Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Superfoods or superfads? Whats trending for 2016?



Last week the boyfriend asked me “Do you like black pudding?”  Well yes is the answer.  “Good” He says, “Cos that’s a superfood this year”.  Well, as you can imagine I started to wonder 1) How the hell the boy who only drinks Coke and Fanta knew this kind of thing?  2) Where was he getting this information? And 3) How nice that he paid attention and wanted to talk about stuff that interests me!  So on the subject of superfoods and because at the start of a new year we do love a list, I figured I’d give you the no nonsense low down on the superfoods we reckon will be trending in 2016 – and yes, the list does include black pudding! A few of these so called “superfoods” may well be worth a bash and may even become a staple in your kitchen this year.  Others – mainly due to the fact we can’t find them in a regular supermarket and are not willing to take out a 2nd mortgage to buy them – hmmm, maybe not so much.


Let’s start by looking back at what we ate in 2015:


Avocado  - yep still love them, can’t get enough, even Nigella put avocadoes on toast into her newest recipe book, therefore seal of approval got.
Kale – of course, still blending it up in my morning smoothies, although honestly I only use it when it’s cheaper than spinach cos I like spinach more and they have very similar nutritional properties
Blueberries - I tend to use frozen these days.  Remember fresh fruits are generally seasonal, so when out of season I find it best to buy frozen varieties to add to smoothies.  Just as good on the vitamin front, plus no ice required as these chill down your blend
Quinoa – can’t say it, don’t eat it.  I’m still quite happy using brown rice anyway, which is cheaper, just as filling, and I think tastes better.
Coconut Water – gross.


This year – our 2016 food fad / superfood lists goes something like this:


BLACK PUDDING
Let’s start with the obvious.  Blood sausage is in fact protein packed and carb free.  We like that.  It’s also full of minerals that are often scarce in UK diets – iron and zinc. Plus it contains potassium and calcium – all together boosting concentration and reducing fatigue while filling you up.  Not one for the vegetarians obviously, it’s usually made from curdled and boiled pig blood, pig fat and a mix of spices.
Recommend? Yep we will give this a go (just cos we like it anyway).

CRUCIFEROUS VEGETABLES
Providing vitamin B (plus C and K), folic acid, calcium and magnesium.  These veggies should help boost energy – something we are all generally lacking this time of year.  I can’t say they will help with enthusiasm though – energy, not enthusiasm – remember these are 2 different things!  Cruciferous veg examples: broccoli, cauliflower, sprouts (if you didn’t have enough over xmas), kale, radish.
Recommend? Yep we like these too, so as a bit of variety we may try eating more of these raw (on salad?) this year.

KEFIR /FERMENTED FOODS
Kefir is a fermented milk drink.  Really.  Known as good for your gut as it is a probiotic – providing more good, gut healthy bacteria, to balance out the bad bacteria’s gained from eating too many sugars and processed foods.  I looked for ideas on eating/drinking this as the thought of fermented milk just sounds sour (ha!), so how about adding banana and peanut butter to make a milkshake? 
Recommend?  I haven’t tried it yet myself, but understand the importance of gut health.  If you don’t want to try kefir, maybe stick with the other fermented foods – kimchi or sauerkraut for example.

TEFF
Well there had to be a new super grain in there somewhere and a few keep cropping up, but teff is the easiest to say and seems to be best due to its long standing history as a staple of the Ethiopian diet.  Until last year it was banned from export from Ethiopia, but as that ban has been lifted I can see this becoming more easily accessible and therefore one that totally makes the 2016 superfood list.  It’s a tiny gluten free grain that can be ground into flour.  It’s a low GI food, therefore keeps your blood sugar stable and it’s full of fibre, plus rich in minerals such as iron, calcium, zinc and copper. 
Recommend? Well this may just knock out quinoa, so for that reason alone we say yes to teff!

SEAWEED (especially KELP)
This is a bit of a hangover (and recommended hangover cure) from 2015, but is still acclaimed as a 2016 superfood (fad).  Kelp is full of iodine.  This helps boost metabolism and at the same time acts as a diuretic – it’s therefore been touted as a weight loss aid through 2015.  It’s rich in vitamin C and calcium too.  You can buy seaweed from most Asian supermarkets and its becoming more popular on the bigger general supermarket shelves now too, however it does have a very specific flavour so perhaps leaving it to restaurants and sushi bars to prepare is best. 
Recommend? Give it a go, and try in powdered form added to soups perhaps?

CACTUS WATER
Full of antioxidants, calcium, magnesium and phosphorous.  It’s got less sugar than coconut water and a much fruitier taste. 
Recommend? We hate coconut water so if this is nicer and still good for you then yes – although really we still like a glass of plain old actual water.  Nice and cold, that’s all.

BIRCH WATER
While on the subject of “super waters”, birch water keeps cropping up too.  As well as calcium, magnesium and potassium found in cactus water, this also has electrolytes so may be a good post work out drink.  It also contains polyphenols that act as antioxidants and an anti-inflammatory. 
Recommend? We can’t find it anywhere to try, but if it tastes as good as it sounds we would like to sip some after a good run!

MUSHROOMS
Make room for the mushroom!  Yes – finally one we’ve all heard of before.  A vegetable with vitamin D – the elusive vitamin D that we convert from (even more elusive in the UK) – sunlight! Also containing vitamin B, mushrooms are particularly meaty and so can add texture as well as taste, to many dishes. 
Recommend? With more people taking up the meat free Monday idea and eating more vegetable based meals all the time we totally recommend the addition of the mushroom to this list and to your diet this year.


So far so good, we are recommending all of the above.  Especially the easy ones – black pudding, cruciferous veg and mushrooms!  Yum.


Now for the few that didn’t make the top 8 but are worth a shout out:


Cacao – can we actually be arsed?  I love chocolate, I know it’s full of sugar and crap, but as long as I don’t eat too much I think its ok.  Here’s a massive tip and something we believe in strongly at no nonsense: Don’t demonise foods, don’t put them in good or bad categories where they are either allowed or banned. This will only make you feel guilty when you do in fact eat - and God forbid - enjoy, one of your banned/bad foods.  If you want chocolate, eat some, just not all the time or every day or too much. 
Recommend? You don’t need to substitute cacao.  Although saying that there a few good products we have found that use it  – for example we cannot get enough of these:
  




Matcha – actually we love green tea.  Matcha is like super green tea.  Great!  But it’s still too pricey. Until its price is on par with a nice bag of PG tips we can’t really justify that kind of price – for a drink – with no alcohol! 
Recommend?  If you offered me some for free or at a reasonable price I would drink it all the time.
Bee Pollen – Victoria Beckham eats it every day (allegedly).  Rich in proteins and with more amino acids than eggs, beef or cheese this sounds like a very nutritious food source.  I have no idea what it tastes like (I’m imagining honey…?) but surely it’s made by the bees as food for the bees, so we are stealing it? 
Recommend?  I don’t want to steal from fluffy little baby bees.
Bugs (especially crickets) – Well maybe this one should actually be on the top list as eating bugs could well be the way to go!  A protein source full of vitamin C, that packs a crunch, or can be ground into flour.  Edible crickets are jumping up all over the place (excuse the pun) – they are now being farmed as food grade in America and I’m sure will become more popular when we can get our heads round the fact that we are eating, well, bugs.
Recommend?  If you’re ok with peeling a prawn, then you will probably be fine with these – go for it (and tell me how they taste)
Black Beans – yep the ones you put in your burritos.  Again, maybe these should be on the top list to complete a top 10.  They are gaining in popularity this year due to their high fibre and protein content.  Also – they are cheap.
Recommend? They are cheap, they taste good and they go in burritos, so yes.
Hemp seeds– not cannabis, but yep that stuff middle class crusties of the 90’s liked to make their clothes and bags from.  Yes that same hemp is growing in popularity as a so called superfood. It’s full of plant proteins and minerals, plus the seeds contain omega oils.  During 2015 I substituted hemp milk on cereal, in tea and coffee, milkshakes, and home based recipes.
Recommend?  Hemp replenishes the soil with nutrients as it grows, so it’s good for the environment as well as for us, plus it doesn’t require any pesticides when grown.  I can vouch that hemp milk is super tasty, so it’s yes from us. (We drank this milk:









Moringa – A plant high in calcium and protein – sounds good.  I imagine you can buy in powder form and use in the same way you might use wheatgrass or spirulina – ie make juices or add to smoothies etc.
Recommend?  If you must.  Although it’s still really expensive and not easy to find unless you’re in a health food shop. 
Kohlrabi – a poor ugly looking hybrid of the turnip and cabbage. It can be eaten raw or cooked, but we haven’t had the pleasure of trying this as yet.  It’s a vegetable, therefore low in calories and it’s high in vitamin C.
Recommend? Why not – as soon as we can find some we will try some.


So that wraps up the long list of so called superfoods we will all be eating (or not) in 2016.  Let me know what you think or any recipes you make using these ingredients.  If you’re not keen on trying any of the above, here is a list of “alternative superfoods” that we much prefer (it includes PORK SCRATCHING!) http://www.telegraph.co.uk/food-and-drink/healthy-eating/10-of-the-most-surprising-superfoods/

And just before we sign off for this week – one last list to share – these are the other health “TRENDS” we are predicting this year – keep your eyes peeled for;
Souping (rather than smoothie (ing?) Using veggies in the blender again, this year we will be doing it hot (and by the summer probably cold too!)
Smoothie bars (rather than juice bars) – we predict pick n mix style “bars” popping up, where you can choose your ingredients and they will be whizzed up for you!
Food labelling – we reckon there should be – and hope there will be - more emphasis on clearer and more easily understood labelling of packaged food products, so everyone can make informed choices.
Following (or perhaps preceding this) the sugar tax debate will rage on – more about this in one of our upcoming blogs
A focus on gut health (and fermented foods as well as pre and probiotics) will continue as we understand more about its importance on our overall wellbeing
Finally there will be more of a shift to alternative healthcare and at home wellness – what people can do to help themselves.  In the UK this field is a rapidly growing one as the NHS buckles under the strain and our poor GP’s and junior doctors suffer. 


For more info on superfoods and how to incorporate the right amount of vitamins and minerals in your diet, please give us a shout: info@nitakothari.com or book a free dietary assessment via: bookings@nitakothari.com

To join the superfood debate or to let us know your health trend predictions for 2016 get involved via social media – we are over on:  

And to keep up to date with all our blogs and recipes you can sign up for the newsletter via the link on any page of our website: www.nitakothari.com



**Please remember this is advice ONLY (as is all other information contained in this blog, the website and social media related to it) None of the info or advice is intended to override any recommendation from your GP or health professional**


Thursday, January 07, 2016

Getting SMARTER with New Years Resolutions



Good morning people, happy Thursday and welcome to our first blog of this year.  Happy new year to you all and here’s to wishing you a happy, healthy 2016.


Naturally as this is the first blog of the year we have to talk a bit about new years resolutions, especially the ones that promise self-improvement!  Some make them, some people avoid them, some say they don’t make any but they really do – in secret. Personally, I always make them.  I procrastinate from September, tell myself by November / December it’s not worth bothering getting anything new started now, I should just leave it until the new year – when of course miraculously – I will be feeling fresh and new and fighting fit and enthused and energised and inspired.  Then January hits and enthused, inspired or energised are not words I use to describe myself in January at all!

January.  It’s cold and grey and damp and as we all placed such hopes on it, it’s a let-down.  I feel sorry for January.  This year in particular – Jan 4th has been the worst.  It was the Monday from hell that we all went back to work.  The trains weren’t running, it poured from the heavens, some smug sods were still on holidays or had returned from winter breaks with a tan, an engagement ring, a new puppy…whatever. 

I digress, but because January is always a little shocking and because I’ve had the same new years resolutions for about the last decade – none of which I have ever accomplished or stuck to – I decided this year would be different.  This Jan, before making new promises to myself I would try and understand why I keep making the same ones and then why I don’t keep them.  Isn’t the ultimate definition of madness doing the same thing over and over again yet hoping for a different result?  Well yep, then call me mad, because that’s been me (and I’m sure you relate) for too long.  This year I’m sharing my old and my new resolutions with you, plus the reasons why they have changed and how I changed them.  I’m hoping this will give you some food for thought in making promises to yourself anytime this year.

OUT WITH THE OLD:
My top 10 old resolutions, in no particular order, went something like this – year in, year out….

  1. Get fit
  2. Lose weight
  3. Get healthy
  4. Get a better job
  5. Save money
  6. See family and friends more
  7. Get a boyfriend
  8. Learn to drive
  9. Don’t drink and smoke so much
  10. Take my make-up off each night before going to bed

I’d start each January getting up nice and early each morning, arriving at the gym onto the treadmill and pounding away.  I’d contact one friend (that I’d probably seen over xmas/new year anyway) and set up an eve to go for dinner – not drinks as was trying not to drink/smoke so much.  I’d rewrite my CV and look online for jobs.  Actually I was lucky enough with this one to find suitable openings, go for interviews and get the jobs in most cases.  I’d rethink the “learn to drive” thing while I was still in London, I probably couldn’t afford it anyway, at the same time realising I couldn’t save much money as took a pay cut in my new role.  I’d take my make-up off most nights, until the one when I met my friend for dinner, ended up going for a few drinks anyway and coming home too tipsy to care.  Then I’d be upset that I was 3 weeks into the year, I’d been out once and didn’t have a love interest or been swept off my feet my prince charming yet.  Come Valentines day in February (or honestly a few weeks prior in most cases) ALL resolutions were over.  Does any of this sound familiar to any of you?  If so read on because I’ve found a way to stop all of this by adding value and reason to resolutions – thinking about why I was making them in the first place made all the difference this time.

IN WITH THE NEW:
This years top 10 is similar but check this out:

  1. Find and run a 5k race for charity
  2. Shift a stone/6.5 ish kilos before turning 39 (5th September)
  3. Eat something green with every meal!
  4. Focus on my business, passion and creativity, finding paid work that’s fulfilling and fun – ensure I do one thing every day to get closer to this goal
  5. Save enough money for a summer holiday
  6. Meet at least one family member once a month / Meet a different group of friends each month too
  7. I’m in a relationship now (whoop – sounds strange saying that and even stranger writing it down) so make sure we get time alone to build our bond – date nights, mini breaks, duvet days etc at least once a month
  8. (Learn to drive when I need to – this isn’t a priority for me this year unless my situation changes)
  9. (I’ve managed the not drinking so much already and smoking went hand in hand with the alcohol, so that’s cut down too – not a focus for me this year) Instead – drink at least 1 litre of water each day
  10. Take my make-up off each night before I go to bed!

I would like to add as a quick aside; there are lots more things I’m hoping for this year too and not all are as self-centred as the above!  These however work for the purpose of today’s topic so stick with me:

I hope you can instantly see most resolutions are now more focused.  Adding value to each promise and reasoning with myself as to why these were a priority, I then used my own adaptation of the SMART goals technique to get to these. I thought long and hard about why I was making such promises to myself and why I wanted to do/change/better these things and even though I wanted to before, why hadn’t I succeeded?  

Well to start with lets look at SMART goals.

SMART stands for
Specific

ie lets get specific with each one – eg “Get fit” turns into “find and run a 5k race for charity”
  







Measurable / Meaningful
ie “save money” turned into “Save enough money for a summer holiday” so it was something meaningful that I was saving up for and I knew how much I needed to save too - making it a measurable goal





 
Achievable / Attainable
ie “lose weight” turned into “Lose a stone by September” which when you break it down is a sensible and achievable weight loss goal per month and even per week (if this is one for you too and you’d like more info on healthy weight management please contact us info@nitakothari.com




Realistic
ie “find and run a 5k race for charity” is something a lot of people do and a very realistic goal for me considering my current fitness levels







Timed
ie “lose 1 stone by September” gives me a clear goal of how much and by when










I’ve gone and added an extra E and R to make my goals SMARTER

is for End
Know when to end it, to stop, to change your mind and adjust your rules.  Sometimes with even the most amount of willing things just don’t get done or turn out how you planned.  You need to know, when the time comes, that you can adjust your goals/resolutions/promises and there is no harm, no shame and no sense of failure attached in doing so.  Letting go can be just as hard as starting up, but knowing that you can, sometimes prompts you to try harder at the start.

is for Reason
Make sure you have your own personal and real reasons for your new resolutions.  Make sure they are for you and for your benefit.  For example, when I really think about it my get fit and get healthy goals were both geared towards the “lose weight” one.  Really I didn’t care if I was healthy, I just wanted to be slimmer.  The reason I wanted to be slimmer was totally wrong too.  This year I understand fitness, health and weight go hand in hand but are NOT the same.  If you would like more info on this or how to succeed in your own weight management journey, fitness and/or realistic health goals please contact me on info@nitakothari.com for a free initial consultation, or for any advice and further info on this article. 

Remember, each goal is specific and measurable.  It has it owns reason and value.  For example: 

  • I want to run for charity to give back to Macmillan cancer support – they helped me so what better way to raise money and give back than to do it with my fitness after recovery from cancer!  
  • I am in a relationship with a guy who loves my lumps and bumps, but I’m still not at a healthy weight so have worked out a reasonable and healthy height/weight ratio I’d like to stick to. Also my focus is on getting the full nutritional value from the foods I eat to aid not only weight management but my fitness and health goals too.  Again for info on achieving healthy weight loss, or more details about nutrition and finding the best foods for yourself and your health, please just get in touch – info@nitakothari.com
  • Saving for a holiday – of course there is a reason – I need a break! 
  • Seeing the family, friends and building our relationship well the reasons here are the same for each.  Keeping good relationships is what keeps me happy.  In fact it’s a proven point that this is true for most, so working on relationships as a resolution for this year is my number one focus.  
Check out this TED talk about what makes a good life –

Finally, let’s think about how we get to these new, focused, goals.  We have managed to redefine them this year, but how are we going to achieve them all if we didn’t manage it before?  Well step one is done here – making them SMARTER helps a great deal to focus our energies and have that end point to aim for.  Do not expect instant results – this is another major reason a lot of us do not succeed in keeping to our resolutions.  Each promise needs commitment and work from you to achieve.  Building good goals and turning the process of getting to them into good habits is the best way I have found to proceed, so the next step I’ve found is to break down our resolutions to small and even easier achievable chunks.  For example when thinking of saving for a summer holiday – that holiday may realistically be in let’s say August. 
- So it gives you 7 months to save. 
- You may have to pay earlier but could do a finance deal if it’s a big holiday/hotel/operator/airline etc.  Find out. 
- Make a budget of your expected salary and outgoings and see where you can make the savings. 
- Seek out a high interest savings account or such, to help grow your savings as much as possible over a short time period. 
These are 4 steps already that you can think about for just one resolution.  If you give yourself a week or 2 for each step everything will be in place in a couple months and it will just be the saving to actually do and the holiday to book! 

There is a great blog piece here from the Institute of Integrative Nutrition – short, sweet and to the point - they talk about having one resolution and 12 mini goals – one for each month of the year.  I love this idea: http://www.integrativenutrition.com/blog/2015/12/the-truth-about-new-year-s-resolutions-and-some-useful-alternatives

Lastly Mind Tools have also offered a great piece on common goal setting mistakes that I found useful in setting my resolutions this year - https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/goal-setting-mistakes.htm  so I thought Id share this with you too.

So good luck with your resolutions and relationships and your 2016.  I hope this year is fulfilling, happy and ultimately healthy in all respects for all of you.



If you’d like more info on achieving a happy, healthier year, please get in touch info@nitakothari.com where we can discuss our health coaching service and weight management program.  Or like and follow us on social media for regular recipe and tip updates:


You can also sign up for the newsletter via the link on any page of our website: www.nitakothari.com


**Please remember this is advice ONLY (as is all other information contained in this blog, the website and social media related to it) None of the info or advice is intended to override any recommendation from your GP or health professional**