Thursday, August 17, 2017

Building your healthy diet

                   

                    Choosing Healthy Protein




Protein provides energy and supports your mood and cognitive function. While it’s in many of the foods that we eat every day, for something so common it’s often a misunderstood part of our diets. Think of protein and you might think of steak sizzling on a grill, an energy bar touting to banish fatigue, or a protein shake promising amazing muscle growth. Yes, these foods are all packed with protein, but when it comes to making the best protein choices to keep your body and mind healthy, quality is just as important as quantity.

What is protein ??
Protein is a vital nutrient required for building, maintaining, and repairing tissues, cells, and organs throughout the body. When you eat protein, it is broken down into the 20 amino acids that are the body’s basic building blocks for growth and energy. The amino acid tryptophan influences mood by producing serotonin, which can reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety and improve overall cognitive function.
Most animal sources of protein, such as meat, poultry, fish, eggs, and dairy, deliver all the amino acids your body needs, while plant-based protein sources such as grains, beans, vegetables, and nuts often lack one or more of the essential amino acids. However, that doesn’t mean you have to eat animal products to get the right amino acids. By eating a variety of plant-based sources of protein each day you can ensure your body gets all the essential amino acids it needs.
The health benefits of protein
Protein gives you the energy to get up and go—and keep going. While too much protein can be harmful to people with kidney disease, diabetes, and some other conditions, eating the right amount of high-quality protein:
  • Keeps your immune system functioning properly, maintains heart health and your respiratory system, and speeds recovery after exercise
  • s vital to the growth and development of children and for maintaining health in your senior years
  • Can help reduce your risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease
  • Can help you think clearly and may improve recall
  • Can improve your mood and boost your resistance to stress, anxiety, and depression
  • May help you maintain a healthy weight by curbing appetite, making you feel full longer, and fueling you with extra energy for exercising.
  • As well as being imperative to feeling healthy and energetic, protein is also important to the way you look. Eating high-quality protein can help:
    • Maintain healthy skin, nails, and hair
    • Build muscle
    • Maintain lean body mass while dieting
    While most people eating a Western diet get sufficient quantity of protein each day, many of us are not getting the quality of protein we need.
  • High-quality vs. low-quality protein
  • Distinguishing between industrially raised meat and organic, grass-fed meat is only part of separating low- and high-quality sources of protein.
    • While some processed or lunch meats, for example, can be a good source of protein, many are loaded with salt, which can cause high blood pressure and lead to other health problems.
    • Processed meats have also been linked with an increased risk of cancer, likely due to the substances used in the processing of the meat.
    The key to ensuring you eat sufficient high-quality protein is to include different types in your diet, rather than relying on just red or processed meat.
  • How much high-quality protein do you need ?
  • Adults should eat at least 0.8g of protein per kilogram (2.2lb) of body weight per day. That means a 180lb man should eat at least 65 grams of high-quality protein per day. A higher intake may help to lower your risk for obesity, osteoporosis, type 2 diabetes, and stroke.
    • Nursing women need about 20 grams more of high-quality protein a day than they did before pregnancy to support milk production.
    • Older adults should aim for 1 to 1.5 grams of protein for each kilogram of weight (think 0.5g of protein per lb. of body weight if that's easier).
    • Try to divide your protein intake equally among meals.
    Source: Environmental Nutrition
  • Good sources of high-quality protein
  • Fish. Most seafood is high in protein and low in saturated fat. Fish such as salmon, trout, sardines, anchovies, sablefish (black cod), and herring are also high in omega-3 fatty acids. Experts recommend eating seafood at least twice a week.
    Poultry. Removing the skin from chicken and turkey can substantially reduce the saturated fat. In the U.S., non-organic poultry may also contain antibiotics and been raised on GMO feed grown with pesticides, so opt for organic and free-range if possible.
    Dairy products. Products such as skim milk, cheese, and yoghurt offer lots of healthy protein. Beware of added sugar in low-fat yoghurts and flavored milk, though, and skip processed cheese that often contains non-dairy ingredients.  
    Beans. Beans and peas are packed full of both protein and fiber. Add them to salads, soups and stews to boost your protein intake.
    Nuts and seeds. As well as being rich sources of protein, nuts and seeds are also high in fiber and “good” fats. Add to salads or keep handy for snacks.
    Tofu and soy products. Non-GMO tofu and soy are excellent red meat alternatives, high in protein and low in fat. Try a “meatless Monday,” plant-based protein sources are often less expensive than meat so it can be as good for your wallet as it is for your health.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Healthy Eating

Simple Ways to Plan, Enjoy, and Stick to a Healthy Diet



Healthy eating is not about strict dietary limitations, staying unrealistically thin, or depriving yourself of the foods you love. Rather, it’s about feeling great, having more energy, improving your health, and stabilizing your mood. If you feel overwhelmed by all the conflicting nutrition and diet advice out there, you’re not alone. It seems that for every expert who tells you a certain food is good for you, you’ll find another saying exactly the opposite. But by using these simple tips, you can cut through the confusion and learn how to create a tasty, varied, and nutritious diet that is as good for your mind as it is for your body.


How can healthy eating improve your mood?

We all know that eating right can help you maintain a healthy weight and avoid certain health problems, but your diet can also have a profound effect on your mood and sense of wellbeing. Studies have linked eating a typical Western diet—filled with processed meats, packaged meals, takeout food, and sugary snacks—with higher rates of depression, stress, bipolar disorder, and anxiety. Eating an unhealthy diet may even play a role in the development of mental health disorders such as ADHD, Alzheimer’s disease, and schizophrenia, or in the increased risk of suicide in young people.
Eating more fresh fruits and vegetables, cooking meals at home, and reducing your intake of sugar and refined carbohydrates, on the other hand, may help to improve mood and lower your risk for mental health issues. If you have already been diagnosed with a mental health problem, eating well can even help to manage your symptoms and regain control of your life.

What constitutes a healthy diet?

Eating a healthy diet doesn’t have to be overly complicated. While some specific foods or nutrients have been shown to have a beneficial effect on mood, it’s your overall dietary pattern that is most important. The cornerstone of a healthy diet pattern should be to replace processed food with real food whenever possible. Eating food that is as close as possible to the way nature made it can make a huge difference to the way you think, look, and feel.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017


Philippe Coutinho: Liverpool reject £90m Barcelona bid for midfielder

Liverpool have again told Barcelona that Philippe Coutinho is not for sale after rejecting a €100m (£90m) bid for the Brazil midfielder. Barcelona’s second offer, comprising €85m plus €15m in add-ons, was immediately rejected.
Barça returned with their latest bid for the 25-year-old on Wednesday having had an offer of €80m (£72m) rejected last month. It was met with the same response. Liverpool rejected the offer, reiterated to Barcelona they will not consider selling their influential playmaker this summer and, despite reports in Spain that a deal is imminent, consider the matter closed.
Whether that deters Barcelona from making a third offer remains to be seen, as their latest approach does reflect a confidence at Camp Nou that Coutinho is keen on making the move. Liverpool have repeatedly stated he will not be sold with Jürgen Klopp insisting last week that his club’s stance is not open to interpretation. Their position is strengthened by the five-year contract Coutinho signed only last season. That deal, worth around £150,000 a week, does not include a release clause.
While interested in joining Barcelona, Coutinho has not agitated for a Liverpool exit and has shown no sign of doing so since the first bid was made. Klopp spoke to the forward in Hong Kong when Barcelona first formalised their interest to stress his importance to the team and reiterate the club’s determination to keep him at Anfield.
That conversation, however, came before Barcelona banked £200m courtesy of Neymar’s departure to Paris Saint-Germain. They have since continued to pursue Coutinho as well as Borussia Dortmund’s Ousmane Dembélé, although claims a Barcelona delegation travelled to England this week to meet their Liverpool counterparts were inaccurate. Liverpool have had no plans to meet Barcelona to discuss Coutinho’s transfer.


How Paulinho turned his career around to earn a dream move to Barcelona

April 2017: Paulinho had messed up. There was the Brazilian in China advertising a betting site alongside a Japanese porn star. His club, Guangzhou Evergrande, were unhappy about being kept in the dark about such controversial activities and there was even wild talk of deportation. It was one of the few mistakes he would make in Asia.
Not even the most committed gambler in south China or north London would have bet back in June 2015, when the midfielder signed for Guangzhou from Tottenham, that he would be heading back west two years and two months later to join Barcelona. After all, the midfielder had been declared a flop in England after two underwhelming seasons with Spurs from 2013-15. So bad had it become, with three starts in his second campaign, that his next destination was China to join his former Brazil manager Luiz Felipe Scolari. We all know the reputation that the Chinese Super League has in Europe. The big names have arrived but the respect has not. Those who go there do so for the money.
Yet it is Barcelona who have splashed out, paying £36.4m (€40m) to activate his release clause, a fee roughly three times more than Guangzhou paid Spurs and more than twice the record amount a Chinese team have received for a transfer. European eyebrows are as raised as the fee. Just before the signing was confirmed, the BBC called the move “one of the more random transfers of recent times” and asked whether he would even be a good signing for West Ham or Everton.
One wonders how many have seen the former Corinthians midfielder play since he left England because Paulinho has been excellent in the Chinese Super League. He has been better than Alex Teixeira, better than Ramires, better than Ezequiel Lavezzi and better than Oscar (though an eight-match ban for the former Chelsea player for kicking the ball at two opponents during play, sparking a huge brawl, makes that comparison a little unfair).
“Sometimes in training we will just watch him,” said a former midfield partner Zheng Zhi, formerly of Celtic and Charlton Athletic. “He is a second ahead of everyone else.” Perhaps that is why he has time to advise and help the younger players at Guangzhou. Zheng added last week that Paulinho will be sorely missed but wished him well in his new adventure, sentiments that most fans in China share. The pain of parting may be mutual. On plenty of occasions Paulinho spoke of his satisfaction with life in China, on and off the pitch, and working with the protective arm of Scolari around his shoulders, a man who also knows something about leaving London with a reduced reputation.
Under Scolari, the 29-year-old became the perfect overseas signing, bringing power and authority to Guangzhou and the ability to dictate tempo and drive forward. In all he played 95 games – impressive in just over two years – and scored 25 goals, some of which were truly spectacular. If winning two Chinese Super League titles and one Asian Champions League is not enough to convince the doubters, then there is the more subjective point that Paulinho has been the best player in Asia for the past 18 months. Succeeding there is not a given. Guangzhou spent much more buying Jackson Martínez from Atlético Madrid but the Colombia striker has struggled. It remains to be seen if, and probably when, he returns to Europe, he will be known as a CSL flop.
Paulinho may or may not be the world-class talent that Barcelona fans were expecting to arrive with the first flash of the Neymar cash. Yet since leaving Europe he has not only shone in Asia, he has also returned to the Brazil national team. He had last played for them at the 2014 World Cup and it was assumed that playing in China spells the end of international careers.
It helped that Brazil’s manager, Tite, knew the player from Corinthians, but this was no sentimental selection. In World Cup qualification Brazil, who started along the road to Russia with a little wobble, won all eight games after the midfielder returned. A personal high-point came with a hat-trick in a 4-1 win in Uruguay in March. Perhaps Barcelona – and Bayern, who were interested back in April – do not see him as a Spurs failure but a vital member of a Brazil team who were first to qualify for the 2018 finals.
If Paulinho can rebuild his career with Brazil then he can reforge his reputation back in Europe. Chinese and Asian football is not held in high enough regard to remove the flop label – that will only change if more players leave for Europe’s bigger clubs – but Barcelona are.
The step up from Canton to Catalonia is obviously big but it could just be that Tottenham fans, for whatever reason, did not see the best of a very good player. Succeeding with Guangzhou may not automatically mean he is a world-beater but then struggling with Spurs does not mean the opposite. Paulinho has earned his chance.

Thursday, August 10, 2017


Liverpool’s Jürgen Klopp: we will not sell Philippe Coutinho at any price

Jürgen Klopp has insisted Liverpool will not accept any bids for Philippe Coutinho after the club rejected an improved £90m offer for the Brazil playmaker.
Barça returned with their latest bid for the 25-year-old on Wednesday having had an offer of €80m (£72m) rejected last month and, speaking to Sky Germany, Klopp was adamant that Liverpool are committed to retaining their best players.
“Liverpool is not a club that has to sell players. That is set in stone. So what they offer in the end doesn’t matter,” he said.
“From a financial standpoint, there is no price limit to let him go. No price at which we are ready to give in. Our goal is to have the best possible team. So we want to keep our guys and add new ones. That is our plan.”
Liverpool have repeatedly stated Coutinho will not be sold and their position is strengthened by the five-year contract he signed only last season.
“Today, no player on the planet is unsellable,” added Klopp. “But a transfer is also a question of timing and if you have the opportunity and the need to react to such a transfer.
“Also you have to ask, if you have the time to react. But just because of one request of one club, we don’t have to think about that. We are not in that situation.”
While interested in joining Barcelona, Coutinho has not agitated for a Liverpool exit and has shown no sign of doing so since the first bid was made. Klopp spoke to the forward in Hong Kong when Barcelona first formalised their interest to stress his importance to the team and reiterate the club’s determination to keep him at Anfield.
He is expected to miss the opening game of the Premier League season on Saturday, when Liverpool travel to Vicarage Road to face Watford, due to a back injury.

Wednesday, August 9, 2017


Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Manchester United in talks over return to Old Trafford

Manchester United have started talks over a new deal to bring back striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic, according to Sky in Italy.
The 35-year-old Swede is a free agent following his release from Old Trafford at the end of last season and is battling back to fitness after suffering a cruciate knee ligament injury in April.
His rehabilitation has continued at the club's Carrington training complex, with Jose Mourinho saying in July that he could resume at United despite Romelu Lukaku's arrival. "Why not wait for such a good player that gave us so much?" he said.
And with the latest news from Italy, it would seem United are stepping up their efforts to secure a return for the player who shone in his first season in the Premier League, scoring 28 goals in 46 appearances before injury struck.
Ibrahimovic's agent Mino Raiola told Sky in May there had been offers from "many leagues" for the former PSG and Barcelona striker and that he would "remain in Europe 100 per cent", adding he still had "one more year, maybe two" left in his career.
AC Milan have been the latest side to be interested in Ibrahimovic as they continue to overhaul their squad in a summer that has seen several Serie A sides make big statements in the transfer market.
Atletico Madrid were also linked, while LA Galaxy president said their doors were "always open" for a player they had an "incredible relationship" with.
Ibrahimovic would also be welcomed by his former team-mates. Paul Pogba said earlier in August: "He's still a big leader because he's still in the team, even he's not playing he's a leader outside of the pitch."

Tuesday, August 8, 2017


José Mourinho has spent lavishly again this summer to create a big, powerful side equipped for the title race – yet Manchester United must buy again

Guardian writers’ predicted position 3rd (NB: this is not necessarily Jamie Jackson’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)
In 2017-18 Manchester United have to be true contenders for the Premier League title. This is the minimum demand and undeniable truth facing José Mourinho as he embarks on a second campaign leading the record 20-times champions.
Given the Portuguese’s backing in the transfer market, he has no excuses if they are not challengers. Last summer Mourinho acquired Paul Pogba for a then world record of £89m and followed that up this summer by buying Romelu Lukaku for £75m from Everton, a record between two British clubs, the central defender Victor Lindelof (£31m) and last week the midfielder Nemanja Matic (£40m).
Factor in Henrikh Mkhitaryan (£30m) and Eric Bailly (£30m), who were also bought 12 months ago, and it is a £295m investment made by the Glazers, who own United. If Ivan Perisic or the AN Other forward Mourinho wants to complete his trading is recruited (for a minimum £45m), it will be close to £350m he has spent since taking charge.
Despite finishing in a lowly sixth place in the Premier League, last season was still a success. With Zlatan Ibrahimovic scoring 28 times in all competitions before a serious knee injury, Mourinho guided United to the EFL Cup and the Europa League. This last trophy completed United’s set of major honours and came with the precious prize of a Champions League place.
As the Europa League triumph left his men battle-hardened, Mourinho should set par performance in the continent’s elite club tournament at the quarter-finals, then back his managerial ability to see how much further he can take them. But it is the Premier League where the manager really believes his side can prosper. In Georgetown, Washington DC, before the final training session of the tour of the United States, Mourinho named Tottenham Hotspur as major favourites for the title while ranking United as having a fighting chance.
Do not be fooled. Mourinho’s team is not perfect but has been built primarily for domestic competition. It is big and strong, a powerhouse outfit the manager will instruct to try and bully most opponents.
A scan through his probable first XI illustrates this and points to weaknesses at left-back, No10, and in a wide attacking berth. The last two issues could be eased in a single acquisition if Mourinho obtains Perisic from Internazionale. Do that then United’s best side might read: De Gea; Valencia, Bailly, Jones/Lindelof, Blind/Darmian; Pogba, Matic; Rashford, Mkhitaryan, Perisic; Lukaku.
This 4-2-3-1 has no room for Ander Herrera so in a 4-3-3 to accommodate the Spaniard, Mkhitaryan would miss out and Perisic would play one side of Lukaku with Marcus Rashford the other. Mourinho also fielded a three centre-backs on tour and sees this as an option rather than a regular system for the coming campaign.
Whichever way he goes, a formidable unit can be fielded on any match-day that would contain only a couple of players Mourinho has inherited and is lukewarm about – the centre-back Phil Jones and Daley Blind or Matteo Darmian, the potential left-backs.
His goalkeeper, De Gea, has a definite case for being the best in the world and of Antonio Valencia Mourinho says: “There is no better right-back in football.” Bailly has convinced he should be first-choice and not just a player with potential. Matic was an integral part of Mourinho’s last Chelsea title-winning team of 2014-15, Pogba is the Portuguese’s on-field personification, and of the front four of Lukaku, Rashford, Perisic and Mkhitaryan, only the last causes doubt.
On Tuesday night in Skopje, United take on Real Madrid in the Uefa Super Cup final. After United were given a 1-0 schooling by Barcelona in their final outing in the States, Mourinho was open about the Catalan club and Real being on a different level to his side. The manager stated it is up to him to stymie the two Spanish giants with clever strategy. The encounter at the Philip II Arena in the Macedonian capital is a chance for Mourinho to do so but a more sure-fire way of achieving this is by beefing up recruitment. This should be straightforward but requires United to be more bullish. They must utilise the financial heft that was underlined by the £750m earned from the Adidas kit deal alone, plus Pogba’s presence as a statement of what United are building, to make a muscular move in the closing weeks of the transfer window.
If the ambition is to be the dominant Premier League force again and disrupt the Real-Barça-Bayern Munich continental hegemony, United need to target a player who would instantly improve them after scoring 18 Premier League goals last year, who is only 21, and has the requisite edge to perform at Old Trafford: Tottenham Hotspur’s Dele Alli.

Monday, August 7, 2017