Posts Tagged ‘nutrition’

Boost your immunity by eating smarter

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

The end of winter may be in sight, but there’s still plenty of cold weather to come if you live in the UK and other colder climes. And this is the time of year when you’re particularly susceptible to picking up colds, flu and other infections, because your body has been starved of sunlight for months and your immune system has been working overtime.

But don’t just sit back and give in to the bugs. By eating the right things you can actually fight back and boost your immunity – and I don’t mean vitamin pills. Sure, they have their place, but sort out your diet and you’ll stand a far better chance of stopping bacteria and viruses from taking hold and ruining your spring.

Seasonal vegetables are a good start, with bright orange and dark green varieties top of your list, as they convert into vitamin A. So go for carrots, spinach, cabbage and pumpkins, supported by protein-rich foods like meat, eggs, fish, pulse vegetables and nuts.

What’s more, ignore your friends’ protests and pile on the garlic – the most raw the better. It has legendary infection-fighting properties, with the added advantage of helping you get a seat on the tube in the rush hour, or whatever your preferred mode of public transport may be.

Finally, another favourite that boosts your resistance to infections is shiitake mushrooms, thanks to the presence of the supernutrient lentinan.

Balancing your diet well during winter and early spring can lay the groundwork for a healthier year.

Click here for more ways to eat to beat the bugs.

… and if you do pick up a bug, click here for your guide to which supplements and herbal remedies can speed up your recovery.

Meanwhile, click here to find out why broccoli is a great immunity booster and can help you live longer.

Plus click here for more immunity boosting food news.

Magnesium madness?

Monday, January 18th, 2010

We’ve heard that some people feel that they crave chocolate because it contains magnesium, a nutrient that their body, they believe, must be lacking, and that by taking supplements of magnesium, they conquer their chocolate cravings.

We can’t find any consistent and convincing evidence to support this view. While it is possible that we may opt for certain foods as a form of self-medication – coffee to pick us up, fast-release carbohydrates to help us relax, for example – the fact is that magnesium is present in other foods like nuts, fish and meat as well. If this is purely a physiologically driven craving, why wouldn’t our bodies crave these foods as well in order to make good any magnesium short-falls?

Chocolate cravings are a complex phenomena. Most of us crave or want it because we love the taste and texture, and enjoy the little buzz we get from eating it. Sadly, lots of people then feel guilty immediately they have swallowed the last mouthful.

This is what makes Ador chocolate so unique. First, it comes in 35g bars, so you can polish off the whole bar and only have added 179 calories to your day’s total. Second, it contains pine nut extract, which will help you to feel full so that one bar is enough until you next main meal.

If you feel your diet may be lacking in magnesium, we suggest having a chat with your GP or taking a multivitamin and mineral supplement that contains 100% of the RDA of all the nutrients it contains. Going out on a limb and taking magnesium on its own is unlikely to stop you wanting chocolate, and taking too much of one mineral can unbalance others. This is something you don’t get with a safe, well-balanced multivitamin like a Centrum, Multibionta, Seven Seas or Boots version.

Click here to find out more on the effects of magnesium overdosing

Of course, magnesium has some great health benefits too. So check out these great blogs on why chocolate and magnesium are good for you http://tinyurl.com/yeeynan
http://tinyurl.com/ycpbqjo

How to stick to your diet plan… and keep the weight off afterwards

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

What you eat at one meal profoundly affects when and what you what to snack on next.

Bear this in mind and you are well on your way to cracking the seemingly impossible task of sticking to your diet and just as importantly, keeping your weight off, once you have been through the hard slog of losing it.

How does this work? Well, think about two different breakfasts. The first is a bowl of sugary breakfast cereal or a muffin from a coffee shop. How long do these keep you feeling full for and when do you feel peckish again?

Everyone we have asked says that these foods will keep them going for about an hour or so, but that they are soon fixated on the biscuit tin, craving another sugar-hit.

Have a bowl of porridge or a couple of boiled eggs on the other hand, and you will easily make it through until mid-morning without even thinking about a nibble.

This is simply because eggs and porridge are filling (eggs, because of their protein content; oats, because of their slowly digested carbohydrate).

Sugary cereals and muffins, on the other hand, are full of quickly digested energy that rapidly raises blood sugar levels, but soon leaves you craving more.

The same goes with a lot of snacks. Nibble biscuits, cakes and sweets, and you’ll be back on that sugar roller-coaster before you can say ‘Hob Nob’!

Opt for a slowly digested snack, like an oatcake or a piece of rye bread, and you will feel fine until your next meal. The only problem is, who carries an oatcake or piece of rye bread around in their pocket or bag… and who really fancies eating them anyway?

This is where Ador snacks come into their own. To begin with, the oat bars (raspberry, mocca or prune and ginger) are completely portable. Next, they taste fantastic. And here’s the clever bit: they contain Fabuless, an natural oat and palm extract that helps to keep you feeling full.

This puts you in the driving seat when it comes to naturally controlling your appetite, and also means you won’t be starving, and overeat when you start your next meal.

Could Ador be what weight watchers everywhere have been waiting for?

Click here for 10 more tips to help you stick to your diet