Learn to Love Greens

Learn to Love Greens

green leafy veg

If optimal health or weight management is your goal, you really need to love green leaves because they are so very good for you.

Kale, collard greens, turnip greens, carrot tops, swiss chard, spinach, baby spinach & beet leaves, mustard greens, broccoli, cabbage, bok choy, watercress & lettuces are” some of the most inexpensive sources of so many important nutrients. Dandelion, red clover, plantain, watercress and chickweed are edible green leaves which you may find growing in your backyard as weeds!

Green, leafy vegetables provide a great variety of colours from the bluish-green of kale to the bright green of spinach. Leafy greens have all types of flavours from sweet to bitter, from peppery to earthy (think nasturtium leaves).

There are so many good, healthy and worthwhile things to mention about leafy greens that I could write a whole chapter on them but for now I’ll just list a few.

Greens are low in fat, high in dietary fiber, and rich in folic acid, vitamin C, vitamin K, potassium and magnesium, as well as containing a host of phytochemicals, such as lutein, beta-cryptoxanthin, zeaxanthin, and beta-carotene.

Adding greens to your meal or making a meal around leafy greens is quick, easy and affordable. A large bowl filled with leafy greens gently tossed with healthy oils like MCT or olive oil, topped with boiled eggs, a fillet of salmon or pieces of steak are hearty and yummo! In fact, did you realise that meat has all of the essential amino acids , essential fats and 12 vitamins needed for health? One vitamin is missing – Vit C. Which is why adding leafy greens to your meat meals is so important. Remember…

“Add some greens when you eat meat, They will make your meal complete!”
~Trim Healthy Mama

Folate: The word folate describing the B vitamin originates from the Latin root word folium, which means leaf. Did you know that our body must get folate from food – dark green leafy veggies! Folate deficiency can be quite common and lead to a host of health problems such as digestive disorders, cardiovascular disease birth defects. Folate does other valuable things as well but in a nutshell – you really, really need it.

Beneficial for weight loss: Greens contain nitrites, which have been associated in browning fat cells, meaning converting fat-storing white cells into fat-burning brown cells. This creates extra fat burning and ultimately, weight loss.

Greens are also helpful for anti-aging, cardiovascular health, as well as helpig to fight against both types of diabetes.

Green veggies contain a variety of carotenoids, flavonoids and other powerful antioxidants that have cancer-protective properties. Green leafy vegetables are rich in beta-carotene, which can also be converted into vitamin A, and also improve immune function.

The antioxidants like vitamin C, lutein, and zeaxanthin that are contained in leafy greens may help reduce your risk of cataracts and macular degeneration. Vitamin C helps the body make collagen too!

Note 1: Rotate your greens! Don’t eat watercress 7 days a week or baby spinach 6 days a week every week. Change it up! To over consume any one type of green can cause unwanted side effects. For instance, some greens bind calcium so that your body cannot absorb it so variety truly is the spice of life!

Note 2: While leafy greens offer many health benefits, they can sometimes trigger IBS in individuals who are sensitive. If you  take a blood thinner like warfarin (Coumadin), be sure to have your INR levels checked regularly as you increase your intake of dark leafy greens.

Note 3: Spinach and some other greens have a high oxalic content so if you are following a low oxalate diet then you need to limit your amount. Be led by our own body’s need and do what is right for you, if you have a medical condition. And if in doubt, always check with your GP or health professional.

You don’t need a recipe. Just buy a bag of mixed green leaves or a single type. Add a handful to every meal. Simple!

Protein Power

Protein Power

Protein Power

The Power of Protein

When fat loss is a goal, getting adequate protein in is huge. I bang on about this a lot and and most women who start working with me already know that protein is important. However, once they start actually tracking to see how many grams they’re currently getting in, they are usually shocked to find out it’s typically a LOT lower than they expected.

It’s quite common for clients to only be getting in 40-60 grams when ideally they should be aiming for closer to 100-120 grams (or more, depending).  It’s not that they’re not eating protein, they are! But most are assuming there’s a lot more in the foods that they’re eating than there actually is, or they’re not eating enough of them to reach their goals.

For example;  if you are 176lbs or 80kg and your goal is to get .8 grams per pound of body weight of protein in per day, that’s 140 grams. Divide that up by your 3-4 meals per day and you’re looking at around 30-40 grams per meal. The recommended range of protein intake is between 0.8 g/kg and 1.8 g/kg of body weight but seeing as how most of here are not body builders nor elite athletes we can work around the lower to middle range. ☺

Maybe you’re eating a couple of eggs for breakfast. That’s only 14 g or so of protein. If your goal is 120, you’re going to have a lot of making up to do. Not impossible, but challenging for most. I know you are trying to anchor your meals and snacks around protein but it’s likely not enough.

Getting adequate, quality protein will do wonders for your satiety, your carvings, your energy levels, your hair and your weight loss* (* when eating correctly for weight loss to occur)

If fat loss is a goal, it’s also the most thermogenic macro, meaning your body burns more calories digesting and absorbing protein compared to carbs and fats. Not only that, it will help reduce muscle loss when in a calorie deficit.

Brands used in the comparison

  • Bega Simply Nuts Crunchy – 1 TB
  • Woolworths gouda – 20 g slice
  • Sss Foods Hommus – 25g
  • Chobani low fat Greek yogurt
The amounts shown in the photos below were all calculated using Cronometer.
If you were to eat everything listed above in the images you would be consuming:
1600 calories with 191g of protein, only 50g of carbohydrates and 65g of fat. WOW! While that is more protein than we need can you see how little calories it is for such a large amount of food. Are you eating AT LEAST half of this amount each day? If you aren’t eating at least half of this amount of protein, what are you filling up on – fat or carbohydrates?

 

Do any of these foods surprise you? Are you eating enough protein?

Click to view all images

Quickstart Guide to THM

Quickstart Guide to THM

I love Trim Healthy Mama (THM) because it is an excellent educational tool for any person, but especially easy for mama’s and busy women to understand and implement. First there was the large, original book which was not the easiest read. Then, THM condensed the information into the THM Plan book and that is much easier and quicker for people to read and start implementing the principles.

THM is, in essence, a set of guiding principles. It is not a diet. No two people’s eating plan will look the same and that’s the way it should be. We are all very different. We have come from different background, had different life experiences, have different budgets, cultural needs, family needs, health concerns, allergies and personal preferences.

Below is a short Getting Started guide. This is to help those people who find it hard to read through the whole book and get started. It is NOT a replacement for the book. Not one little bit. The book is essential. You need to understand the principles of WHY we do certain things in order to see the food freedom of the plan. Use this guide as a training resource along with the book. When you *get it*, the plan will become real to you and you will be able to tweak it to suit your lifestyle, needs, budget and circumstances.

Trim Healthy Mama is a simple, effective practical lifestyle program that helps anyone of all ages and stages of life slim down or gain weight (depending upon your needs) and gain greater health. The THM plan can be customised to fit your individual needs, preferences, challenges and circumstances. This is NOT a low carb diet. It is not keto with some carbs. It is a flexible, low glycemic plan that includes good, healthy fats and slow burning carbs, fruits, vegetables, grains and dairy.

To lose weight AND to build health we need to:

  • Stabilise our blood sugar levels
  • Eat one fuel at a time
  • Allow our body to use the fuel we have just eaten
  • Nourish and hydrate our body

Getting Started

Start slowly. Accept that this is not a ‘fast weight loss’ plan. Some people like to jump in boots and all! Others need to wade in slowly – one meal at a time. There’s no one right way but it depends upon who you are. I want to help you succeed.

Try making a few S or E breakfasts for a week. After that you’ll be confident enough to add in some lunches and dinners. Soon you’ll find yourself making all your meals the THM way, go you! Even if it takes you a full month or two to switch over, that is completely fine. No rush. You can do this!

Protein anchors every meal. Use lean protein only for E or FP meals. S meals can have fatty protein or lean protein.

There is no set order for eating S or E meals. You can change them up however you wish. We call this freestyling.

To Do

1. Do a kitchen clean-up! Get rid of sugar or ‘white’ products. No potatoes (for now), flour, noodles, pasta, no chips, bread, sugar, pastries, etc.

2. Sub out a few ingredients: throw out any PUFA oils like canola, sunflower, etc. Go buy some quality olive oil, organic coconut oil, real butter.

3. Go buy some unsweetened almond milk or coconut milk or a blend of the two.

4. Purchase a sweetener. The quickest and easiest one is to buy a tub of Natvia or Raw Earth. (Also see below for an image and a printable of easily store bought sweeteners) Going cold turkey off sugar will be difficult but do-able. The first few days can be hard with flu like symptoms, headaches, cravings, irritability, etc. But it is worth it! It’s one thing to wean the children very slowly but as an adult, it’s quicker and easier for long term success to go cold turkey.

5. Plan a few days ahead – not too many – things might change. Have some protein sources prepped and ready. Tins of tuna in springwater or olive oil, canned chicken, poached chicken, turkey slices, seasoned, cooked mince meat, boiled eggs, etc. Grab lots of non starchy veggies. Wash them. Cut them up and store them in the fridge so you always have good food handy.

6. Plan for breakfast – what do you usually eat? Are you an eggs and bacon kinda gal or more a porridge/cereal person? An S (fat fuelled) breakfast would be 2 eggs, bacon and some sautéed in coconut oil with veggies like mushroom and zucchini. Or you could try Sweatpants Oatmeal for an E brekky. Wait 3 hour until your next meal/snack.

7. Next meal/snack – what is your protein? Your protein source may dictate your fuel. If you have a fatty piece of chicken then your snack will natural be an S so pair it with some strawberries, cucumber or a slice of cheese.

8. Hydrate! If you don’t drink a lot of water this is the first 101. Work your way up slowly to at least 2 litres of water a day. Do this slowly: add an extra 500ml per day for a whole week. Then the following week, add in another 500ml per day for a week. This will help your body and bladder adjust easily. Experiment with some All Day Sippers if you like but it’s not necessary. Drinking all the water will help you when going cold turkey from refined sugars. Sippers: Good Girl Moonshine, Singing Canary, Apple Pie Sip, Boost Juice, Hello Health Sipper, and Cranberry Wassail.

Fuels

Let’s get into a little more detail about the fuels. There are two primary fuel sources. Fats and Glucose (blood sugar derived from carbohydrates). And our bodies need both in order to keep functioning. With the weight loss part of the THM plan we want our body to burn one fuel source at a time so that most or all of that food source is used and not stored in the body as fat. Protein forms the base of every meal and snack. We can combine our protein source with either fats or carbs but NOT both in the same meal.

Fat meals – Satisfying or S Meals
S meals are protein-centred meals that are always low-carb (5 grams), but liberal with fats. Fat is the primary fuel. S Meals are very satisfying and deter cravings while remaining slimming.

Carb meals – Energising or E Meals
E meals are protein-centred meals that are controlled, low glycemic carbs (45 grams), but have less fat.  E meals use carbs or glucose the primary fuel. E Meals will give you energy while maintaining a healthy blood sugar level.

Fuel Pulls
Some foods are low fat and low carb so they match both S and E. These are called Fuel Pulls. These foods are your best friend! They don’t give you sufficient fat or carbs but they fill the tummy and have marvellous health benefits. We can’t just live on meat, cheese, cream, butter and nuts. We need our non starchy veggies – they are your best friend!

Meal Frequency

Ideally, during the day, you will fuel your body with a snack or a meal every three to four hours. Try and start with tbreakfast as early as you can. Not everyone can eat first thing upon rising so just do the best you can. And then fuel your body about 3-4 hours later. No need to get rigid about it . Sometimes life gets in the way and one day you might find yourself going five hours. Okay, it’s not ideal but you’ll be fine. It’s best not to go over the four hours without getting some protein into your body. The 3-4 hour range is great for weight loss as it gives the body a chance to use the fuel from your last meal before you give it more. Grazing or picking on something every hour or so never lets your body fully burn its last fuel. We want the body to use the food fuel so then it can turn to using our excess weight (fat) as fuel. if weight loss is your goal, breaking the habit of eating every 2 hours will help immensely.

Hunger will not hurt you. You are not starving, you are not deprived. You get to eat large portions if you like. So remember that a little hunger is very natural and is a good sign.

If you are having a FP snack and/or are pregnant or breastfeeding, you can snack at the 2.5 hour mark.

Changing Between Fuels

If you are changing from an S to an E snack or meal, be sure to leave two and a half to three hours between them.

Freestyle according to your taste buds, your needs or what’s in the pantry. If you are tired or breastfeeding, try an E meal. If you want comfort food, go for S.

Handy Tips

  • Buy the book and read it!
  • Know you will mess up and get it wrong or even have off plan meals. Get over it and know you will reset and start again in 3 hours time.
  • Remember . . . don’t eat fats and carbs in the same meal if you want to lose weight!
  • Hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. Drink a minimum of 2 litres of water (and/or sippers) each day.
  • Eat veggies every day. Aim for green leaves with every meal!
  • Do not go longer than 3-4-5 hours without eating.
  • Avoid food ruts! You must keep your metabolism guessing by alternating between S & E meals.
  • Do not count calories.
  • Do not focus on numbers. Ingredients trump numbers every time.
  • Do be mindful of what goes in your mouth. Be aware of your fuels.
  • Buy a sweetener – Natvia or Raw Earth.
  • If you are struggling, start with one meal per day, like breakfast. Get breakfast meals under your belt before progressing.
  • Consider FP snacks. They can be filling yet prevent you from accidentally ‘crossing over’.
  • Plan ahead for two days at a time if you find that helpful.

Freebie

Meal Planning Your Way Guide

Why You Need More Fish In Your Diet

Why You Need More Fish In Your Diet

Fish contains much needed minerals and certain health benefits that other meats don’t. Eating oily fish twice a week is recommended for your overall good health, especially for your heart and blood. Oily fish varieties include small fish such as anchovies, sardines, herring and kippers as well as larger types like ocean tuna, Atlantic salmon, mackerels, eel, trout, silver warehou, mullet, trevally, sand whiting and snapper. But don’t forget about the leaner, white fish – they have loads of health and weight benefits!

Frozen is a good option if you can’t buy it fresh. Canned sardines, salmon and tuna are convenient and affordable. Frozen fish fillets are a busy woman’s dream. They are individually wrapped so you can take a fillet out, put it in a bowl filled with warm tap water and it will defrost in just a few minutes. It doesn’t get much quicker or easier than that! Look for frozen fish at Coles, Woolworths, IGA’s, Aldi or Costco. Buy the plain (no sauce, no crumbs) fillets and add your own dressing or just a splash of lemon juice and some herbs.

Fish

Oily fish are darker in colour and stronger in flavour than white fish. They have a higher fat content and 5 to 6 times more omega-3 than white fish. In addition, oily fish are rich in vitamin A and vitamin D. But white fish have a place in the diet too! Fish is very good for weight loss, especially white fish. White fish can be used in S or E meals.

Just as we have fatty meats and lean meats as part of our diet, we also need to have fatty fish and lean fish in our diet – this is best for optimal nutrition but also to change up or juggle the caloric load of our food.

Tip!

For canned tuna, check the label for a claim “High in omega-3” as many brands have had their natural oil reduced during canning.

Here are some more reasons to include more fish this week:

  • A great protein source in either S or E meals
  • High in important nutrients
  • Powerful anti-inflammatory properties.
  • Good source of Vit D. and iodine.
  • It prevents and helps battle against auto-immune issues such as Hashimoto’s.
  • It boosts your own natural collagen production.
  • Breastfed babies of mothers who eat fish have better eyesight, perhaps due to the omega-3 fatty acids transmitted in breastmilk. Eating fish two or more times a week is associated with reduced risk of age-related macular degeneration.
  • It boosts heart health and the entire cardiovascular system.
  • It may help prevent and treat depression
  • It may relieve the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and autoimmune disease.
  • It may boost brain health. Elderly people who eat fish at least once a week may have a lower risk of developing dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease.
  • It can help improve your sleep.
  • It may help people with diabetes manage their blood sugar levels.
  • It helps lower blood pressure that is too high.
  • It has shown in studies to lower asthma risks in children by 24-25 percent.
  • Eating at least two serves of fish per week reduces the risk of heart disease and stroke by reducing blood clots and inflammation, improving blood vessel elasticity, lowering blood pressure, lowering blood fats and boosting ‘good’ cholesterol.

Get Your Fish On
If you are struggling with your weight – eat more fish.
If you are struggling with your health – eat more fish.

Just Eat More Fish!

An easy way to increase your fish consumption is to simply double what you are doing now. If you are eating fish zero times per week – start by eating it once a week. If you are eating it once a week – eat it twice a week. If you are eating fish twice a week – double it and eat it four times a week. If you are already eating fish 4 times a week don’t forget to vary the sources. Aim for a minimum of 2 serves of oily fish PLUS 2 serves of white fish every week!

Sustainability

This isn’t something I’m addressing in this post but the Good Fish website is great for learning more about fish and and sustainability practices.

Pop on over to my Facebook page and let me know how often you are eating fish! 

 

oily fish
white fish image
15+ Foods That I Always Have On Hand

15+ Foods That I Always Have On Hand

These are 15+ foods I make sure I never run out of – these are my staples that allow me to eat healthy food even when I don’t have a lot of food prepped or made in advance. I don’t always bake or have meals cooked but I can always eat well as there is always something easy to eat. If I have it in the house, I will eat it – this goes both ways, for healthy, nutrient dense food or food that isn’t so healthy.

My Top 15

In no particular order.

  1. Dark chocolate
  2. Eggs
  3. Chobani 0.5% Greek yoghurt
  4. Salmon fillets (frozen)
  5. Ground turkey, beef mince & chicken fillets
  6. Deli Meats/Cold cuts
  7. Bone broth (both homemade or store bought)
  8. Seasonal fruits and vegetables, especially strawberries and sugar snap peas, zucchini, broccoli & mushroom, rocket and baby spinach, capsicum, cos lettuce and avocado. Frozen fruit and veggies – berries, cherries & lemon wedges.
  9. Chana dahl (dried) chickpeas, black beans, red kidney beans and lentils (canned)
  10. Oats
  11. Brown rice [precooked] sachets
  12. Passatta and Peeled & Diced Tomatoes
  13. Butter
  14. Olive oil, Coconut oil & MCT oil
  15. Organic Apple Cider Vinegar

Five Extra Foods (because to be honest I always have these as well)

  1. Mixed nuts and seeds
  2. Chamomile tea and White tea, Coffee beans
  3. Hydrolysed Collagen
  4. Laughing Cow Light Cheese wedges
  5. Natvia sweetener or Monkfruit sweetener

What foods are staple items in your house? Let me know!

15 foods I have on hand

Pin It on Pinterest