The Simple Way to Eat Better

What you see is what you eat: When you’re trying to clean up your diet, looking at a waistline-friendly food (like an orange) may help keep you from reaching for an unhealthy snack, according to a study in the journal Eating Behaviors.

Researchers at The University of Leeds studied 13 dieters and 21 non-dieters. On two separate occasions, they exposed each group to one of two foods—chocolate or an orange — to compare how participants reacted to tempting food afterward. After seeing and smelling one of the two foods, each group was invited to snack on an assortment of oranges, chocolate, and cereal bars for 10 minutes.

When dieters were shown the orange, they ended up consuming fewer calories and 60 percent less chocolate than when they were shown the chocolate. By contrast, the non-dieters ate a similar amount whether they glimpsed the orange or the chocolate beforehand. When you’re already trying to eat healthfully, just eyeing a piece of fruit cab prime you for better decision-making, say the researchers. “Being exposed to diet-healthy food is an instant reminder for dieters to stick to their diet plans,” says Nicola J. Buckland, research student at The University of Leeds and lead author of the study.

To keep from falling off the healthy-eating wagon, Buckland recommends keeping a piece of fruit “in highly visible places,” like on your desk or kitchen counter. If you’re heading out and you know you’ll be tempted to cheat, pack an apple in your purse or some baby carrots in your clutch. Every time you open your bag, you’ll be reminded of your healthy-eating mission, says Buckland.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More From Women’s Health:
Best Foods for Women
Healthy Eating 101
Eating Well: The Best Fitness Foods for Women

Lose up to 15 lbs in just six weeks with The 8-Hour Diet. Buy the book!

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6 Products That’ll Make You a Better Biker

Cool-invention alert: Engineers in Austin, TX, have designed a new helmet embedded with tiny cameras so that, if the cyclist wearing it gets into an accident, paramedics have more potentially life-saving details on what happened.

Developers are still in talks about licensing the product, which would retail for about $ 300. In the meantime, check out this gear to make your ride easier, faster, and—of course—safer.


Head gear
The Multidirectional Impact Protection System in this SCOTT Taal helmet allows the liner and the shell to move independently of each other, imitating the movement of the brain inside the skull. This reduces the rotational impact absorbed by the brain during a fall, resulting in a lower risk of head injury and concussion.
$ 75; scott-sports.com

Pedal pushers
Weighing in at just a third of a pound for both pedals and cleats, the Ultralite Sports Nimbus ST pedal system allows you to ramp up your speed since the pedals are so lightweight.
$ 295; ultralitesports.com

Hands-free shades
Constantly readjusting your sunglasses gets old fast. The nose and behind-the-ear grips on the REVO Guide Small keep the glasses from siding down your face, no matter how sweaty you get. Plus, the lightweight polycarbonate lenses have a special coating designed to keep dirt, water and grease from building up.
$ 179; revo.com

Handy gloves
Make your ride more comfortable with the gel palm padding in these Cannondale Women’s Gel Gloves. They also provide added shock absorption in case you hit a pothole and your hands wind up on the pavement.
$ 30; cannondale.com

e-Tracker
The touchscreen Garmin Edge 510 GPS cycling computer comes with an easy-to-install handlebar mount. The device tracks your speed, distance, time, and elevation. Sync it with your smartphone to send links to friends that let them follow your ride in real time. Or you can wirelessly transfer data about your workout to your computer for later review.
$ 330; garmin.com

Fancy pants
Recovery is just as important as performance. These 110% Juggler Knickers not only provide compression for the lower body; they also have ice pockets strategically placed on key muscles that cyclists use—hips, glutes, quads, hamstrings, and knees. Simply freeze the reusable ice packs, then after a long ride, put the pants on and place the packs in their designated pockets. They’ll soothe your aches and pains while you cook dinner, mow the lawn, or just chill out.
$ 150; 100playharder.com

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

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A Better Commute: Biking
Ride of the Century
7 Reasons to Start Bike Riding

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The Easiest Way to Be a Better Cook

 
Want to be a better cook? Turns out that you don’t need fancy kitchen gadgets or cooking classes, you just need a specific side dish. Researchers at Cornell University found that if you serve vegetables as part of a meal, people will think the dish tastes better—and that you’re a better cook—than if you forgo the greens.

Researchers gave menus to participants that listed dishes like chicken, steak, and pasta. Some participants’ menus included vegetables with the main dishes; others did not. Everyone was asked to rate the appeal of both the meal and the preparer. People who were shown a combo meal of, say, steak and broccoli, said that they thought the meal would taste better, and that the cook was better, than the people who had the solo steak on their menu.  In fact, the steak-and-broccoli group even said that the cook was more thoughtful and attentive, and less selfish. The steak-only folks harbored much fewer warm feelings.

People tend to associate meals that have vegetables with a little more effort, like the ones served at restaurants or at holiday gatherings—meals which people usually think of as tasting really good, says lead study author Brian Wansink, Ph.D., director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab and the author of Mindless Eating: Why Eat More Than We Think. (Disclaimer: The study, which will be published in the peer-reviewed journal Public Health and Nutrition, was sponsored by Bird’s Eye vegetables).

“The more effort that you believe went into a meal, the better you think it’s going to be. Even if that effort was heating up some vegetables,” Wansink says.

In light of the fact that 70 percent of all vegetables eaten are eaten at dinnertime but only 23 percent of dinners have vegetables, Wansink and his team wanted to find out if there was any additional motivation to include veggies in meals. “This [study] provides the best two motivations as to why you should put vegetables on the table. Not because they’re healthy—we all know that—but because it makes you look like a better cook and a more loving person,” he says.

Ready to cook up a storm? Here are three delicious side dishes to whip up the next time you want to seriously impress your dining companions.

Sauteed String Beans with Sweet Onion and Grape Tomatoes
This colorful medley is sure to make any entree look its best. The grape tomatoes are an amazingly sweet addition.

Roasted Broccoli and Cauliflower with Lemon And Orange
Baking lightly oiled broccoli and cauliflower until crisp-tender inhibits the release of any unpleasant sulphur aromas. The vegetables mellow even more when tossed with sweet citrus just before serving.

Overnight Kale Salad
Dress up vitamin and fiber-rich kale with pomegranate seeds, pine nuts, Pecorino Romano cheese, and an overnight vinaigrette marinade. Not planning dinner a day ahead? You can let it steep for as little as 30 minutes.

Get even more veggie side dishes from the Women’s Health Recipe Finder!

photo: Ingram Publishing/Thinkstock

 
More from Women’s Health:
The 10 Best Fitness Foods for Women
Print It: The Easy 7-Day Eating Plan
13 Great Gifts for the Foodie in Your Life

You Being Beautiful
Find easy ways to look and feel good fast in Dr. Oz’s book You Being Beautiful
 
 
 
 

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Why Chocolate Tastes Better While You’re Dieting

Guilt is the tastiest ingredient. A new study from Northwestern University finds that feeling guilty about eating forbidden food makes it taste better.

In the study, 40 women were split into two equal groups. One group was shown healthy living magazines with images of people looking fit and slender while the other group looked at magazines whose pictures did not relate to wellbeing. After study participants were done reading, they were given a chocolate bar and asked how much they enjoyed it. Those who read the healthy living magazines reported that they liked the sweets 16 percent more than those who did not.

“People experience a greater amount of pleasure when they have just a little bit of guilt,” says lead researcher Kelly Goldsmith, an assistant professor of marketing at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. “We have a relationship programmed in our brains between guilt and pleasure. If you feel guilty doing something, you just expect it to be pleasurable. It’s an automatic feeling,” she adds.

What this guilt/pleasure relationship doesn’t mean: Feeling guilty will not make you choose to eat the forbidden food. “If you read about the importance of health, you’re not more likely to go pick up a chocolate cupcake,” Goldsmith explains. “You’ll just enjoy it more if you do.”

But while you may enjoy the sweet side of your guilt trip, it can actually become dangerous and cause overeating. “It’s easy to think denying yourself your favorite foods will help you be good, but that often backfires,” explains Karen Ansel, R.D. “After too much deprivation, even the most dedicated dieter won’t be able to take it anymore and will end up binging.”

It’s not all bad news, though. If you’re looking to lose weight, you don’t need to deprive yourself in the first place. “Women can eat their favorite foods as long as they have a portion control strategy. The key is to balance your diet with lots of healthier, lower-calorie choices,” Ansel says. If you’re trying to drop some extra pounds and don’t want to give up some of life’s tastiest foods, follow Ansel’s advice for how to enjoy every bite—no guilt necessary.

Chocolate:
While high in fat, chocolate actually has some pretty awesome health benefits. “It’s made from cocoa powder, which is shown to lower blood pressure and protect your skin from sun damage,” Ansel says. The first step to guiltlessly enjoying chocolate is to choose the right kind. Dark chocolate, which is higher in antioxidants than milk chocolate, is always a safe bet. Next, Ansel recommends portion control. Think miniature. “Dark chips or dark chocolate kisses guarantee instant portion control,” Ansel says. Here are her suggestions on how to incorporate these small sweets into your healthy diet:

*Melt a couple of dark chocolate kisses into low fat milk in the microwave for a decadent hot chocolate that’s high in protein and calcium
*Stir dark chocolate chips into cooked steel cut oats
*Melt dark chocolate kisses in the microwave and drizzle over fresh strawberries, bananas, kiwis, or pineapple for a healthy antioxidant packed dessert
*Stir dark chocolate chips into non-fat Greek yogurt

Cheese:
It’s time to start liking stinky cheese. “Choosing cheese with a strong flavor makes it easy to use less,” Ansel says. When trying to pack a salad with flavor, opt for blue or Gorgonzola cheese rather goat cheese. And, as always, portion control is key. Here are Ansel’s suggestions for healthily enjoying cheese:

*Sprinkle Parmesan on air-popped popcorn
*Put a couple cubes of Brie alongside a pear for a super indulgent snack that’s under 200 calories. Bonus: This snack provides a smart combo of protein, fiber, and a little fat to keep you full for hours.

French fries:
Fast food French fries will never be healthy. They are drenched in oil and covered in salt, which masks the potato taste! But sometimes you just have to have them. In that case, Ansel suggests:

*Balancing them. Pair them with something lower in calories like a veggie burger or a grilled chicken sandwich instead of a big greasy cheeseburger. Make it even healthier by eating your burger or grilled chicken over greens instead of on a bun.

For those times a fry substitute will do, lower you calorie count by:

*Tossing sliced parsnips with olive oil, rosemary, and garlic and baking in a 450-degree oven for 20-25 minutes. This also works with zucchini.

photo: Photos.com/Thinkstock

More from WH:
9 Health Benefits of Chocolate
Make Your Junk Food Healthier
The Grown-Up Guide to Grilled Cheese

You Being Beautiful
Find easy ways to look and feel good fast in Dr. Oz’s book You Being Beautiful

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9 Ways to Sleep Better Tonight


Have trouble dozing off at night? Put away your Sleepytime tea—a new technology might help you catch more ZZZs. A study published online in the journal Brain and Behavior suggests that a special therapy that matches musical tones to brain frequencies may reduce symptoms of insomnia.

Twenty people with signs of insomnia participated in the study. First, researchers established the participants’ Insomnia Severity Index (ISI)—a scale that measures sleep disruption. Then they separated the participants into two groups—a control group, and a group that was given a therapy called high-resolution, relational, resonance-based, electroencephalic mirroring (HIRREM), or, as it’s commercially known, Brainwave Optimization™.

HIRREM involves using sensors to detect electrical frequency bands in the brain. Once scientists identify a specific frequency, they assign it a coordinating musical tone, which is then played back to participants via earbuds within 12 milliseconds of frequency detection. The musical tones reportedly help correct any frequency imbalances between the two hemispheres of the brain. (Those imbalances can be caused by trauma, or extended periods of stress, which create a fight or flight response in the brain, according to Charles Tegeler, M.D., professor of neurology at Wake Forest Baptist and principal investigator of the study.)

Participants who received the HIRREM therapy showed a significant drop in their ISI. The control group members, who originally reported no sleep improvement without the HIRREM, were also later administered the treatment and saw a significant drop in their ISI scores as well. (Disclaimer: The study was funded by a grant from Brain State Technologies, LLC, Scottsdale, Ariz., the company that owns the technology used in the study.)

While Tegeler says you probably can’t replicate these results at home, there are other ways to get better sleep that don’t involve an EEG. Try these tips the next time you need to get some serious shut-eye:

Don’t Focus on Sleeping
The more you think about the sleep you are missing, the more stressed you will be. And more stress means even less sleep. If you wake up and can’t fall back asleep within 15-20 minutes, get out of bed. Do something relaxing outside of the bedroom, like listening to music or reading. If you lie there stressing out about falling back asleep, you’ll only get more anxious. Understand that sometimes the quality of your slumber is out of your control.

Stick to a Schedule
Regularity is sleep’s best friend. Try and adhere to a strict bedtime and wake time every day, even on the weekends. When your body has a routine, it knows when to start winding down and preparing for sleep.

Check for Sleep Apnea
Snoring is common, and although it’s usually harmless, it could be a symptom of a sleep disorder called sleep apnea. If you have long pauses in your snoring (ask a friend/bedmate to listen), see your doctor. Sleep apnea, while sometimes life threatening, can be treated.

Turn to the Tub
Your mom knew a thing or two about nighttime baths. The body starts to feel sleepy when it’s temperature drops. You can exaggerate that effect by taking a warm bath or shower and then lying down and letting your body heat get low.

Block Out the Light
Even just a little bit of light can disturb your sleep. So make sure to shut off all your night lights and hallway lamps, not to mention TVs, laptops, tablets, and phones, well before you head for bed.

Exercise Earlier
Regular exercise can actually improve your sleep but you need to schedule it for the right time. Working out too close to bedtime may cause your body temperature to stay elevated, which makes it harder to doze off. Try to finish exercising at least three hours before bedtime–preferably in the afternoon.

Avoid Heavy Foods and Booze
Consuming heavy foods or alcohol before bed can cause indigestion, not to mention frequent trips to the bathroom. And although drinking alcohol may make you tired and help you fall asleep faster, you will wake up more often and not get the quality of sleep you need to feel rested the next day.

Upgrade Your Pillow
Choose a pillow that is supportive, comfortable, and suited to your sleeping position. A stomach sleeper and a side sleeper may need different pillows. Find the best pillow for your sleep habits.

Knock Boots
Yep, sex before bed can help you fall asleep faster, too. Getting frisky releases feel-good endorphins which can relieve stress, making it easier to fall asleep. Sounds good to us.

Additional reporting from the editors of Women’s Health.

Image: Stockbyte/Thinkstock

More from WH:
The Cost of Not Sleeping Enough
Easy Ways to Get More Sleep
Yoga for Bedtime


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The Secret to Better Sleep

Your muffin top is keeping you up at night. According to a new study from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, losing weight, especially around your midsection, can improve the quality of your sleep.

Researchers asked 77 participants to fill out a form discussing their sleeping problems, including sleep apnea, fatigue, insomnia, restless sleep, excessive sleep and use of sedatives. The study subjects then followed a weight loss plan for 6 months, resulting in an average loss of 15 pounds and 15 percent reduction in belly fat per person. At the end of the study period, participants reported about a 20 percent increase in their overall sleep scores.

“Fat, and particularly belly fat, interferes with lung function,” says Kerry J. Stewart, Ed.D., a professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University and one of the study authors. “It becomes harder for the lungs to expand because fat is in the way.” When your lungs can’t expand at full capacity, breathing becomes more difficult. Difficult breathing leads to sleep problems, like sleep apnea. Inversely, the less fat around your belly, the less interference with lung functioning—and the better you’ll sleep.

While a good night’s rest is important for looking and performing your best in daily actives, it also plays a vital role in protecting your heart, Stewart says. Disturbed sleep, from sleep apnea or other disorders, is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. “Sleep apnea is much more common in obese people and also likely causes weight gain, too,” he says. “There is a vicious cycle that needs to be broken.”

To get rid of belly fat for good, try this core-revitalizing workout from The Women’s Health Big Book of Abs. With this workout, you’ll activate more muscle, burn hundreds of calories, and work all of your core muscles with every exercise.

How to do it
Perform this workout three times a week. Alternate between Workout A and Workout B three days a week, resting at least a day between each session. When you see a number with a letter next to it (such as 1A, 1B), that means the exercises are performed as a circuit. For each circuit, do 1 set of each exercise in succession.

top photo: Hemera/Thinkstock; workout photos: Beth Bischoff

More from WH:
50 Ways to Lose Belly Fat
The 12 Best Foods for Your Abs
The Dangers of Belly Fat

Get even more workouts with The Women’s Health Big Book of Abs. Pick up your copy today!

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Is Organic Really Better?

 
organic foodA recent organic foods study out of Stanford University elicited news headlines like this: Organic Food No More Nutritious Than Non-Organic, Study Questions How Much Better Organic Food Is, and Stanford Scientists Cast Doubt on Advantages of Organic Meat and Produce. Those headlines alone may make you wonder, “Is organic really worth it?”

While the study, which was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, could sway some people to bypass the organic aisle during their next supermarket trip, critics of the study say it fails to address the huge public health perks associated with organic food. “The study highlighted the lack of nutritional differences between organic and conventional foods. We think this is a misleading framework for evaluating the benefits of organic foods,” explains Sonya Lunder, senior research analyst at Environmental Working Group, a consumer watchdog group focused on protecting human and environmental health. “The nutritional component is not the reason most consumers choose organic.”

See all of the nasty stuff you avoid when you choose organic…

1. Pesticides in the Food Chain
The facts: While not a main point of the Stanford study, researchers did conclude that organic food contained significantly lower levels of pesticide residues, something previous research suggests could help protect kids from autism and ADHD, among other ills. United States Department of Agriculture testing routinely finds pesticide residues considered unsafe for children on conventionally grown—not organic—produce samples, including apples, peaches, plums, pears, grapes, blueberries, strawberries, and raisins. “Parents don’t want their children to serve as human guinea pigs for chemical corporations,” says Charlotte Vallaeys, director of farm and food policy for The Cornucopia Institute, an organic watchdog group.

The organic advantage: Eating organic coincides with a massive drop in disease-causing pesticides in your body. “The enormous benefit of eating organic produce is that it reduces pesticide exposure by 90 percent. This has been proven in studies conducted at Harvard, the University of Washington, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,” explains pediatrician Phil Landrigan, MD, professor and chair of Preventive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City. “Reduction of exposure to pesticides reduces risk of neurological injury and certain cancers. I advise my patients to choose organic whenever possible.”

2. Killer Superbug Infections
The facts: Antibiotic-resistant superbugs kill more than 90,000 people a year, with MRSA alone killing more people in American than AIDS. The overuse of antibiotics in farming helps spur the growth of these hard-to-kill and sometimes-fatal infections. Tests of supermarket meats routinely find superbug germs, meaning that improperly cooking the meat or failing to wipe off your countertop correctly could put you in a life-threatening situation.

The organic advantage: Antibiotic-resistant superbug germs are far less likely to be found on organic meat because organic bans the use of antibiotics. You’re more than 30 percent less likely to come in contact with superbugs in the meat supply when you choose organic.

3. Poisonous Rain
The facts: More than 17,000 pesticide products are on the market, yet the Environmental Protection Agency has required testing for less than 1 percent of the chemicals currently used in commerce. Even tiny amounts of America’s most popular weed killer glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, can damage DNA and kill cells, and have been linked to infertility and certain cancers. Farmers spray so much glyphosate that it’s taken up into the air and returns to the soil in chemical-laced rain, according to U.S. Geological Service research.

The organic advantage: Organic bans the use of chemical pesticides, keeping them not just out of your food, but also your community’s water, air, and rain.

4. Human Sewage Sludge
The facts: It’s perfectly legal for nonorganic farmers to douse human sewage sludge taken from municipal water treatment plants to fertilize nonorganic fields. The sludge could contain whatever morgues, residences, and industrial parks decide to put down the drain. Scientists have detected shampoo chemicals in nonorganic tomatoes and hypothesize that sewage sludge is partly to blame.

The organic advantage: Organic certification bans the use of sewage sludge. Organic fertilizing methods rely more on regulated compost or cover crops—plants grown during the off season and tilled or crimped back onto the soil.

5. GMOs
The facts: Scientists have never studied the long-term health effects of eating genetically engineered material, but that hasn’t stopped nonorganic farmers from planting GMO crops since the 1990s. Most GMOs are manipulated to withstand high doses of chemical pesticides—some of which wind up inside of the food we eat. Currently, up to 90 percent of nonorganic processed foods contain GMO material.

The organic advantage: Preliminary research suggests GMOs could be causing digestive disease, accelerated aging, obesity, and a rise in food allergies. Organic explicitly bans the use of GMOs.

6. The Drugged Meat Market
The facts: About 80 percent of all antibiotics used in this country go to feed conventional livestock because it not only prevents disease, but helps fatten the animals up faster. North Carolina livestock alone ingest more antibiotics annually than the entire U.S. human population. USDA researchers routinely detect antibiotics in meat, and new science suggests that could be making humans gain weight, too.

The organic advantage: Organic bans the use of antibiotics. It also bans the use of feeding animal byproducts to livestock, and requires that farm animals eat food grown without pesticides and GMO seeds.

7. Freaky Food Additives
The facts: Conventional processed foods are little packaged science experiments, and your family members are guinea pigs. We could be paying a big price for flashy foods—certain food dyes are linked to brain cell damage and ADHD.

The organic advantage: Instead of using chemicals derived from petrochemicals, organic manufacturers often turn to natural colorants like beet juice.

8. Unstable Food Prices
The facts: The worst drought to hit America in a half decade is decimating U.S. crops, particularly corn, causing unstable food prices. Although chemically dependent GMO crops are advertised as being drought tolerant, researchers have found that adding chemicals to the soil actually makes it harder for plants to get through extended dry periods unscathed.

The organic advantage: Long-term experiments at the Rodale Institute, an organic research farm in Pennsylvania, found that, during normal weather, organic and conventional farming produce about the same amount of food [Editor’s note: Rodale is the publisher of Women’s Health]. But when weather starts to act up, organic wins out, producing 30 percent more in years of drought. That’s because organic soil is alive with beneficial bacteria, and the soil acts like a sponge to hold water in reserve during drought. (The healthy soil also helps prevent flooding.)

photo: Stockbyte/Thinkstock

 
More from WH:
The World of Genetically Modified Food
How To Decode Meat Labels
Your Gym’s Dirty Secrets
 
 
 
 

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