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Q & A Mondays: Metabolism, "junk food", and croissants for breakfast

2/17/2013

6 Comments

 
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Q & A Mondays: "Health foods" or not? Spotlight on STEVIA, QUINOA and ALMOND MILK. Plus gelatin queries. 

2/3/2013

47 Comments

 
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Welcome to Q&A Mondays! Each Monday, I'll endeavour to answer some of the health questions sent in by readers via email, or that have been posted on the Nutrition by Nature Facebook page. 

This week's questions tackle some darlings of the health food industry - quinoa, almond milk and stevia. Are they really all they're cracked up to be? 

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47 Comments

Gelatin FTW! Plus a recipe: coconut water jellies. 

2/1/2013

34 Comments

 
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I’ve written about gelatin before, both here and here. But (for new readers in particular, hello!) to summarize, some of the health benefits of gelatin and why you’d go out of your way to include it in your diet: 

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34 Comments

Q & A Mondays: Metabolism, chocolate and OJ

1/27/2013

3 Comments

 
Welcome to Q&A Mondays! Each Monday, I'll endeavour to answer some of the health questions sent in by readers via email, or that have been posted on the Nutrition by Nature Facebook page. 

This week's questions are short but sweet, general food queries. Here goes... 

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Q & A Mondays: Calorie restriction, intermittent fasting and IGF-1 

1/19/2013

6 Comments

 
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Welcome to Q&A Mondays! Each Monday, I'll endeavour to answer some of the health questions sent in by readers via email, or that have been posted on the Nutrition by Nature Facebook page. 
This week, Stuart asks via email:

The proponents of calorie restriction, and intermittent fasting state that it reduces the levels of circulating IGF-1 [Insulin-like Growth Factor 1], which gets upregulated by a "high protein" diet.  The higher levels of IGF-1 apparently lead to a shorter lifespan, and increase your risk of tumour (according to animal studies anyway).

A) Do you believe this is true, despite these methods going against having a high metabolism?

B) Is IGF-1 secreted independently of insulin, and mainly in response to protein intake?

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6 Comments

POTATO PANCAKES (and why some veggies aren't all they're cracked up to be)

1/18/2013

27 Comments

 
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Potatoes get such a bad rap. Nutritionally-speaking, they’re an excellent source of vitamin C, B6, thyroid-supporting carbohydrates, some usable protein, and are one of the vegetables that contain the least natural plant toxins*. What’s more, they’re an excellent vehicle for other tasty and nutritious foods – butter, salt and cheese (you think I’m kidding, but I assure you I’m not).   

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27 Comments

Health benefits of COFFEE? You betcha! 

1/6/2013

4 Comments

 
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Some people describe their coffee-drinking as a “bad habit”, an “addiction”, something to be kicked. In truth, however, you can think of caffeine less like a "drug" and more as a therapeutic nutrient - there are real health benefits to be reaped from drinking a cup of coffee daily.

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4 Comments

How to meet your calcium needs if you don't drink milk

12/27/2012

5 Comments

 
I really, really love milk. And cheese. And cream, yoghurt, custard and ice cream! But I get that not everyone enjoys (or can tolerate) dairy. Whatever your reason, the problem with not consuming dairy is that it is pretty difficult to obtain enough calcium in your diet via non-dairy sources – the calcium in vegetable foods such as broccoli, kale, dried figs and chickpeas tends to be poorly bioavailable, inadequately digested and inconvenient (you’d have to eat a truckload of figs or broccoli, which may come along with other, uh, ‘side effects’). 

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5 Comments

Healthy Cherry Ripe tart

12/2/2012

8 Comments

 
There are some foods I really WISH were healthy. Cherry Ripe bars are one of them! But a quick squiz at the ingredients list yields unpromising results:

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8 Comments

Roasted peaches, goat's cheese, honey and thyme

11/13/2012

1 Comment

 
Peaches are just gorgeous. Blushing, fuzzy dumplings with sweet, juicy flesh, heralding that the best of summer’s bounty has arrived. Roasting brings out their sweetness and concentrates their flavour, accented here with fragrant local honey, tangy goat’s cheese and fresh sprigs of thyme. If you like, feel free to substitute any of the wonderful variety of stone fruit that are just now coming into season (here down under!) – nectarines, apricots, black amber plums, or even cherries.

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    Kate Skinner Nutrition

    Kate Skinner

    Nutritionist, Health Writer
    Adv Dip Nutr. Med. (ACNT), 
    BDesArch (USyd)

    About Kate 

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