Thursday, 26 June 2014

How to Lose Weight Using Cinnamon Powder and Honey


By
Cook
Discussion threads, articles, gossip and talk all over the Internet are all a twitter about how to lose weight using cinnamon powder and honey. While some insist that they've seen no difference after trying this combination, others enthusiastically recommend it as a surefire way to reduce weight.

The recipe for this allegedly miraculous weight loss aid is very simple. You can make it in minutes and store it in the refrigerator for one day, or until needed. Mix up one batch each morning before breakfast.
Try using different types and flavors of local honey as well as different types of cinnamon until you get the results you desire or to change the flavor and palatability of the drink.

Recipe Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Combine the cinnamon and honey with the water in a small saucepan.
  2. Bring the mixture to a boil.
  3. Filter the liquid into a cup and divide into two half-cup quantities.
  4. Consume one half an hour before breakfast and the second half an hour before going to sleep at night.

Helpful Tips

Keep these helpful tips in mind:
  • Some proponents recommend adding raw honey after the water has boiled to retain nutrients and thus the benefits.
  • By following this regimen, it is suggested that a dieter may easily lose three to five pounds within one week without changing anything else within his or her diet. Differences in results may be due to the cinnamon used. There are three types of cinnamon available in stores: Ceylon cinnamon, Indonesian cinnamon, and Cassia cinnamon.
  • Keep in mind that while Cassia is sold as a cinnamon, it is not actually the same spice and may, therefore, produce different results.

The Effect It Has on the Body

According to materials and articles recommending this diet aid, this mixture of cinnamon powder and honey stops the body from accumulating fat.

http://diet.lovetoknow.com/wiki/How_to_Lose_Weight_Using_Cinnamon_Powder_and_Honey

What Foods Have No Carbs?

By
Diet Advisor
When deciding to follow a low carb diet, dieters often want to know what foods have no carbs. For those who count carbs, foods that have low or zero carbs are precious commodities.

"Carbs" is a shortened version of the word carbohydrates, which are macronutrients containing sugars. Carbohydrates are further broken down into distinct categories.
  • Simple carbohydrates - Examples of simple carbohydrates include dairy products, candy, baked goods, fruit, and processed sugars.
  • Complex carbohydrates - Examples include rice, corn, flour, whole grains, and legumes.
Fiber and sugar alcohols are also considered carbs, but they are usually not restricted as part of a low-carb diet.

Foods with No Carbs

Low-carbohydrate diets, such as the Atkins diet, limit the amount of carbohydrates you can eat in order to exert insulin control. In general, most low-carbohydrate diets recommend eating fewer than 50 grams of carbohydrates per day, and some suggest eating as few as 20 to 25 grams per day. When you consider that one cup of white rice has 151 grams of carbohydrates, and a slice of bread contains about 15 grams of carbohydrates, eating carbohydrate-containing foods adds up quickly. Foods with no carbohydrates can help you eat adequate amounts and still limit carbohydrate intake.
The key is knowing which foods have no carbs.

Meat & Animal Protein

All naturally-occurring meats contain no carbohydrates; however, pre-packaged and deli meats are often processed with a sugar and salt solution or seasoning blends, conferring carbohydrates to the meats. Processed and cured meats, such as sausage, ham, bacon, and frankfurters regularly contain small amounts of carbohydrates. Reading package labels is essential to learn if pre-packaged products contain carbohydrates. In their natural state, the following contain zero carbs:
  • Beef
  • Veal
  • Organ meats (including brains, liver, and kidneys)
  • Lamb
  • Pork
  • Tongue
  • Chicken
  • Turkey
  • Fish (such as salmon, trout, and halibut)
  • Duck
  • Goose
  • Fish
  • Shellfish (such as crab, shrimp, and lobster)
  • Mollusks (such as oysters, mussels, and clams)
  • Game meats (such as venison and elk)
  • Exotic meats (such as ostrich and emu)
  • Eggs
  • http://diet.lovetoknow.com/wiki/What_Foods_Have_No_Carbs

Tuesday, 24 June 2014

3-Day Tuna Diet


Hoping to shed a few pounds in a few days? Proponents say the three-day tuna diet is an easy, quick way to lose weight. However, this diet isn't associated with any medical institution, and there are few testimonials of dieters who have used this plan with success.

This diet has floated around on the Internet for several years, and is often passed around as a diet recommended by a weight-loss clinic or a doctor. While it's not clear how this diet got started, no hospital or doctor has recommended it.
The Cleveland Clinic is the institution most often linked to the three-day tuna diet, but it states on its website that there is no such thing as the "Cleveland Clinic Diet." The Clinic issued this statement: "We all wish that weight loss and other health benefits could occur with simply making three days worth of dietary change. But severely restricting your calories, and including/excluding specific foods from the diet is not the way to long-term, sustained weight loss and health benefits."
Still, the stories of fast weight loss using tuna persist, and you can find the diet on numerous web pages. Generally, sources accurately label this plan as a fad diet.

Menu for the Three-Day Tuna Diet

The tuna diet is a three-day plan, but it does not require you to exclusively eat tuna for the three days.
Despite the fact that there's no real known source for this diet, the different websites you can find it on have remarkably similar ideas of what the diet entails.
Here's a sample of a full menu for day one:

Breakfast

  • Black coffee or tea (can be sweetened with artificial sweetener) or water
  • Half a grapefruit or equivalent in juice
  • One slice of toast with a tablespoon of peanut butter

Lunch

  • Half a cup of tuna
  • One slice of toast
  • Black coffee, tea or water

  • Three ounces of any lean meat
  • One cup green beans
  • One cup carrots
  • One cup vanilla ice cream
  • One medium apple
  • Black coffee, tea or water

Other Accepted Foods

The diet goes on in a similar fashion for two more days. In addition to the foods listed, dieters are advised to drink four more glasses of water (or diet soda) daily. Herbs, salt and pepper, lemon, vinegar, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, ketchup and mustard are also allowed.
After the three days, dieters may to go back to eating normally but not to overeat.

Diet Claims

Some websites claim that you can lose up to 10 pounds in three days following this diet. However, most websites that contain the diet do not include testimonials of anyone saying they have actually had success with the diet.
By all accounts, this diet is a fad and cannot deliver what is promised. What it likely would deliver, instead, is a very cranky and hungry dieter. Consulting a calorie counter lets you know that lunch on day one is not much more than 200 calories, and the whole day would give you less than 1,000 calories, which is really not enough to function.
Any diet that involves starvation (or severe calorie restriction) will produce some weight loss, but that weight loss is mostly water and will immediately return once you start eating normally again.

Healthy Diet Options

It's a much better idea to choose a healthy diet and stick with it over the long term than to try an unfounded (and probably unsafe) diet just because it promises quick results. There are many safe diet programs that make it more of a lifestyle than a fad. Consider some of these programs:
All of these programs combine healthy eating with exercise.

Use Caution with Fad Diets

Always be cautious when a diet promises quick and easy results, since you should probably expect anything but. Additionally, severely limiting your food intake can result in vitamin and mineral deficiencies. When beginning a new diet, consult your physician to make sure it is safe for you and your specific needs.
http://diet.lovetoknow.com/wiki/3_Day_Tuna_Diet

Monday, 23 June 2014

Introduction to weight loss

Introduction to weight loss

Last Updated: Aug 16, 2013 | By Serena Styles
  1.   
Banking Calories Method of Weight Loss
Banking calories is not a healthful method of weight loss. Photo Credit

Whether you are trying to lose 5 pounds or more than 50, the same principles determine how much weight you lose and how fast your weight loss will occur. Remembering the following simple guidelines and putting them into practice can lead to weight loss without the aid of any special diet plans, books, or medications.
Our body weight is determined by the amount of energy that we take in as food and the amount of energy we expend in the activities of our day. Energy is measured in calories. If your weight remains constant, you are probably taking in the same amount of calories that you burn each day. If you're slowly gaining weight over time, it is likely that your caloric intake is greater than the number of calories you burn through your daily activities.
Everyone is in control of the amount of food he or she consumes each day, so our intake of calories is something we can control. To a major degree, we can also control our output of energy, or the number of calories we burn each day. The number of calories we burn each day is dependent upon the following:
  • Our basal metabolic rate (BMR), the number of calories we burn per hour simply by being alive and maintaining body functions
  • Our level of physical activity
For some people, due to genetic (inherited) factors or other conditions, the resting metabolic rate (BMR) can be slightly higher or lower than average. Our weight also plays a role in determining how many calories we burn at rest -- the more calories are required to maintain your body in its present state, the greater your body weight. A 100-pound person requires less energy (food) to maintain body weight than a person who weighs 200 pounds.
Lifestyle and work habits partially determine how many calories we need each day. Someone whose job involves heavy physical labor will naturally burn more calories in a day than someone who sits at a desk most of the day (a sedentary job). For people who do not have jobs that require intense physical activity, exercise or increased physical activity can increase the number of calories burned.
  1. As a rough estimate, an average woman 31-50 years of age who leads a sedentary lifestyle needs about 1,800 calories per day to maintain a normal weight. A man of the same age requires about 2,200 calories. Participating in a moderate level of physical activity (exercising three to five days per week) requires about 200 additional calories per day
  2. http://www.onhealth.com/weight_loss/article.htm#introduction_to_weight_loss