Sunday, April 28, 2013

How Long Is Your Typical Workout?

How Long Is Your Typical Workout?

When it comes to working out, we all have different styles. You may try to fit in a short workout whenever you have a few minutes, or you may like the discipline - and results - of scheduling an hour-long workout into your daily routine.

Whatever your workout style, it's smart to try and get in the minimum amount of exercise - 150 minutes per week, according to US guidelines - in order to help reduce risk of disease and reap the other benefits of exercise. So tell us: do your weekly workouts make the cut? How long is your typical workout? Tell us what your favorite workout is in the comments!


Thursday, April 18, 2013

The Fast Metabolism Diet

The Fast Metabolism Diet
By making the right choices and substituting a few favorites, you can totally enhance your fat burning potential. Check out these metabolism-boosting diet tips.

the fast metabolism diet

The Fast Metabolism Diet

Your metabolism is your body’s ability to burn fat and calories, and no matter how you approach it, you can make considerable improvements to your metabolism by eating the right foods.

Today, I’m outlining my best metabolism-boosting diet plan. By making the right choices and substituting a few favorites, you can enhance your fat burning potential quickly, easily, and affordably!

Want to Boost Your Metabolism? Here’s How…

My fast metabolism diet plan isn’t a detailed, day-by-day meal plan that leaves you eating the same foods day in and day out. Strict plans like that don’t always work for everyone, and sometimes a little flexibility is just what you need to see your goals through.

Let’s start with 3 basic rules:

1. Eat 6 Meals a Day – Eating smaller meals on a more frequent basis is the easiest way to keep your metabolism boosted throughout the day. If you wait too long between meals, your metabolism actually starts to slow down. You’ve just got to make sure you’re eating the right foods.

2. Think about Nutrition, Not Calories – My fast metabolism diet doesn’t rely on calorie counting. In fact, I want you to stop that habit today. Because you want to keep your metabolism boosted all day long, restricting calories isn’t necessarily going to help. Instead, watch your nutrition labels and avoid foods with trans and saturated fats, high sugar content, or bleached and processed carbs. Generally speaking, you should be focusing on whole foods that are rich in vitamins and minerals.

3. Supplement with Omega-3s – Omega-3 fatty acids, like those found in fish, nuts, and avocados, have been shown in a number of studies to speed up your metabolism in a big way. Although you should also be eating more foods high in omega-3s, supplementing daily with a product like Optimum Fish Oil Softgels will ensure more consistent results.

Now, I want you to clean out your cupboards and do a little grocery shopping. I’ve compiled a list of foods that are particularly effective at boosting your metabolism. For more details on what to keep and what to toss, take a look at my Master Cleanse here.

Foods for a Fast Metabolism:

  • Lean proteins (chicken, fish, lean beef, shrimp)
  • Nuts ( almonds and pistachios)
  • Egg whites
  • Whey or pea protein (check out the Best Protein Powders here)
  • Whole grains / organic sprouted grains
  • Steel cut oats
  • Quinoa
  • Chia seeds
  • Sweet potatoes / yams
  • Leafy greens (spinach, red leaf lettuce, arugula)
  • Almond milk
  • Avocadoes
  • Extra virgin coconut oil
  • Spices (cinnamon, cayenne pepper, chili powder)
  • Tea (green tea, chai tea, black tea)
  • Water – simple but proven!

Generally speaking, you want to be looking for foods high in protein, fiber, complex carbs, and vitamins and minerals. All of these ingredients will keep your metabolism boosted for longer, which means more fat and calories burned AND fewer cravings!

But Don’t Neglect Your Workouts…

A good diet is definitely half the battle when it comes to burning fat and losing weight. But I’s not everything! A solid exercise and workout plan is equally important.

To make sure you’re staying active and building lean muscle mass to burn even more fat, try my Intermediate Workout for Fat Loss here. It will help you shed the extra weight and get you in amazing shape!

Have any questions or feedback about these my fast metabolism diet? Please leave a comment below…


Saturday, April 13, 2013

Sign Up For Our New POPSUGAR Fitness Email and Enter to Win a Trip to NYC!

Sign Up For Our New POPSUGAR Fitness Email and Enter to Win a Trip to NYC!

You can now get your POPSUGAR Fitness fix delivered directly to your inbox! Our new email newsletter will include all the things you love: quick video workouts, healthy eating tips, and reviews of our favorite gear. To celebrate our new newsletter, we're giving away a trip to New York City to attend our next Class FitSugar event featuring celeb trainer and cardio dance queen Anna Kaiser, founder of AKT INMOTION.

Entering for your chance to win this amazing trip is easy. Just sign up for the POPSUGAR Fitness newsletter, and you'll be entered for a chance to win a trip for two to New York City, including airfare and hotel, tickets to our next Class FitSugar event with Anna Kaiser, and a $500 Nike gift card to outfit you for class!

Head over to the giveaway page and enter for your chance to win now!

Official Rules


Thursday, April 11, 2013

Welcome to the Culination: New Site Aims to Revolutionize the Way We Cook

Welcome to the Culination: New Site Aims to Revolutionize the Way We Cook
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Culination, a new online cooking instruction website, plans to make it a whole lot easier for Americans to learn cooking techniques, prepare healthy recipes, and get inspired in the kitchen.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

#imagreatist Active Choices from Around the Web

#imagreatist Active Choices from Around the Web
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This week greatists from around the web got moving! Read on to feel inspired to be active, too.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

The Benefits of Active Recovery After Exercise

There are two types of exercise recovery – active and passive. Exercise recovery refers both to short-term recovery when you’re doing interval training and longer term recovery between workouts. Find out the advantages of each and how to apply them to your workouts.

The Benefits of Active Recovery After ExerciseSometimes after a hard workout you just want to plop down into a chair to let your burning muscles rest. There are two approaches to recovery from exercise. When you head for a chair after a workout, lie down on the floor or otherwise limit movement, it’s called passive recovery. If you keep moving at a lower intensity for five to ten minutes after a workout, it’s called an active recovery. What are the benefits of each?

Recovery not only refers to what you do after a workout, it also applies to interval training, workouts where you do alternating periods of intense exercise and recovery. Recovery between intervals can be passive or active. If it’s passive, you stand or sit between intervals or do light stretching exercises. If it’s an active recovery, you would continue to exercise at a sub-maximal intensity until the next active interval when you would again pick up the pace.

Active Recovery versus Passive Recovery: Which is Best?

When doing interval training, research suggests an active approach to recovery is best. When you exercise at a high intensity, lactate builds up in your muscles and bloodstream during the active intervals and your blood becomes more acidic. This acidity interferes with the ability of your muscles to contract, meaning you won’t be able to work as hard during the next active interval. This increase in acidity contributes to the burning sensation your get in your muscles when you work them intensely. Not only does it interfere with muscular contraction, it may psychologically keep you from putting forth your best effort during the next interval due to discomfort.

Research suggests that active recovery between exercise intervals seems to improve performance on the next interval. When you stay active between work intervals, it speeds up the removal of lactate and helps to reduce the acidity that hinders performance when you increase the intensity again.

Many experts don’t believe it’s lactate that causes the fatigue and burning you experience after intense exercise but the build-up of hydrogen ions that occurs along with the lactate. This increases acidity. One theory is that the hydrogen ions make contractile proteins within the muscles less sensitive to calcium so they can’t generate as much force.

Based on this, it’s more beneficial to exercise at a sub-maximal intensity between active intervals than to stop moving entirely. On the other hand, there is research suggesting that passive recovery between intervals delays time to exhaustion so you may be able to exercise a little longer before being overcome by fatigue.

Active versus Passive Recovery after a Workout

After completing a workout, it’s best to actively recover than to sit down. Not only does lower intensity activity help to reduce acidity and aid removal of lactate, it reduces venous pooling. During exercise, your muscles are actively pumping. This pushes on veins and increases blood flow back to the heart. If you stop suddenly, blood can “pool” in your veins and decrease blood return to your heart, leading to a drop in blood pressure or fainting. When you keep moving at a lower intensity, an active cool-down, you prevent sudden changes in blood pressure.

What about Recovery between Workouts?

After you’ve done a hard workout, should you take it easy the next day or do low-intensity activity? Although it makes sense that doing light activity might prevent delayed onset muscle soreness by increasing blood flow, there’s not a lot of evidence that it does. Still, some people feel better doing a light workout the next day, light jogging or stretching. Yoga is another good alternative for recovery days. Light exercise is best for a recovery day since your muscles need time to replenish glycogen stores. If you’ve done a resistance-training workout, your muscles also need time to repair.

Other Ways to Recover after a Workout

It’s important to replace lost fluids as quickly as possible. You can get a rough idea of how much fluid you’ve lost by weighing yourself before and after a workout. Eating a carbohydrate and protein meal within a one hour “window period” after exercise helps to speed amino acids to your muscles and replenish glycogen stores more quickly. It’s also important to get enough sleep. Lack of sleep raises cortisol levels. This interferes with recovery and increases your risk for infection by suppressing your immune system. If you do high-intensity workouts, sleep should be a priority.

The Bottom Line?

Keep these tips in mind when you’re doing interval workouts or taking a recovery day. Whether it’s passive or active, your body needs time to rest and recover.

References:

Canadian Journal of Applied Physiology, 1993, 18(1): 31-42, 10.1139/h93-004.

Med Sci Sports Exerc 2004; 36(2):302-308.

Sports Science Exchange. 87:15. (2002)

Exercise Physiology. Fifth Edition. McArdle, Katch and Katch. (2001)

Read the full article.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Farmer’s Market Pizza on Whole Wheat Dough

Farmer’s Market Pizza on Whole Wheat Dough
You will love this pizza made on whole wheat dough with seed and Parmesan seasoned crust; featuring a tomato, garlic, olive oil and herb base replacing traditional sauce; and piled high with the season’s fresh veggies from the local farmer’s market!

Ingredients

Farmer’s Market Pizza on Whole Wheat Dough by FairLadyJ

Dough:
1 ¾ cups whole wheat flour
2 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
1 Tbsp active dry yeast
½ tsp salt
1 Tbsp sugar
1 Tbsp olive oil
2/3 cup hot water

Pizza “sauce” base:
1 Tbsp olive oil
1-3 garlic cloves, pressed (to your taste)
1 tsp sesame seeds
1 tsp chia seeds
¼ cup fresh grated parmesan cheese
1 tsp dried oregano
1-2 Tbsp fresh minced basil (or substitute with 1 tsp dried)
2 plum tomatoes, sliced as thinly as you can

1 cup part skim milk mozzarella cheese, shredded

Various farmer’s market vegetables:
Broccoli florettes, diced
Red onion, diced
Red bell pepper, diced
Green bell pepper, diced
Yellow squash, thinly sliced and halved
Zucchini, shredded
Mushrooms, sliced

Directions:

Making the dough:
Mix dry ingredients in a large bowl. By thoroughly combining the flour, gluten, yeast, salt, and sugar before adding the liquids, you reduce the kneading time necessary to make sure the yeast is totally incorporated in the dough. Add olive oil and hot water. Turn dough onto lightly floured surface and knead for 5 minutes. Spray a medium to large sized bowl with cooking spray. Place dough in bowl, lightly spray top of dough and cover with plastic wrap. Place in the refrigerator and allow it to rise overnight 16-20 hours. (i.e. If I make my dough between 8-9pm, we can eat pizza the next day as early as lunch 12-1pm or for dinner between 5-6pm.) This may sound labor intensive, but it really only takes 15 minutes to mix and knead the dough.

Preparing the gourmet pizza:
Heat oven to 425. Place dough on a 12″-14” pizza pan sprayed with cooking spray (I use a 13” pizza baking stone) and roll out until the dough reaches the edge of the pan. The extra gluten helps the wheat dough rise higher and stretch without tearing better, but may make rolling the dough difficult. If so, simply pick up the dough, place the fist of one hand in the center of the dough and pull gently at the edges rotating the dough so it is stretched evenly. Return dough to the pan. Using a fork, prick the dough all over. This will help keep the pizza flat by preventing large bubbles forming in the dough during baking which may cause your toppings to slide around. Let the dough rest while you prepare the toppings.

Wash, slice, and dice vegetables. Brush dough with 1 Tbsp olive oil all the way to the edge of the crust. Press garlic over dough and spread evenly with a rubber spatula over the center of the dough, do not extend to the crust. Sprinkle the edge of the crust only with sesame and chia seeds. Sprinkle parmesan cheese over entire pizza dough, including to the edge of the crust. Your crust is now completely seasoned and you can begin to assemble the center portion of the pizza. Sprinkle the oregano and basil evenly over the center of the dough. In a thin layer, arrange the very thinly sliced tomatoes over the center of the dough. Sprinkle mozzarella over tomatoes, add remaining veggies.

Bake for 15 minutes. Let pizza rest for 3-5 minutes so cheese can settle. Cut into 8 slices and serve.


Thursday, April 4, 2013

7 Ways Your Diet Can Cause Weight Gain

7 Ways Your Diet Can Cause Weight Gain

stressMost people who want to lose weight go on a diet.  Some start an exercise program.  Some simply improve their eating habits in hopes that small changes will lead to weight loss.  Most weight loss experts will tell you that these are reasonable steps to slim down and improve your health.  What they may not tell you is that those changes can also lead to weight gain.

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