June 16, 2009

10 Craziest Diets in History

Filed under: Articles — Tony @ 1:11 pm

This is a pretty cool article over on neatorama:

The chewing diet was popularized in the Edwardian Era by Horace Fletcher. He believed that chewing allowed food to be properly absorbed into the body. Insufficient chewing would lead to constipation and clog up the digestive tract, said Fletcher. He lost 40 pounds in just four months using the diet he created. Dr. Kellogg was a friend and fan of Fletcher and he required patients at his sanatorium to participate in the chewing diet as well as a variety of other weight loss methods.

To properly implement the chewing diet, a person must chew each bite over 32 times, which takes approximately 30 seconds. After chewing is done, the person then tilts his or her head back and allows the food to trickle down their throat. Anything that is still too big to swallow must be spit out. The desire to eat things likely diminishes after a period on this diet, so it does work as you begin to eat less food.

Possible Side Effects May Include: A sore jaw. Much longer meal times. Annoyed and disgusted friends.

Link

June 15, 2009

The Heart Attack Grill

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tony @ 7:51 am

Bill Geist visits the Heart Attack Grill in Chandler, Ariz.

The Heart Attack Grill capitalizes on peoples reactions to the false diet prophets. I can’t imagine that eating one of their 8000 calorie burgers is enjoyable; I’m pretty sure it would be a miserable painful and thoroughly disgusting experience… but people find it worth doing just to thumb their nose at all the guilt and pressure of modern dieting.

Christopher Walken’s roasted chicken and caramelized pears

Filed under: Recipes — Tony @ 5:57 am

Christopher Walken demonstrates a very simple method for roasting a chicken that brings out a lot of flavor.

June 9, 2009

Dieting and genetics. The myth of the “fat gene”

Filed under: Nutrition — Tony @ 5:59 pm

genetic_manipulationWe’re all aware that genetics plays a role in weight loss but the story is told to us in some sort of vague accusation. As if it’s OUR genetics that are faulty… leaving us cursing the fact that we didn’t get better genes in the big raffle.

The role of genetics has been largely misunderstood. A lot of time has been spent on searching out the “fat gene”. Somehow thinking that a category of people will eventually be able to take a pill and shut this gene down. Several times in recent years this “Fat Gene” has been found by different teams of scientists only to later be debunked as existing in thin people too.

The fact is that we ALL share the genetics that allow us to gain weight. It’s a critical survival tool. We all come from an unbroken an ancient lineage of survivors. We are from the survivors of food stress and famine; survivors of malnutrition; survivors of war and exploitation. These are the genes we carry. We carry the genes of ancestors that fought conditions that may be unimaginable to us in modern times while subsisting on foods that were makeshift at best.

The human condition in earlier times was a constant cycle of famine; long periods of time without food or with only nutrient poor foods. That cycle put direct pressure on our genes. People that could store the energy to live through the cycle made lived to pass on their genes to us. Those that couldn’t store energy didn’t. We now all carry the genes to help us survive famine even though most of us don’t ever have to go a day without food unless we decide to.

The role of individual genetics in weight gain has never been proven to me more than a minimal blip. So don’t lose hope and know that you carry the genes of only survivors.

June 6, 2009

Lard; good for you after all?

Filed under: Nutrition — Tony @ 7:49 am

lard

Lard

After decades of trying, its moment is finally here.

By Regina Schrambling

Wait long enough and everything bad for you is good again. Sugar? Naturally better than high-fructose corn syrup. Chocolate? A bar a day keeps the doctor away. Caffeine? Bring it on.

Lard, however, has always been a ridiculously hard sell. Over at least the last 15 years, it’s repeatedly been given a clean bill of health, and good cooks regularly point out how superior this totally natural fat is for frying and pastries. But that hasn’t been enough to keep Americans from recoiling—lard’s negative connotations of flowing flesh and vats of grease and epithets like lardass and tub of lard have been absurd hurdles. But no longer. I’m convinced that the redemption of lard is finally at hand because we live in a world where trendiness is next to godliness. And lard hits all the right notes, especially if you euphemize it as rendered pork fat—bacon butter.

Lard has clearly won the health debate. Shortening, the synthetic substitute foisted on this country over the last century, has proven to be a much bigger health hazard because it contains trans fats, the bugaboo du jour. Corporate food scientists figured out long ago that you can fool most of the people most of the time, and shortening (and its butter-aping cousin, margarine) had a pretty good ride after Crisco was introduced in 1911 as a substitute for the poor man’s fat. But shortening really vanquished lard in the 1950s when researchers first connected animal fat in the diet to coronary heart disease. By the ’90s, Americans had been indoctrinated to mainline olive oil, but shortening was still the go-to solid fat over lard or even butter in far too many cookbooks.

I have to admit even I was suckered by the nutrition nuttiness, despite having been all but weaned on lard in a Mexican neighborhood in Arizona. The great Mexican cooks in kitchens on either side of our house used it to make wondrously supple flour tortillas and almost airy tamales, while my Oklahoma-born dad worked it into biscuits and melted it for frying anything in his cast-iron skillet before we could afford, as he always put it, to “eat like white folks.” (Peasant food has cachet only if you are not forced to live on it.) As a food writer, I learned early on that it was considered a four-letter word in recipes, even when it was essential for authenticity. (You can substitute butter in Mexican aniseed cookies called bizcochos, but they won’t be as crisp, crunchy, and delicate.)

That’s all changed. Now you could even argue that lard is good for you. As Jennifer McLagan points out in her celebrated book Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes, lard’s fat is also mostly monounsaturated, which is healthier than saturated fat. And even the saturated fat in lard has a neutral effect on blood cholesterol. Not to mention that lard has a higher smoking point than other fats, allowing foods like chicken to absorb less grease when fried in it. And, of course, fat in general has its upsides. The body converts it to fuel, and it helps absorb nutrients, particularly calcium and vitamins.

What matters more, though, is that lard has become the right ingredient at the right time. It fits perfectly into the Michael Pollan crusade to promote foods that have been processed as minimally as possible: Your great-grandmother surely cooked with it, so you should, too.

Add to that the new awareness that what you eat matters environmentally—if you are going to eat an animal on a planet at risk from too many humans raising too many animals to eat, you have to eat the whole thing. Lard is just about the last stop before the squeal when pork producers are extracting every savory bit from a pig.

That environmental consciousness coupled with competitive cooking has resulted in the nose-to-tail trend set off by British chef Fergus Henderson. Walk into any high-end restaurant these days and pork chops are less prevalent than pig’s ears, trotters, and jowls. The salumi/charcuterie craze has also been great for enhancing lard’s profile, particularly thanks to lardo—pork belly cured Tuscan-style with wine and herbs and served in thin slices over warm bread or on pizza. If Mario Batali says it’s good, diners everywhere listen.

The best lard is leaf lard, from the fat around the kidneys of a hog, preferably a heritage hog. Flying Pigs Farm sells this at the Greenmarket in Union Square in New York City for $6 per 8-ounce container, and it sells out fast. Lard from the supermarket can still be pretty scary; most of it has been hydrogenated to make it last longer.

(As I learned from lard crusader Zarela Martinez in New York, you can make your own if you can get your hands on top-quality fat from a small producer—back, belly, or kidney fat will all work. Cut it into chunks and cook them very slowly over low heat until the fat seeps out and only crispy bits are left. Strain it and save the fat in the refrigerator almost indefinitely. Salt the cracklings and eat them as what Mexicans call chicharrones.)

Only one thing may put lard back on the slippery slope: Google the word as news, and it might as well be lard-fearing 1969 all over again. Newspaper food pages still routinely advise using olive or canola oils rather than “fattening” or “artery-clogging” lard. Or they print idiotic utterances like “you get all the lard you need at McDonald’s” (a chain that actually abandoned beef tallow for frying its fries only to be saddled with a trans-fatty substitute). Occasionally an article will make a valid point—lard is still anathema to vegetarians and halal observers—but more often there will be surprise that lard does not taste anything like pig.

Which is one more reason it is taking off at last. It’s stealth fat.

Regina Schrambling is a longtime food writer in New York who writes gastropoda.com and blogs at both gastriques.blogspot.com and epicurious.com.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2219314/

June 5, 2009

Ally McBeal takes us through a Somaception exercise

Filed under: Articles, Somaception — Tony @ 10:51 am

Calista Flockheart’s character Ally McBeal takes her coworker, Georgia through a Somaception exercise. This is a great example of how to get the absolute most pleasure out of a cup of coffee.

Cooking may have helped humans evolve bigger brains

Filed under: Diets — Tony @ 8:59 am

fire2-150x150Dwight Garner The New York Times May 26, 2009
Why Are Humans Different From All Other Apes? It’s the Cooking, Stupid

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/27/books/27garn.html

Human beings are not obviously equipped to be nature’s gladiators. We have no claws, no armor. That we eat meat seems surprising, because we are not made for chewing it uncooked in the wild. Our jaws are weak; our teeth are blunt; our mouths are small. That thing below our noses? It truly is a pie hole.

To attend to these facts, for some people, is to plead for vegetarianism or for a raw-food diet. We should forage and eat the way our long-ago ancestors surely did. For Richard Wrangham, a professor of biological anthropology at Harvard and the author of “Catching Fire,” however, these facts and others demonstrate something quite different. They help prove that we are, as he vividly puts it, “the cooking apes, the creatures of the flame.”

The title of Mr. Wrangham’s new book — “Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human” — sounds a bit touchy-feely. Perhaps, you think, he has written a meditation on hearth and fellow feeling and s’mores. He has not. “Catching Fire” is a plain-spoken and thoroughly gripping scientific essay that presents nothing less than a new theory of human evolution, one he calls “the cooking hypothesis,” one that Darwin (among others) simply missed.

Apes began to morph into humans, and the species Homo erectus emerged some two million years ago, Mr. Wrangham argues, for one fundamental reason: We learned to tame fire and heat our food.

“Cooked food does many familiar things,” he observes. “It makes our food safer, creates rich and delicious tastes and reduces spoilage. Heating can allow us to open, cut or mash tough foods. But none of these advantages is as important as a little-appreciated aspect: cooking increases the amount of energy our bodies obtain from food.”

He continues: “The extra energy gave the first cooks biological advantages. They survived and reproduced better than before. Their genes spread. Their bodies responded by biologically adapting to cooked food, shaped by natural selection to take maximum advantage of the new diet. There were changes in anatomy, physiology, ecology, life history, psychology and society.” Put simply, Mr. Wrangham writes that eating cooked food — whether meat or plants or both —made digestion easier, and thus our guts could grow smaller. The energy that we formerly spent on digestion (and digestion requires far more energy than you might imagine) was freed up, enabling our brains, which also consume enormous amounts of energy, to grow larger. The warmth provided by fire enabled us to shed our body hair, so we could run farther and hunt more without overheating. Because we stopped eating on the spot as we foraged and instead gathered around a fire, we had to learn to socialize, and our temperaments grew calmer.

There were other benefits for humanity’s ancestors. He writes: “The protection fire provided at night enabled them to sleep on the ground and lose their climbing ability, and females likely began cooking for males, whose time was increasingly free to search for more meat and honey. While other habilines” — tool-using prehumans — “elsewhere in Africa continued for several hundred thousand years to eat their food raw, one lucky group became Homo erectus — and humanity began.”

You read all this and think: Is it really possible that this is an original bit of news? Mr. Wrangham seems as surprised as we are. “What is extraordinary about this simple claim,” he writes, “is that it is new.”

Mr. Wrangham arrives at his theory by first walking us through the work of other anthropologists and naturalists, including Claude Lévi-Strauss and Darwin, who did not pay much attention to cooking, assuming that humans could have done pretty well without it.

He then delivers a thorough, delightfully brutal takedown of the raw-food movement and its pieties. He cites studies showing that a strict raw-foods diet cannot guarantee an adequate energy supply, and notes that, in one survey, 50 percent of the women on such a diet stopped menstruating. There is no way our human ancestors survived, much less reproduced, on it. He seems pleased to be able to report that raw diets make you urinate too often, and cause back and hip problems.

Even castaways, he writes, have needed to cook their food to survive: “I have not been able to find any reports of people living long term on raw wild food.” Thor Heyerdahl, traveling by primitive raft across the Pacific, took along a small stove and a cook. Alexander Selkirk, the model for Robinson Crusoe, built fires and cooked on them.

Mr. Wrangham also dismisses, for complicated social and economic reasons, the popular Man-the-Hunter hypothesis about evolution, which posits that meat-eating alone was responsible. Meat eating “has had less impact on our bodies than cooked food,” he writes. “Even vegetarians thrive on cooked diets. We are cooks more than carnivores.”

Among the most provocative passages in “Catching Fire” are those that probe the evolution of gender roles. Cooking made women more vulnerable, Mr. Wrangham ruefully observes, to male authority.

“Relying on cooked food creates opportunities for cooperation, but just as important, it exposes cooks to being exploited,” he writes. “Cooking takes time, so lone cooks cannot easily guard their wares from determined thieves such as hungry males without their own food.” Women needed male protection.

Marriage, or what Mr. Wrangham calls “a primitive protection racket,” was a solution. Mr. Wrangham’s nuanced ideas cannot be given their full due here, but he is not happy to note that cooking “trapped women into a newly subservient role enforced by male-dominated culture.”

“Cooking,” he writes, “created and perpetuated a novel system of male cultural superiority. It is not a pretty picture.” As a student, Mr. Wrangham studied with the primatologist Jane Goodall in Gombe, Tanzania, and he is the author, with Dale Peterson, of a previous book called “Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence.” In “Catching Fire” he has delivered a rare thing: a slim book — the text itself is a mere 207 pages — that contains serious science yet is related in direct, no-nonsense prose. It is toothsome, skillfully prepared brain food.

“Zoologists often try to capture the essence of our species with such phrases as the naked, bipedal or big-brained ape,” Mr. Wrangham writes. He adds, in a sentence that posits Mick Jagger as an anomaly and boils down much of his impressive erudition: “They could equally well call us the small-mouthed ape.”

June 4, 2009

All diets work…until they don’t.

Filed under: Articles, Featured — Diet Shock @ 6:35 pm

The simple fact is that all diets work, until they don’t. It seems like there is a new diet everyday and they all have people that swear by them. In the modern age there is a dizzying array of plans and potions: The New York Diet and the Hollywood Diet; Dr. Phil’s diet and Dr. Atkins diet; The Chocolate Diet and The Cabbage Soup Diet; The Acid Diet and the Alkaline Diet; The Subway Diet and the Grapefruit Diet…. There are diets for every disposition, body type, mood, ethnic background, star sign, and possibly hairstyle and just as big a selection of “pills or potions of the week” that promise effortless results.

All “miracle” plans and potions have several things in common:

1. They all have outrageous / fantasy testimonials
2. They all promise to be easy
3. They all work
4. They all fail
5. They tell you that it’s the truth of their plan / potion when they work and that it’s your fault when it fails

Some diets are as simple as the Japanese Banana diet; which is as simple as eating some bananas for breakfast every day and only allowing yourself to eat other meals until you are 80% full.

Some diets are very complicated, like the Zone diet which forbids many foods and asks you to specifically balance percentages of carbs, proteins, and fats for every single meal.

We here at Diet Shock are going to tell you why these diets work even though the diets appear to be radically different. We will also tell what they have in common and why they eventually fail. More importantly we are going to tell you why the failure of a diet is NEVER your fault. Join today to learn more!

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