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Poll: Nearly One-Fourth Of The Swedish Population Are Now Eating Low-Carb

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 29, 2011

Cheer up fans of high-fat, low-carb living around the world because I’ve got some really exciting news to share with you today that will have you jumping for joy at the incredible progress being made about this way of eating right now in the nation of Sweden. Whether you realize it or not, there’s an outright low-carb revolution happening amongst the Swedish people that has been several years in the making thanks to an unprecedented chain of events that have unfolded featuring educated physicians and patients whose lives have been forever changed for the better because of healthy high-fat, low-carb living. This story I’m about to share with you today should inspire those of us in the United States, Canada, the UK, Australia, and everywhere else livin’ la vida low-carb is impacting the lives of real people.

I’ve been telling you about the rise of the low-carb lifestyle taking place in Sweden for over three years now, including conducting podcast interviews with several of the key players in the low-carb movement there like medical practitioner Dr. Annika Dahlqvist, activist Per Wikholm, and triathlete Jonas Colting. And I’ll be interviewing the great “Diet Doctor” physician Dr. Andreas Eenfeldt on my podcast later this year to talk about the overwhelming success he has seen with his brand new 2011 book detailing what they call LCHF (low-carb, high-fat) is all about. But excitement about LCHF hit a fevered pitch this week when a new public opinion poll about Swedish eating habits released on Monday showed nearly one in four Swedes identify themselves as eating a low-carb diet. INCREDIBLE! Needless to say, this has lit a fire of excitement amongst those who have been championing healthy high-fat, low-carb living there–and I think it will encourage low-carbers around the world to continue spreading the good news about what this way of eating has done for our weight and health.

For those of you who have not been following this story about low-carb diets in Sweden closely over the past few years, let me catch you up on all that’s been happening. In December 2005, Dr. Dahlqvist was reported to a government entity called the National Board of Health and Welfare (similar to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration) by a pair of dietitians who claimed she was putting her patients at “severe risk” by recommending a low-carb, high-fat diet for treating diabetes and obesity. An investigation took place to determine whether Dr. Dahlqvist should be stripped of her medical license or if she would be able to continue to use the LCHF approach with patients. While the investigation was ongoing, her employer informed her she could no longer use her low-carb nutritional plan with patients–so she quit and went into practice for herself while awaiting the result of the charges filed against her.

On January 16, 2008, the National Board of Health and Welfare made their decision after carefully examining all of the evidence presented to them and declared publicly that a low-carb diet is “in accordance with science and well-tried experience for reducing obesity and Type 2 diabetes.” WOW! Sweden is likely the first country in the world to have an official government board admit that low-carb is a suitable treatment for diabetes and obesity. Dr. Dahlqvist was willing to put her entire medical career on the line to defend the low-carb nutritional principles she knew was helping her patients. Although the odds were stacked against her, she was confident in the science and stood strong in the face off immense adversity. In the end, she came out of this intense trial victorious as the Swedish government now recognizes healthy low-carb living, albeit begrudgingly. But this was merely the catalyst for some truly great things to come for the LCHF movement that immediately took off in Sweden.

By mid-2008, a public conversation about LCHF started happening led by Dr. Dahlqvist, Dr. Eenfeldt, and others to begin reeducating Swedish consumers about what a healthy high-fat, low-carb diet looks like so they can make changes in their own personal dietary habits to deal with obesity and chronic disease. You could say a high-fat, low-carb diet explosion began taking place as LCHF bloggers began popping up everywhere featuring people whose lives had been changed as a result of this way of eating. At times it even got a little heated in televised debates like this one in 2009 because the adherents to the conventional dietary wisdom were none-too-pleased at this promotion of saturated fats to consumers for their health. Because of the amazing work she did leading the charge for LCHF, I named Dr. Dahlqvist to my Top 10 Movers & Shakers of 2009 list…but she began having some help from a fellow Swedish physician who was also a big believer in high-fat, low-carb nutrition.

Dr. Andreas Eenfeldt created his “Kostdoktorn” blog which has since expanded in 2011 to an English version called “Diet Doctor” as a means for promoting the principles of a healthy high-fat, low-carb, real food lifestyle change that can be used therapeutically for patients struggling with health issues traditionally treated by medical doctors pharmaceutically. He wanted to reach outside the borders of Sweden, though, and began attending some American obesity conferences like The American Society of Bariatric Physicians and Nutrition & Metabolism Society Symposium beginning in 2010 (and I named him to my Top 10 Low-Carb Movers & Shakers of 2010 for his tireless efforts to educate himself further to pass along to the readers of his top-rated low-carb blog in Sweden). We also signed him up to be a guest speaker on The Annual Low-Carb Cruise in 2010 to share about the remarkable success of LCHF in Sweden. His very first English presentation was very well-received by nearly 100 enthusiastic supporters of healthy low-carb living in the United States. With the much-anticipated January 2011 release of his Swedish language book on LCHF called Matrevolutionen, Dr. Eenfeldt has set the stage for even more widespread communication of the low-carb message to the people of Sweden–and quite possibly around the world if the book’s amazing success so far continues and is translated into other languages (I’m looking forward hearing Dr. Eenfeldt speak again and meet a group of LCHF advocates who will be joining us on The 4th Annual Low-Carb Cruise coming up May 1-7, 2011).

So, is the LCHF movement making a REAL difference in the lives of the people of Sweden? That’s what a new March 2011 poll of 1,000 Swedish citizens between the ages of 18-89 conducted by Demoskop wanted to find out. Commissioned by Pagina/Optimal, the leading publisher of LCHF and other low-carb books (including Swedish translations of bestselling low-carb books like Gary Taubes’ Why We Get Fat And What To Do About It, Leirre Keith’s The Vegetarian Myth and The New Atkins For A New You by Dr. Stephen Phinney, Dr. Jeff Volek and Dr. Eric Westman), they simply wanted to know the answer to the following question:

“Do you try to eat fat but minimize your intake of carbohydrates–the low-carb, high-fat or LCHF method?”

Here’s a graph outlining the results of the poll (it’s in Swedish, but I’ll explain below):


(Click on the image above to ENLARGE)

You can see the full report in Swedish by clicking here, but Dr. Eenfeldt provided some English translation assistance by creating this graph with the demographics of those who responded to the poll:

These numbers are pretty astonishing when you stop and think about it. Here are some of the key findings that are worth noting:

  • Nearly one in four (23%) respondents are carb-conscious
  • Five percent are hard-core adherents to high-fat, low-carb (LCHF) living
  • Interestingly, nearly twice as many women (7%) than men (4%) follow LCHF
  • The older respondents seem more carb-conscious than the younger ones
  • Nearly one-third 55-89 year olds are eating a low-carb diet
  • Low and medium income watch carbs at the same rate as high income
  • High income respondents are more likely to afford eating a LCHF diet
  • Retired respondents over 65 (7%) do LCHF more than working 45-64 year olds (5%)
  • 30-44 year olds support LCHF (7%) at highest percentage of total carb watchers (20%)
  • Students and the unemployed can’t afford to purchase LCHF foods, still watch carbs

    One of my Swedish readers told me the television news station that reported on this poll interviewed a dietitian rooted in conventional dietary wisdom about it and he said it was “all the normal nonsense” that you hear from these so-called health experts. She accused the Swedish people of being “carbphobic” and dismissed the findings as ignorance. Sounds like somebody has sour grapes to me and is extremely jealous of the attention being paid to a healthy and delicious nutritional plan that is greatly improving the weight and health of those who try it for themselves. The implications of this momentum happening in Sweden cannot be overstated. THIS IS HUGE!

    Juxtapose this new poll with a Google Trender keyword search for “LCHF” in Sweden and the picture will become even more stark by comparison:

    Prior to 2008, nobody in Sweden had even heard of LCHF. But after the National Board of Health and Welfare made their decision clearing Dr. Dahlqvist’s good name by noting a low-carb diet is “in accordance with science and well-tried experience for reducing obesity and Type 2 diabetes,” interest in the LCHF lifestyle began to skyrocket and the trend has not slowed down yet. In fact, Google searches for “LCHF” in Sweden have more than doubled in just the past year alone which likely led those people who were searching to visit any number of outstanding low-carb blogs there, get educated about what this way of eating is about, and then start doing it for themselves. That’s why the numbers in this survey were so incredible!

    The fact is this has happened very quickly mostly through word-of-mouth since LCHF has not been endorsed by the government or health leaders. Can you imagine if low-carb, high-fat diets were to be deliberately PROMOTED to the Swedish people as “healthy” what would happen? Those poll numbers above would easily double overnight and the health of the citizens there would improve dramatically without the need for taking risky medications or ever going on a hunger-inducing, unpalatable low-fat diet ever again! Restaurants and grocery stores would need to cater to the LCHF consumer by offering higher-fat food offerings to consumers such as butter, full-fat cheeses, cream, steak, and low-carb staples like spinach, broccoli and cauliflower. It’s a revolution happening right before our eyes in a country that could easily be setting a trend for other nations to follow!

    Most amazing to me is the fact that this has all happened on the grassroots level through the tireless efforts of a lot of people getting involved in promoting LCHF within their circle of influence. It’s as if people have given up being lied to about how to eat from those experts who are supposed to know better about what is most effective and now the people are turning to alternative sources of information coming from bloggers who are telling their success stories since they are real-life examples of what healthy high-fat, low-carb living can do. My speech on the Low-Carb Cruise in a few weeks is called “Following Your Passion To Change The World” where I will challenge the participants to find their talents and use them to bring about change in support of this amazing low-carb lifestyle. The time for making this happen is NOW!

    Will we see a similar trend like what has happened in Sweden start to happen someday soon in the United States of America? It may seem improbable and maybe even impossible to fathom right now. But perhaps the Swedes are giving us a foretaste of the future of America, Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and other countries around the world who desperately need their own dietary revolution to take place. I have a feeling it’s coming sooner than later and I’ll be here ready, willing, and able to do my part to help educate, encourage, and inspire the masses when it does. Will you?

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

  • Posted in government, health, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Media, Nutrition, obesity, real food, Weight Loss | 1 Comment »

    A Week’s Worth of Food Diaries

    Posted by Maureen Diaz on March 28, 2011

     

    My morning "supplements"

    It has been quite awhile since I managed to get anything written here, as I have been concentrating on getting my household re-organized and running more smoothly-a tough task when you have 10 people under one roof! So as I have for weeks been mulling over what/when to write next, I decided this morning that a simple, concise daily food diary may be in order. Not that most people really care about what I eat, but for those who do (and I know there are at least a few), I am starting with today!

    So at the close of each day you can look forward to (or not :P ) a post from me detailing what foods are entering my mouth as well as how this food is affecting me. I am working on taking off the winter weight (8#) which needs to come off, as well as the remaining 15# beyond that to achieve my goal. My 30th class reunion is coming up in July, and I am looking forward to looking better than ever for this, my first-ever reunion with old classmates.

    I will also mention what my family is eating, where it varies from my own dietary intake. Often people ask what/how I feed my family, and so this should answer some of those questions as well.

    I’ll just clue you in now on how my day has started. I had a delicious cup of Republic of Tea Ginger Peach, sweetened just a bit with whole leaf stevia and topped off with a generous dollop of cream. Later I consumed 2 lovely pastured eggs fried in lots of butter and washed down with about a cup of silky smooth fresh heavy cream, flavored with a bit of homemade vanilla & stevia. A Tbsp. of coconut oil & tsp. of fermented cod liver oil are also part of my morning routine. This all makes me feel so good, satisfied, and ready for my very busy day.

    I’ll be back this evening with the rest!

    Maureen Diaz is a homemaker, mother of 9, Weston A Price Foundation chapter leader & educator, certified LW nutritionist, and producer of 3 cooking DVD’s, including Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Her DVD’s are available from her website, nourishingtraditionalcook.com

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    Posted in Butter, cod liver oil, farm fresh, fresh and local, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, obesity, raw milk, real food, real foods, Vitamin D, Weight Loss | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

    Whole Foods Offers Customers ‘Customized Nutrition Plan’ Pushing A Vegan Agenda

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 23, 2011

    Last February, I shared with you about a decision made by the executives of the world’s largest health food supermarket chain Whole Foods beginning to aggressively promote a low-fat, vegetarian diet with their “Health Starts Here” campaign. Interestingly, they’re not trying to hide what they are doing either as you can see on this page of their web site outlining their “Four Pillars Of Health Eating” with the call for customers to become “Plant-Strong” by making vegetables the centerpiece of their diet. Their list of 10 Easy Steps To Make A Fresh Start heavily promotes salads, whole grains, vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, seeds, and “smaller portions” of lean meats while eschewing refined, processed foods. They even have an in-store “Healthy Eating Specialist” whose job is to work at an in-store kiosk/desk to be there to answer questions from customers about health and healthy eating as well as giving lectures on health and nutrition in the local community–all the while pushing the vegan lifestyle. All of this may sound pretty good to the average Whole Foods customer who tends to be more health-conscious than those people who shop at a traditional grocery store. But they are laying a trap for their customers who may not be as nutritionally savvy about what a healthy diet can actually look like. And it’s really a whole lot worse than we ever thought.

    Last week when I blogged about the new vegan propaganda movie called Forks Over Knives coming in May, I received well over 100 comments mostly from vegans who wanted to defend their chosen nutritional plan although I didn’t really criticize it or the film in my post. But “Jill in Chicago” wanted to defend Whole Foods and their “Healthy Eating Specialist” position against being characterized as vegan-promoting. Here’s what she wrote:

    The focus of Whole Foods’ Health Starts Here program is not to eat a vegan diet, but to eat whole, unprocessed foods. I am currently in the midst of a Health Starts Here 28-Day Health Challenge, and the Healthy Eating Specialist who is assisting the group does not discourage meat and dairy consumption. The idea is to eat less of them.

    That’s all well and good and I certainly wish Jill the best as she pursues her own weight and health goals with whatever diet she is choosing to follow. To me it’s all about finding the plan that will work for you, following it exactly, and then continuing to do that for the rest of your life. But what about those people who don’t know which plan is right for them? Is there a way to get a customized nutrition plan that will help them determine what their diet should look like? Whole Foods seems to think so through their partnership with Eat Right America doing direct marketing with the customers of their stores encouraging them to take a survey to see how to eat optimally for your health. What Whole Foods customer wouldn’t be interested in something like that? One of my readers forwarded an e-mail she received from a friend of hers who wanted to pass along this “amazing offer” from Whole Foods giving away “FREE customized nutrition plans to get you started or keep you motivated on your health journey.”

    Gee, how nice is that? All you gotta do is go to the “Eat Right America Challenge” web site, enter or obtain an access code, fill out a survey about your eating, exercise and lifestyle habits as well as you health and they’ll spit you out the perfect diet just for you, including a personalized 28-day nutrition and eating plan that they say “really is a great resource…to Whole Foods Market customers.” They encourage people who take this survey to come back in to visit Whole Foods after you receive your diet plan to consult with the “Health Starts Here” station to speak with the “Healthy Eating Specialist” about learning more about “your path to a healthier life.” Don’t you just love how syrupy sweet and innocent they make this all sound? It’s a lot more dastardly than these unsuspecting Whole Foods customers even know!

    So what’s the real deal here? I wanted to find out and share this with you so your friends, family and co-workers don’t get suckered into thinking this is a legitimate way to know which diet is right for them (if you want to have a REAL test done to determine the correct nutritional makeup of your diet for you based on how your body metabolizes food and nutrients, then you might consider getting the FitTest done from GetYourHealthTested.com). Maybe what they conclude about the kind of diet you should be eating is right for you…maybe not. But this survey is not based on anything scientific methodology regarding your specific situation. It’s deliberately meant to mislead you into thinking what you are currently doing is causing harm to your health and that there is only one solution to preventing your health from getting worse than it is. As you can imagine, the basis for the questions asked in this survey heavily leans on conventional wisdom about the relationship of consuming animal-based fats and proteins to developing heart disease, obesity, cancer, diabetes and other chronic diseases and the supposed virtues of consuming plant-based foods as a way to obtain optimal health. Let’s take a look at what it was like for me to take this survey for myself plugging in information about my diet and lifestyle.

    I began by visiting the Challenge web site where they welcomed and congratulated me for taking “the first step toward a healthier more nutritious lifestyle” through my own “Personal Nutrition Report”:

    The survey started off by asking me some basic demographic information about who I am in a “detailed assessment designed to accurately predict your health future.” Eat Right America is described as “a cause, a passionate desire to enable America’s families to live a life of ‘true’ health.” They do this by promising the results of their survey will give you a “personally-designed, nutrition prescription, that can dramatically extend your life expectancy and lower your risk of life-threatening diseases.” Wow, sounds like they’ve found the Fountain Of Youth miracle cure-all for all of life’s health woes. We shall see. They then asked questions about the current state of my health and what my typical diet looks like:

    Two things stood out to me about the diet portion of the survey–they put eggs in with white meat and there was no designation for “grass-fed” or “pastured” foods. So any red meat consumption listed on the survey could be grain-fed or grass-fed. It obviously didn’t matter to them whether you consumed higher-quality meats or not (an it’s only gonna get even worse in a moment, though). I made it through the 15-minute survey so I could receive my own “Nutrition Prescription customized for Jimmy Moore”–they made it just for me (yeah right!):

    You get a form letter from Dr. Scott Stoll who is a member of the Whole Foods Medical Board who explains that the “solution we have created for you is easy to understand, simple and fun for you and your family to adopt, and represents a proven methodology that is guaranteed to deliver the results you desire.” WOW! What in the world could this miracle of all miracles be that will end my weight and health struggles forever? They then explain about what the “Nutrition Prescription” is all about discussing the implementation of the “Nutritarian Lifestyle” from vegan physician Dr. Joel Fuhrman juxtaposed with the typical Standard American Diet and why this new way to eat is allegedly better for you. They even show you a graph of what your current diet looks like compared with SAD:

    I think it’s interesting they lump meat and dairy together in the same category and apparently list foods like bacon in the “Processed Foods” section. Do you think they put things like tofu and skim milk in with the “Processed Foods” when they are both OBVIOUSLY highly-processed? I wouldn’t bet the house on it. Continuing through my personal assessment, the news only got worse. I was chastised for consuming too much red meat, animal products, and full-fat dairy while eschewing whole grains and more vegetables. They point to my diet as the reason why my health is at great risk for disease:

    For several pages, I receive a lecture on why my cholesterol is too high which puts me at risk for a heart attack (I’ve previously explained in this post that cholesterol testing is a lot more sophisticated these days than ever before and that measuring particle size is much more relevant than LDL or total cholesterol). They claim my LDL (explained as “the most accurate determinant of risk” of coronary artery disease) should be below 80 mg/dl to “maximize reversal” of heart disease, but there was nary a mention of HDL “good” cholesterol in the equation. Additionally, they use the body mass index (BMI) to determine the obesity of an individual stating that it “is a fairly reliable indicator of body fat for most people.” The say my BMI at 251 pounds on my 6’3″ body frame puts me at a “significantly increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.” Oh, now isn’t that nice? They’ve got a rude awakening coming when none of this actually happens to me as they’re trying scaremonger these poor Whole Foods customers into thinking they have to eat a vegan diet. Oh yes, that sticky little detail is coming up soon. But first they need to continue to put the fear of God in me about my current health before they swoop in to the rescue with their miracle plan to save me:

    They say I’m at a “very high risk” of sudden cardiac death if I don’t “take action immediately” despite the fact that my heart scan score in 2009 showed zero calcium buildup in my arteries. My risk of stroke is also “very high” because they think blood clots will happen because of my diet. And with a fasting blood glucose score of 83, they still put me at “significant risk” for getting diabetes because I’m not eating and exercising the way they think I should be. They weren’t finished yet piling on more warnings about what my current diet is doing to my risks for developing cancer and osteoporosis (this is actually starting to get funny if they weren’t so serious about it):

    So I’m at “high risk” for developing cancer because of my eating and fitness choices and they will help me “identify those choices” that will be better for me. HA! Then with my bone health, it’s the same song and dance. What I’m doing right now ain’t good enough–but there’s something better that we think (hope and pray to God) you’ll like…or something like that. What exactly are the culprits in my devastatingly, hanging-by-a-thread health right now? Let’s take a look:

    My full-fat dairy loving, caffeinated tea guzzling, saturated fat-laden meat eating, and salted food consumption is what they think is killing me. Gee, if these are all of the problems with my diet right now, then why am I in the best health of my entire life? Why do I feel so good if I’m just one bunless bacon cheeseburger away from saying so long to this world? And how did eating so “unhealthy” bring my weight down by triple digits, get me off of three prescription medications for good, and have me doing things I would have never thought possible just a few years back? I, of course, know better and have all the confidence in the world about my healthy low-carb lifestyle. But what about those people who take this survey and believe it’s the gospel truth? They read this and think, “Oh my God, what can I do to stop this devastation from happening to me?” Enter the Eat Right America eating plan:

    They try to convince you this is a good thing by stating at the top of the page that this is all about “Nutrition Excellence & Health” and then proceed to explain what they mean by that. To become a “Nutritarian,” all you have to do is eat lots of fruits and vegetables, beans, nuts and seeds, cut down on your animal-based food consumption opting for “healthier options in this food group” (hmmm, lemme guess–ones that are lower in saturated fat?) and eat much less of foods that are “empty of nutrients or toxic” like refined sugars, white flour, processed foods and fast food. On the final point, I think we can agree, but Dr. Fuhrman is hung up on meat being such an unhealthy part of any diet plan. He sees meat in the same vein as low-carbers look at high-fructose corn syrup. It must be avoided as much as possible except for maybe the once-in-a-while “treat.” That’s nothing more than utter nonsense and ignorance. What exactly does the Nutritarian Food Pyramid look like? Check it out for yourself:

    What a bassackwards food pyramid this is! Equating eggs and meat with processed foods and sweets is being intellectually dishonest. Sure, those non-starchy vegetables are an excellent addition to any diet (including a low-carb one), but why the damnation of foods that are equal in their nutrient density to veggies such as red meat, fish, eggs, oils, and the like? There’s no explanation for this other than the insinuation that consuming these foods that contain saturated fat will lead to serious health consequences down the road. But there is no evidence supporting such a claim. Even still, here comes the kicker–”My Personalized Eating Plan” according to the great purveyors of nutritional truth and wisdom at Whole Foods:

    And THERE IT IS! All of this nonsense about how horrible my health is, what the dietary “cause” of my health decline is, what a good diet should look like and all the rest was nothing more than a setup for this moment. The diet they are recommending that I begin eating immediately to overturn the issues associated with my “poor” diet is one that is 96% plants, 3% meat and dairy, and 2% processed foods/snacks. REALLY?!

    While technically this isn’t a vegan diet because there are very small amounts of meat allowed on this plan, it might as well be. Meat isn’t a condiment to me–it’s the lifeblood of a healthy low-carb lifestyle change that has given me vibrant health like nothing else I’ve ever done before. I don’t need to consume 96% of my calories from plant sources which includes high-carb whole grains, beans, fruits and all the rest. I’m doing just fine livin’ la vida low-carb. Can I tell you how much this angers me that they would try to pull something so incredibly deceiving to people who will likely buy into it hook, line and sinker? This is disgusting because there is no education about the wonderful nutrients contained in meats or the health consequences for some people who consume carbohydrate-rich foods. That to me is ethically wrong to deliberately withhold information from the consumer that could help them make the most informed decision about their health.

    They require a 28-day pledge to doing the following: eating at least one large salad, at least a half-cup of beans/legumes, at least three fresh fruits, at least one ounce of raw nuts/seeds, and at least one large double-sized serving of steamed green vegetables on a daily basis while avoiding the “most harmful food habits” that include eating barbequed, processed meats or commercial red meat, fried foods, full-fat dairy like cheese and butter, soft drinks of all kinds both diet and sugary, and white flour. It sure sounds a whole lot like a vegan diet to me with all of those restrictions on what can be consumed on this diet. They also say to chunk any foods that contain over 200mg sodium per serving and to use a blender to liquify your vegetables to drink. Oh, but they help you come off of your “meat habit” (as Dr. Neal Barnard described it in my podcast interview with him last year) beginning in Day 8 of this 28-Day plan:

    Isn’t it interesting how they took great pains to explain that this meal plan isn’t vegan, but then pushed the need to “reduce your intake of animal foods” from your diet? If meat is part of being a “Nutritarian” as they claim, then what’s this concept of “your desire for animal foods (will) diminish over time?” Meat is most certainly NOT a condiment in a healthy diet no matter what Dr. Fuhrman and his lackeys at Whole Foods wants you to believe. Meat is where the REAL nutrition is found and you’re depriving your body of some incredible health benefits by trying to eliminate it from your diet completely. Just ask Lierre Keith or Denise Minger.

    By Day 15, they encourage you to “change the focus of your meal from meat to vegetables” and they assure you will get plenty of protein by consuming greens, beans, nuts and seeds. The gradual move to eating “less meat” is in full force by week three of the plan and it reaches the climax by the time you enter the final week of the 28-Day Challenge when “you are eating much less animal foods,” oils, milk/dairy products, sugar, coffee/tea and caffeine, and a whole lot more veggies, fruit, beans, nuts and seeds. Lest you think none of this survey really has anything at all to do with Whole Foods, then you would be sorely mistaken:

    Yes, you too can become a “Nutritarian” nerd by hopping in your car and driving to your nearest Whole Fools…Whole Paycheck…er, I mean Whole Foods Market to pick up these books, CDs and DVDs to provide you more vegan-based propaganda to fool you into thinking this is the best option for your health. This partnership Whole Foods has made with the vegan diet is intentional and should ostracize any customer who chooses to eat an animal-based diet. That includes virtually every Paleo and low-carb dieter on the planet. If you ask me, a company that is THIS invested in promoting a dietary agenda like this doesn’t deserve the support of people who disagree with it. They’ve drawn a line in the sand and dug in their heels on trying to make this “Nutritarian” diet the ONLY way for Whole Foods customers to get healthy. We should vote with our dollars about what we think about this and send Whole Foods executives a clear message: YOU’RE NOT PUSHING A VEGAN AGENDA DOWN OUR THROATS!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in Butter, cancer, Cheese, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, diabetes, Dietary Cholesterol, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, motivation, Nutrition, obesity, Paleo, plant-based diets, real food, red meat, saturated fat, vegetables, Weight Loss, wellness | 1 Comment »

    10 Sure Fire Steps to “Let’s Get Fat!”

    Posted by Morley Robbins on March 13, 2011

    What?!?… Yes, you read that right. Let’s get fat!

    Come on; let’s take a playful pass at our national obsession with “losing weight” and look at it from a contrasting point of view. Let’s explore: “What do I need to do to make sure that I gain weight?” The research is actually quite compelling, but chances are you may have missed it, so here’s a refresher course on ten proven steps you can take in your daily routine to maximize your fat gain, as much as possible.

    1. Start your day with a cup of coffee, the bigger the better: This is actually very cool. Caffeine sends an “alarm” signal to your brain that you’re under attack! Actually, what it does do is override the Adrenal glands to make sure that there’s enough blood sugar to start the day. And what it will also guarantee is that your blood sugar levels will become really low (a.k.a. hypoglycemia), so be sure to eat something sweet with that cup of Joe, that way you’ll ensure a false sense of security, as well as a false sense of energy. Better yet, this daily routine will add to your growing Adrenal fatigue and help make sure that you can’t possibly generate energy without artificial stimulants in your daily diet (i.e. caffeine and simple carbs).

    2. Do not eat any protein in the morning: One of the best ways to get fat is to absolutely flood your body with carbs – the simpler, the better. If you introduce protein into your breakfast, it only slows down your body’s ability to deal with all that carb-based sugar, as well as all that Insulin raging through your body seeking to store all that excess sugar. Whenever possible, do what you can to cause the greatest spike in your blood sugar (and subsequently your levels of Insulin) as this will ensure that you develop Insulin Resistance which will guarantee optimal fat storage and really help you pack on the pounds. Don’t worry about how this happens – just do it! And after you do this long enough, it will be a true “sweet surprise” to your waistline and your wardrobe.

    3. Be sure to eat a lot of small meals throughout the day: Truth be known, our bodies are designed for surviving starvation. But over the last 50 years in America, we have cast our Paleolithic heritage goodbye and are now able to eat 24/7 – it’s the very best thing you can do under this protocol. In addition, this eating strategy is a proven way to clog up an overworked Liver by never letting it rest. What you truly don’t want if you’re trying to put on “max fat” is allow your Liver to detoxify the challenging ingredients from all your meals, not to mention the 80,000 environmental chemicals. Graze whenever and wherever possible. If necessary, keep that nursery rhyme humming in the background: “Good, better, best – never let the Liver rest!” Giving your Liver more time in between meals is the worst thing you could possibly do if you want to make it on Biggest Gainer! Remember, isn’t that what our diet is all about…

    4. Seek out food additives “designed” to cause weight gain: Be sure to fill your cupboards — and your stomachs — with products that contain as much of the following three food additives as possible:

    a. Monosodium Glutamate (MSG): Now, don’t be fooled into thinking that this can only be found at Chinese restaurants. Relax, it’s everywhere in the American food system. What makes it more fun is that it’s disguised under names like: “hydrolyzed protein,” “autolyzed yeast,” “calcium caseinate,” “magnesium glutamate,””textured protein,” and 35 other names you don’t know about. You get the idea… Have fun finding it and putting as much of this excitotoxin into your tummy as you can stand. The amazing part about this additive is that it tweaks your Hypothalamus (it’s in the center of your brain…) into letting you eat more and more and more. No cause for alarm, relax, it’s automatic.
    b. Aspartame: This, too, is an amazing product for packing on the pounds. Despite what you may think, the FDA actually rejected this food additive for 16 years, until President Bush, Sr. (the one who was a member of Yale’s Skull & Crossbones Society…) took office. Until this past year, it was manufactured by that most trusted chemical corporation, Monsanto; is sold as “NutraSweet” & “Equal;” and is found in countless food products. It might as well be called “NutraFat!” It’s unparalleled in its ability to also trick your brain (yup, you guessed it, it’s that Hypothalamus thing, again…) into weight gain mode and has demonstrated its fatso effectiveness in countless research studies – at least those not sponsored by Monsanto.
    c. High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS): Now, this is the granddaddy of all fat stimulating additives. Rush to the store to buy all the sodas, cake mixes, breakfast cereals, candies, cough syrups, sauces, etc. that you can afford. The best part about it and the main reason why it’s everywhere – it’s so incredibly cheap to make! Consequently, it won’t cost you too much as you focus on ”Let’s Get Fat!” And the fact that the Corn Refiners Association now wants to rename it: “Corn Sugars” only guarantees that you’ll buy more foods with it under a new name — you’ll never know what you’re eating then.

    5. Discipline yourself to a “low-fat” diet. Your body has a natural ability to burn fat. Not to worry, this metabolic pathway works like a muscle: “use it or lose it.” The fastest way to lose it is to eliminate fat from your diet. This guarantees that your body will lose its fat burning ability at a cellular level, and thus preserve as much adipose tissue (a.k.a. fat) as possible on your ever-expanding chassis. And the best part about this dietary strategy — there’s only so much protein that you can eat in a day. Consequently, the balance of your calories must come from carbs – absolutely locking in the Insulin Resistance (noted in #2 above) and thus assuring your weight gain takes place, almost effortlessly. If you remember nothing else, please remember this: “low-fat” means “high-carb” – it’s a lock, and the research is compelling, despite what you have been told otherwise.

    6. Focus on foods “designed” to cause inflammation: At its essence, fat is the body’s way of protecting you from ALL the toxins in your diet and/or your environment. The more toxins in your diet and the more offensive they are, the more fat you absolutely need. To remain vigilant, visualize your body as a raging ball of fire. Be sure to eat plenty of the following foods to ensure that this inflammation is at its peak throughout your body:

    a. Foods that are highly processed & refined. Be sure to look for products that come in a box, a can, or a white lunch bag – these are the best!
    b. Foods that still have trans-fats. Wherever possible, be sure to select foods that have the word: “Hydrogenated” or “Partially Hydrogenated” on them. Margarine is a favorite, but relax, you’ll find trans fats everywhere even though they were banned 15 years ago.
    c. Foods that have an outrageous amount of Omega-6 Fatty Acids. These are best found in most, if not all, of the industrialized vegetable oils. Make sure that they come in a clear bottle as this will ensure a greater likelihood of the oil being rancid, which only adds to the likelihood of it causing more inflammation. The best examples for this “food group” are: Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Canola Oil, Safflower Oil, or Cottonseed Oil. Btw, the Baby Boomers have a distinct advantage here — you all grew up on Crystallized Cottonseed Oil, which was sold many years ago as CRISCO
    d. Foods that contain Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). Now this is a bit more difficult due to the FDA barring any labels on these foods (again, brought to you by President Bush, Sr. — good ol’ Skull & Crossbones…) Nonetheless, be on the lookout for any produce that has an “8” on the little white sticker or buy only processed food (again, think “box,” “can,” or “frozen”) that has corn, soybean, canola or cottonseed as a main ingredient. These four genetically modified staples now constitute about 80% of the foods we eat as Americans, so it shouldn’t be too hard to find GMOs. Remember, if your food has the Non-GMO Label on the product — put it back! You are only delaying your weight gain by succumbing to organic foods, and spending a fortune in the process. Btw, the latest research with rats has now proven that even with minute amounts of pesticide (a known toxin) in their diet, these laboratory critters become obese. How cool is that?!?… Now to put your mind to rest, when you’re eating GMOs, like Bt Corn or Bt Soy, you’re actually eating pesticide – that’s what “Bt” is code for. And one last dimension, as an added bonus, this eating strategy also works wonders if your goal is to become sterile, but I’ll save that for another post.

    7. Plan your biggest and most nutrient dense meal, for as late in the night as possible. You probably already know this (given that you’re committed to “pounding” yourself), but this is actually how Sumo wrestlers achieve their extraordinary weight gains. And who doesn’t want to go toe-to-toe with those guys? The timing (Late!)and the size (Super!)of this meal is a necessity given our plan to overwhelm our digestive system, and again, compromise our liver’s ability to do its critical job. Remember, the more time you give that Liver before bedtime, the more effective it can be in storing all that glucose and detoxifying your system of the toxins – there’s no way, I mean “no weigh…” (Please, pardon the pun…) Bring your liver to its knees, so you can guarantee that you will, as well.

    8. Limit your sleep each and every night. Now this is really important. Stay up as late as you can every night possible. Watch David Letterman, get engrossed in thriller movies or just surf the web for as long as your eyes can stand the toothpicks. The less sleep you get, the better. Please don’t tell anyone, but while you’re sleeping, you actually burn fat to provide energy to keep all your countless metabolic processes going. But given that we shut down that fat-burning pathway (see #5 above), we don’t need to worry about that, now do we? And as an added bonus, be sure to sleep with a light on – this will totally confuse your body. In effect, this will make you have a low appetite in the morning, but a high one at night, thus ensuring success with both #2 and #7 above – isn’t this cool how it’s all coming into focus? Just do your part to prevent any true restorative sleep, thereby keeping your body on alert at all times. And btw, if you find you’re always waking up between 1-3 am, well that means one of two things: 1) either your Liver is working way too hard, or 2) you went to bed way too early!

    9. Spend as much of your food dollar in restaurants, preferably “Quick Service” ones: As a nation, we currently spend 50% of our food dollar outside the home – that’s about $2,500/person. A little known secret: if you would spend just a few thousand more, you, too, could own the Crave It! Study sponsored by McCormick Spice Co. (2001) Contained in it will be a guaranteed process for “enhancing” your food to ensure maximum visits and thereby, maximum weight gains for patrons. This process makes food “Hyperpalatable,” and with an amazing mixture sugar, fat, and salt, as well as other food additives (see #4 & #6 above), you will learn how to tweak your “hedonic hotspot” also located in your brain (this time it’s the Nucleus Accumbens – neighbor to the Hypothalamus). Once the “hotspot” gets compromised, you’ll never feel satiated, and you will keep coming back for more and more and more food. You can’t help it – you have just become a victim to the central wiring of our brain: the cue-urge-reward-habit cycle that fuels ALL addictions. And best of all, the added bonus to this step: you lose total control over the foods that are going into your body. This is your failsafe strategy: Eat out >>> Get fat… Trust me, it works like a charm. Try it regularly, and let that food eatertainment industry stimulate you to your ever expanding core.

    10. And finally, do not, under any circumstance, exercise: Don’t even think about it! What are you trying to do? If you exercise, you’ll only build more muscle and then there’ll be that many more places (i.e. muscle cells) to store all that excess glucose. Now, I’m only going to say this once more, the less muscle, the more Insulin Resistance. And the more Insulin Resistance, the more your body is forced to store that “food” as fat. Insulin Resistance guarantees a faster and greater weight gain. OK? Remember, lose it – don’t use it! So let’s lose as much muscle as possible to ensure optimal fat storage and weight gain. And best of all, if you really harness yourself to #2 and # 5 above, refined foods will absolutely melt in your mouth – you won’t even have to expend all that needless energy chewing your food. How’s that for a true winning step to our getting fatty strategy.

    So there you have it! A sure fired, 10-step program to maximize your fat gain. Why I’m so confident, I’ll even guarantee it!

    And for those of you who think I’ve totally lost my mind, relax. I’ve just decided it’s time to inject some levity into the relentless din of dietary recommendations seeking to address the nation’s most pressing chronic illness: Obesity. This condition is absolutely out of control across the country and it reflects the abominable state of our food system, our complete lack of commitment to real, restorative food, as well as our unwillingness as a nation to believe the simple truths about what foods, and what food additives, actually cause the creation of or the burning of fat.

    A sobering statistic: in the time it took you to read this article (~15 min), 12.5 people died from Obesity-related diseases in America. (Please, let that sink in for a moment – that’s one very 72 seconds…) Even more sobering is the accelerated rate of this condition in infants and children… A rather bleak future, unless we wake up from our processed food stupor and come to our senses about our individual and collective responsibility to reverse these easily correctable dietary trends.

    Now, take a deep breath… we’re almost done, but this is the most important part. If you “master” all ten of the steps outlined above, and I’m deadly serious now, it will very likely assure you of becoming what is called Leptin Resistant. What in the world is that, you ask? Well it’s relatively “new” on the research scene (~1994), but Leptin Resistance has now been identified as the leading cause of our ever increasing waist lines, and is repeatedly being shown to be the underlying force behind the growing tsunami of chronic disease crippling America.

    Truth be known, Leptin is your body’s master hormone, and is produced by your fat cells, of all places. And much to everyone’s surprise, it keeps the Hypothalamus and all its many, many homeostatic processes running properly. (Btw, the Hypothalamus is the “Intel chip” running your body’s countless metabolic and bodily functions!)

    The proper functioning of this critical part of your brain is absolutely affected by the foods, and especially the food additives, that we eat each and every day. And for those of you who are thinking: “Well, there’s no way I’m Leptin Resistant…” Here’s the acid test: Do you have any noticeable fat on your bod? If so, you’re more than likely Leptin Resistant. What this means is that the signaling between your Hypothalamus, your Liver, and your fat cells is blocked likely due to excess sugars in your diet, the “communication” is likely dysregulated, and as a result, your body is forced to store more and more of your food energy as fat — and that’s a fact! To think and eat otherwise is to buck three million years of programming in that “Intel Chip” running your body…

    If I could wave a magic wand, my wish would be to have you truly understand the absurdity of following steps #2 and #5 and the devastation that this excess sugar is having in our bodies. Each year, the average American consumes 160 pounds of refined sugar, coupled with 50 pounds of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), and another 20 pounds of artificial sweeteners, to boot. And yet, we profess innocence. I’m well aware of the fact that YOU don’t add it to your food, trust me, it is absolutely being done for you and to you. The biggest impact from this annual binge of sugar consumption — it’s wreaking havoc with our Insulin production, and consequently is the primary dietary culprit in the accelerated rise in chronic disease – far, far worse than the saturated fat you’re so terrified of eating! Continued use of excess sugars in our foods is a crime against humanity and we are all innocent bystanders – it’s high time we “Just say ‘No!’ “

    Now, for those of you who would like to stop this ever growing madness and learn how to de-engineer each and every one of these 10 steps, and thus avoid the devastating challenge of Leptin Resistance, please contact me as noted below. We have a proven process and several programs designed to make sure you are able to: 1) let go of the dietary mythology slowly killing Americans, 2) learn how to “let go of fat,” and 3) learn how to keep it off.

    Give us a call… What have you got to lose?!?…

    A votre santé!

    Morley M. Robbins
    “Health Futurist”
    wellness@chiropractic1st.com
    847.922.8061 (M)

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    Posted in Big Agriculture, diabetes, exercise, Food Addiction, Glucose, grains, heart disease, insulin, liberation diet, low fat dairy, obesity, Paleo, processed food, sugar, Uncategorized, Weight Loss | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

    20-Year Low-Carb Dieter Finds Zero Plaque Buildup In Her Arteries

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 10, 2011

    The low-carb blogosphere has been ablaze this week after Gary Taubes appeared on The Dr. Oz Show in what many thought was an ambush against healthy low-carb living. In fact, there was one segment where Dr. Oz went on a low-carb diet for 24 hours (we won’t even talk about how idiotic that is right now, but I’ll be doing a response video to that entire boondoggle soon) and he made an illustration with the food he was eating for a snack. Using pepperoni slices and string cheese, he said “Here’s how I see it, that’s my artery” referring to the curled slice of pepperoni followed by him referring to the string cheese going through the hole in the pepperoni stating “and this is the plaque.” After a smug smacking of the side of his cheek, he concludes, “That’s how I envision it” which is met with raucous laughter from The Dr. Oz Show audience. Really? Is this same old tired, worn out argument against livin’ la vida low-carb still being used by seemingly intelligent medical professionals like Dr. Mehmet Oz? Unfortunately so. But is it true? Do low-carb diets simply cause more harm than good by consuming foods that are higher in fat and lower in carbohydrates? Let’s look at the story of one of my readers who has been eating low-carb for the past 20 years and recently had a sophisticated test conducted to see what kind of damage her high-fat, moderate protein, low-carb way of eating has had on her body.

    She e-mailed me that she recently had a wellness exam after recommitting herself to a “clean” low-carb lifestyle again starting in May 2010 and she discovered that her cholesterol was slightly higher (36 points up) than normal. However, instead of medication, she was put on a high-quality, pharmaceutical-grade fish oil supplement. Now that’s pretty amazing in this day and age of handing out statin drugs like they’re candy, but the “best news” is what happened next. At the same time they checked her cholesterol, she had an arterial ultrasound test called Carotid Intima-Media Thickness (CIMT) done as well. It’s a sophisticated test where they use a doppler to capture images of the carotid, femoral, and abdominal arteries to see if there is any plaque buildup to be concerned with. Plaque that penetrates the arterial wall can lead to a condition known as atheroschlerosis where the arteries harden and become blocked which can eventually lead to a heart attack or stroke. Dr. Oz was certainly insinuating on his show that eating a diet that consists of fat and very few carbohydrates would lead to this, but check out what happened next when my reader got her results.

    The nurse practitioner called me and told me that my results were some of the best she had ever seen! My actual age is 43, but my arteries measured that of a 25 year old!

    WOW! When she received these astonishing results from the nurse, my reader revealed to her what she had been doing–the healthy low-carb lifestyle! The nurse then “acted a little surprised” and was “offended” that my reader didn’t tell her about what she was doing sooner. When asked whether she lost any weight eating this way, my reader said she had shed over 30 pounds since May 2010 and that low-carb living makes her “feel better, look better, and act better” than anything else she’s ever tried.

    It is just the way I have to eat for the rest of my life.

    Obviously, she is super-stoked about the results of her CIMT test and now has a newfound confidence that livin’ la vida low-carb is “not harming my body at all.”

    My liver and kidney functions were fine, as well as all of the rest of the blood work.

    And although her cholesterol is slightly elevated, we know that most of those tests tend to focus on LDL and total cholesterol rather than the triglyceride/HDL ratio which is a much better indicator of heart health risk than what is typically measured. I have long challenged anyone to prove to me that “high” cholesterol is unhealthy. There’s just no solid evidence that exists substantiating this oft-repeated but never proven claim. Even worse, most doctors seem to be so clueless about cholesterol except to pull out their prescription pad to write down Lipitor or Crestor for their none-the-wiser patients. Why does a non-medically trained layperson like myself seem to know more about lipid health than a cardiologist like Dr. Oz? Maybe he likes the money he makes cutting into people’s chests (as he bragged so much about in the Taubes interview) while simultaneously taking sponsorship from advertisers who create products that are the real culprit in cardiovascular disease, namely high-carb, grain-based cereals.

    This is one reason why Gary Taubes refused to have his cholesterol numbers run on his appearance on The Dr. Oz Show on Monday because the numbers are meaningless without the proper context. It was a setup that he refused to participate in knowing he wouldn’t have an opportunity to properly explain the importance of measuring LDL particle size with an NMR LipoProfile test, for example. In fact, Taubes told me that he was able to share about this distinction with LDL cholesterol but the producers cut it out of the final version of the segment. Gee, what a surprise! Look for a blog post about this from Gary at his blog coming soon.

    As for the fabulous results my reader experienced after being on a low-carb diet for the past 20 years, all I can say is WAY TO GO! While people like Dr. Oz may not think someone can live long-term on a diet consisting of meats, eggs, cheese, green vegetables, butter, and the rest of the incredible foods we enjoy eating on this healthy lifestyle change, you’re proving that’s just not the case. Not only are you doing it, but your health is better than it ever would have been eating any other way. Congratulations to you for choosing low-carb as your preferred nutritional plan and for inspiring us all in our own low-carb journey to be confident and proud of the way livin’ la vida low-carb is improving our health on a daily basis!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in Artherosclerosis, blood cholesterol, Blood Serum Cholesterol, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, Dietary Cholesterol, Fear, HDL, health, heart disease, Inspiration, jimmy moore, LDL, livin lavida lo-carb, Nutrition, obesity, plaque, Weight Loss | 1 Comment »

    Spring Forward With 36 Low-Carb, Paleo & Health Blogs For March 2011

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 9, 2011

    Believe it or not, it’s already time to “Spring forward” with your clocks this Sunday morning at 2AM so the sunlight will shine a little later into the day. It’s the first real shift from the cold winds of winter to the blossoming promise of Springtime and summer season that is to come over the next few months. When I told my wife Christine about the time change coming this Sunday, she exclaimed, “Already?!” Yep, it’s here and I for one am happy to see it. Living in the comfy confines of South Carolina, we don’t have the extreme cold temperatures and gobs of snow that so many others to the north of us have to deal with throughout the months of December through March, but it has been just a wee bit nippy this winter compared with past ones. I say bring on the warmer weather, baby, and none too soon! And I’ve got just the thing to help you celebrate the right way as you “Spring forward” this weekend–36 new and interesting low-carb, Paleo and health blogs that I really think you should know about!

    As you know, I enjoy “paying it forward” by highlighting my fellow diet and health bloggers who are doing excellent work continuing on the conversation about what healthy living is all about. It seems over the past year there have been a lot more blogs showing up to do just that and so my updates with blogs for you to check out are becoming more frequent. I LOVE THAT! It means the community is growing and expanding like never before which will reach a whole new generation of people who have become sick and tired of being lied to about what it takes to make them leaner and healthier than they’ve ever been. Just in case you’ve missed any of my other low-carb, Paleo and health blog listings over the past few years, check ‘em out by clicking here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.

    And now take some time to visit these 36 low-carb, Paleo and health blogs for March 2011:

    1. DR. RICHARD FEINMAN’S BLOG
    2. ESCAPE THE HERD
    3. NATURALLY ENGINEERED
    4. CAVEMAN HOME COMPANION
    5. CORI’S LOW CARB LIFE
    6. PRIMAL JOURNAL
    7. THE HEALTHY HOME ECONOMIST
    8. I BELIEVE IN BUTTER
    9. PAUL’S HEALTH BLOG
    10. NUTRITION OVEREASY
    11. THE REAL HEALTH TRUTH BLOG
    12. DELIGHTFUL TASTE BUDS
    13. RIPPLE EFFECT
    14. FOUR HOUR CHALLENGE
    15. ROUNDBOYS ANONYMOUS
    16. CUPBOARD LOVE
    17. GREATER THINGS: A 40 DAY FAST
    18. POMEGRANATE PIP
    19. THREE NEW LEAVES
    20. CHUCK BROWN: MY BRAIN DUMP
    21. MORE THAN FOOD
    22. DAIASOLGAIA: DISCOVERIES FOR A FULL LIFE
    23. NATURALLY WELLS
    24. TODAY’S MEDICINE…
    25. THE CRUNCHY PICKLE
    26. BARRY HUGHES: SETTING GOALS AND LIVING LIFE
    27. AIKONA
    28. CRITICAL MAS
    29. HEALTHIER BODY FROM HEALTHIER FOODS
    30. THE CELLULITE INVESTIGATION
    31. GET FIT SISTERS
    32. UP PALEO!
    33. KRIS HEALTH BLOG
    34. SEGAMARTINEZ
    35. PALEO, CROSSFIT AND THE OVERLOAD PRINCIPLE
    36. BLUE SKIES AND LOW CARB PIES

    By all means, please visit these blogs and leave them a comment if you see something you like. For a blogger, comments are the only real gauge of whether people are interested in what you’re writing about and provide instant feedback for the content. Your encouraging word and honest feedback will mean so much to these people who are taking a chance putting themselves out there for all the world to see–so don’t be bashful in sharing! I love hearing from my readers when they comment on my blog or e-mail me and I know the authors of the blogs I’ve listed above will appreciate it too.

    And if you have a favorite low-carb, Paleo or health blog that you’d like to see featured in a future blog post, simply e-mail me the name of the blog and the URL to livinlowcarbman@charter.net. I’ll check it out for myself and then put it on my running list of new and interesting blogs to highlight in a future post. In fact, if you haven’t started your own low-carb blog, then what are you waiting for? Do it today and start making a difference in the lives of those who read about your experience livin’ la vida low-carb. One by one, we will change the world!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in Inspiration, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, obesity, Paleo, real food, Weight Loss, wellness | 3 Comments »

    Gary Taubes Treated Fairly In Radio Interview On ‘The Dr. Oz Show’

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 1, 2011

    Last week I shared with you information about the New York Times bestselling author of Good Calories Bad Calories Gary Taubes appearing on the popular syndicated daytime television program Dr. Oz Show coming up on March 7, 2011. The taping of the show itself took place last Wednesday and Gary told me that he thought he did pretty well grading himself a B+ for his efforts in communicating the message.

    However, he did admit there were some rather “interesting” questions asked by Dr. Oz which we’ll have to wait and see whether they make it in the final cut of the show next Monday–but I firmly believe ANY publicity for the concepts shared in Taubes’ new book Why We Get Fat And What To Do About It is GOOD publicity! The fact remains The Dr. Oz Show is the top-rated syndicated health program in America and millions of people will be exposed to the message of livin’ la vida low-carb like never before. It’s gonna be a good day for healthy low-carb living when that interview airs next week.

    But we may have an encouraging precursor to how the television interview will go based on how Gary Taubes was treated by Dr. Mehmet Oz on The Dr. Oz Show on Oprah Radio last Thursday. Taubes noted this interview took place by telephone a couple of weeks before it aired on February 24, 2011. You’ll notice how complimentary Dr. Oz is of Gary’s work and agreeing with him on key issues such as insulin being the root problem with obesity and chronic disease. Regardless of what you think about Dr. Oz based on his previous statements, you can’t help but be encouraged by what he says in this interview. Listen in and decide for yourself whether you think he’s truly changing his tune or if he’s merely playing to his guest:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMUGUZ3EEEo

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sbw_8vRvbg0

    Sounds impressive, right? But do you buy it that Dr. Oz has this sudden realization that carbohydrates are the real culprit in the weight gain and health decline of Americans? Share what you think in the comments below. And be sure to tune your DVR to your local listing on Monday, March 7, 2011 to watch Gary Taubes make a major national television appearance on The Dr. Oz Show to share about what’s in his latest book Why We Get Fat. Look out America, you’re about to get hit upside the head with nutritional truth and reality!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in exercise, health, heart disease, insulin, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Media, Nutrition, obesity, Weight Loss | 3 Comments »

    Frito-Lay Pretends To Care About Health With Their 2011 ‘All-Natural’ Marketing Campaign

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on February 22, 2011

    Today I’m gonna hit on one of my biggest pet peeves about the modern-day health culture we live in that absolutely drives me bonkers. Have you noticed just how brazen so many food companies have become in recent years in an attempt to improve their much-deserved “junk food” image by making blatant health claims about their products that are completely meaningless? It’s as if they are pulling out all the stops in their efforts to pull the wool over the eyes of common sense thinking so they can bamboozle the consumer into making a purchase under false pretenses. My wife Christine and I exposed this dastardly marketing agenda of the food manufacturers last summer with our 10-part “Health Claims Gone Wild” YouTube video series. And yet major food manufacturers like Frito-Lay have stepped up their efforts in 2011 to help boost the sales of their chips which have seen a decline in sales in recent years (ostensibly because people are being more mindful of their carbohydrate intake–thank you Dr. Atkins).

    Frito-Lay pledged in 2010 to make over half of their product line “healthier” by removing the MSG, artificial colors and flavors, as well as most of the salt in their products which include Lay’s potato chips, Sun Chips, Tostido’s, and more. Additionally, they’re cutting the fat in these products by 40 percent with a goal of making the saturated fat content of all of their products less than 1 gram per serving. The president and CEO of Frito-Lay Al Carey made the following statement at this news conference that exemplifies why I’m so jaded about the future of health in the United States: “My objective is in three years that all of our products will be either ‘better for you’ or ‘good for you.’”

    Now I’m sure Mr. Carey was well-meaning when he said this, but can anyone else see the irony of it all? We’re talking about potato chips here and the way they propose to make them “better for you” or “good for you” has everything to do with reducing the salt and fat in them. But does this make them healthier for the consumer? I think not. In fact, I remember back in the 1980s when Lay’s had a famous television commercial featuring NBA legends Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Larry Bird making a bet that “you can’t eat just one.”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRzcjw9l6xo

    The theme song of the marketing back then was, “No one can eat just one.” Man how times have changed! In 2011, the consumer is attempting to be more health-conscious and Frito-Lay is now transitioning their efforts in this regard to meet that growing demand with a brand new series of television commercials attempting to paint the picture that their chip products are somehow “better” by featuring the voiceover acting skills of Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights, Early Edition). If you’ve been watching television at all in the past couple of months, then surely you’ve seen these:

    FRITO-LAY “CHEF” COMMERCIAL

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2093wkKQEg

    FRITO-LAY “ANTHEM” COMMERCIAL

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ho-FVukWUPQ

    FRITO-LAY “QUALITY” COMMERCIAL

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SyKF2-yjsc

    “We make them natural…you make them fun.” Cutesy tagline, right? But did anyone else catch the slick marketing slight-of-hand in these ads? I guess because my life is so dedicated to the subject of health and nutrition that this stuff is more obvious to me than most people. But the average Joe and Jane sitting at home watching the boob tube might watch any of those commercials and say, “Hey, they’re making those ‘all-natural’ chips healthier and by hand. I need to go get me some of them there chips the next time I go to the grocery store since I’m trying to lose weight and be healthy.” Sound preposterous? Maybe to you and me, but not to the people who still think salt and dietary fat are the problem with weight and health. And that’s why this new campaign from Frito-Lay is so insidious. Just because these chips are “all-natural,” that doesn’t mean they’re necessarily good or healthy for you. BAMBOOZLED!

    Admittedly, back in my low-fat dieting days I happily went to my local Subway restaurant to get my low-fat turkey sub without mayonnaise and made it a combo meal with a bag of Sun Chips and a Diet Coke. The Sun Chips were and are still promoted as healthy because they have whole grains in them and are low in fat. And I even tried some of the now infamous Lay’s WOW potato chips with the fake fat olestra which resulted in some not-so-desirable gastrointestinal side effects. I fell for the low-fat marketing scheme that is now befalling a whole new wave of consumers with this effort by Frito-Lay to move towards the “natural” branding of their products. Here’s a CBS News story about the dramatic change in focus by Frito-Lay in 2011.

    Did you catch that in the CBS story? They can’t make Cheetos or Doritos without artificial ingredients! Sheez, that’s quite telling…but they’re working on it. Oh joy! And I don’t mean to sound ugly or anything, but did you see what that Chief Marketing Officer for Frito-Lay Ann Mukherjee looked like?

    I’m empathetic with anyone who struggles with their weight, but it does appear that the person directly responsible for marketing at Frito-Lay desperately needs to find better information about what is causing her own weight struggles. Unfortunately, if they think it’s the fat and salt causing the problems then they are sorely mistaken. But that’s EXACTLY what they’re doing as Frito-Lay Registered Dietitian and Nutrition Scientist Danielle Dalheim brags about in this promo video pushing “sensible snacking” with Frito-Lay chips:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhcINatFL88

    Our chips are not cooked in saturated fats–”the bad fats”–and instead we use monounsaturated vegetable oil fats. Incredible! Again, the average consumer doesn’t know any better that these “choices” aren’t even close to being ideal for anyone attempting to eat a healthy diet. And yet that’s how they’re being marketed with this new “Naturally Delicious” advertising push. You’ll get a better feel for what Frito-Lay thinks “healthy” snacking is all about in this Q&A section on their web site dedicated to explaining it all in great detail. From demonizing saturated fats, promoting the “calories in, calories out” mantra, claiming their products are real food, worrying about salt as if it’s some health hazard, pushing MORE snacking as a means for losing weight, and finding a reason for virtually everyone to buy their chips. Well, after taking a look at the nutritional info on some of their new “All Natural” branded chips that are supposed to be the healthiest, I’ll never be buying this stuff again for the rest of my life:

    TOSTIDOS ALL NATURAL SCOOPS

    What’s bad about it: Made with starchy corn (maybe genetically modified, too!) and cooked in omega-6 loaded vegetable fats with a whopping 19g carbohydrate for the one-ounce serving size of chips. Who do you know that just eats ONE ounce of potato chips? Me neither! Betcha can’t eat just one serving!

    LAY’S ALL NATURAL GARDEN TOMATO & BASIL

    What’s bad about it: Besides being made with the very starchy potato and then cooked in omega-6-rich vegetable oils, the seasoning has sugar, brown sugar and dextrose in it and the ingredients show there’s also nonfat milk in this chip. Sugar, sugar and more sugar–OH MY! So is that supposed to be part of what makes it “all-natural?”

    LAY’S ALL NATURAL BARBECUE

    What’s bad about it: In addition to the potatoes and vegetable oils, did you catch what they put in the BBQ seasoning that’s anything but “all-natural?” It’s this innocent-sounding ingredient called “corn sugar” that you might know better as high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS). They can change the name of the ingredient, but that doesn’t change what it is!

    LAY’S ALL NATURAL CLASSIC

    What’s bad about it: This one passes the Michael Pollan “5 ingredients or less” test since it only has three ingredients in it. But look at what those three ingredients are: potatoes (starchy carbs), vegetable oils (inflammatory omega-6 fats), and salt (probably man-made and not the more natural sea salt). This gives you a one-ounce snack that provides a total of 15g carbohydrate and not much nutritionally for you. How can they sucker people into thinking this is “healthy” with a straight face?

    I could go on with Tostidos All Natural Multigrain, Rold Gold All Natural Everything Bagel Pretzels, Sun Chips All Natural Garden Salsa, Sun Chips All Natural Original, and Sun Chips All Natural Harvest Cheddar. No matter what Frito-Lay tries to say about their revamped potato chip line-up, I’ve gotta call a spade a spade–this stuff is pure unadulterated junk garbage that doesn’t even deserve to be called “food.” Anyone who buys into this ploy by them that they’re eating “better” or “healthier” with these new products is merely fooling themselves. There’s nothing redeeming about consuming this as sustenance for your body and the sooner you stop eating them the better. That’s the cold hard truth and something people need to hear. You cannot be healthy when you make Frito-Lay chips a regular part of your diet. Period.

    I don’t expect food companies like Frito-Lay to stop attempting to fool the general public into thinking they actually care about the health of their consumers. That’s not their job. Their job is to sell more products and they’ll pretend to care about your health just to get into your pocketbook for your hard-earned cash. But people who genuinely care about health should vote with that same pocketbook by NOT buying this junk food and instead opting to funnel your food budget dollars towards more genuinely nutritious real foods such as grass-fed beef, pastured eggs, and organic, locally-grown non-starchy vegetables, for example. Think about all the money that’s been wasted on Frito-Lay chips over the years at $3 per bag. For the price of two bags, you could have gotten at least a pound of grass-fed beef or a couple dozen fresh local eggs from a farmer.

    We make choices every single day about how we feed ourselves and our family. Isn’t it time we chose better rather than being fooled into thinking the big food companies care about your health? For more information on locating a local farmer near you, visit EatWild.com. Let’s send food companies like Frito-Lay a message that rings loud and clear: WE DON’T WANT WHAT YOU’RE SELLING IF IT’S GONNA KEEP UP FAT AND UNHEALTHY! Now let’s put words into action.

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in Big Agriculture, Food Addiction, fresh and local, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Local Foods, Money, motivation, Nutrition, obesity, polyunsaturated fats, processed food, real food, saturated fat, soy, Total Wellness, unsaturated fat, Weight Loss | 1 Comment »

    Gary Taubes Appearing On ‘The Dr. Oz Show’ On March 7, 2011 To Discuss ‘Why We Get Fat’

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on February 21, 2011

    For many years I’ve been saying that what the low-carb movement needs more than anything else is someone with a big enough platform to demand the kind of media appearances on major media outlets that would get the word out to the masses who so desperately need to start livin’ la vida low-carb for the sake of their weight and health. Oftentimes people have suggested we need a Hollywood superstar to be the face of this way of eating before anyone will pay any attention and I’ve often concurred with this theory that in our pop culture society that is probably the only way the message will finally cut through. But one man has emerged over the past decade as the face of low-carb living by presenting the evidence for it in both a professional and scientific manner that translates to the average, everyday American more so than even the late great Dr. Robert C. Atkins ever could. His name is Gary Taubes.

    It began with his infamous July 2002 masterpiece published in the New York Times magazine entitled “What If It’s All Been A Big Fat Lie?” which landed him a book deal with Knopf to work on a more detailed and scholarly version that would appeal to researchers, doctors, and medical professionals. The culmination of that effort released to the marketplace in September 2007 when the 600+ page nutritional tome Good Calories Bad Calories debuted with great fanfare to shake up the nutritional and medical establishment about their long-held beliefs regarding conventional wisdom on the role of diet and health. One month after the book came out, Taubes was invited to appear as a guest on CNN’s Larry King Live to talk about his new book with various health luminaries like Dr. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Andrew Weil most prominently.

    In fact, Dr. Weil was quite impressed with the work Taubes had invested into the New York Times bestseller Good Calories Bad Calories and has continued to promote the Taubes philosophy in his own personal writings ever since (including two new books set to release in 2011 which will ostensibly promote the value of carbohydrate-restriction and eating more dietary fat for health). This same scenario has played itself out amongst so many others in the medical profession who have come to realize just how wrong they have been recommending high-carb, low-fat diets to their patients for weight loss and health. Whether he realizes it or not, Gary Taubes has started a new low-carb revolution that shows no signs of slowing down with all the noticeably increased attention given to it in 2010.

    Shortly after Good Calories Bad Calories released in 2007, I began receiving e-mail after e-mail from my readers wanting to know if there were an easier book available for them to communicate the low-carb lifestyle to their friends and family who would never invest the time and energy into slogging through a 600-page Taubesian-styled book! The e-mails kept pouring in over the past few years and I forwarded all of these to Gary Taubes himself to consider writing a more “consumer-friendly” version of his instant classic. After much prodding from the low-carb community, he was finally able to convince Knopf to let him write another book that would be shorter in length, contain a lot less science-speak, and be much more practical in nature for those who needs such guidance and direction when it comes to how they eat for weight loss and health. The result of that effort was the highly-anticipated December 2010 release of Why We Get Fat And What To Do About It (read my review) which was based on various lectures that Taubes had been presenting over the past few years on college campuses and at medical conferences (like his “Why We Get Fat” presentation for Innovative Metabolic Solutions in August 2010). The book has followed in the footsteps of Good Calories Bad Calories landing on the New York Times bestsellers list for Hardcover Advice & Misc. this month. It’s interesting to see the 272-page book doing so well even without any big media so far (except for this month’s Reader’s Digest cover story). But all that’s about to change coming up this Thursday when Taubes is set to make an appearance on one of the top 20 syndicated daytime television shows in AmericaThe Dr. Oz Show!

    One of my dedicated readers asked me on Sunday whether I knew that Gary Taubes was going to be a guest with Dr. Mehmet Oz on his Emmy Award-winning television show this week. REALLY? I told her I didn’t know anything about it and that I’d have to check in with the man himself to confirm if it’s true or not. Minutes after inquiring about what my reader had shared, Taubes wrote back to me confirming that he will be “filming Oz on Wednesday” but that he didn’t know exactly when it would air. The producer of the show told him that it could be upwards of two weeks before it is shared on the show. So I wrote my reader back who insisted it was airing THIS Thursday, February 24, 2011 on The Dr. Oz Show and that she received an e-mail about it from her Oprah Winfrey mailing list. She e-mailed me the Oprah newsletter showing me what she saw and you’ll notice to the left that’s the listing for the Taubes appearance on Dr. Oz’ show coming up this Thursday. We’ll confirm that for you ASAP. Get ready to set your DVRs to record this one and at least some snippets of it should be available online after it airs. I’m happy for Gary Taubes to have this unique opportunity to state his case on a very popular daytime television show that reaches a wide range of people who are concerned about their weight and health. While Dr. Oz hasn’t always been the biggest supporter of low-carb nutritional principles over the years, I admire him for giving a voice to those who understand why controlled-carbohydrate diets are necessary for so many of us. In fact, I submitted my own personal low-carb success story to the show recently, so we’ll see what happens if they’re truly interested in showing the viewers what low-carb living looks like in the lives of real people.

    Although Taubes is a very polished speaker and communicator explaining why low-carb diets are necessary for preventing obesity and chronic disease (listen to him wax eloquently in Part 1 and Part 2 of my January 2011 podcast interview with him), he admitted that he has “this horrible feeling” about how he will be portrayed on the show since the entertainment value seems to be more important than the educational aspect of the show. I assured him that regardless of how they try to make him look, just stay in control of the message as much as you can when it’s your turn to speak and the truth will prevail. I even told him to remind Dr. Oz that he even admitted he eats a low-carb diet when he was Larry King Live in 2007. I think there’s nothing but upside to any media exposure as substantial as this and I can’t wait to see how Gary Taubes does. He told me he’d follow-up with me about how the taping goes for him on Wednesday, so I’ll likely be sharing another post reporting on what happened. Then look for Gary Taubes on The Dr. Oz Show to show up on your television screen come Thursday! Go Gary go!

    2-23-11 UPDATE: I just received an e-mail from Gary Taubes on the set of “The Dr. Oz Show” and the producers told him that his interview about Why We Get Fat (Book by Gary Taubes) will be airing on Monday, March 7, 2011. SET YOUR DVR! I’ll be sharing more about how the interview went from Gary’s perspective after the taping today. Should be interesting to say the least!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

    Posted in health, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Media, Nutrition, obesity, saturated fat, Weight Loss | Leave a Comment »

    New Starbucks Iced Coffee will Pack on the Pounds

    Posted by Margie King on February 20, 2011

    Starbucks and scone

    Starbucks iced coffee is calorie dense (Photo by like_the_grand_canyon/Flickr)

    When you’re ordering the new Starbucks “trenta” iced coffee you’re not only getting a massive drink (31 ounces) but massive calories (230 calories using whole milk with sweetener) – with the corresponding potential to pack on more than 20 extra pounds in one year, according to one weight-loss expert.

    “An extra 200 calories per day will lead to a potential weight gain of about 2 pounds per month, or potentially 21 pounds per year,” says Jessica Bartfield, M.D., internal medicine and medical weight-loss specialist at Gottlieb Memorial Hospital, part of the Loyola University Health System.

    According to the Starbucks web site, a trenta plain iced coffee, with sweetener, has the following:

    • Trenta (31 ounces iced coffee) with non-fat milk – 190 calories
    • Trenta (31 ounces iced coffee) with 2% milk or soy milk – 220 calories
    • Trenta (31 ounces iced coffee) with whole milk – 230 calories

    A normal cup of coffee is considered to be 6 to 8 ounces, and studies have suggested that one to two cups of caffeinated coffee daily can have health benefits. “The new “trenta” will offer four to five cups of coffee in one serving, and unfortunately the additional caffeine will not “burn off” the excess calories,” continued Dr. Bartfield.

    “People need to recognize that that drinks are not necessarily innocent ways to quench our thirst, boost our energy, or satisfy a sweet tooth,” she said. “Drinks are rather sneaky sources (usually) of empty calories – nutritionally deplete.”

    “Increasing sizes of food or beverages potentially distorts our perception of portion size and makes it difficult to respond to our body’s natural cues of being hungry or thirsty or full,” said Courtney Burtscher, clinical psychologist who runs the monthly behavior management group as part of Loyola’s weight loss program. “People will sometimes use external cues to decide when to eat and when to stop. Cues can include the following: when others are eating, when the television show they are watching goes to commercial or is over and when their portion is gone.”

    According to Dr. Burtscher, contributing factors to determining how much people eat may include:

    • generational: “My parents taught me to clean my plate and not waste food.”

    • relational: “Feelings will be hurt if I don’t finish what they made/gave me.”

    • economical: “This is such a good deal – more bang for my buck.”

    • convenience: “I’m in a rush and need it now.”

    • emotional: “Extreme moods may increase the chances for emotional eating.”

    Dr. Bartfield criticized Starbucks for offering the new product saying “Massive amounts of food and drink should not be promoted to American consumers when the majority of our population is overweight or obese.  Starbucks operates more than 50 outlets in the Philadelphia area.

    Margie King is a certified holistic health coach, Wharton M.B.A. and former corporate attorney. She received her training at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition and is certified by the American Association of Drugless Practitioners. Margie leads workshops on nutrition, conducts healthy cooking classes, and offers individual and group health and nutrition coaching to women and busy professionals.

    For more information and to receive her free report “Bread: What You Need To Know Before Buying Your Next Loaf,” check out Margie’s website: http://www.MargieKing.net

    Read more of Margie’s articles as the Philadelphia Nutrition Examiner here: http://www.examiner.com/nutrition-in-philadelphia/margie-king

    Posted in Nutrition, obesity, sugar | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

     
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