Archive for June, 2009

Why Fructose Puts On Belly Fat…and How to Avoid HFCS

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Americans eat about 136 pounds of added sugar every year, each. Some 57 pounds is High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS). In 1966, we ate no HFCS and 23 pounds less added sugar per person. Can simple food swaps actually help you lose weight…and better yet, belly fat?

How much HFCS we now eat, and how many more pounds we now weigh are close to the same. According to the CDC, women under 50 weigh about 27.5 pounds more and are an inch taller than in 1960; men under 50 weigh 23.5 pounds more and are an inch and a half taller, on average.

Smart researchers, however, have found that the main problem with HFCS is not that it changes your metabolism. It’s that we eat too much of it.

HFCS is typically 55% fructose, high only in comparison with regular corn syrup. If you’re eating fast food, most breakfast cereals, juice drinks, ice creams and even Miracle Whip, you’re getting HFCS. Low levels of mercury in HFCS supermarket products are also worrisome.
Patients ask: “I only drink one soda/whatever: how can it make me fat?”

A new small study may answer that: 15 people got just glucose, and 17 people got just fructose for 25% of their calories for 10 weeks. Naturally, both groups gained weight.

But the people getting fructose had more belly fat, less insulin sensitivity, higher blood sugars, higher insulin levels, more oxidized cholesterol.

What does all this science mean?

Less insulin sensitivity and higher insulin levels mean greater fat storage. Around the middle. Where you don’t want it.

Fat around your middle is another organ. It’s not just a spare tire. It makes hormones. And the hormones it makes make you hold on to fat.

How can you avoid eating HFCS?

1. Eat fast food that you prepare, not that you buy.
2. Read food labels: if you need reading glasses or a magnifying glass, get them.
3. Check out lists of popular foods without HFCS http://highfructosehigh.com/no-hfcs/

Eat for flavor and health! They’re the same.

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Book Reviews: Weight Loss Recipes for Kids

Friday, June 5th, 2009

On Amazon, there are over 50 choices for healthy recipe books for kids, but the best of the lot are hidden gems. And they don’t necessarily feature diets.

Pediatricians have been told for years to not give diets to kids to lose weight, for fear of disrupting self-esteem further.

But the popular market is changing that, and with good reason. The childhood obesity epidemic is out of control. 23 percent of all U.S. kids, if current trends continue, will be obese by 2020.

Real Food for Healthy Kids gets it mostly right. “Kid food” is a big, commercial invention: kids can love Zucchini Tempura with Horseradish Dunk and Hole-y Eggs as much as adults. And with food like this, adults and kids will both lose weight.

Toddler Cafe daybreakers divx is even better: no sneaky carrots into meatloaf or white beans into cupcakes (yuck!) here. Instead, you get simple, creative ways for the food oriented parent to create beautiful meals that taste great and introduce avocado, brussels sprouts and Pea Pancakes to the younger set with style and smarts.

Pretend Soup is a favorite, and not just because Mollie Katzen (Moosewood Cookbook) is a friend (conflict of interest: full disclosure!). It picks up where Toddler Cafe leaves off.

The recipes are simple, friendly, kid-considerate and intrinsically healthy. No need to dumb down adult food: this is food that is low calorie, rich in flavor, and teaches your kid (and you) how to cook. That’s probably the very best way to lose weight and keep it off for a life time.

Too expensive? Drug costs for obese kids were 2.5x higher in 2005 than for normal weight kids…and that difference could buy a lot of groceries.

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