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2 votes
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I really didn’t want to go on the Goop cruise
8 votes -
Forks Over Knives - A documentary about whole food plant based diets
11 votes -
Cake in the office should be viewed like passive smoking, says UK food regulator
13 votes -
Semi-formal study of people trying a fad diet where you eat mostly potatoes for four weeks
14 votes -
What life is like when you're allergic to corn
7 votes -
Rice, beans, and the "myth" of protein combining
6 votes -
Climate change food calculator: What's your diet's carbon footprint?
5 votes -
A pint a day (30 Nov 1996)
4 votes -
Being healthy
5 votes -
According to a woman tasked with checking for poison in Adolf Hitler's meals, Hitler was sympathetic to vegetarianism
3 votes -
Everything you know about obesity is wrong
13 votes -
"White trash" food and the diet of the poor
5 votes -
Effects of drinking water on weight loss outcomes
15 votes -
What should I know about intermittent fasting?
I know it's a big deal right now, but I don't know much about it. I sort of stumbled into it by accident because I don't feel safe eating at work right now, so most days I don't have any food...
I know it's a big deal right now, but I don't know much about it.
I sort of stumbled into it by accident because I don't feel safe eating at work right now, so most days I don't have any food until I get home around 4:00 to 4:30 PM. I'm also usually wrapping up my evening and in bed by 9:00 PM, so I end up with a roughly five hour window in which to eat. Last weekend I tried to follow it even though I was home and found it surprisingly easy to just not eat until that time, even though it was safe for me to do so and food was available.
I was already calorie counting prior to this, but I noticed the shift to not eating at work accelerated my weight loss a little bit. It's also way easier to come in under my calorie count when I don't eat for most of the day.
Because it seems like this is working (though granted, I'm in the very early stages), and because I don't really have a choice in the matter given that I can't safely eat at work anyway, I'm interested in learning about the do's and don't's of intermittent fasting. As a beginner to this, what should I know? I am mostly interested in just making sure I'm not doing any damage to myself or creating any potential problems that I don't realize, so safety is my primary concern. Weight loss is a secondary focus, though less essential because I feel like I've got that down with calorie counting. Any insights or resources you know of would be appreciated.
14 votes -
What do I need to know about switching to a vegetarian diet?
My husband and I have cut back on meat consumption significantly in recent months, and I'm tossing around the idea of trying to do a full vegetarian diet for the month of March as a trial run for...
My husband and I have cut back on meat consumption significantly in recent months, and I'm tossing around the idea of trying to do a full vegetarian diet for the month of March as a trial run for potentially going vegetarian full-time.
I've searched around and there's a lot of conflicting information out there on the topic of vegetarianism, as well as the reality that a significant amount of nutritional information online is sketchy at best. I know we have lots of vegetarian/vegan users here, and I'm wondering if there's any significant need-to-know health concerns or things that need to be addressed. Do I need to supplement any particular nutrients? Do I need to measure my protein intake? Any other must-know information or do's/don't's I should be aware of?
31 votes -
Copenhagen crowned Europe's healthiest city – factors included things like life expectancy, the percent of GDP allocated to healthcare and the cost of fruit and vegetables
7 votes -
Limited eating times could be a new way to fight obesity and diabetes
11 votes -
Norwegians are eating less sugar than at any time in the last forty-four years – annual consumption per person has fallen by more than 1kg a year since 2000
12 votes -
Headline Whiplash: Red meat is good for you now? (Research meta-review)
4 votes -
Scientist who discredited meat guidelines didn’t report past food industry ties
8 votes -
Our food is killing too many of us: Improving American nutrition would make the biggest impact on our health care
11 votes -
Unhappy meals - How 'food science' made us unhealthy
10 votes -
The Grandmaster diet: How to lose weight while barely moving
18 votes -
Is a meat-free diet really as healthy as vegetarians claim?
6 votes -
A boy ate only chips and french fries for ten years. This is what happened to his eyes
11 votes -
Stop mocking vegans
32 votes -
UN says humans must transform our diets and land use to save the planet
5 votes -
Lean Cuisine doesn’t want to be part of diet culture anymore. Does it have a choice?
9 votes -
Vegetarian protein is just as 'complete' as meat, despite what we've been taught
25 votes -
Do cookbooks need nutrition facts?
11 votes -
Dissecting the role of the gut microbiota and diet on visceral fat mass accumulation
4 votes -
Why I’m no longer vegan™ (an argument for political veganism)
4 votes -
Is meat bad for you? Is meat unhealthy?
10 votes -
"Breakfast food" is a lie - Americans eat a narrower variety of foods for breakfast than anyone else
6 votes -
Jack Dorsey’s diet is wacky. Is it also dangerous?
7 votes -
Giant pandas are macronutritional carnivores - A new study shows that the nutrient profile of the bear’s all-bamboo diet is much closer to that of a typical meat eater
4 votes -
Meet Nigeria’s small but growing vegetarian and vegan community
9 votes -
Genetics-based expectations affect your physiology
7 votes -
The gut microbiome as a major regulator of the gut-skin axis
7 votes -
The metabolic adaptation manual: Problems, solutions, and life after weight loss
6 votes -
Death of the calorie
19 votes -
A plea to make fiber cool
3 votes -
Sleeping more on weekends does not make up for past sleep loss
10 votes -
Bigger, saltier, heavier: Fast food since 1986 in three simple charts
8 votes -
What you need to get your recommended intake of fruits and vegetables
12 votes -
GPs to prescribe very low calorie diets in hope of reversing diabetes
8 votes -
Seven cookbooks for getting started with a paleo diet
5 votes -
I tried the carnivore diet and it broke me after three days
7 votes -
It is truly shocking how much sugar we eat
Have you ever really looked at what you eat? If you have, you may notice one common ingredient present in everything from vegan sauces to certain ketogenic foods. Taking those specific diets into...
Have you ever really looked at what you eat? If you have, you may notice one common ingredient present in everything from vegan sauces to certain ketogenic foods. Taking those specific diets into consideration, the widely accepted figure for keto is <100 grams, and similar in the vegan sphere as well(Often times you'll see a quoted 30 grams, but the kicker always comes in the comments where someone says fruit based sugars don't count towards this. They do, very much so, count towards it). This is far, far, far too much sugar for any one human to be taking in a day. The FDA has no recommended figure for their DV scale of food labels, but other groups certainly do. The World Health Organisation recommends no more than 5% of daily calories be from sugar of all types. This is equivalent to 25 grams for a 2000 calorie diet. The American Heart Association recommends the same figures.
Now, you may be asking yourself, why would the AHA bother themselves with sugar? Certainly that's more for a diabetes association to study than a heart disease one? Well, it's because sugar is heavily linked to heart disease. From the source:
participants who took in 25% or more of their daily calories as sugar were more than twice as likely to die from heart disease as those whose diets included less than 10% added sugar
So, not only are you at risk for heart disease, but there are new studies that suggest alzheimer's is nothing more than a 3rd form of diabetes.
I'm not hoping for much in posting this, except that someone somewhere looks at their diet and resists the stranglehold sugar has on our present society.
35 votes