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Eating According to Your Zodiac Sign

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If your zodiac sign determines your personality, your compatibility with others, and who you are in general, why shouldn’t it also determine which foods are best for you?  Next time you get the munchies, consider which foods might be a good fit for you, based on your sign. Whether or not you’re a believer, these delicious and healthful recipes are sure to please your palate.

Fire Signs: Don’t Burn Yourself Out

Aries

  • Eat: Brown rice, bananas, fruit juices, olives, tomatoes, onions, lettuce, cauliflower, cucumbers, spinach, radishes, broccoli, beans, lentils, pumpkin, walnuts, figs, dried apricots, garlic, and mustard
  • Avoid: Spicy food, salt, and alcohol

Leo

  • Eat: Whole grains, rice, citrus fruits, apples, peaches, root vegetables (e.g., potatoes, carrots, and radishes), spinach, broccoli, bitter greens (e.g., kale and mustard greens), nuts, almonds, sunflower seeds, and figs
  • Avoid: Spicy food, and dairy products

Sagittarius

  • Eat: Whole grains, whole-grain cereals, pears, apples, oranges, strawberries, root vegetables (e.g., potatoes, carrots, and radishes), onions, olives, figs, and garlic
  • Avoid: Spicy food, sweets, refined sugar, and alcohol 

Air Signs: Go Nuts

Gemini

  • Eat: Plums, oranges, grapefruit, grape juice, raisins, apples, lettuce, cauliflower, spinach, carrots, celery, green beans, tomatoes, vegan yogurt, almonds, cayenne, garlic, and ginger
  • Avoid: Coffee, root vegetables (e.g. potatoes and radishes), yeasty foods, and refined sugar

Libra

  • Eat: Whole grains, oats, apples, grapes, strawberries, raisins, steamed vegetables, spinach, tomatoes, peas, carrots, corn, nondairy cheeses, vegan yogurt, nuts, and almonds
  • Avoid: Alcohol, carbonated beverages, yeasty foods, and refined sugar

Aquarius

  • Eat: Apples, oranges, pears, steamed vegetables, cabbage, celery, corn, carrots, tomatoes, broccoli, soy yogurt, nuts, dates, figs, cayenne, garlic, ginger, and protein bars
  • Avoid: Coffee, yeasty foods, and refined sugar

 

Water Signs: Avoid the Oil

Cancer

  • Eat: Wheat, whole-grain rye, rice, oats, fruits, bananas, steamed vegetables, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, tomatoes, beets, pumpkins, cucumbers, seaweed, vegan yogurt, beans, and natural sugars
  • Avoid: Oily foods, salt, sweets, and refined sugar

Scorpio

  • Eat: Fruits, bananas, black cherries, coconut, steamed vegetables, green salads, leeks, cauliflower, onions, radishes, tomatoes, asparagus, cucumbers, beets, beans, lentils, and almonds
  • Avoid: Oily foods, yeasty foods, salt, sweets, and refined sugar

Pisces

  • Eat: Wheat, whole-grain cereals, rice, oats, fruits, apples, grapes, oranges, lemons, peaches, plums, steamed vegetables, spinach, onions, seaweed, beans, dates, and natural sugars
  • Avoid: Coffee, oily foods, yeasty foods, asparagus, salt, sweets, and refined sugar

 

Earth Signs: Keep Things Light

Taurus

  • Eat: Cranberries, asparagus, beets, cauliflower, cucumbers, spinach, onions, radishes, pumpkin, nuts, beans, and horseradish
  • Avoid: Rich and heavy foods, and excessive amounts of carbohydrates

Virgo

  • Eat: Whole grains and cereals, oats, fruit salads, fruit juices, lemon juice, bananas, oranges, leafy greens, vegetables with spices, sprouts, soups, teas, and almonds
  • Avoid: Rich and heavy foods, and chocolate

Capricorn

  • Eat: Rice, fruit salads, fruit juices, oranges, lemons, vegetables with spices, cabbage, corn, potatoes, sprouts, soups, teas, peanuts, figs, and flaxseeds
  • Avoid: Rich and heavy foods, spicy foods, and chocolate 

10 Horrifying Tortures Of Early Christians

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Early Christians sometimes faced persecution and even death for their beliefs. Many were tortured first; some were not. Of Jesus’s 11 disciples (not counting Judas) Peter, Simon the Zealot, Phillip, Jude the brother of James, and Andrew were all crucified in various parts of the world. Peter requested to be crucified upside down, a request the Romans were only too happy to grant. Andrew’s cross was in the shape of an X, which is now called St. Andrew’s Cross and appears on the Scottish flag.
This list contains 10 of the most bizarre and painful methods of torture inflicted upon the Christians of antiquity through the Early Middle Ages. Much of this information has been gleaned from John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs and corroborated elsewhere.

Cooked To Death

Saint Lawrence of Rome is more well known for the manner of his death than his ministry in life. When a Roman prefect demanded that the tithes of the Catholic Church be handed over to the Roman state, Lawrence brought forth his impoverished congregation, who he stated were the tithes, as the money had been given them for food. The infuriated prefect ordered metal plates to be set over a bed of coals and heated until they were red-hot. Lawrence was then bound and laid naked on them, face up. His flesh sizzled, smoked, and was burned black, yet Lawrence made no outcry, nor did he beg forgiveness from the prefect. He finally called in a clear voice, “I’m done on that side. Turn me over and eat.” He is now the patron saint of cooks.
Peter, a eunuch of Diocletian’s household, was discovered to be a Christian and cooked in the same manner as Lawrence.

Dragged To Death

Mark, who wrote the Gospel of Mark, founded the Christian Church in Alexandria and preached to the masses that they should give up their Egyptian gods and goddesses. It’s not clear how long he was able to keep this up, but he did convert many before A.D. 68, when an angry mob tied a rope around his neck and dragged him through the streets behind a chariot for two days without interruption. The dragging continued even after his death, until his bones were showing.
According to some sources, Hippolytus of Rome, an elder under Pope Pontian, was dragged to death behind a wild horse on the island of Sardinia. He is now the patron saint of horses. In 257, Saturninus of Toulouse was dragged behind a bullaround the city until the bull was chased down a flight of stone steps and Saturninus’s brain was dashed from his skull.
Julian the Apostate succeeded Constantius II (who succeeded his father, Constantine the Great) in 361. Julian restored the pagan religions to the empire and horribly persecuted Christians. Within two years, he was ordering them sought out and dragged to death in every city and along the caravan routes throughout Palestine.

Skinned

Removal of the skin is so excruciating that victims invariably passed out multiple times during the torture. To prevent this, they were usually hung upside down so the excess blood flow to their brains forced them to remain conscious. The skin is not easy to remove, and torturers rarely made an effort to remove it in one piece unless they wanted a trophy. Typically, the skin was sliced into strips, then each strip peeled from the body with the aid of a knife. Often, the skin was thrown into a fire or to animals, or dangled before the victim’s eyes.
This is how Bartholomew, one of the 12 apostles, was killed by locals in Armenia, into whose language he translated Matthew’s Gospel. The Armenians refused to abandon their idols and executed Bartholomew by crucifying him upside down and skinning him.

Sewn Into Skins And Eaten By Dogs

This torture was devised by Nero himself, not merely to cause Christians pain but to entertain him and his guests. Nero was infamously rumored to have crucified Christians on trees in his gardens, coated them with wax, and set them on fire to light his nightly walks (he evidently didn’t mind the stench). Others he ordered sewn into hides—any large animal was skinned, and the prepared skin sewn around the victim except for the head, hands, and feet. Then ravenous dogs were set loose. The victim could only scuttle around on all fours like a crab. Nero was said to have laughed heartily as the dogs gnawed at the skin as they would a bone.
Julian of Antioch was tortured every day for an entire year and displayed to the crowds in every town in Cilicia, (a southern coastal region of what is now Turkey). He was then sewn into a skin filled with asps and scorpions and flung into the Aegean Sea. He was said to have floated all the way across the Mediterranean to Alexandria, Egypt.

Starved To Death

Emperor Decius ruled from 249 to 251, when he was killed at the Battle of Abrittus in Bulgaria. During his short reign, he had a temple built in Ephesus and required that all Christians sacrifice for the good of the emperor (not “to” the emperor, since this would impute divinity to Decius, who was still alive). This was against Roman law, but the Christians largely considered any similar sacrifice counter to their faith and refused, even when warned that they would be tortured to death. Pope Fabian himself was beheaded over the issue.
The next year, seven of Decius’s best soldiers, Constantinus, Dionysius, Malchus, Martianus, Maximianus, Joannes, and Seraion, were discovered to be Christian converts. Decius attempted to bribe them back to the Roman faith by giving them a long furlough while he was away. They fled the area and hid in a cave. Upon Decius’s return, he was told of their whereabouts and had the cave sealed. All seven died from starvation or dehydration. There is a legend, similar to Rip van Winkle, that these seven men fell asleep and woke up 360 years later, exited the cave and amazed the people in the town.

Boiled To Death

Boiling water causes almost instant first-degree burns and will cause third-degree burns after 10 minutes. Eventually, the flesh will slough away deep into the muscle, and death is usually marked by the water turning red as it finally breaches the blood vessels. Tradition holds that John the Apostle, who wrote the Gospel of John, survived without harm after being boiled in a cauldron of oil, after which he was exiled to Patmos Island in the Aegean.
In 222, a woman named Cecilia, possibly Saint Cecilia, was boiled in a bathtub over a bed of coals for a day and a half, after she converted her husband and brother. They were beheaded, as was the captain who led them to their deaths, because he converted in view of the victims’ fearlessness. After Cecilia was drawn alive from the tub, she is said to have sung a song of praise to God, which is why she is the patron saint of music. She was then beheaded. This inspired the Second Nun’s Tale in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.

The Inquisition’s Auto Da Fe

Rizi_Francisco,_Autodafe_-_Plaza_Mayor_(Madrid)
By the 13th century, everybody expected the Spanish Inquisition. The church formed inquisitions in every country in Western Europe, but the Spanish was the most brutal and feared. Anyone found guilty even of reading the Bible in his or her own language was tried, usually convicted, and often executed. The ceremony of execution and torture was called an “Auto da Fe,” or “Act of Faith.” The Inquisition was required not to spill any blood in performing tortures, but this requirement was usually ignored.
The most common method called for the victim to be stripped to his underwear and laid face-up on an elevated platform. Thin cords were passed through holes and wrapped around the limbs, then drawn so tightly that they cut through the victim’s flesh to the bones. If no confession was made, the process was repeated up to four times. If this elicited no confession, the next stage involved folding the arms backward behind the victim with the palms outward, then both arms were tied to a winch that ratcheted them closer and closer until the backs of the hands touched. This ripped both shoulders out of the sockets with such pressure that blood spewed from the mouth. A surgeon would then set the joints and the victim was given two months in prison to recover.
Two months later, the last torture involved a heavy chain lashed around the body with both ends attached to a winch. The arms were pinned straight at the sides and the chain was passed around the wrists. Then it was tightened like a tourniquet until the shoulders and wrists dislocated. The joints were then reset, and the torture immediately inflicted a second time. If the victim still did not confess, he was sent to be burned at the stake. If he did, he was placed in prison for another month or two, then released a cripple.

Ground To Death In A Mill

Under the rule of Maximian, Saint Victor Maurus may have suffered the most excruciating death of all. He secretly ministered to his parishioners in Milan until about 303, when he was discovered and immediately dragged through the streets behind a horse while the crowds stripped him naked and beat him, then demanded he recant. He refused and was stretched on the rack for a day, during which time he prayed to God for patience. He was then imprisoned—and immediately converted three of his guards. When Maximian heard of this, he ordered the guards beheaded, and Victor racked again, while the torturers beat him savagely with clubs. He was ordered to recant and refused a third time. Maximian had a Roman altar built and ordered Victor to sacrifice incense on it to Jupiter. This enraged Victor, who kicked over the altar. Maximian furiously ordered the offending foot cut off, after which Victor was flung into a stone mill used to grind wheat into flour, and the torturers ground him to death.

Broken On The Wheel

The breaking wheel is a horribly painful method of torture in which the victim was tied to the side of a wheel laid flat on the ground. Then one of two methods was employed: Either the torturer used a sledgehammer to smash every limb to pulp, or the wheel was made to turn in transection with another, like gears, so that the victim’s body was crushed between them. No bone or section of bone was spared, except the torso and head to keep the victim alive. Sometimes the genitals were smashed. Then the victim was left in this condition to die from exposure, blood loss, or to be eaten by birds and ants.
This was the fate of a man called Peter, in Lampsacus, Mysia (now Lapseki in Turkey), in about 250. He was martyred along with three others: Paul, Andrew, and Dionisia. Dionisia was condemned to be raped to death, but tradition holds that an angel spared her and the three nominated rapists ran away in fear. She then escaped prison, but desired to be martyred like her friends and allowed the authorities to recapture her. She was beheaded, and Paul and Andrew were stoned. Peter was broken on the wheel, then beheaded.

Having Their Guts Eaten By Pigs

In 363, under Julian the Apostate, Saint Marcus was Bishop of Arethusa, a town near modern Apameia, Syria. Julian ordered Marcus to repair a dilapidated pagan temple, but Marcus destroyed it instead, then fled the city. He soon realized that his Christian followers would pay for what he had done if he did not return—and so he did. The enraged townspeople dragged him through the streets, stripped him naked, stabbed him all over his body with their pencils and quills, then smeared him with honey and suspended him in a basket in a town square, where the wasps and bees would swarm into the basket and devour him.
Several of his followers were discovered and dragged down by the mob, who ripped their bellies open with their bare hands. Corn was packed into their abdomens and pigs were set on them. The pigs devoured the corn—and their intestines.

Healthy On a Budget: 10 Incredibly Cheap Health Foods

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Our grocery stores are so awash in cheap, unhealthy food that nutritious eating has almost started to seem like a luxury pursuit. Eating a healthy, whole food diet can feel like something for those who have money to spend on organic vegetables and free-range meat, but tough for a family on a budget. But eating healthily does not have to be expensive. Happily, there are plenty of nourishing, delicious foods that cost next to nothing. Here are ten super-healthy ingredients that won’t break the bank. 

Cabbage

The humble cabbage is a thrifty cook's dream. A five pound head will generally set you back three dollars. In spite of it's low cost, it packs a nutritional punch, though. It's low in calories, but loaded with vitamins and minerals like Vitamins K and C, iron, calcium, and potassium.  

Parsley

Often used as a mere garnish, parsley is actually a nutritional dynamo, packed with antioxidants, and vitamins C and A. It's also an ingredient in traditional medicine, with proponents who claim it's useful in treating everything from gastrointestinal issues to menstrual problems. While those claims are hard to verify, at less than a dollar a bunch, it might be worth trying.  

Dried Beans

Protein is often the most expensive element of a meal, but beans are one of the rare exceptions. You can usually buy a one pound bag for a dollar (or less), which is much less than you'd pay for an equivalent amount of meat, but with much less fat and none of the cholesterol. In addition to protein, beans are also high in folate, iron, fiber, and other nutrients.  

Eggs

Even the most expensive organic free-range eggs come in at less than fifty cents an egg. And for that price, you get an exceptional source of protein that is high in B vitamins and anti-oxidants. They're also incredibly flexible and can be worked into almost any dish. 


Brown Rice

Rice provides so much energy at such low cost, it's the world's most widely eaten staple. Brown rice, which has not had the bran and germ removed is higher in minerals like magnesium and zinc than white rice and is also has a lower glycemic index, making it the healthier option.  

Bananas

Sweets have become too large a part of the American diet in part because they've grown so cheap. But if you want a low-cost treat, you don't have to go for something unhealthy. Bananas, which are high in potassium, vitamin B6, and vitamin C, make a wonderful treat at less than a quarter each.  

Carrots

We've all been told since childhood that carrots are good for eyesight, which turns out to be not exactly true. Nonetheless, they are excellent for you as they are high in vitamin A, thiamin, niacin, folate, vitamin B6, and a host of other nutrients.  

Rutabagas

High in vitamins C and B6 and minerals like calcium, magnesium, and phosphorous, the rutabaga is a nourishing vegetable with a unique taste that are excellent, boiled, roasted, or mashed. They keep wonderfully making them excellent for buying in bulk.  


Canned Sardines

Like many fish, sardines are high in healthy omega-3 fatty acids, but unlike many larger fish, they are low in mercury and PCBs. That makes them a wonderful choice, especially for women who are pregnant or nursing. Even better, canned sardines which can be eaten as is, cooked, added to a sauce, or almost anything else you can think of, are one of the most affordable fishes on the market.  

Sweet Potatoes

Being a hardy tuber that stores well makes sweet potatoes a lot cheaper than many other vegetables. And that's great news, because they are also loaded with potassium, Vitamin A, and fiber.

8 Citrus Fruits You Should Be Eating

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We all know about standard citrus fruits like oranges, clementines, and tangerines. They provide endless health benefits, making these sweet fruits an excellent go-to snack. But in case you’re getting a little tired of eating oranges every day, there is a wide variety of citrus fruits out there that may not even be on your radar. They also make great add-ons to meals and recipes. Check out these eight citrus fruits you should be eating. 

1. Blood oranges

While they sound a little unappetizing, blood oranges actually have excellent flavor. They taste like a mix between an orange and a raspberry. The rind and flesh are a deep red color, part of what contributes to their great taste. Your best chance to get a blood orange is at specialty supermarkets from November through May, Martha Stewart says. Try putting them in a salad, a delicious blood orange champagne cocktail, or include the fruits in a punch. 

2. Kumquats

These little fruits are bite size and should be eaten whole. The combination of bitter and sweet makes for a delicious snack: The flesh is bitter, but you get a hint of sweet from the rind.
Not a fan of a plain kumquat?
You can also use it in jams, desserts, and different breads. The tiny fruits also pack a powerful vitamin punch. They’re extremely rich in vitamin C, which helps fight infection-causing organisms in your body. It’s a great source of minerals, and the fruit’s antioxidants help combat cancer. s

3. Finger limes

“This oblong Australian fruit earned the name ‘citrus caviar’ for its pearl-like pulp filled with mouth-puckering juice,” according to a Women’s Health article. Not sure what to do with it? Try using its flesh for a nice garnish. 

4. Meyer lemons

Women’s Health reports that this lemon is known for tasting less acidic and much sweeter than a standard lemon. As you’re preparing for great-tasting summer drinks and desserts, consider using a Meyer lemon for lemonade or sorbets. “As a hybrid of a lemon and a mandarin, Meyers maintain many of the health-giving qualities of their citrus parents, blending the best of both worlds. Of course, they are an excellent source of vitamin C, which keeps our immunity in check,” Organic Authority says. A few bites of a Meyer lemon will help your body combat cancer and diseases, as well as slow the aging process. 

5. Key limes

This isn’t just a plain old lime: It’s smaller, juicier, and more acidic than other lime varieties. This is often a bartender’s top choice to accompany drinks, and it also is great to incorporate into desserts — who doesn’t enjoy a good key lime pie? 

6. Uniq fruits

While this pear-shaped fruit may look a little strange, it’s seedless and extremely juicy. Women’s Health says it tastes like a tangerine bathed in honey. The fruit is a Jamaican snack, according to the publication. 

7. Tangelos

A cross between a tangerine and a grapefruit, the tangelo has tons of sweetly tart juice. How can you tell if it’s a tangelo? Check for a bump on the end — tangelos all have a distinctive one. The juice makes for a great alternative to your standard orange juice. Tangelos are rich in dietary fiber and provide a wide variety of essential vitamins and minerals. 

8. Yuzus

There are a ton of great things that can be made with yuzu. For instance, it has a great-tasting juice, comparable to a lemon mixed with mandarin oranges, which can add a great flavor to pancake batter or even pesto. Ready for a little more of a challenge? Try using it as an ingredient in ponzu sauce. Just make sure to include it in your diet — its antioxidants help replenish dead skin cells. Yuzu has the ability to slow down skin aging, making skin look fresh and young. In addition, it’ll help your body fight cancer and heart disease.

7 Fruits and Vegetables that Reverse the Signs of Aging

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The human diet contains thousands of antioxidants--nutrients that may help do everything from preventing wrinkles to killing off cancerous cells. But while many foods from chocolate to popcorn promise these health benefits, your best bet for a long, vibrant future begins with produce. 
 

 

Tomatoes 
Lycopene, an antioxidant that can combat free radicals (molecules or ions that can damage healthy cells and suppress your immune system), gets the credit for tomatoes' ability to help protect against some cancers, including lung cancer. If possible, opt for Classica tomatoes--in a study of 13 tomato varieties, Classicas ranked highest in lycopene. 

Kale 
This popular leafy green is a major source of vitamin K (one cup cooked contains almost 12 times your recommended daily value), which may help ward off heart disease and osteoporosis. Ask for Winterbor kale at your local farmers' market--in addition to vitamin K, this variety contains high levels of fiber, which can help lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels. 

Eggplant 
The deep-purple skin gets its rich color and anti-aging power from nasunin, a nutrient that helps fight the spread of cancerous cells by cutting off the blood supply they need to multiply. Research also suggests that nasunin may slow the development of Alzheimer's disease by preventing free radicals from damaging neurons. 

Red Bell Pepper 
This immunity-boosting superstar contains roughly 60 percent more vitamin C--which triggers the production of white blood cells that fight off germs and bacteria--than its green counterpart. It may also keep you looking young: A study in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that people with diets high in vitamin C were less prone to wrinkles, possibly because the nutrient spurs the production of collagen. 

Blackberries 
Rutin, a potentially lifesaving flavonoid (a class of antioxidants) found in high levels in this flavorful fruit, may block an enzyme linked to the formation of blood clots, lowering the risk of heart attack or stroke, according to a 2012 study from Harvard Medical School. 

Basil 
One of the herb's medicinal properties comes from the antioxidant eugenol. Recent lab studies found that this compound sparks anticarcinogenic activity in cervical cancer cells, causing them to self-destruct. 

Brussels Sprouts 
Our cells are naturally equipped with tumor-suppressing genes, and the sulfur compounds found in Brussels sprouts may help those genes by blocking enzymes that promote tumor growth. A 2012 study also found that these sulfur compounds could play a key role in treating rheumatoid arthritis by reducing inflammation and activating cartilage-protecting proteins.

Strongest Antioxidant Foods In Your Diet

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 Blackberries

Researchers at the University of Oslo wanted to know which foods have the highest concentration of antioxidants, the natural chemicals in food that make it healthy and prevent disease, so they tested 1,113 common foods and drinks, from apples to waffles. Their findings: Ounce for ounce, spices, herbs, nuts, and seeds pack the most nutrients. But if we're talking typical serving size, berries (five different kinds) also dominate the top ranks. The most surprising find? Chocolate ice cream rated higher than fruits like honeydew and green grapes! Here, the best 10 foods to eat to "anti" up.

Blackberries
One cup of blackberries contains the most antioxidants of all the berries tested, beating out blueberries, strawberries, cranberries, and raspberries. Plus, one cupful provides half your daily recommended intake of vitamin C.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 62 calories, less than 1g fat, 14g carbohydrates, 7.6g fiber, 2g protein

Walnuts

Just an ounce of walnuts, or 15 to 20 halves, is loaded with antioxidants. They're also cholesterol-free and low in sodium and sugar. Nuts are laden with calories, though, so be mindful of your intake.

Nutrition facts (1 ounce): 185 calories, 18.5g fat (1.7g saturated fat), 4g carbohydrates, 8g fiber, 4g protein

Strawberries


Bursting with fiber and vitamin C (149 percent of your daily recommended intake!), a cup of sliced strawberries is a cup full of healthy benefits.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 49 calories, 0.5g fat, 11.7g carbohydrates, 3g fiber, 1g protein

Artichoke Hearts


Add a cup of antioxidant-rich artichoke hearts to your diet.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 70 calories, 0g fat, 11.5g carbohydrates, 4.5g fiber, 2.5g protein

Cranberries

One cup of whole cranberries is full of disease-fighting and health-boosting antioxidants.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 51 calories, 0.2g fat, 13.5g carbohydrates, 5g fiber, 1g protein

Brewed Coffee

Your morning cup of joe does more than perk you up -- it also boosts your health.

Nutrition facts (8 fluid ounces): 18 calories, 2mg sodium

Raspberries

Another super-healthy berry to add to your diet. One cup is loaded with vitamin C (54 percent of your daily recommended intake) and antioxidants.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 64 calories, 1g fat, 15g carbohydrates, 8g fiber, 1.5g protein

Pecans


As if you needed any more reason to take a bite out of that pecan pie. One ounce, or 20 jumbo kernels, of pecans is rich in antioxidants.

Nutrition facts (1 ounce): 196 calories, 20.5g fat (1.7g saturated), 3.9g carbohydrates, 2.7g fiber, 2.6g protein

Blueberries
This superfood is good for your health and can help protect your skin from premature aging.

Nutrition facts (1 cup): 83 calories, 0.5g fat, 21g carbohydrates, 3.5g fiber, 1.1g protein

Ground Cloves

Just a teaspoon of ground cloves can do wonders for your body. Spice up your meals and boost your health at the same time.

Nutrition facts (1 tablespoon): 21 calories, 1.3g fat (0.4g saturated), 4g carbohydrates, 2.3g fiber, 0.4g protein

The Bitter Truth About Splenda

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If you were told to ingest a biologically alien synthetic chemical whose presence on this planet did not predate 1976, and whose structure is only a few atoms away from the deadly pesticide DDT, and you knew that not only were there no long term human safety studies performed on it, but that it had been already proven in tests to have following adverse health effects .

· Shrunken thymus glands (up to 40% shrinkage)  
· Enlarged liver and kidneys. 
· Abnormal histopathological changes in spleen and thymus
· Increased cecal weight  
· Reduced growth rate 
· DNA Damage
· Adverse changes to gastrointestinal bacteria
· Abnormal Pelvic Mineralization
· Decreased red blood cell count  
· Hyperplasia of the pelvis 
· Aborted pregnancy (Maternal & Fetal Toxicity) 
· Decreased fetal body weights and placental weights  
· Bowel inflammation/Crohn's Disease
· Triggering migraine
· Increase glycosylation of hemoglobin (HbA1c) for diabetics 

...would you still consume it? Of course not! And yet, millions of Americans (including our precious children!) are doing exactly that by consuming Splenda. So, what is sucralose, chemically speaking?
Like "Splenda," the term "sucralose" is a cute little marketing ploy. The true name of this ugly little chemical is actually too long for the human tongue to comfortably pronounce (which is usually an excellent indication that it is not safe to ingest!) Go ahead and see if you can wrap your vocal chords around this phonetic monstrosity:

1,6-dichloro-1,6-dideoxy-BETA-D-fructofuranosyl-4-chloro-4-deoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranoside

Despite the intended insinuation, sucralose is not a form of sucrose (cane sugar). Sucralose/Splenda is produced through artificially substituting three hydroxyl groups (hydrogen + oxygen) with three chlorine atoms in the sugar (sucrose) molecule. Natural sugar is a hydrocarbon built around 12 carbon atoms. When transformed into Splenda it becomes a chlorocarbon, in the same family as deadly pesticides like DDT, insecticides, biocides, disinfectants like Chlorox Bleach, and WWI poison gas like dichlorourea.
The makers of sucralose/Splenda argue that this "remarkably stable" chemical passes unchanged into the urine and feces, when in fact, up to 11% to 27% is absorbed into the body (FDA, 1999). In fact, the varying degrees to which sucralose is absorbed is used as a marker for gut and intestinal permeability to determine certain disease states. Once absorbed, some portion of this chlorocarbon accumulates in the body (between 1.6% to 12.2%). What effects will these accumulated chemicals have? According to James Bowen, M.D:

"Any chlorocarbons not directly excreted from the body intact can cause immense damage to the processes of human metabolism and, eventually, our internal organs. The liver is a detoxification organ which deals with ingested poisons. Chlorocarbons damage the hepatocytes, the liver's metabolic cells, and destroy them. In test animals Splenda produced swollen livers, as do all chlorocarbon poisons, and also calcified the kidneys of test animals in toxicity studies."
How can this be true for an FDA approved sweetener?

FDA approval does not in any way guarantee safety... sadly enough, in many cases, it guarantees the exact opposite. Take aspartame for instance. Aspartame (Equal/NutraSweet) contains 10% methanol, which is broken down in our body into two extremely toxic substances: formaldehyde and formic acid. There are over 30 known adverse health effects associated with its consumption! This sweetener gained FDA approval in 1981, despite appalling evidence linking it to cancer, particularly, brain cancer.

So, if Splenda is not a viable alternative to sugar, what can we use instead?
When one uncouples the experience of "sweetness" from caloric content, the body becomes confused because it does not receive nourishment and therefore will not attain satiety – this, in turn, leads to overindulgence. Indeed, new studies have shown exactly this: those who consume synthetic sweeteners are more prone to obesity. What this means is that when we ingest something sweet, it should also have caloric and nutritional content. Anything less than this equation is a recipe for failure and ill health.

Thankfully Nature provides us with a veritable cornucopia of healthy sweeteners: honeysteviaxylitol,erythritol, and dehydrated organic cane juice, all of which are available at your local health food store. Next time that sweet tooth calls, remember not to succumb to advertising hype which would convert poisonous chemicals into "magical" no-calorie sweeteners. Use both common sense and a sense of moderation, and your body will thank you.

Food That's Pretty Much Guaranteed To Give You A Heart Attack (18 pics)

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Do you like trying new foods? Are you looking for something outrageous and delicious? These foods might be delicious but they're also pretty much guaranteed to give you a heart attack.



















What A $32 Million Dollar House Looks Like (35 pics)

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This $32 million dollar home is no joke. Built on 17 acres of land in Scottsdale, AZ this thing is fit for a king. With the McDowell Mountains as your background and architecture this majestic, who wouldn't want to live here.



































Totally Bad Ass Facts That Are Totally True (12 pics)

The 10 Most Useful Medicinal Plants For Your Garden

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There’s no better way to use whatever extra space you have at home than to create a garden space where you can grow medicinal plants.
In fact, even if you live in an apartment setting, you can create a windowsill garden where you can grow medicinal plants.
This is especially useful if you have little kids running around in the house who can acquire a burn, a shallow wound, a sore or strike up a fever.
Basically, the medicinal plants to grow in your very own little garden space should be ones with the most number of medicinal values.

Factors that You Need to Consider when Growing Medicinal Plants in a Garden

Before giving out the top 10 medicinal plants that you can grow in your very own garden, here are a few tips to get you started.
First, check on the area where you plan to grow the medicinal plants in. Will you be having a mini-garden or would you like to turn your lawn into a virtual resource of medicinal plants which you can call your very own backyard pharmacy?
After analyzing the extra space that you have, consider other factors like sunlight, water, type of soil, type of container and the time of the year when the medicinal plants will thrive the most.
By taking these factors into account, you can rest assured that your medicinal plants will be thriving in the mini-garden that you will create just for them.

TOP 10 MEDICINAL PLANTS FOR YOUR GARDEN SPACE

Now that you already have an idea about the gardening basics, what exactly are the valuable medicinal plants that you can grow right in your very own garden space? Take a look at the following list:

1. Aloe Vera

If there’s one medicinal plant which has 101 uses, that is none other than aloe vera.
Let’s say that you or a kid in your home suffered from a minor burn, you can use the bottom stalk of aloe vera as a soothing balm by rubbing the exposed end on the burn.
Aside from minor cuts and wounds, this medicinal aloe vera is also great for burns, treating eczema and reducing inflammation.
Did you know that this medicinal plant can even be taken internally? You can actually drink aloe vera juice and use it to treat digestive problems, ulcerative colitis, chronic constipation and poor appetite. This plant grows well under the sun, so it works best for outdoor gardens.

2. Great Burdock

Also called edible burdock or Lappa burdock, this medicinal plant is actually used as a root vegetable. In traditional medicine, the Great Burdock is used as a blood purifying agent, a diuretic and a diaphoretic.

Aside from being medicinal, this plant also has great aesthetic value because of its purple-and-green thorny flowers which looks great against any garden.
If you would like to add this medicinal plant to your backyard pharmacy, this can actually grow even without shade; just make sure that the soil is always moist so that the plant will thrive. Other uses for this medicinal plant include boils, rashes, bruises, burns, acne, ringworm and bites.

3. Pot Marigold

The good thing about growing this medicinal plant in your garden is that it can thrive under any soil condition.

As long as you make sure that the Pot Marigold grows in moist soil, it will very easily thrive. It’s also a great-looking addition to your garden aesthetically because of its deep-orange color.
So what are the main uses of Pot Marigold medicinal plants? It can help heal bites, stings, sprains, sore eyes, wounds and even varicose veins. When taken internally, this medicinal plant can be used to treat chronic infections and fever.

4. Chamomile

One of the medicinal plants, chamomile can help treat more than 100 separate ailments and conditions including the common cold, digestive problems, diarrhea, eczema, gastrointestinal conditions, mucositis, toothache, earache, shoulder pain and the common wounds.

What’s good about chamomile is that planting them in your backyard will add a crisp and fruity fragrance to your garden.

5. Echinacea

This lovely-colored flowering medicinal plant is considered to be one of the world’s most important medicinal herbs. It’s actually an herbaceous plant which has several different species.

What makes the Echinacea plant a handy medicinal plant to be around is the fact that it has a wide array of uses, including the treatment of sores, burns, wounds, allergy relief, insect bites, stings and snakebites. This type of medicinal plants also have the ability to help relieve allergies by strengthening immune system.

6. Great Yellow Gentian

Also called the Great Yellow Gentian, this medicinal plant comes from the mountains of southern and central Europe. It is actually a bitter herb which is used in traditional medicine, and its main function includes the treatment of digestive problems.

This type of medicinal plants also aids in the relief of exhaustion from chronic diseases, it stimulates the gal bladder and liver while at the same time strengthening the body.

7. Tea Tree

Look at the ingredients of any over-the-counter medicinal product or beauty product and you will see how tea tree oil is usually listed as one of its main ingredients. This just goes to show how useful the tea tree plant is medicinally.

Tea tree oil comes from the leaves and twigs of the tea tree plant. It has a great many uses, including the treatment of acne, vaginal infections, athlete’s foot, warts, insect bites, cold sores, minor burns, thrush and chronic fatigue syndrome.

8. Peppermint

There’s probably no better-smelling plant that you can grow in your garden than peppermint. It’s considered to be the world’s oldest medicine which has been used by people from the ancient times to relieve whatever it is that is bothering them medically.

What makes peppermint such a medicinal garden essential is the fact that it is naturally rich in vitamins A and C, manganese and it helps reduce a number of symptoms including irritable bowel syndrome, upset stomachs, fevers, flatulence and spastic colon.

9. Ginseng

Ginseng is one of the most beloved and popular medicinal plants in eastern countries. What makes ginseng such a great addition to your medicinal plants garden is the fact that it promotes general health instead of just being useful for a particular type of ailment.

It’s the root of the ginseng which is particularly useful in relaxing the nervous system. It also helps reduce cholesterol levels, improve your immune system and stamina, and helps treat lack of appetite and sleep disorders.

10. Sage

Both a cooking herb and a medicinal plant, sage is a great salve for insect bites, skin infections, gum infections and mouth infections. It can also help with indigestion, flatulence, depression and even menopausal problems.

The Latin name, where sage was derived from, means ‘to heal’, which is an apt description for many ailments that can be resolved using this lush herb which doubles up as a medicinal plant.
These are just some of the top herbal medicinal plants which can serve as a great addition to your garden space. Aside from giving your dwelling that green and homey feel, these medicinal plants have a variety of uses for whatever it is that is ailing you.

The Amazing Brain Benefits of Going Grain-Free

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Since the Wheat Belly revolution, people all over the world have reported amazing results: being able to reverse type 2 diabetes, shedding layers of dangerous visceral body fat that encases the organs, and revving up to super-charged energy levels. But we started to wonder…how does ditching wheat—and all grains for that matter—impact the brain? We turned to William Davis, MD, best-selling author ofWheat Belly and the mastermind behind the new Wheat Belly Total Health, to learn more about the benefits of the grainless brain.
The concept is quite simple—although removing grains from your life could be a bit tough, thanks to the fact that they're in so many foods and we've become addicted to them. That's where Dr. Davis' new total health plan comes into play. "Remove grains from your diet, and your brain is released from the control of their mind-active components. It is liberating, wonderful, and empowering," he says. "Your brain can be restored to its normal alert, energetic, calculating, and creative state."
Dr. Davis explains the incredible ways your brain could heal (after withdrawal) when you cut grains from your diet:
Improved Mood
Addicted to bread? That could be while you're feeling lousy most of the time. Once the depression that can accompany the withdrawal that affects about 40 percent of people going grain-free is past, there is typically a substantial lifting of mood. This develops due to the removal of gliadin and other prolamin protein-derived exorphins, as well as increased levels of brain serotonin.
People are happier and more optimistic, and they become better engaged with the people and activities in their lives. Some people experience such dramatic improvements of mood that they are able to free themselves from suicidal thoughts and antidepressant medications, Dr. Davis notes.
Be careful returning to wheat and other grains when you've been off of them, though. "Dark, suicidal thoughts appear to be among the most easily re-provoked thoughts with any grain reexposure. People who experience this effect, for instance, report being plagued by a week of suicidal thoughts after a single intentional or inadvertent episode of grain exposure," Dr. Davis says. "Meticulous avoidance is therefore key." 
(He notes that anyone taking an antidepressant medication will need to consult with his or her healthcare provider before any effort to reduce or change medication is undertaken, as a trained healthcare professional is required to make good decisions in this area.)
Reduced Anxiety
Unfortunately, low-level anxiety plagues many people. Dr. Davis says that typically, such anxieties recede with grain removal. For some, the effect can be dramatic and life changing, sometimes even providing relief from years of phobias such as agoraphobia, the fear of leaving home, or claustrophobia, the fear of closed spaces. (Grain does more than impact your brain. It could be the root of your annoying skin problems, too!)
Lifted Mind Fog
Like the lifting of mood, a lifting of mind fog is also a common grain-free experience. People report that they are better able to concentrate for prolonged periods and are able to think more clearly, make decisions more easily, and speak more effectively. Writers are able to write for longer periods; artists are able to draw, paint, or compose more easily; businesspeople can engage in discussion, perform at meetings, and prepare documents more effectively; and athletes are able to sustain concentration for a longer time and become less reliant on performance crutches such as energy drinks and protein bars. This effect applies to children just as much as adults. Some of the most dramatic stories I've heard have come from parents who report that their children's school performance skyrocketed when they were freed from the fogginess of grain consumption.
Enhanced Learning
Restoration of the capacity for prolonged concentration, clearer thinking, and reduced distractibility add up to an enhanced ability to learn. People listen more effectively, retain more with reading, acquire and synthesize data and concepts with greater ease, and enjoy enhanced recall. They are more focused, more creative, and more effective.
Reversal of Seizures
As seizures have been associated with grain consumption, especially consumption of wheat, removal of grains can be associated with relief from seizures if grains were the initiating cause. "Most commonly, sufferers of temporal lobe seizures experience a marked reduction or complete relief from these episodes. Although the causal association between grains and grand mal seizures is more tenuous, I am hearing from more and more people who have experienced marked relief from these dangerous events, as well," Dr. Davis says.
Reversal of Neurological Impairment
Dr. Davis reports that people with cerebellar ataxia usually experience a slow, gradual improvement in coordination, balance, capacity to walk, and bladder control, or at least experience no further deterioration, after grains are eliminated. "Likewise, the pain or impaired feelings of peripheral neuropathy recede slowly or stop progressing," he says. "Because the nervous system is slow to heal and may do so imperfectly, the process can take months to years, so a long-term commitment is required to gauge improvement. This is very important to recognize, as some people eliminate grains and report two weeks later that grain elimination didn't work for them."
Dr. Davis notes that even multiple sclerosis, which results from autoimmune destruction of the myelin covering of nerve tissue, can slowly improve or reverse. "It's also critical that you simultaneously correct vitamin D deficiency, as preliminary studies suggest a powerful relationship between vitamin D and this condition.
Prevention of Dementia
There's a lot we don't know about the causes of dementia, but one thing is clear. Chronically high blood sugar levels can fuel the development of dementia. One important way to stabilize your blood sugar is to give up blood sugar-spiking grains, Dr. Davis says. "Grain elimination is a powerful means of reversing high fasting and after-meal blood sugars," he explains. "Some people are also prone to the autoimmune process triggered by the gliadin and prolamin proteins that leads to dementia; it is likewise turned off with elimination of the inciting grains." 
Wheat Belly Total Health Top Tips for Going Grain-Free
1. Start Phase 1 food eliminations. Get ready for a life-changing event on par with birth and marriage! The plan is simple: Eliminate grains, eat real, single-ingredient foods, and manage your carbohydrates. For starters, try eliminating some of the things on this list:
All wheat-based products:
• Breads
• Breakfast cereals
• Noodles
• Pasta
• Bagels
• Muffins
• Pancakes
• Waffles
• Doughnuts
• Pretzels
• Cookies
• Crackers
• Wheat-brewed beers
• Wheat-brewed liquors
• Bulgur and triticale (both offspring of wheat)
All rye products:
• Rye bread
• Pumpernickel bread
• Crackers
• Rye whiskey
• Rye vodka
All barley products:
• Barley
• Barley breads
• Soups with barley
• Beers made with barley malt
All corn products:
• Corn
• Cornstarch
• Cornmeal products (chips, tacos, tortillas)
• Grits
• Polenta
• Sauces or gravies thickened with cornstarch
• Corn syrup
• High-fructose corn syrup

2. Choose a non-stressful period to experience withdrawal. Leg cramps, crankiness, mood swings—these are all common symptoms of grain withdrawal. "If you have the luxury of managing your time, choose a period when you don't anticipate high stress," Dr. Davis recommends. "Don't choose, for instance, the week an annoying mother-in-law is planning to visit, the start of a new and challenging project at work, or the week before your dissertation is due. Ideally, choose a long weekend or vacation."
He also recommends pampering yourself during this phase of the Wheat Belly Total Health plan. "Watch movies, laugh, enjoy a glass of wine, lie in the sun, get a massage. Like a bad hangover, this will pass," he says.
3. Hydrate. The precipitous drop in insulin caused by removing grains also reverses the sodium retention of wheat and grain consumption, causing fluid loss (diuresis) and a reduction in inflammation, Dr. Davis notes. "If you don't compensate by hydrating more than usual over the first few days, you may experience light-headedness, nausea, and leg cramps," he says.  (If you're hydrated, your urine should be nearly clear, not a dark, concentrated yellow.) A great habit to start the day right is to drink 16 ounces (2 cups) of water immediately upon awakening, since we awake dehydrated after lying supine and mouth-breathing for eight or so hours.
4. Use some salt. Specifically, sprinkle sea salt or another mineral-containing salt on your food to compensate for the loss of urinary salt that develops due to the drop in insulin levels, Dr. Davis says. "Salt, along with water, addresses the light-headedness and leg cramps that commonly occur during withdrawal," he explains.
5. Supplement. Magnesium deficiency is common, especially in people who have consumed grains for a long period of time, and it can magnify some of the symptoms of withdrawal from grains, particularly leg cramps and sleep disruptions. "Among the best absorbed is magnesium malate at a dose of 1,200 milligrams (mg) two or three times per day. (This is the weight of the magnesium plus the malate, not just "elemental" magnesium; this provides 180 mg of elemental magnesium per 1,200-mg tablet or capsule.)
"I advise patients to also supplement iodine with inexpensive drops, capsules, or kelp tablets (dried seaweed) at a dosage of 500 micrograms (mcg) per day, which is more than the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) of 150 mcg per day and, I believe, closer to the ideal intake," he says.
6. Consume fats, oils, and proteins liberally. "Do what your grandmother did and eat the skin and dark meat on your chicken, and ask for the liver," Dr. Davis says. (Just make sure it comes from grass-fed animals!)
Save the bones and boil them for soup or stock, and don't skim off the fat or gelatin when it cools, he adds. Dr. Davis also advocates for adding olive and coconut oil to your meals, and making smoothies and salads with good-fat foods like avocados.
"Remember: Fat consumption does not make you fat, nor does it cause heart disease," he says. "Bury that bit of nonsense with the 'healthy whole grain' fiction."
7. Take a probiotic. Dr. Davis says to try getting 30 to 50 billion CFUs (colony-forming units, the measure used to quantify bacterial numbers) or more per day, and look for a supplement containing mixed species of lactobacillus and Bifidobacteria.
Yogurt and fermented foods can be helpful, but aren't powerful enough for repairing the damage done by grains, he says. "While fermented sources of healthy bacteria (such as yogurt, kimchi, or kombucha) can be modestly helpful long-term, they are insufficient in the special situation of grain withdrawal, during which rapid repopulation with a broad range of species is desired."

The Seafood You Should (and Shouldn't) Eat

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Eat Fish to Save Fish?

To save the oceans—and our health—we need to eat more fish. The right fish. That's the mantra behind the new book The Perfect Protein, written by Andy Sharpless, the fearless leader of Oceana, the largest international organization focused solely on ocean conservation. Intrigued? So were we.

We tracked down Sharpless to learn more about his innovative concept for preserving ocean life, beating the obesity epidemic on land, and feeding the world by shifting diets to the best fish.

"The world's industrial-scale commercial fishing fleets have basically overfished the oceans," he says. "That comes down to fishing above scientifically recommended catch limits, destroying nursery habitats for young fish, and catching non-target species and discarding them at sea—bycatch."

If we want to have healthy fish left to eat, we need to know which ones to indulge in, which ones to enjoy occasionally, and which ones to avoid. Sharpless shares his recommendations…

YES: Sardines & Anchovies

Simple Rule: Stay small—eat the little fish.

What It Means: Smaller species reproduce really quickly, and in most cases are an abundant, strong, and fertile part of the food chain, Sharpless says. In fact, little fish could feed millions of people sustainably and healthily if well managed. "The lower down on the food chain, the smaller your footprint on nature," he adds. "If you can develop an appetite and taste for them, you'll have a lot to choose from, they're cheaper, and they're better for nature."

YES: Mackerel

Simple Rule: Eat wild, not organic.

What It Means: Wild Atlantic mackerel is rich in omega-3s that help your brain fire at full. Atlantic mackerel is low in contaminants, too, making it a strong seafood pick for you and the planet.

Bonus tip? Beware of "organic" seafood. Although there are some organic fish farms outside of the country, they aren't certified by U.S. authorities. Instead of organic, look for healthy wild picks listed in reliable seafood guides.


YES: Oysters, Mussels, & Clams

Simple Rule: Enjoy lots of shellfish.

What It Means: Generally speaking, Sharpless says most shellfish are a good choice. Oysters, mussels, and clams—farmed or wild—help improve water quality and, because of their shorter lifespans, tend to accumulate fewer contaminants, he says. Scallops are a little trickier; you'll want to look for diver- or day-boat-caught scallops, ones caught with minimal impact on the environment.

SOMETIMES: Wild-Caught Alaskan Salmon

Simple Rule: Eat big fish mindfully and rarely.

What It Means: Just like birthday cake should be an occasional treat, so should healthy big-fish picks like Alaskan wild-caught salmon. Larger fish take years to reproduce, and chronic overfishing has left many big-fish species in major peril. Orange roughy, for instance, can live to be 100 years old and only start reproducing at age 40. Overharvesting young roughy has left the species in limbo.

Also noteworthy? Big fish, the head honchos of the food chain, often contain higher levels of contaminants like mercury because they accumulate up the food chain. (Wild-caught Alaskan salmon is an exception, and a healthy choice.)

NO: Shrimp

Simple Rule: Bycatch means shrimp must be bygones.

What It Means: "If you want to be a responsible seafood eater, you have to say good-bye to shrimp," Sharpless says, noting that shrimp fleets tend to catch a lot of other things in their nets, too. American data show shrimp catches contain 5 pounds of non-shrimp species per pound of shrimp. "Much is dumped out on the deck, damaged, injured, killed, or discarded at sea," Sharpless says. When you eat shrimp, you're responsible in part for 5 pounds of bycatch, including sea turtles and pretty much any other type of fish in the Gulf.

Farmed shrimp isn't any better. It's been found to harbor banned antibiotics—even ones that could cause cancer—pesticides, and bits of insects.

NO: Farmed Salmon

Simple Rule: Eat wild seafood.

What It Means: One-third of all fish caught in the world are turned into fish meal or oil; of that, 81 percent goes to farmed fish like salmon. It takes 5 pounds of wild fish to produce 1 pound of farmed salmon, not a favorable footprint on nature. Plus, farmed salmon tends to be full of parasitic sea lice, requiring the treatment of high-dose toxic chemicals. 

NO: Chilean Sea Bass & Bluefin Tuna

Simple Rule: Don't eat imperiled fish.

What It Means: Overfishing has brought Chilean sea bass and Bluefin tuna to the brink of collapse. And put quite simply, there just aren’t that many big fish left in the ocean.

The good news is if we avoid these species now and embrace science-backed numbers when figuring out how much to take from the ocean, we could one day enjoy these species again. "The purpose of good ocean management is to make sure there's enough in the bank account to make sure after the catch there's enough left in water for next year,” Sharpless says.


Stress No More! Try These 30 Calming Foods

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Swiss Chard

This versatile leafy green is loaded with magnesium, which is considered by many nutrition experts as the ultimate “anti-stress” mineral. “Magnesium helps muscles and nerves relax,” says Rachel Fiske, a nutrition consultant and personal trainer in San Francisco, CA. According to Fiske, a deficiency in magnesium can lead to high blood pressure, unregulated blood sugar and headaches. Talk about stress.
To de-stress: Steam, lightly sauté or toss one cup of Swiss chard into a good, hearty soup (right before serving) to reap the benefits.

Cauliflower

Cauliflower is high in fiber, which promotes healthy digestion and elimination. If stress causes constipation or other digestive problems, bulk up on this veggie.
To de-stress: Steam half a cup of cauliflower and mash (as you would potatoes) with some olive oil and spices and serve it as a guilt-free side dish to basically any entrée!

Spinach

With a laundry list of micronutrients such as vitamins A, C, K and folate and minerals like manganese and iron, spinach should be the top staple in everyone’s diet. But in times of stress, the adrenal glands (where stress hormones are stored) tend to be particularly depleted of their normally high levels of vitamin C.
To de-stress: Replace iceberg lettuce with spinach next time you make a salad for a more nutrient-dense option.

Pumpkin Seeds

“Zinc is essential for immune health and stress management, particularly in our fast-paced urban lifestyles,” says Fiske. And pumpkin seeds are chock full of it! Symptoms of a zinc deficiency include loss of appetite, irritability and depression. So a handful of pumpkin seeds now and then isn't a bad idea.
To de-stress: Toss a quarter cup in a salad for some extra crunch…and to keep your zinc reserve high. You can also try roasting the seeds and tossing them with olive oil and a sprinkle with salt for a satisfying snack.

Broccoli

With more vitamin C than an orange, broccoli is also a rich source of vitamin A and potent antioxidants that help your body manage everyday stress.
To de-stress: Steam (rather than boil) to retain more of broccoli’s important nutrients, or eat raw with your favorite dip as an afternoon snack. A one cup serving of this super food delivers pretty much every stress-managing nutrient you need. So, listen to your mom! Eat your broccoli.

Tuna

A great protein source, tuna also contains omega-3 fatty acids (the “good fats” that Americans are not consuming enough of). Think of the omega-3 fats as a natural anti-inflammatory. When stress is present (especially chronic stress), inflammation can take place throughout the body.
To de-stress: Four ounces of this flavorful fish is enough to provide these stress-supportive benefits.

Asparagus

This spring vegetable is not only high in antioxidants (ideal for combating oxidative stress) but also a good source of tryptophan, an important amino acid that the body uses to make serotonin, which helps us sleep and supports a healthy mood. “Serotonin deficiency is the most common cause of panic attacks,” says Julia Ross, author of The Mood Cure. Whether you have a full-blown anxiety or panic attack or are simply just experiencing too much stress, eat more serotonin-containing foods.
To de-stress: Slice asparagus thin and enjoy raw with your favorite dressing or lightly steam or boil it (make sure it retains its natural crunch and color) and add to a pasta dish or salad. Just one cup should help you restore your mood-enhancing serotonin levels.

Nutritional Yeast

You may think of it as just “hippie food,” yet this nutritional powerhouse has stress-relieving B vitamins and 15 minerals, including magnesium, selenium and zinc. “It boosts metabolism and is beneficial for stabilizing blood sugar and weight loss,” says Susan Arthur, a nutrition consultant in Aptos, CA.
To de-stress: Sprinkle about one tablespoon on popcorn for a faux-cheese healthy snack. Warning: You might get addicted!

Bell Peppers

Thanks to their high vitamin C content (291 percent of the RDA), bell peppers are a good anti-stress food. They’re also low in calories (red bell peppers are only 25 calories per cup) and high in dietary fiber, putting them on the top of George Mateljan's The World’s Healthiest Foods list.
To de-stress: Add one cup to your favorite salsa recipe for extra stress-support…and an unexpected twist.


Parsley

This member of the carrot family delivers an astounding amount of stress-busting nutrients like flavonoids, a type of antioxidant found in plants that protect against free-radical damage (which are the result of stress) and vitamins A and C. Your body will thank you for all of the protective powers it provides.
To de-stress: Add a handful to your next smoothie. Trust us, it’s more delicious than you think!


Strawberries

The phytonutrients in strawberries that give this sweet fruit their vibrant color are antioxidants that help control stress-related inflammation.


Salmon

Like tuna, wild caught salmon (as opposed to farmed) is high in omega-3 fatty acids, which contribute to a healthy mood and optimal brain function. Try eating more salmon to keep your cognitive abilities sharp and your attitude positive as you battle the week ahead.
To de-stress: Again, just four ounces of this brain food will do.

Coconut Water

High in potassium and magnesium, coconut water is naturally fortified with minerals and free of added sugar. It’s particularly good post-exercise for rehydrating and re-energizing.
To de-stress: Choose an unsweetened 100 percent pure brand with no added preservatives or flavorings. Be sure to check the label! For best results, enjoy 8 to 12 ounces daily.


Sardines

These small fatty fish are a wonderful source of brain-boosting omega-3 fatty acids, says Ross. Plus, it’s just a handy protein to have in the pantry.
To de-stress: Spoon some of the fish on a cracker and season with freshly ground black pepper and a little cayenne for an appetizer


Tulsi Tea

Also known as holy basil, tulsi tea is revered in India and touted for its many medicinal and nutritive properties. Several studies show that it can decrease stress hormones and corticosteroids, lower levels of which are associated with improved mental clarity and memory, says Chris Kilham, an ethnobotanist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
To de-stress: Steep a teabag for two to five minutes and sip, either hot or cold. Enjoy 2 to 4 cups for optimal benefits.


Walnuts

High in omega-3 fatty acids, B vitamins and magnesium (all of which support metabolism, reduce stress and improve mood), walnuts provide excellent nutrition for the brain,” says Arthur.
To de-stress: Mix a quarter cup of walnuts into a salad or cereal for additional texture and brain-boosting power.


Turkey

This white meat is a good source of l-tryptophan, the precursor to serotonin and a “feel good” hormone responsible for promoting restful, rejuvenating sleep and fending off depression and suboptimal moods.
To de-stress: Roast 4 ounces of organic or free-range turkey and slice up for sandwiches or salads.


Beef

Grass-fed and organic beef is both high in anti-inflammatory omega-3 fats and zinc. When it’s lean, it’s a great source of low-fat protein.
To de-stress: Sauté 4 ounces of ground beef with onions, spoon it onto some lettuce and wrap it up for a protein-rich, low-carb “taco”

Eggs

Often maligned as artery-clogging and cholesterol-rich, eggs are full of nutrients like vitamins, minerals and good fats -- all of which help release endorphins (the brain’s chemicals that “amplify pleasure and make pain more tolerable,” according to Ross).
To de-stress: Poach, fry, scramble or boil one or two eggs for a healthy protein boost any time of day.


Cottage Cheese

This mild cheese is high in calcium, protein and the amino acid tryptophan, which promotes healthy serotonin and endorphin levels, says Ross. Plus, it’s super filling so it’ll keep your waistline happy too.
To de-stress: Pair 4 ounces cottage cheese with berries or pineapples for a satisfying meal or snack.


Chicken

Organic, free-range chicken that is free of antibiotics and hormones is a healthy source of protein and amino acids, the building blocks of protein, necessary to support a healthy immune system and prevent fatigue and weakness.
To de-stress: Grill it, slice it and add it to salad for a healthy meal. It also doesn’t hurt to have an ultimate go-to Roast Chicken recipe in your back pocket. As with most proteins, 4 ounces per meal should do the trick.

Shiitake mushrooms

Popular in Asian cultures, these vitamin C-rich mushrooms are known to help protect the immune system and increase vitality. “During times of chemical, emotional, psychological or physiological stress, the urinary system excretes vitamin C at a significantly increased rate, thereby elevating the body’s needs for vitamin C during these times,” says Michael Murray, N.D., author of Encyclopedia of Nutritional Supplements.


Carrots

These root vegetables are high in beta-carotene, a potent antioxidant that helps support the immune system.
To de-stress: Great raw with hummus, carrots can also be steamed, sautéed, roasted and glazed. Just 4 ounces should do the trick!


Green Tea

Green tea is a good source of cleansing chlorophyll, anti-inflammatory flavonoids and soothing magnesium, says Arthur. It’s also high in antioxidants -- making it one of the more beneficial beverage choices you can make.
To de-stress: Replace your second cup of coffee during the day with this more nutrient-packed and tasty beverage.


Kale

Also ranked as one of the world’s healthiest foods by Mateljan, kale is a good source of vitamin C, manganese and l-tryptophan.
To de-stress: Sauté one cup of kale with some olive oil, garlic and lemon juice or chop it raw and add to salads.


Blueberries

Like other berries and rich-colored fruits, blueberries contain plant nutrients (or anthocyanins) that protect against some chronic diseases, especially those caused by chronic stress.
To de-stress: Toss a half a cup in yogurt, cereal or a smoothie for a healthy dessert or breakfast.


Sweet Potatoes

Healthier and sweeter than their white cousin, sweet potatoes are an excellent source of beta-carotene, dietary fiber and potassium (which can protect your body from the effects of stress). Be sure to leave the skin intact!
To de-stress: Swap out white potatoes for everything from mashed potatoes to French fries.

Extra Virgin Olive Oil

This staple is rich in polyphenols, which can help keep inflammation down, especially in times of stress.
To de-stress: Replace your bottled, store-bought salad dressings with a simple, homemade olive oil vinaigrette. One to two tablespoons is all you need to reap the benefits.


Turmeric

A cousin of the ginger root, turmeric contains curcumin, a compound that suppresses inflammation and supports liver health.
To de-stress: A half a teaspoon of this bright orange spice on any veggie or meat dish will kick up its flavor and nutritional benefits. You can also try cooking with more curry, a spice blend that contains turmeric.


Celery

Celery’s ability to reduce blood pressure has long been recognized by Chinese medicine practitioners, says Mateljan. This munch-able vegetable contains phthalides, compounds that relax the muscles of the arteries that regulate blood pressure and allow the vessels to dilate thus reducing high blood pressure, a common symptom of too much stress.
To de-stress: Chop up half a cup and use it as the base of any soup. And make sure you don’t forget it in your tuna or egg salads.

6 Surprising Ways Juice Companies Trick You

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When you look at a juice label, the first thing you see is the last thing you should trust, the label. Giant corporations are capitalizing on shoppers' confusion over labels' claims of healthy fiber, exotic antioxidants, and neuron-nourishing ingredients. What they don't bring to your attention are the crushed bug parts used for coloring and the carcinogenic fungicide, exotic antioxidants, and cheap fake ingredients that are lurking in the bottles.
"Juice makers, including Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, realize that consumers are concerned about losing weight and reducing their risk of diet-related diseases," says senior nutritionist Jayne Hurley, coauthor of a new juice review published in the Center for Science in the Public Interest's (CSPI's) Nutrition Action newsletter.
"But no juice is going to perform miracles for eyes, skin, hearts, colons, or any other part of the body. That goes for just plain juice, and it certainly goes for a juice dressed up with some combination of water, artificial sweeteners, food dyes, or fake fibers," she adds.
Bone up on these hidden ingredients and marketing tricks and never be fooled in the juice aisle again!

Fungicide-Laced Fruit

Recent Food and Drug Administration testing found that a banned fungicide is turning up in about 15 percent of orange juice samples tested. According to the Los Angeles Times, the administration is ramping up efforts after Coca-Cola, the owner of the Minute Maid and Simply Orange juice brands, found toxic carbendazim in samples. Most of the tainted juices are from fruit grown in Brazil, Mexico, Costa Rica, and Belize, where the harmful fungicide is still legal. Organic juice is your best bet. Even better? Just eat a whole organic orange. The fiber will help prevent a blood sugar crash related to drinking juice.

Go-To Ingredients: The Least-Nutritious Juices

According to the CSPI report, juice makers often use the cheapest juices, apple and grape, as the main juice ingredients, even if they aren't in the name of the product. For instance, Trop50's Pomegranate Blueberry variety contains more apple juice than pomegranate juice and more grape juice than blueberry juice.

Fake Fiber

The label of Welch's 100 percent Grape Juice with Fiber makes it seem like the fiber comes from unadulterated, natural sources like "whole Concord grape skins and seed." Instead, CSPI points out that the fiber comes from the processed food additive maltodextrin, a starch-like carb that actually resists digestion. V8 High Fiber, Sunsweet PlumSmart, and Prune Juice Light pull similar tricks. To get your healthy fiber fix, just eat the actual fruit. It's better for your blood sugar and diabetes risk.

Insane Sugar Content

Many parents think juices are health drinks, but that's simply not the case. Take Tropicana Tropical Fruit Fury Twister, for example. One 20-ounce bottle contains 340 calories and a whopping 60 grams of sugar. That's the sugar equivalent of giving your child two 7-ounce canisters of Reddi-wip to guzzle down. Tropicana is owned by Pepsi, and just like the parent company's soda, the juices are loaded with artificial ingredients, and the juice products often contain very little actual fruit juice. Honest Kids organic pouch drinks are much healthier choices.

Crushed Beetle Ingredients

If you're a fan of ruby-red grapefruit juice, you'd better flip the bottle over and read the label. If the product lists carmine, natural red #4, crimson lake, or cochineal extract, you're likely ingesting food coloring that comes from the crushed abdomen of Dactylopius coccus, an African beetle-like insect.

Brain-Draining Food Dyes

Tropicana Twister Cherry Berry Blast contains 0 percent berry and cherry juice, despite the name of the drink. The color of the nutritionally defunct product comes not from healthy fruit, but from the artificial dye Red #40, which has been linked to hyperactivity and other behavioral problems in some kids. In many cases, it's much cheaper for companies to use petroleum-derived fake coloring than real fruit juice. CSPI recently filed a regulatory petition urging the Food and Drug Administration to require front-of-label disclosure of food colorings, a labeling move that 75 percent of the population wants, according to a 2010 CSPI survey.

10 Foods That Fight Inflammation

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1. EXTRA-VIRGIN OLIVE OIL




Extra-virgin olive oil – an unrefined type of olive oil – contains a substance called oleocanthol that interferes with two enzymes (COX-1 and COX-2) involved with inflammation in the body. In fact, a 2005 study in the journal Nature found that oleocanthol inhibits inflammation in a way that’s identical to the painkiller ibuprofen.

2. Red Wine




Red wine contains a compound called resveratrol, which has been found to have both anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer properties. Scientists say the presence of this compound may help explain the so-called “French paradox” as to why the French –who drink red wine with most meals – can eat a diet that’s actually quite high in saturated fats and yet have healthy arteries and hearts. 

3. Tea



Generally, any beverage that is high in water content will have anti-inflammatory qualities, and tea is a great choice. Teas such as white tea, oolong, and green tea are full of catechins, antioxidant compounds that reduce artery plaque and inflammation. Tea also has been linked to reduced risks of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. 

4. Grass-Fed Beef




If you’re eating beef that’s not specifically sold as “grass-fed,” it means the cows were fed a high-calorie diet of corn and grain in an effort to fatten them quickly. Corn and grain are full of omega-6 fatty acids, which have been linked to inflammation. Grass-fed cows are leaner, and their meat is rich in healthy compounds such as omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin E. 

5. Oily Fish




You’ve probably seen bottles of fish oil supplements in your pharmacy or grocery store, but you can get the same healthy boost from going straight to the source, as well. Oily fish such as salmon, sardines, and tuna are fish that have fatty oils throughout the fillets and in the area around the gut, rather than just in just the liver. Experts say eating one to two servings of these fish per week can reduce inflammation and also decrease your risk for heart disease and sudden death.

6. Cocoa




Cocoa contains anti-inflammatory compounds called flavanols, substances that reduce both blood clotting and inflammation in the body. Enjoying a cup or two of hot cocoa per week can help reduce inflammation, particularly if it’s made with skim or low-fat milk to keep down the drink’s content of saturated fats. Keep in mind, however, that trying to get your cocoa in the form of candy will load you up on saturated fats. 

7. Cranberries




Cranberries are a powerhouse food, with studies linking the red berry to such benefits as inhibiting cancerous tumors and lowering bad (LDL) cholesterol. Scientists say the fact that the berries are rich in anti-inflammatory antioxidants contribute to their healthful effects. As a bonus, cranberries also contain tannins, substances that can act as a natural antibacterial agent to fight urinary tract and E. coli infections. 

8. Grapes




A 2004 study in the medical journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology found that people with stable coronary disease lowered the amount of inflammatory markers in their blood by drinking Concord grape juice. This finding was likely due to the presence of resveratrol in the grapes’ skins, which inhibits inflammation and may even help to fight cancer. Eating grapes – and not drinking them – also adds fiber to the grapes’ benefits and eliminates any added sugar. 

9. Walnuts




Walnuts contain the “plant version” of omega-3 fatty acids, a substance known as ALA, which reduces inflammation in the body. In a 2004 study published in the Journal of Nutrition, scientists found that people who ate at least 2.3 ounces of walnuts and flaxseed (which also contains ALA) daily had reduced levels of inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein (CRP), a major indicator of a person’s risk for heart disease.

10. Broccoli




Broccoli is a virtual disease fighter, rich in such healthy compounds as beta-carotene, vitamin B folate, vitamin C, and the inflammation-fighting flavanoid kaempferol. Broccoli also contains sulforaphane, which experts say helps the body cleanse itself of cancer-causing compounds.

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Myths About Dinosaurs Get Mythbusted (5 pics)

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Jurassic Park is the closest humans have ever gotten to seeing a dinosaur in real life so there's a lot we don't know about them. Here are just a few of the major myths that have been debunked.





Real Life Doomsday Devices That Could Destroy Humanity (8 pics)

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Doomsday isn't just something you read about in books, it's something that could actually happen. If it does happen, these are the devices most likely to cause it. But for now let's keep our fingers crossed and hope it doesn't happen anytime soon.








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