Page 3 of 6 FirstFirst 12345 ... LastLast
Results 21 to 30 of 51

Thread: Low Carb Recipes

  1. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by Lista View Post
    detox in what way?
    Take supplements geared towards that. We've posted a lot of articles regarding the chemicals, pesticides, etc....and how they get stored in fat cells. The vast, vast, majority, of people with weight problems have LOTS of heavy metals, candida, leaky gut syndrome, etc....if they never address THOSE issues, weight loss will be extremely difficult.

    When I had a severe root canal infection for many years, I had terrible issues with weight. I gained weight and it seemed like no matter what I did, the weight hardly budged.

    There's a lot more to weight loss than just eating less, eating low carb, exercising, though those things in and of themselves are not bad, so don't get me wrong.





    By CBSNews CBS February 11, 2010, 9:50 AM
    Chemicals in Food Can Make You Fat



    It used to be that diets meant cutting down on the fat and calories, more exercise, more fish in the diet, more fruits and vegetables. That was a healthy diet 50 years ago.

    Has human anatomy changed? No, but food has changed a lot. Foods that were healthy 50 years ago may not necessarily be healthy in 2010.

    Today, according to Stephen Perrine, author of "New American Diet," we have all sorts of chemicals in our foods, pesticides, growth hormones, antibiotics, and plastic pollutants, to name a few. He says they aren't good for the environment, they aren't good for our bodies, and they also cause you to be overweight.

    Perrine says certain toxins in your food can contribute to weight issues and obesity. The chemicals that disrupt the function of our hormonal system are called obesogens. Obesogens can cause heart disease, diabetes, obesity, and high cholesterol. These chemicals are found in many of the most popular foods we eat and enter our body through a variety of sources: natural compounds found in soy products, artificial hormones fed to the animals we consume, plastic pollutants in some food packaging, chemicals added to processed foods, and pesticides sprayed on our produce.

    Perrine told "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith that only recently the American Medical Association has come out in support of the idea that these obesogens play a significant role in our national obesity crisis.

    Perrine's book, "New American Diet," addresses this correlation, and gives guidelines on how you can change your diet to eliminate obesogens. In interviewing test subjects who tried the New American Diet, Perrine said, people reported an average weight loss of 15 pounds over two weeks.

    But where can we find these obesogens? What are some foods that are the worst offenders? Perrine took a look at some basic obesogens and examined where they can be found in foods:

    Where do you find "obesogens"?

    In your fridge: pesticides and PCBs
    • The Dirty Dozen: Non organic peaches, apples, sweet bell peppers, celery, nectarines, strawberries, cherries, kale, lettuce, imported grapes, carrots, pears
    • Unsustainable fish: farm-raised salmon
    • Corn/soy-fed beef and chicken

    In your pantry: plastic compounds (in particular BPA)
    • Lining of canned foods such as canned tuna, soup, beans and tomatoes
    • Lining of canned beverages such as energy drinks, baby formula
    • Sports drink bottles

    NOTE: We produce six billion pounds of the obesogen BPA every year and it's detectable in 93 percent of Americans.

    PLASTIC POLLUTANTS:
    Detectable in 75 percent of Americans, phthalates are plastic softeners that mimic estrogen. They're found in the lining of canned foods and beverages, sports drink bottles, and pesticides. We create about one billion pounds of phthalates a year worldwide, and they leach easily into our blood, urine, saliva, etc. We produce six billion pounds of the obesogen BPA (bisphenol A, an organic compound used to make plastic) every year, and it's detectable in 93 percent of Americans. BPA leaching occurs from food and drink packaging, cans, and bottle tops.

    TAKE TUNA FOR EXAMPLE:
    Canned tuna is one of the most BPA-heavy foods out there. BPA is an ingredient in the lining of cans that leaches into foods and interferes with the hormones that tell your body when it's full. In fact, if you empty out a can of tuna, wash it out and run your finger along the side, you can feel the plastics. Those can be really dangerous for someone on a diet. The easiest fix is simply swapping out canned tuna for tuna pouches.

    ARTIFICAL HORMONES:
    A study in the International Journal of Obesity from researchers at 10 different universities, including Yale University School of Medicine and Johns Hopkins Unversity, found that the use of steroid hormones in meat production and on conventional dairy farms could be a possible contributor to the obesity epidemic.

    Consumption of meat from cattle treated with hormones, means you are taking them in, too. Naturally-occurring horomones, such as estrogen, progesterone and testosterone are being pumped into our cattle. In addition, trenbolone acetate or TBA is also givent to cattle to "beef them up." TBA is an anabolic steroid that's eight to 10 times as potent as testosterone. That means if your cattle has it, your meat has it, and you then have it.

    Also, when you are picking meats, keep this in mind: A lot of obesogens are fat soluable, so they accumulate in fatty tissues. So pick leaner cuts if you can, 95 percent lean beef for example. But the best advice is to go organic, free range, grass-fed beef. Check the labels, as there are several grades of organic foods.

    LET'S TAKE A LOOK AT STEAK:
    Because conventionally-raised beef are fed corn and soy (an obesogen) and injected with six different steroids (all obesogens), the typical conventional steak has seven and a half times as much fat as a steak normally should have.

    Those obesogens -- and the fat they create -- go into your body when you eat the steak. But order a grass-fed steak, and you'll avoid all that fat and those obesogens.

    ANTIBIOTICS/SOY-FED:
    Antibiotics are often given to chicken and fish to promote growth and keep them healthy, as they are often kept in tight pens with one another. Antibiotics are an obesogen. As is soy, and soy is a great protein-rich way to feed chickens, beef and fish cheaply, but it's not what these animals were bred to eat. This means they need more antibiotics to keep healthy.

    TAKE A LOOK AT SALMON:
    Because farmed salmon are fed a mix of soy (an obesogen) and fish meal, their flesh is naturally white, not pink. And because they are farmed in enclosed pens, they are fed antibiotics (an obesogen) as well. To create that healthy pink salmon color, farmers use pellets that come loaded with pink dye, and use a "Salmo-fan" or "Salmo-ruler" -- a paint fan for choosing the desired color of salmon flesh. Farmed salmon are up to 10 times higher in pesticides like PCBs as wild salmon.

    PESTICIDES:
    The average American is exposed to 10 to 13 different pesticides through food, beverages and drinking water every day. And nine of the 10 most common pesticides are endocrine-disrupting, which have been linked to weight gain. While pesticides chemicals have a number of different effects on our bodies, one of the scariest is that they mimic estrogen; it's like giving us a shot of female hormones, which undermines our ability to build lean muscle and promotes fat storage.

    But according to a recent study in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, eating the right fruits and vegetables and avoiding the most contaminated ones, for just five days can reduce circulating pesticide based obesogens to undetectable or near undetectable levels.

    LOOKING AT FRUIT:
    An apple a day may keep the doctor away, but not if that apple contains high levels of pesticides and obesogens. The most dangerous fruits are apple, pears, peaches, imported grapes and strawberries. We urge you to buy organic when buying those fruits. Oranges, grapefruit, kiwi, bananas, pineapple, mango, and watermelon are safe for conventional diets.

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to CatchyUsername For This Useful Post:

    Lista (03-17-2016)

  3. #22
    Senior Member Colonel's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2015
    Location
    Oslo, Norway
    Posts
    14,495
    Thanked: 5797
    Quote Originally Posted by CatchyUsername View Post
    There's a lot more to weight loss than just eating less, eating low carb, exercising, though those things in and of themselves are not bad, so don't get me wrong.
    Exercising doesn't necessarily help that much but improving one's fitness levels a lot does help. A body that has to function at a high level in terms of fitness is easier to coach into keeping the excess weight off.

  4. #23
    Senior Member wheeze's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2015
    Posts
    1,488
    Thanked: 862
    Blog Entries
    1
    Quote Originally Posted by A.J. View Post

    When weight loss stalls, it means you need to detox ...
    mines from the meds i take..... janumet is one BIG factor...

  5. #24
    Another example of what I'm talking about....interesting:


    Pesticides found to cause trans-generational mental disorders and obesity ... Harmful traits are inherited for THREE generations

    Thursday, March 17, 2016 by: L.J. Devon, Staff Writer
    Tags: pesticides, genetic expression, transgenerational effects
    Facebook (39)
    Twitter
    Pesticides
    (NaturalNews) From an early age, we are inundated with the helpless belief that our genes are set in stone – a fixed code – a destiny that we cannot control. The study of epigenetics debunks this mythical mindset, revealing how external factors change our gene expression throughout our lifetime.

    The field of epigenetics examines more closely the relationship between our genes and our environment, and how man-made chemicals influence cellular processes, ultimately changing the expression of our genes. Some chemicals may inactivate genes that are normally active. Other chemicals may activate genes that would typically lay dormant. These chemically-induced changes in gene behavior can initiate health problems, especially in the womb, during childhood development and puberty.

    Pesticides of the past alter gene expression from one generation to the next
    Now the field of epigenetics is discovering a disturbing new trend. Man-made chemical pesticides (such as the persistent pollutant DDT), are altering gene expression through multiple generations, destroying the inherent health of entire bloodlines. This means pesticides are silently changing the expression of genes, generation after generation, and the damage is being carried on, restricting future generations' ability to live harmoniously with their environment. The pesticides are interfering with people's natural relationship with their bodies and the world around them. The damage of past pesticides (such as DDT) is being carried out and expressed in the genes of new generations of people who may not even consider the banned pollutant to be a threat.

    When a parent's gene expression has been manipulated by pesticides, those changes can be inherited by the next generation. The pesticide poisons of the past century are literally rewriting the gene expression of future generations, victimizing the next of kin from the start. The trans-generational damage has now been recognized across three generations. The damage can be observed in childhood cancer cases that are linked directly back to parental pesticide exposure. Lymphoma risk increases two-fold for children whose parents were pesticide applicators. Pesticide applicators who applied pesticides without proper protection give birth to children who are at greater risk of developing childhood cancers.

    In 2012, biologists experimented with pesticides on mice. The genetic changes that occurred were passed down through three generations, eliciting mental disorders and obesity in the offspring. Through the same genetic mechanisms, these effects are observed in humans.

    2,4-D herbicide initiating changes in cell cycle control, human stress response, and DNA repair
    The commonly-used herbicide 2,4-D damages cellular DNA. Medical researchers discovered the herbicide's genotoxic effects in 2004, showing how it causes chromosomes to break apart in human blood cells. In 2005, "environmentally realistic levels," of 2,4-D were found to change gene expression for important functions of the body, including immunology, stress response, cell cycle control and DNA repair.

    Egyptian geneticists found that the bone marrow cells of mice were being deconstructed in the presence of 2,4-D, as the chromosomes broke apart.

    University of Minnesota researchers couldn't deny the fact that 2,4-D was causing severe changes in men who worked with the herbicide and had high levels of the chemical metabolites in their urine. The researchers found that the men were silently enduring chromosome aberrations and hormonal fluctuations that would ultimately affect their mental state, metabolism, homeostasis and sex drive.

    Glyphosate is a catalyst for disease processes
    Glyphosate herbicide alters genetic expression of humans by destroying the microbiome of the exposed persons. MIT researchers documented the role of glyphosate in damaging the gastrointestinal tract of humans, and depleting good species of bacteria that the body needs to detoxify and stimulate immune response. Glyphosate is a catalyst for disease processes, and is behind the widespread epidemics of heart disease, diabetes, obesity, autism, infertility and cancer that are ravaging people stuck on the Western diet of glyphosate-infested food products.

    The more we eliminate pesticides from our lives, the quicker we allow our cellular processes to normalize and self regulate, allowing our genes to express health and vitality.

    Sources include:

    Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/053340_pe...#ixzz43BJlbYdy


    Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/053340_pe...#ixzz43BJAfRin

  6. The Following User Says Thank You to CatchyUsername For This Useful Post:

    Lista (03-17-2016)

  7. #25
    Resident Chocolate Monster Lista's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2015
    Location
    Welcome, NC USA
    Posts
    3,056
    Thanked: 1547
    Quote Originally Posted by CatchyUsername View Post
    Take supplements geared towards that..
    That's what I was asking. I've heard various people talk about "detox". For some it means no sugar, or gluten, for others it means taking a pill, and for others it means eating and drinking certain foods that will facilitate "detox". I was wondering, which AJ meant.

  8. #26
    There are different detoxes that target different things or issues. You can take Bentonite to detox your intestinal tract of herbicides and pesticides (but not what is in your stored fat, though). You can do far infrared sauna to target the same thing, and work up a sweat, which is a great way to get crap out of your fat cells (but not necessarily your vital organs). Coffee enemas target the stuff in your liver. Heavy metal detoxing is completely different. You can take supplements for that, or use liposomal glutathione along with CytoDetox (a particular product).

    See what I mean? It all depends on WHAT you are "detoxing"and WHERE you are detoxing it from.....there are different methods for different things.

    One thing I found out the hard way for certain......I was not detoxing the mercury fast enough when I had the silver amalgam removed, and it cost me dearly. I had signs of mercury poisoning (the numbness in hands and feet, numbness on the left side of my face, etc.....). And I was even taking liposomal glutathione. I knew about the detoxing, but I needed to do bowel detoxing as well, as mercury concentrates there and binds to candida. That is where activated charcoal is fantastic in terms of removing toxins from your intestines (like Bentonite). As soon as I started a product called, "Bind" that has activated charcoal and other good stuff, the symptoms stopped as I was pulling the mercury out much more quickly.

    Sorry to go so long, but there are different products that target different things.

    Quote Originally Posted by Lista View Post
    That's what I was asking. I've heard various people talk about "detox". For some it means no sugar, or gluten, for others it means taking a pill, and for others it means eating and drinking certain foods that will facilitate "detox". I was wondering, which AJ meant.

  9. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to CatchyUsername For This Useful Post:

    Lista (03-17-2016), Valiant Woman (03-17-2016)

  10. #27
    Resident Chocolate Monster Lista's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2015
    Location
    Welcome, NC USA
    Posts
    3,056
    Thanked: 1547
    Interesting...thank you!

  11. #28
    Senior Member Valiant Woman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Location
    Broken Arrow, OK
    Posts
    4,311
    Thanked: 4100
    First meal of the day. Super smoothie containing spinach, green banana, organic blueberries, organic strawberries, chia seeds, water, and prebiotic fiber blend.

    Low Carb Recipes-image-jpg
    When your praise match your prayers, the answer will come.
    https://www.facebook.com/Valiant-Wom...1103844642026/

  12. The Following User Says Thank You to Valiant Woman For This Useful Post:

    CatchyUsername (03-18-2016)

  13. #29


    There ya go!!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Valiant Woman View Post
    First meal of the day. Super smoothie containing spinach, green banana, organic blueberries, organic strawberries, chia seeds, water, and prebiotic fiber blend.

    Low Carb Recipes-image-jpg

  14. The Following User Says Thank You to CatchyUsername For This Useful Post:

    Valiant Woman (03-18-2016)

  15. #30
    Senior Member Valiant Woman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Location
    Broken Arrow, OK
    Posts
    4,311
    Thanked: 4100

    Smile

    Had a light dinner last night. I think I may have over did it on my carb intake a couple of days this week.

    Roasted wild caught salmon brushed with a mix of EVOO, lemon juice, minced garlic, Rosemary, and capers; broccoli seasoned with garlic powder & red pepper. 😋

    Low Carb Recipes-image-jpg
    When your praise match your prayers, the answer will come.
    https://www.facebook.com/Valiant-Wom...1103844642026/

  16. The Following User Says Thank You to Valiant Woman For This Useful Post:

    CatchyUsername (03-19-2016)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
You can avoid major, expensive repair costs with an extended service plan for your Mercedes Benz. Many vehicle repairs can cost thousands of dollars in unexpected expense, now may be the time to consider an extended service plan for your vehicle.