We’ve Moved this Blog

May 20, 2010

Yes, it has been quiet around here.  That’s becuase we’ve been getting ready to move to our new site:

http://motivpersonaltraining.com/blog

And now we are live. So please, update your bookmarks and feed readers.  And stroll around the new website, too.

See you over there.


More Nuts are Better?

May 11, 2010

Nuts have a bad reputation. But new research now indicates that more nuts are better for you than just a few:

Researchers found that, for the average person, about two servings of tree nuts did a better job of reducing blood cholesterol and triglycerides than one serving.

Researchers who examined the results of 25 previous studies on the health effects of nut consumption found a dose-related improvement in participants’ blood-lipid levels. The results are published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

The lead author of the latest research, Joan Sabaté, says the study “confirms that nuts, indeed, lower cholesterol.” A professor and the chairman of the department of nutrition at Loma Linda University, in Loma Linda, Calif., Dr. Sabaté was among the group of researchers that first linked nut consumption to a lower risk of heart attack several years ago.

Dr. Sabaté said the research indicated that for the average person, a slightly higher amount of nuts—about 2.4 ounces, or two servings—does a better job than one serving of lowering cholesterol and triglycerides, another type of fat in the blood.

Still, he said, “we do not need many to get the benefit.” One serving of almonds is about eight nuts; a serving of smaller nuts such as peanuts is about 15 to 20 nuts.

Remember, as in all of nutrition, portion size matters.

Read more about it here.


watch those calorie counts

May 5, 2010

Those calorie counts may not be what they seem:

Researchers at Tufts University bought 29 dishes from 10 restaurant chains, including Ruby Tuesday, McDonald’s, and Wendy’s, and analyzed them to see whether the menu calorie counts were right. Turns out that on average, the tested dishes contained 18 percent more calories than the amount listed. The differences ranged from 36 percent fewer calories to a jawdropping 200 percent more! Denny’s grits topped the higher-calorie list, thanks to what turned out to be a supersized portion.

It wasn’t all bad news—the Taco Bell nachos, P.F. Chang’s Cantonese shrimp, and Domino’s thin-crust cheese pizza had around 30 percent fewer calories than the menu listed. Bear in mind that researchers sampled just one of each item and that all were purchased in the Boston area; calories might well be different if you order the same dish in your local joint.

Read more here.


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