Friday, March 15, 2013

Recipes

=== News - 4 new results for [recipes] ===

Delight guests with March Madness recipes
Knoxville News Sentinel
If you're one of the tens of millions of Americans eagerly preparing to be
swept up in the March Madness mania, you're probably already making plans
about where to watch the games. Spectators need look no further than their
own living rooms to find the ...
<http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/mar/13/delight-guests-with-march-madness-recipes/>

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<http://news.google.com/news/story?ncl=http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/mar/13/delight-guests-with-march-madness-recipes/&hl=en&geo=us>

4 vegan St. Patrick's Day recipes; more fallout from soda ban: Table Talk
OregonLive.com
Going vegan on St. Patrick's Day: Yesterday, we shared five Irish recipes
for St. Patrick's Day that were hits in Foodday's Test Kitchen, and it was
mostly meaty fare like corned beef and cabbage. But people who don't eat
meat also celebrate St ...
<http://www.oregonlive.com/foodday/index.ssf/2013/03/4_vegan_st_patricks_day_recipe.html>

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<http://news.google.com/news/story?ncl=http://www.oregonlive.com/foodday/index.ssf/2013/03/4_vegan_st_patricks_day_recipe.html&hl=en&geo=us>

Chef Ori Ann Li to share vegan recipes
Maui News
Cookbook writer Li's first book, “Ori Ann Li's Vegan Paradise: 65
Unforgettable Recipes,” features Asian and fusion cuisines and tips on
healing foods. It was published this year. Her second book (not yet titled)
will feature European and Middle ...
<http://www.mauinews.com/page/calendars.detail/cal/6/event/5459/Chef-Ori-Ann-Li-to-share-vegan-recipes.html?d=03%2F14%2F2013>

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Raglan Road's Boxty Bradan
Orlando Sentinel
Place 2 boxty potatoes on plate. Top each with floret. Whisk crème fraiche
and chives to a creamy consistency and lightly drizzle on salmon. Repeat
with remaining potatoes and salmon. Recipe note: Crème fraiche is a thick
cream with a tangy, nutty ...
<http://www.orlandosentinel.com/features/food/os-thot-raglan-roads-boxty-bradan-20130313,0,1668310.story>

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Smart Snacks

Smart snacks, can be part of a healthy diet, by helping you curb hunger between meals. Just be sure you know their calorie content and practice portion control.

Medically reviewed by Pat F. Bass III, MD, MPH
If you grew up believing that eating snacks between meals was a sure path to weight gain, you’ll be happy to hear that this is now outmoded thinking — with a caveat. If you choose healthy snacks and practice portion control, you can curb hunger between meals and even lose weight doing it.
“A planned snack can actually help prevent overeating,” says Deborah Beauvais, RD, a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and a district supervisor of school nutrition services in the Rochester, N.Y., area.
If you have a small snack to curb your hunger, you won’t be famished when you sit down for lunch or dinner, which can make it easier to control how much you eat during meals.
Tips on Being a Smart Snacker
Start with these steps to make healthy snack choices:
Snack only when you're truly hungry. Don’t hit the vending machine or dip into the cookie jar out of boredom or frustration. “Feed an emotional urge to munch with an alternative activity like walking the dog, checking e-mail or social media, or calling or texting a friend,” says Beauvais. “Remember — the more physically active you are, the bigger your daily calorie budget is.”
Practice portion control. An ounce of raw almonds (about 23 nuts) is about 160 calories and can easily fit into your healthy eating plan. But if you eat half a bag without thinking, those extra calories could add up to trouble. “Almost any food can be worked into a healthful diet when you pay attention to portion size,” Beauvais says. The daily rule of thumb is that total calories in must equal total calories out.
Think small. You don’t need to eat an entire bag of chips or box of cookies to be satisfied. Researchers at Cornell University gave different portion sizes of three snacks — apple pie, potato chips, and chocolate — to two groups. The group that was given smaller portions was as satisfied as the group that ate larger portions.
Don’t confuse snacks with treats. A treat is something you eat on a special occasion, like cake on your birthday, or pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving. A smart snack is a healthy food that helps ward off hunger pangs and is part of your day’s overall eating plan. “Yes, you can work both snacks and the occasional treat into your diet,” Beauvais says. But because treats tend to be higher in calories than snacks, you need to limit them to special occasions and keep portions small.
Don’t be fooled by “fat free” or “no sugar” labels. “Fat free” doesn't always translate to lower calories, Beauvais points out. You need to review the nutrition facts label and pay special attention to the serving size and the number of calories per portion. “There are many fat-free and low-fat products that are healthier options than their full-fat cousins," she says, "but only by comparing food labels will you learn if the food you are choosing fits the bill.”
Here’s what to look for per serving on the label to be sure you’re choosing smart snacks — and be sure to limit your snack to the designated portion size if the package contains more than one serving:
  • 7 grams or less of fat
  • 2 grams or less of saturated fat
  • 0 grams of trans fat
  • 15 grams or less of sugar
  • 360 milligrams or less of sodium
Nuts are the exception to this list, notes Beauvais.
Plan your snacks ahead of time. You’ll be less tempted by the candy bar in the vending machine at work if you planned ahead and brought low-fat yogurt or some whole-wheat crackers and low-fat cheese to snack on. Your kids are more likely to reach for some carrot and celery sticks with peanut butter if they’re cut up and waiting for them in the fridge. “Measure ahead and pre-portion foods in snack bags,” Beauvais suggests.
Time your snacks. A study of women in the Seattle area who were overweight or obese found that they lost more weight if they had a snack between lunch and dinner than if they snacked between breakfast and lunch. The women who snacked in the afternoon also tended to eat more healthy fruits and vegetables as part of their day’s snacks and meals.
Ideas for Healthy Snacks
Here are Beauvais’s recommendations for smart snacks, for kids and adults alike:
  • 1 cup of dry whole-grain cereal — eat it like snack mix
  • 1 cup of low-fat yogurt topped with 1/2 cup fresh fruit
  • Fresh fruit (1 piece) or fresh vegetables (1 cup) paired with 1 to 2 tablespoons of low-fat yogurt, hummus, or tofu dip
  • 1 tablespoon of peanut butter or hummus on whole-wheat crackers (read the cracker box for serving size)
  • 2 cups air-popped popcorn with an herb seasoning (no butter)
  • Fruit smoothie made by blending 1 cup of nonfat yogurt with 1/2 cup juice and 1/2 cup fruit, and ice as desired; yields two 8- to 10-ounce smoothies
Feeling hungry? There’s always room for snacks in a healthy diet if you choose them carefully and include their calories in your day’s total.
Last Updated: 02/25/2013
 
 http://www.everydayhealth.com/health-report/healthy-family-guide/smart-snacking.aspx?xid=nl_EverydayHealthMenopause_20130314
 
 
 

Rheumatoid Arthritis Medication









Malaria Drug: A Surprisingly Effective Rheumatoid Arthritis Medication

What do mosquitoes and humans have in common? A drug developed to prevent malaria works well as a first-line RA treatment.


Medically reviewed by Farrokh Sohrabi, MD

Developed to prevent mosquito-borne malaria, hydroxychloroquine does double-duty as an effective and low-cost rheumatoid arthritis drug.
Hydroxychloroquine is a disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD), which helps lessen rheumatoid arthritis (RA) swelling and pain. Originally used to inhibit malaria, the drug was repurposed in the 1800s by doctors looking for new ways to manage other diseases, says Scott Zashin, MD, a rheumatologist at UT Southwestern in Dallas.

http://www.everydayhealth.com/rheumatoid-arthritis/malaria-and-ra-treatment-2576.aspx?xid=nl_EverydayHealthLivingWithRheumatoidArthritis_20130314

Looking for Beauty in a Life of Chronic Pain






Chronic Pain Blog

Sue Falkner-Wood
Life with Chronic Pain: A How-to Guide
March 7, 2013
Looking for Beauty in a Life of Chronic Pain
Winter seems to be the time of year we’re all worn from the mere act of survival. We feel like worn out human popsicles as we’ve rediscovered the very acts of staying warm and moving around seem too much to expect. Maybe those bears that hibernate have the right idea. It would be sweet to go to sleep and wake up when it’s spring but alas, it’s not to be for us mere humans. We are imbibed with the tasks of survival, family responsibilities and dragging ourselves along for the ride. I think most of us feel we used to be more appreciative of winter, you know BEFORE. That would be before pain arrived in our lives. We recall once frolicking in the snow, breaking off icicles to suck and being unafraid to climb a flight of icy stairs. Those were the days. Now our enjoyment is from film, photos and the view from a tightly closed window. The beauty of winter is still there; it is we who have changed.
I was at our son-in-law’s lumber yard/hardware store a few days ago and the street front was filled with flats of new, incoming blooms. Strange, the effect that one single sign of spring had on me. I had to ask for a large box and fill it with hope in the form of blossoming plants and herbs. It was as if a package I was waiting for had arrived. Pastel pansies both large and small in lavenders, yellows and purples; tiny violas and white trailing blooms and a gallon pot of poppies filled my box. I had to satisfy the practical side of my nature and also purchase a pot of cilantro and one of Italian parsley. Now the box full of promise sits on the front porch, semi-protected from the elements, serving as a constant reminder spring is on the way. I watered them this morning while uttering, “Hang on. It won’t be long now.”
As we go through these rough years for many of us with chronic pain, beauty becomes more important than ever. It is such a close cousin of joy and inspiration and we crave all three. Beauty, they tell us is in the eye of the beholder making it relative to our taste, our customs and our needs. Beauty can be many things. It is a black horse, it is a gorgeous day, it is a newborn child and one poet pointed out, truth is beauty. Let me share just a few lines from John Keats.
ODE ON A GRECIAN URN
Beauty is truth, truth beauty, that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.
There are days I feel like a Grecian urn but do not feel like beauty personified. I feel much too used up and worn to be beautiful so I look for beauty in others, in other places and in beautiful things. Some days I feel as if I belong in the urn; would like to throw the urn or maybe just sell it at a swap meet. Unlike the urn which remains in most part, unchanged, we humans have to mark our time here by showing our wear and tear of life. Some of us are struck early, others late but most will know pain of one form or another. I see very little beauty in the pain that surrounds me and you. I do however see truth and if truth is beauty, then count me in.
It’s a heavy burden, living with constant pain. It is made so much lighter if we are truthful with ourselves, with our families and with our physicians. Truth sounds so simple, as I paraphrase Mark Twain who said we should always tell the truth because it’s easier to remember than a lie.
I have often seen patients, friends and family members who always found it so much more interesting to elaborate, fudge, fib or out and out lie about many things. I have never understood that stance. I know we can each have our version of the truth but basically, it remains sound and unchanged. We’re only human and if we don’t want to tell our age or our weight to someone else, we fudge a bit. On the larger issues of life, where do so many folks find the time and energy to play the game that lying involves. How do they keep it all straight? I had a relative who lied so often she forgot the truth. Oh well, to her the story had to be interesting, whether true or not.
As a nurse I always found it tragic when a blurry eyed fellow or a slurry tongued woman claimed they did not have too much to drink or indeed, with pupils popping, did not take too many drugs, legal or otherwise. Truth spills out of each of us whether we want it to or not. I guess it’s up to us to make that truth beauty.
We have a debt to ourselves to be truthful with our medical caregivers or we will confuse the issues and jeopardize our own health. I can see the beauty in that because not only is honesty safer but it is more noble, isn’t it? Trust grows out of honesty and that is also beautiful.
I love looking for beauty in this life I’ve been given and recommend it highly. Physical beauty wears as we age and become more ill but the beauty from within, born of truth, honor and love, that is amazingly beautiful to behold. Sometimes when I unlock my front door and walk into my home to be greeted by two little dogs, who are jumping and yelping as if I’d been off to the wars, I look at my home with fresh eyes and say to myself, “Someone happy lives here.”
Sue now has a Facebook page — check it out and “like” her now!






http://www.everydayhealth.com/blog/life-with-chronic-pain/looking-for-beauty-in-a-life-of-chronic-pain/?xid=nl_EverydayHealthLivingWithChronicPain_20130314

CathyKats Blog from facebook

CathyKats Blog

by CathyKat Moholland (Notes) on Tuesday, March 12, 2013 at 9:06am

 Today  i went on http://www.myfitnesspal.com/    site updated   my information   , I know should log in more  log in  what i eat have been busy alot  with family and I have not felt well at times to be on the pc . My eczema is bothering me really bad at the moment  where i dont  want to do anything  . It just Pain in the butt . I have things to use most  what issue interacts with my eczema , The type i have is   dyshidrotic eczema it is the type that you have becareful  what you touch  like nickel , other things like antibactrial  soaps , frangrances , a list things that can aggravate it  . My weight went from 267. 5 lb to 265.5 lbs , Hard with our  scale cause part of our kitchen floor is not   even its on slant   so i have to  basicly  stand one part of the floor   lightly hold the counter stand on the scale  to get an  accuarate reading as if the floor was  even . I dont know if thats  ok  to do .  Im doing my Blog here  for  a bit  til i can redo my old old one on Blogger.com i dont have access to it anymore .