiling of fuels while simultaneously protecting our lipid-intolerant organs.
Metabolic syndrome appears only after the storage capacity of the adipocyte compartment has reached a maximum, at which point a gradual accumulation of ectopic fatty acids begins.
Ectopic means “not where it’s supposed to be”. It accumulates in the abdominal region (beer belly), the liver, muscle tissue including the heart, the pancreas, and perhaps in lipid-rich deposits in the arteries.
Obesity should therefore not be regarded as a pathology or disease, but rather as the normal, physiologic response to sustained caloric surplus without which the advent of metabolic syndrome is accelerated.
Conclusions
Obesity isn’t a disease
It’s a symptom of another disease – Metabolic Syndrome
It’s better to have squishy, subcutaneous fat than the big, hard beer belly kind of fat
My Suggestion
Stop thinking of obesity as a health issue unto itself.
If obesity is a result of something else, you need to know what that cause is and then take action to reverse the problem.
You can start by dumping the Standard American Diet and replace it with something more Mediterranean or Asian or Paleo.
1 [Latin gluttonicidium, from glutton- + -cidium -cide] : the act or an instance of taking one’s own life voluntarily and intentionally by means of habitual eating to excess
. 2: one that commits or attempts gluttonicide
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I discovered this amazing new word while skimming some new studies online.
You are not going to believe the research I am going to share with you tomorrow.
Jeff Garlin’s new book (my footprint) is the best & worst diet book I have ever read.
The worst because…. it’s not really a diet book.
There’s none of the eat this and don’t eat this that all diet books are supposed to have.
There are no promises of rapid and permanent weight loss.
There are no recipes.
The cover doesn’t feature an image of a person with taut muscles and a rippling six pack.
It features Jeff…and his still too big belly…walking on a treadmill….in the middle of a forest.
Not exactly the prototypical diet industry role model.
But that’s okay.
It’s okay because Jeff has written a book that should be read by:
People who find themselves unable to stop themselves from eating
People who identify themselves as food addicts
People who have to eat when they feel angry, sad, anxious, happy, etc..
People who eat when they are already full
People who eat to the point of nausea
People who eat past the point of nausea
People who hide their eating habits from others
People who are ashamed of how they eat
People who love and care for people who eat like Jeff Garlin
Now onto the book…
Jeff Garlin provided the voice for the overweight spaceship captain in the movie WALL-E.
If you haven’t seen the movie, you really should. Even if you don’t like animation – but, I digress.
Back to the book.
After attending the closing night of WALL-E at a movie theater in Hollywood, Jeff realized (not for the first time), that for years, he has been telling himself that he’s going to finally lose the weight and get in shape. But he never does.
On that fateful night, after watching the captain experience his own epiphany, Jeff realizes that it’s finally time for him to stop talking about losing weight and to finally do something about it.
“If not now, then when”?
And as his lies in bed that night, Jeff is struck by an idea – he’ll write about his attempt to lose weight.
And just like his character in WALL-E, he decides to add an environmental transformation to his physical one.
Jeff has decided to lower his carbon footprint as he simultaneously lowers his personal footprint.
Jeff’s Weight Loss Journey
The first thing you’re going to notice about this book is that it reads like a series of diary entries. Chronologically we read about Jeff’s day to day struggles to overcome his food addiction and drop a ton of weight (while simultaneously lightening his environmental impact upon the earth).
The second thing that you’re going to notice is that Jeff is funny. Seriously funny. For those people who are already fans of Curb Your Enthusiasm, this will come as no surprise. But for those people who have never watched Curb, let’s just say that as I read this book (in public – coffee shop, chiropractor’s office) I couldn’t stop myself from laughing out loud.
Yes – I was that strange person laughing to himself in a room full of people.
What I Loved About Jeff’s Message
Jeff made two points that struck me as terribly important.
1. He is a food addict.
This is a very controversial statement.
Most weight loss experts (and the general) population that weight loss is as simple as eating less & moving more.
They are wrong.
People like Jeff know that in addition to the chemistry and biology of human metabolism, many of us have to deal with powerful mental & emotional obstacles that drive us to eat and eat and eat.
Just like the alcoholic, compulsive gambler or drug addict, our thoughts and emotions can have a profound effect upon our hormones, brain chemistry and ultimately our actions.
Food addiction is real.
2. Weight Loss is hard work.
Unlike other “food addicts” Jeff doesn’t take the position that his addiction makes it impossible to lose weight. He doesn’t assume the role of victim.
Jeff is eager to spread the message that:
Weight loss is possible
But it is going to be really hard
There are no magic solutions.
There are going to be good days and there are going to be bad days.
There’s a lot to be said for mastering basic cooking techniques like properly grilling a steak, plain and simple. Here I’ve done just that yet to spice things up I roasted cauliflower with a little kick using smoked paprika. This might sound too basic but this is where choosing your ingredients makes all the difference. Grass-fed meats and organic produce are bursting with natural flavour. Delicious doesn’t have to mean complicated.
RECIPE:
2 x 6oz NY grass-fed steaks
1 tsp cracked black pepper (1/2 tsp per steak)
1/4 tsp salt
1 tbsp grape seed oil (or olive oil if preferred). Grape seed oil gets to a higher temp before burning so is ideal for searing on high heat.
1 head organic cauliflower – cut in florets
1/4 tsp smoked paprika
1/4 cup green olives – halved
1/4 tsp pepper
2 tbsp olive oil
drizzle agave or honey