Archive for 'Fast food'

Fast Food and Calories

Here in the technology and information age, we have more knowledge and advancements than ever before in history. Sixty years ago, who would have ever thought that you could send an instant message over a phone, let alone take a picture with it? Sixty years ago, who would have thought we would be capable of sending a man to the moon, but fail the war on obesity and cancer?

Isn’t it oddly shocking that America is so well-advanced in everything except health and fitness? While the fitness industry tells us to count calories and exercise for fat loss, we grow fatter and fatter as a nation.

Running parallel to the fitness industry is the fast food chains, doing their best to keep on the top of “healthy eating” trend. It seems the fast-food industry can tailor to anyone’s dieting needs with “fat-free,” “low-calorie,” and “low-carb” menu items.

Today, fast food is considered a normal eating venture among the average person. People aren’t just eating out on special occasions or weekends anymore; they are eating out all the time. But is it the calories in fast food that’s so destructive to the body and waistline or does the problem lie deeper?

Fast Food and Obesity

Fast food is simply tasty, ready-cooked meals packed to go. Fast food has been around since the early 1900′s, but its popularity sparked and grew in the 1940′s with the birth of good ole’ Mickey D’s; quick food priced cheaply. Within a few years similar fast-food operations popped up everywhere in the blink of an eye.

With the compelling rise in fast-food restaurants since the 1940′s, oddly, too, started the rise in obesity and cancer during that same time period. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to do the math and link fast food to the obesity and cancer crisis.

Fast Food and its Nutritional Value

To say fast food has a “nutritional value” is an oxymoron. There is absolutely nothing nutritional about fast food. Fast food simply feeds hunger and/or your immediate craving. Fast food does not feed your body in the form of usable lasting energy or building materials, the essence your body thrives on for life itself.

Fast food is highly processed with a wide array of additives. The concept of fast food is obviously, food ready-to-eat and served quickly. To ensure fast food’s low cost to the consumer, the fast food products are made with highly-processed ingredients to give it shelf-life, to hold consistency, and to enhance flavor. Fast food is altered from its original healthy form it was meant to nourish the body with, to a denatured form that lacks any nutritional value whatsoever.

According to Diana Schwarzbein, M.D., “The FDA Total Diet Study found that fast-food hamburgers, across the board, contained 113 different pesticide residues.” So my question is why does the FDA want to regulate the sale of vitamins, minerals, and herbs that are actually beneficial for the body when there’s a linking fast-food / cancer / obesity crisis on our hands?

Why Fast Food is Fattening and Dangerous

Wake up people. It’s not the calories in fast food that’s damaging to your health and waistline, it’s the chemical additives such as aspartame and MSG (monosodium glutamate). These chemical additives are approved by the FDA and studies show that they lead to weight and disease issues.

Synthetic chemicals added to processed food, including fast food, damage your body’s cells. Your body is made up of nutrients found in plants and animals you eat. Man-made food items loaded with pesticides, as well as aspartame, margarine, and other man-made chemicals do not nourish your body. If your body can’t use what you put into it you will gain fat and decrease health.

Since we can’t visually see what actually happens at the molecular level when we eat processed food, we discount it and rely on the FDA to do our thinking for us. After all, if its FDA approved, it MUST be okay to eat, right? Not at all.

Nutrients from the food we eat allow us to burn fat and be healthy. Your body cannot process synthetic chemicals. If a food item can’t be processed, it will end up lodged in areas of your body, primarily fatty areas and tissues, creating an acidic pH.

A simple fast-food chicken breast can contain everything from modified corn starch to hydrolyzed corn gluten. Hello? Chicken comprised of corn? A fast-food chicken nugget is nearly 60% corn, and corn is what farmers use to fatten up cattle.

Michael Pollan, author of, The Omnivore’s Dilemma says it perfectly – “How did we ever get to a point where we need investigative journalist to tell us where our food comes from?”

A good visual that Dr. Mark A. Gustafson found is that it takes fifty-one days to digest fast food chicken nuggets or French fries. FIFTY-ONE DAYS! Does that sound healthy? I could care less about the caloric, fat, or carbohydrate content. That’s not the problem, people. The problem with fast food is that it’s void of nutrients and loaded with chemicals not recognized by the body.

What’s even more devastating is the book The Fast Food Diet written by Stephan Sinatra, M.D. This is a sad state when a doctor promotes eating chemically-altered food with addictive chemicals and damaged fats that scars the artery walls and contribute to total metabolic damage.

Eating Good and Avoiding the Hidden Dangers

Granted, calories do count to an extent, but what counts more is the quality of the calorie. If you want to lose fat then you have to change your eating habits. This doesn’t mean opt for Healthy Choice® and Smart One’s® frozen meals because they appear to be healthy. Food manufacturers use deceptive marking tactics to create an illusion to make people buy their product.

To lose fat and keep it off you should choose foods in their natural state, such as fresh organic cuts of meat, fresh organic fruits and vegetables, essential fats, and plenty of filtered water. It’s vital that you go back to the basics.

Make eating fresh and organic food choices the bulk of your diet. If you do that, you will never have to count calories again. The quality of food outweighs the quantity every time.

References: Schwarbein, Diana M.D. The Schwarzbein Principle. 1999. 287 Pollan, Michael. The Omnivore’s Dilemma. 2006. 1

Karen Sessions has been in the fitness industry since 1988. She is a nationally qualified bodybuilder and holds two personal training certifications. She has written 6 ebooks on fitness and has helped hundreds of clients transform their bodies. http://www.theelitephysique.com “Use of this article is authorized provided it is reproduced in full, and all web URLS are active hyperlinks directed to the author”

Tags: lasting energy, Weight loss, nutritional value, Food manufacturers, blink of an eye

Quit Being Fast Food Diet Stupid!

What is this that I keep seeing about fast food diets? I do a ton of internet research day in and day out, and I keep seeing articles and web-sites containing information in regards to fast food diets that can still keep you thin and healthy. What can I say? I suppose that I can understand the point of view of the fast food industry to reflect this opinion; it’s in the interest of their self-preservation. However, I can only speculate as to why anyone else of any other affiliation would even think about justifying a fast food diet as being healthy.

The term fast food diet is an oxymoron! True, if you eat fast food regularly, you are in fact surviving on a diet that consists of fast food. However, you are not, in fact, on a fast food diet. A diet, in every sense of the modern meaning as it applies to weight loss or healthy eating, cannot come even close to being in the same family as fast food. We are not even talking about distant cousins, twice removed, re-instated through marriage… We are talking about the fact that there is no such thing as a fast food diet. Fast food can be utilized occasionally to replace healthy food because you are on the go and have no access to food that you have prepared yourself. It is a temporary fix for the problem of not having access to healthy food. However, it is not meant to be eaten solely in a “fast food diet”.

We as Americans have grown lazy and dependent upon the fast food industry. They know this, and prey upon us because of this. The concept or term “fast food diet”, I am sure, was even invented by one of the fast food conglomerates in order to try to gain leverage upon the health conscious Americans who have begun to educate themselves upon the dangers of eating fast food on a regular basis. You are smiling at my comment and thinking to yourself, “this guy is crazy”, or “that would be funny if it were true”. However, if it is true, is it truly funny? How else do you think that the fast food diet came to be? You come up with a better idea and let me know.

Business is business, and money is money. Fast food is a business and needs money to survive. If you were to suddenly decide not to eat fast food anymore because it was unhealthy for you to do so, then they have lost their business and they have lost their money. So, let’s create a term “fast food diet” and let Americans think that it means that they can lose weight, and eat our food while doing so! I swear, there was a moment of silence in my mind after writing that… because I know that a ton of us fell for it! The fast food diet caught on faster than a California brush fire during a drought!

Do not be suckered into thinking that counting calories and eating healthy is the same thing! Yes, they are listing fast food diets that you can partake in which list items off of the various fast food establishments’ menus in order to eat a less than two-thousand calorie “fast food diet” daily. This can give you some quick results in weight loss due to your body burning more calories in a day than you are taking into it with you shiny new fast food diet. However, while it is getting thinner, is it getting better? What attributes and vitamins and minerals is your body getting from these menu items? Are you truly getting healthier, or do you feel yourself drained of energy and getting sick more often?

The fact of the matter is that your body does not get anything healthy from these menu items which will enable you to maintain the weight loss that you accomplished from the fast food diet. Your fast food diet has forced your body to actually break down muscle tissue as well as fat in order to get the necessary proteins and vitamins that the food is lacking. So, why eat a fast food diet?

The best fast food diet is the one that refrains from eating any fast food at all. You can watch your calories, and still get all of the vitamins and minerals that your body needs. You can eat negative calorie items that are full of anti-oxidants and anti-carcinogens which will actually prolong your health and your life on this planet. The truth is that the fast food diet is simply a way to keep you coming back to get your fix from the fast food pushers. As I said, the fast food industry serves their purpose. However, do not let yourself be fooled into thinking that eating a fast food diet on a regular basis is going to lead to any long-term positive results.

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Tags: food diet, Fast food, food establishments, distant cousins, term fast food diet

Fast food seems to be the main provider of nutrition for our body these days. The amounts of fast food consumed by children below 14 have increased at tremendous rate from 1980 to 2000. The estimation is that children now consume 10% of their bodies with fast food, and that 10% of fast food contribute to their total energy intake on daily basis.

Compare this to the 2% number of fast food consumption in children in 1980. And for your information, relying on fast food alone won’t meet your body daily requirement of nutrition. The numbers of fast food restaurants have doubled in 20 years and it’s predicted to growth at more alarming rate in the coming years. The reason of this alarming growth rate is due to the bad infestation of fast food restaurants, not only in America, but also in the world.

The fast food giants now also specifically target children in their advertisement campaign too. And now we can see fast food restaurants opening up their branches at public school too. This fast food infestation is believed to be responsible in triggering the obesity and diabetes epidemic in societies. And since a lot of people rely on fast food for their daily nutrition intake its worth knowing the nutritions information that are contained in the fast food.

So let’s get to know well the fast food nutrition information that is currently becoming a part of our daily life. First of all most of the fast food use partially hydrogenated vegetable oil which contribute trans fat to our body. Trans fats are hand-made fats which are made through the injection of hydrogen on unsaturated fat, making it a trans fat. So naturally all fast food products which are made through frying contain a lot of Trans fat.

Research done by feeding monkeys on fast food which contain Trans fat resulted in an increase of the size of bellies of the monkeys. And monkeys fed on unsaturated fat foods which contain the same calories did not show the same increase of size. And the most alarming occurrences are that monkeys fed on fast food show an early sign of diabetes. These Trans fats that are found in fast food have higher probability of causing than other fats.

Let’s take a look at some of the popular fast food products.

McDonald’s Big Mac and fries

Fat: 12g (per 100g)

Salt:; 0.9g

Sugar: 3.7g

Protein: 9.3

Fibre: 3.2g

KFC two chicken pieces and fries

Fat: 12g

Salt: 0.7g

Sugar: n/a

Protein: 12.2g

Fibre: n/a

Considering the amount of fat available there, obviously the best choices for food in fast foods restaurant are the salad and the grilled meat. Be careful with the dressing; make sure you order it in separate cups so that you can control the amount of additional fat that you are going to eat.

Mc Donald Chicken Caesar Salad

Fat: 6 g (per 100g)

Salt: 0.39 g

Protein: 7g

Sugar: 1g

Fibre: 3g

Subway Veggie Delight sandwich

Fat: 3g

Salt: 0.5 g

Protein: 7g

Sugar: 3.5g

Fibre: 3g

Subway Chicken Savory Sandwich

Fat: 3g

Salt: 0.6 g

Protein: 8g

Sugar: 6g

Fibre: 4g

With such a bad infestation of fast food, now you know what to order when your friends or your colleagues or even your families insist on taking you to the nearest fast food chain. New York City have 23 McDonald’s in Manhattan alone and everywhere in hospitals, airports, train stations and eve high schools, so with this fast food nutrition information you are armed with knowledge to order the least poisonous foods for you.

Linda Mie A former obese girl now sharing her recommendations and reviews of various diet methods available out there. Find out her personal twist and tricks on popular diet methods based on her own experiences for quick and healthy weight loss diet. See also her new guide: the fast food 101.

Tags: food restaurants, Donald Chicken, fast food nutrition information, nearest fast food chain, Fast food

Bible Weight Loss Tips

Believe it or not, the Bible is packed with tips for effective weight loss

The Bible is full of weight loss tips. Hundreds of pages about fighting the desire of the flesh.  Everyday we’re bombarded by opportunities to overindulge. Television ads show us tantalizing large photographs of tasty restaurant meals. Well-meaning family and church members buy us chocolates, cake or tasty treats.

Tight ministerial schedules make it hard, at times, to get to the grocery store, must less cook. That leaves us with fast food — processed foods which may be laden with fat, hidden sugars and unwanted calories.

It’s no surprise when those unwanted calories turn into unwanted pounds and inches. It’s no surprise the added weight tends to make us less active, compounding our problem.

So how do we cope? God is surely our best ally as we battle bulge.

We could turn to fad diets. We could rely on negative-calories foods like grapefruit which contain fewer calories than it requires to digest. But I learned in my own personal struggle that prayer and fasting are powerful weapons against those spiritual enemies which may have caused our problems in the first place: Overeating, food lust, food addiction, eating for pleasure instead of hunger, self bitterness and/or an unloving spirit.

God enabled me to drop about 40 pounds which hung around long after my son’s birth — pounds I had gained easily despite breast feeding.

My family loves to eat out and it was just too easy to put off dieting when faced with large platters, tempting buffets, and sumptuous desserts. Even when I cooked, I hated to waste food, so I ate more than I needed. Breast feeding didn’t help because I ate more — just because I could.

My victory came when I decided the enjoyment I got from eating wasn’t worth being overweight. I made a commitment to regular exercise — meaning just about everyday — and began juicing for 40 days.

In my case, this wasn’t strict juicing, which removes the pulp. I used my blender, but limited my food intake to fruits and vegetables. You could call it a Daniel fast because it is similar to his test diet outlined in Daniel 1.

What made this effort different than a diet was that I was doing it for the Lord. God gave me the willpower I didn’t have otherwise.

Jesus’ disciples learned about the need to fast after they attempted to heal a child and could not.

“… this kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting,” he told them Matthew 17:21.

Fasting at the Holy Spirit’s urging has helped me both spiritually and physically. I have done water fasts and the Daniel style fruit-and-vegetable fast. I have given up desserts or some activity for the Lord. I have learned to set aside time to hear God’s voice through Scripture and the circumstances of life.

Occasionally the weight creeps back, as I suspected it would, but God ordains a church fast or gives me someone for whom to pray and fast.

As I get older, I realize the importance of cutting portion size to compensate for muscle loss and my body’s decreasing ability to burn calories.

I know I’ve not arrived and my choices could be better, at times. But I have made progress.

I have learned to cut my white flour, sweets and meat. I eat more soup. I avoid soda and sweetened drinks, preferring water and non-caffeinated, unsweetened tea. I’ve cut way back on the home-baked cookies or sweet breads. I don’t eat many fried foods. I eat more vegetables, like spinach.

I’ve developed newer, healthier habits with God’s help. He’s enabled me to say “no” to calorie-laden desserts because they seem too rich, instead of just out of concern about calories. Sometimes the drink or dessert seems too sweet. I look forward to eating whole grains and actually prefer them at times — at least in part because it makes me feel good to take care of myself.

To me, there is no perfect diet regimen. I believe God wants us FREE to make wise choices, and eat foods we enjoy in moderation.

God gives us wise advice in Romans 13:14: “…put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof.”

This article is not intended to take the place of medical advice. Water or Daniel-style fasts are not advisable for everyone and can be dangerous for some. Seek a medical checkup and get a doctor’s advice before undertaking any diet or food-related fast.

By Cheryl Rogers writes on behalf of the Facebook download – Chit Chat for Facebook. Chit Chat is a Facebook Messenger that enables it’s users to talk over Facebook Chat from their computer’s desktop. The Chit Chat site also boasts many Facebook articles.

View the original article here

Tags: Fast food, Hospitality Recreation, television ads, sumptuous desserts, prayer and fasting

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