Archive for the ‘Weight Loss Advice’

Remove Kitchen Treats27.01.10

Where are your kitchen treats hidden?

Where are your kitchen treats hidden?

Is your kitchen full of ways to ruin your diet?

Do you have a cookie stash, bag of crisps/chips, packets of sucky sweets, sachets of butter popcorn or hidden bars of chocolate?

Well it’s time to get rid of these kitchen treats, if you only have healthy things in the house then that’s all you can eat!

We’re all guilty of snacking when we’re bored, peckish or upset, when these naughty foods come out you’ve suddenly found yourself finishing off a whole bag of Doritos or a massive chunk of chocolate.

Just removing these treats won’t be enough for most people, they must be replaced with something to stop the temptation to visit the local store.  Try “grazing” on raw carrots, nibbling dried fruit or avoid those kitchen cupboards altogether when you feel like a snack!

It’s time to smash up that cookie jar for good…

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Spaghetti Bolognaise27.01.10

Last week it hit the news that the Italian chefs were reclaiming spaghetti bolognaise because the rest of us across the world have royally buggered up the real recipe and eat a tomato-y mush masquerading as spaghetti bolognaise.

Apparently, the real recipe not only includes beef mince, it includes bacon, cream and white wine.. and the pasta you are meant to use is tagliatelle.

If you’re on a diet, you will see what the problem is with the original recipe – it is a calorific nightmare! That is why I want to share my healthier version of the original. So what it isn’t ‘authentic’? If you want it just how Nonna made it, go to Italy and experience it first hand, don’t preach to me in my kitchen and tell me the original is better by virtue of being original. I just want to eat healthily thanks!


Here is my fool-proof ‘spag bol’ recipe, let me know what you think of it. Just make sure you choose a healthier brown pasta, I don’t care what shape it is! ;)

This will comfortably make enough for 2-4 people, depending on how hungry they are! If you need to stretch it further, add more tins of tomatoes, any suitable veggies lying around (courgettes/peas/sweetcorn/mange tout!) or a tin of kidney beans and you’ll get it to be enough for 6 adults. Sometimes I add fresh basil but don’t worry if you haven’t got any as I have a potted basil plant on my kitchen window sill.

Ingredients:

  • 200g lean beef mince
  • 1 onion
  • tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 OXO cube
  • Peppers x2 (red/yellow/green dependent on preference)
  • 1 large carrot
  • Basil
  • Oregano
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic (I’ve been known to put 5 cloves in as I LOVE garlic!)
  • 2-3 tins of tomatoes
  • 1 lime

Method:

  1. Chop all of your veggies
  2. Fry the onion and garlic in the olive oil until the onions are soft and clear
  3. Add the mice to the onions and break the mince apart with a wooden spoon to brown
  4. Crumble OXO cube over mince
  5. On a high heat, (if you like softer vegetables) add peppers and carrots and keep it all moving until veggies are less crispy. If you like crunchy veggies like I do, add the tinned tomato first, stir it all up then add the veggies.
  6. Add your herbs. Stir and simmer for 15-20 mins stirring occasionally.
  7. Squeeze the juice of one lime in the bolognaise and stir.
  8. Serve on top of brown pasta with four cherry tomatos cut in half for decoration with chopped fresh basil if you’ve got it lying around

Like my recipe or hate it? LET ME KNOW!!!

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 3 Comments →

Google Some Healthy Recipes21.01.10

Google can find some great healthy recipes

Google can find some great healthy recipes for you

Making your own food is always the healthier option as you know exactly what’s being put into it.  Packaged food can contain a surprising amount of sugar, salt, fat and chemicals, always check the label before you buy!

But what if you have no idea what to cook with your ingredients?

Cooking healthily can lead to some very boring meals, I mean who wants to eat plain salad for lunch and rivita biscuits for a snack everyday?

You can use Google to find interesting recipes for whatever you have lying around the kitchen!

Let’s have an example:

After routing through the fridge and cupboards I’ve spotted these healthy ingredients that will go well together:

  • Chicken Breast (with no skin)
  • Pasta
  • Fresh Tomatoes
  • Garlic

Type all the ingredients into a Google search and add in speech marks ‘healthy recipe’ at the end:

Google Healthy Recipe Search

Google all your main ingredients and add "healthy recipe" on the end

The top result in Google produced a wonderful meal, thanks to foodnetwork.com this time round.

I guarantee you’ll find a suitable recipe in the top 5 search results; most of the sites will have user comments on the food’s taste and perhaps a star rating.  You may need herbs or other seasoning to enhance the flavour so it’s always handy to stock up on these at home.

Good luck on your cooking and remember cooking your own food is not only healthier, it’s another little exercise you can do (along with the washing up afterwards, hehe!)

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 3 Comments →

Lose Weight With Twitter05.01.10

fat twitter bird

Twitter Can Be Used To Track Your Weight Loss

Yes you read it right, you can use Twitter to help with your weight loss plan!

If you’re not familiar with Twitter then you can write short messages called “tweets” and these are left on your profile for all to see.

So why not tweet about your current weight?

If you tweeted everyday just saying how much you weighed then you’ll have a fantastic record of how you’re doing when reaching your goal size. You can get your friends and family to “follow” your twitter profile giving you a bigger incentive to work harder at losing pounds.

Don’t become too obsessed with your everyday weight, it can fluctuate around plus or minus 2 pounds per day. If you aim to lose 2 pounds a week (a good target) then compare your current weight to the tweet you made the week before.

So here’s the tips for losing weight with twitter:

  1. Tweet your weight everyday
  2. Get all your friends/family to follow your tweets
  3. Compare your weight WEEKLY not daily
  4. Keep tweeting until you reach your goal weight!

You can follow Louisa on Twitter here.
We’d love to see your “daily weight tweets” so make sure to follow TotalChunk on Twitter!

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 2 Comments →

The seven dieting virtues29.12.09

Everything has an opposite, so the seven deadly dieting sins must do too, which is why I have had a go at writing about the seven heavenly dieting virtues.

This one has been a bit harder as it’s less applicable to dieting than the deadly sins (why are sins more interesting? Who knows!?) but work with me and I’ll try and make this post interesting and informative.

Thing is, the heavenly contrary virtues are a bit boring as they overlap a bit – so I’ve used artistic licence to combine the four cardinal virtues with three theological virtues.

Many people want to lose weight with the help of Jesus – type ‘lose weight with Jesus’ into Google and it returns over a million results which is rather incredible.

I’m not a religious woman but this post is definitely applicable to all dieters, whether they are determined Atheists or can’t get out of bed without saying a prayer.

Happy reading!

(more…)

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 5 Comments →

7 deadly dieting sins27.12.09

The 7 deadly weight loss sins

The 7 deadly weight loss sins

Today I am going talk about the Seven Deadly Sins of Dieting. Deeply rooted in Catholic literature, the original seven deadly sins were gluttony, fornication, avarice, sorrow, wrath, acedia (restlessness), vanity and pride.

Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’ remains on my must-read list but I have a few more books to read but I think it’s a group task, I feel as though I won’t appreciate it alone or without guidance!!

Anyway, Dante’s epic poem (written between 1308 and 1321) updated the original sins to what we are more familiar with today: gluttony, avarice, luxuria, acedia, wrath, envy and pride. However the Catholic church did away with luxuria (extravagance) and we now know (officially) the sins are: pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony, and sloth/acedia.

As dieters, we all are guilty of these sins but let’s remember that these ‘sins’ do not mark the end of our quest for a slim and healthy figure. You don’t need to do a penance or repent and feel guilty. All we need to do is recognise that we have made a mistake and try and not do the same thing again. I’m also going to write about the 7 Heavenly virtues so look out for that.

Happy reading! (more…)

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 7 Comments →

Merry Christmas!26.12.09

Merry Christmas! I hope Santa Claus brought everyone the gifts they asked for. I got lots of lovely bath stuff, money to go towards my holiday and some rather fancy headphones from the lovely Jonny.

I did get lots of chocolates and a naughty hamper with mince pies, toffee and panatone which looks lovely!

When people don’t know what to get you, they often pick up little luxuries like nice chocolates and biscuits. It’s a terrible time if you’re trying very hard to lose weight – or even just maintain your current weight over the festive period.

So I’ve devised a little list of tips to help you enjoy your food at christmas that should help you prevent an unfortunate weight gain:

  1. If someone gives you chocolates, thank them and share them among your relatives. You look generous and are less tempted to polish off the box!
  2. At lunch time, fill up on green veggies and carrots. Turkey is a good, lean meat so don’t feel you can’t eat it. Do try and go easy on the roast potatoes, parsnips, chipolatas and other trimmings.
  3. Take your time – too many people eat what is on their plate because it looks lovely. Learn to recognise when you are full and stop eating at this point.
  4. Avoid attacking the chocolate tin when watching The Queen’s Speech or the Great Escape.
  5. Christmas puddings are full of sugar and calories so eat a smaller portion and choose single cream or evaporated milk to go with it. You will be surprised how little can satisfy a sweet tooth.
  6. Don’t drink alcohol to excess, make smarter choices when drinking alcohol and try and avoid creamy liqueurs after dinner.
  7. Go for a walk or a short bike ride on Christmas day. You will probably want to sleep after dinner – that’s fine, just make sure you do something otherwise you will feel even more sluggish on Boxing Day.
  8. Hit the sales. You don’t necessarily have to buy much but bag carrying is good exercise and we all know how exciting it is to find a bargain.



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New study – exercise doesn’t help period pain19.12.09

New research by Birmingham University suggests that exercise does not help to alleviate period pain. 650 students aged between 18 and 25 were surveyed with 28% confessing to regularly experiencing moderate to severe period pain.

period painResearchers took into account weight, general health, mood, ethnicity and whether or not participants were smokers when assessing the results of the study.

Astonishingly, researchers could only conclude that exercise only helps on a case by case basis, i.e. some women may find it helps. Royal College of GPs chairman Professor Steve Field said women with period pain should do what works for them and exercise might make them feel better in general but this is little comfort to the thousands of women like myself who suffer debiliating pain every month.

I have vomited due to the pain experienced, my stomach can bloat to twice its size and I need to visit the bathroom far more often. I’ve missed work as I’ve been physically unable to get out of bed and I regularly experience migraines too. I’ve had a laparoscopy to find out what might be the precise cause of my monthly problems. I’ve been prescribed an awful amount of pain killers and hormones. Some pain killers have made me like a zombie they’re so strong…

Personally, this new study has not surprised me as I have found exercise to be unhelpful to me. Thanks to 11 years of experience dealing with period pains, I have some advice to offer women who are trying to lose weight:

  • Keep a diary of symptoms and come to know WHEN they will occur. I get a migraine when I ovulate so I know very soon when one is on its way and if I am not at home, I have time to get there before my vision is obscured and I’m vomiting.
  • See your doctor, the contraceptive pill can often help women but I have found this not to be the case. I am clearly a freak of nature – I should be put in a test tube and studied.
  • Periods are not an excuse to overindulge in chocolate – see my blog post on chocolate cravings and why women crave chocolate
  • Try herbal remedies and aromatherapy before you drug yourself up to the eyeballs with pain killers
  • Try gentle exercise like yoga but if you don’t feel up to high intensity stuff, don’t do it! Walking is preferable to sitting on the sofa for a week
  • Warm baths are lovely and make you feel nice and clean. If you’ve had a hard day at work, treat yourself with a bath rather than a whole pizza!

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 4 Comments →

Recipe: Lazy healthy chilli06.12.09

AMELIA

I promised I would come and tell you some of my recipes for cheap and healthy food. Now, as much as I love cooking, I do also get incredibly lazy at times and have been in several states of… economic booms and busts. Even when I’ve had more money to blow on food, somehow I always come back to this recipe because I just love it so much.

Amelia Does Lazy Chilli

4 x tins of tinned tomatoes

1x can of tinned pulses

Chilli paste (bought in a tube because I am THAT lazy)

Quorn mince (optional, you can either remove it all together or add beef mince)

Other ingredients that I add if I have them are: Oxo cubes, whole cloves of garlic, passata, vegetables

Amelia has a recipe that is just as easy as this packet mix!

Amelia has a recipe that is just as easy as this packet mix!

So, this is the best bit… you just chuck it all in the saucepan together (unless you’re adding meat) and stir and simmer until the rest of the food is ready.

Now, I either use this to put on a jacket potato or with rice as a veggie chilli option. This is quite simple food, I know, but it is so natural and pure and low in calories and high in nutrition and so blimmin’ tasty! Considering if I make it just for me, I can make 2/3 portions for £1 it’s the new superfood!

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 4 Comments →

Eating healthily on the cheap20.11.09

When I first went to uni, I stocked up on microwave meals on a 4 for £5 deal because I convinced myself that it would be the cheapest way to eat. As I adjusted to feeding myself and realising how much food really costs, I began to realise how I could eat the best I can with value for money for just myself or a group of people.
It’s all very well saying that paying out for takeaway food is cheaper than paying for ingredients for a lot of people, but perhaps unless you’re buying sturgeon caviar and fillet steak for a thirty person dinner party. I always find it hard to believe someone who has been out of their parents home for longer than six months who say that eating healthily is expensive.
Our main source of carbohydrates: rice, pasta, potatoes can all be purchased for more than four portions for under a pound. One of my favourite lunch time meals is jacket potato with fillings like cheese/beans/coleslaw/tuna, these are again cheap and simple nutrition as long as you go easy on the size of your portions as it’s still calories and cheese isn’t fantastic for you in large portions.
Pasta and sauce, pasta and pesto, spaghetti bolognaise, add in with tomato sauces and vegetables and a little bit of meat and you’re away.
Rice will cover chilli con carne, home made curries made with tomatoes, not cream and there is no end to the amount of healthy meals that you can make.
Then you’ve got the foods that are so simple, you wonder how you didn’t think of it sooner… omelettes, meat and veg, sausage and mash and stews.
There is also soup! I hate ready made soups, but I love my own. Alright, there is the initial expense of the food processor, but you’ll earn that back quick enough. My favourite and cheapest is tinned tomatoes whizzed in with some chilli, maybe you’d like to add some pulses, a little spaghetti… other ones I really like is beetroot and potato, bacon and lentil on a tomato base, winter vegetable. Summer soups would also include gazpacho or a really tasty cucumber. Not only does it fill you up, but it all goes a long way, freezes easily and is so cheap to make on a budget.
Meat is expensive, but there are still ways around it. Still choose lean cuts and don’t cook with the skin. Cheaper cuts of meat such as neck of lamb, beef shin or pork hock. My mum made a curry with neck of lamb and the meat didn’t even cost £3. I can vouch it was still just as tasty. Mince is also cheap, but buy the lean stuff and you’re laughing.
It’s not just what you buy, but when you buy food as well. Food that’s in season is always going to be cheaper because they don’t have to import it from other countries and we have it in abundance. Root vegetables are winter vegetables, so your parsnips, pumpkins, squash, etc will generally be cheaper at your local supermarket or farm shop.
Also if you go at the end of the day, supermarkets reduce their food to sometimes pennies. If you eat this food immediately or freeze it, you’re not going to worry about it going off. I would also recommend portioning your food before freezing it, wrapping chicken breasts individually, slicing bread, this saves stabbing at your food to defrost it.
All of these things are so simple to cook, they don’t take long when you consider how long you wait for a pizza delivery on a Saturday and you can control exactly what goes into your food and not feel obliged to eat huge portions, no point in making all this cheap food to then go and eat more than you need!
When I first went to uni, I stocked up on microwave meals on a 4 for £5 deal because I convinced myself that it would be the cheapest way to eat. As I adjusted to feeding myself and realising how much food really costs, I began to realise how I could eat the best I can with value for money for just myself or a group of people.
It’s all very well saying that paying out for takeaway food is cheaper than paying for ingredients for a lot of people, but perhaps unless you’re buying sturgeon caviar and fillet steak for a thirty person dinner party. I always find it hard to believe someone who has been out of their parents home for longer than six months who say that eating healthily is expensive.
Our main source of carbohydrates: rice, pasta, potatoes can all be purchased for more than four portions for under a pound. One of my favourite lunch time meals is jacket potato with fillings like cheese/beans/coleslaw/tuna, these are again cheap and simple nutrition as long as you go easy on the size of your portions as it’s still calories and cheese isn’t fantastic for you in large portions.
Pasta and sauce, pasta and pesto, spaghetti bolognaise, add in with tomato sauces and vegetables and a little bit of meat and you’re away.
Rice will cover chilli con carne, home made curries made with tomatoes, not cream and there is no end to the amount of healthy meals that you can make.
Then you’ve got the foods that are so simple, you wonder how you didn’t think of it sooner… omelettes, meat and veg, sausage and mash and stews.
There is also soup! I hate ready made soups, but I love my own. Alright, there is the initial expense of the food processor, but you’ll earn that back quick enough. My favourite and cheapest is tinned tomatoes whizzed in with some chilli, maybe you’d like to add some pulses, a little spaghetti… other ones I really like is beetroot and potato, bacon and lentil on a tomato base, winter vegetable. Summer soups would also include gazpacho or a really tasty cucumber. Not only does it fill you up, but it all goes a long way, freezes easily and is so cheap to make on a budget.
Meat is expensive, but there are still ways around it. Still choose lean cuts and don’t cook with the skin. Cheaper cuts of meat such as neck of lamb, beef shin or pork hock. My mum made a curry with neck of lamb and the meat didn’t even cost £3. I can vouch it was still just as tasty. Mince is also cheap, but buy the lean stuff and you’re laughing.
It’s not just what you buy, but when you buy food as well. Food that’s in season is always going to be cheaper because they don’t have to import it from other countries and we have it in abundance. Root vegetables are winter vegetables, so your parsnips, pumpkins, squash, etc will generally be cheaper at your local supermarket or farm shop.
Also if you go at the end of the day, supermarkets reduce their food to sometimes pennies. If you eat this food immediately or freeze it, you’re not going to worry about it going off. I would also recommend portioning your food before freezing it, wrapping chicken breasts individually, slicing bread, this saves stabbing at your food to defrost it.
All of these things are so simple to cook, they don’t take long when you consider how long you wait for a pizza delivery on a Saturday and you can control exactly what goes into your food and not feel obliged to eat huge portions, no point in making all this cheap food to then go and eat more than you need!

AMELIA

When I first went to uni, I stocked up on microwave meals on a 4 for £5 deal because I convinced myself that it would be the cheapest way to eat. As I adjusted to feeding myself and realising how much food really costs, I began to realise how I could eat the best I can with value for money for just myself or a group of people.

It’s all very well saying that paying out for takeaway food is cheaper than paying for ingredients for a lot of people, but perhaps unless you’re buying sturgeon caviar and fillet steak for a thirty person dinner party. I always find it hard to believe someone who has been out of their parents home for longer than six months who say that eating healthily is expensive.

Our main source of carbohydrates: rice, pasta, potatoes can all be purchased for more than four portions for under a pound. One of my favourite lunch time meals is jacket potato with fillings like cheese/beans/coleslaw/tuna, these are again cheap and simple nutrition as long as you go easy on the size of your portions as it’s still calories and cheese isn’t fantastic for you in large portions.

Pasta and sauce, pasta and pesto, spaghetti bolognaise, add in with tomato sauces and vegetables and a little bit of meat and you’re away.

You'll see the savings you make very quickly

You'll see the savings you make very quickly

Rice will cover chilli con carne, home made curries made with tomatoes, not cream and there is no end to the amount of healthy meals that you can make.

Then you’ve got the foods that are so simple, you wonder how you didn’t think of it sooner… omelettes, meat and veg, sausage and mash and stews.

There is also soup! I hate ready made soups, but I love my own. Alright, there is the initial expense of the food processor, but you’ll earn that back quick enough. My favourite and cheapest is tinned tomatoes whizzed in with some chilli, maybe you’d like to add some pulses, a little spaghetti… other ones I really like is beetroot and potato, bacon and lentil on a tomato base, winter vegetable. Summer soups would also include gazpacho or a really tasty cucumber. Not only does it fill you up, but it all goes a long way, freezes easily and is so cheap to make on a budget.

Meat is expensive, but there are still ways around it. Still choose lean cuts and don’t cook with the skin. Cheaper cuts of meat such as neck of lamb, beef shin or pork hock. My mum made a curry with neck of lamb and the meat didn’t even cost £3. I can vouch it was still just as tasty. Mince is also cheap, but buy the lean stuff and you’re laughing.

It’s not just what you buy, but when you buy food as well. Food that’s in season is always going to be cheaper because they don’t have to import it from other countries and we have it in abundance. Root vegetables are winter vegetables, so your parsnips, pumpkins, squash, etc will generally be cheaper at your local supermarket or farm shop.

Also if you go at the end of the day, supermarkets reduce their food to sometimes pennies. If you eat this food immediately or freeze it, you’re not going to worry about it going off. I would also recommend portioning your food before freezing it, wrapping chicken breasts individually, slicing bread, this saves stabbing at your food to defrost it.

All of these things are so simple to cook, they don’t take long when you consider how long you wait for a pizza delivery on a Saturday and you can control exactly what goes into your food and not feel obliged to eat huge portions, no point in making all this cheap food to then go and eat more than you need!

Posted in Weight Loss Advicewith 2 Comments →