Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Spicy Tips (Tamanna Shaikh T.Y.B.A 2010)



Sniff those spices
Spice tips
Shop : Check the package date; if there’s no date done mark one on the package. “ Buy from reputed stores that’ve a fast turnaround,”
Store : Not by the stove. Keep in small containers with tight screw tops in a cool, dry cupboard.
Sniff : Smell spices. Crush dried herbs. Then sniff. If a spice solos in a dish, it’s crucial that its flavor and aroma are strong.
Toss : Depending on storage conditions, whole spices last two years. Ground spices last six months to a year. But if you don’t want to toss out old cinnamon sticks, place with old whole cloves in a pot of water; simmer about 15minutes to sent your home.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Natural Ways To Boost our Metabolism By- Tamanna Shaikh ( T.Y.B.A)

Natural Ways to Boost Your Metabolism






A fast metabolism is critical to burning fat and managing body weight. While some dieters use diet pills to speed up their metabolisms, the risks and side effects of these drugs make them risky. You can use some safe and natural methods to speed up your metabolism.

Gain Muscle

The American Council on Exercise recommends resistance training for weight management. Think of your muscles as your body's engine. The bigger your engine, the more energy you can burn. Muscle, unlike fat, is active tissue that raises your metabolism just by being there. Adding a resistance training program is a sure method of naturally raising your metabolism. To make the most out of your time in the gym, train three days per week, training your entire body during each session. Use basic, compound exercises such as the leg press and shoulder press.

Keep Hydrated

Inadequate water intake can slow your metabolism. Water is responsible for several metabolic processes, including digestion, waste management and temperature regulation. The Mayo Clinic recommends drinking 2 liters of water daily. You can fight hunger as well as raise your metabolism by drinking a glass before each meal. To provide an extra boost, make sure your water is ice cold. Your body burns extra calories heating it up to room temperature.

Cardiovascular Exercise

Cardiovascular exercises such as walking, jogging and cycling are all effective ways to burn calories and keep your metabolism stoked. If you are just starting out, use a low-impact, low-intensity exercise such as brisk walking or moderate cycling. With more experience, you can graduate to jogging or intense cycling like spinning.

Coffee

Whether you realize it or not, you might already be waking up to an effective natural metabolism booster. The caffeine naturally present in coffee raises metabolism and can improve fat oxidation. Drinking a cup before exercise can also improve alertness and help fight fatigue.


References

LIVESTRONG.COM is designed to inspire people to change their lives, help themselves and help others. For more on this topic, visit http://www.livestrong.com.





SOURCE: INTERNET

Thursday, June 10, 2010

7 myths of veggies....by Tamanna Shaikh (T.Y.B.A.)2010

7 MYTHS OF VEGGIES......

(Photo: Getty Images)

(Photo: Getty Images)

Is it healthier to eat raw veggies or to cook them? Is fresh broccoli more nutritious than frozen? Is eating iceberg lettuce a waste of time?

You may be surprised by the answers to these seemingly simple questions. In fact, there are several misconceptions when it comes to vegetables. The one universal truth is that most of us could be eating more of them.

As summer approaches, we have more vegetable choices than at any other time of year. Here's a guide to what's fact and what's fiction when it comes to eating your veggies.


Myth: Fresh vegetables are more nutritious than frozen

Fact: Studies show that sometimes you can get more nutrients from frozen veggies, depending on variety and how old the vegetables at your supermarket are. That's because produce starts losing nutrient quality as soon as it's picked.

Frozen vegetables are flash-frozen right after harvest so they are preserved at their peak of freshness when they are most nutritious. Your best bet in terms of taste, nutrition, and the environment is still local in-season produce. When that's not an option frozen can be a better choice (from a nutrient standpoint) than spinach that takes two weeks to reach your table.


Myth: Cooked veggies are less nutritious than raw

Fact: It depends on the vegetable. "Cooking destroys some nutrients, but it releases others," says Marion Nestle, author of What to Eat. It destroys vitamin C and folic acid, according to Nestle, which is why it's not a great idea to cook oranges.

On the other hand, she says, cooking releases vitamin A and the nutrients in fiber and makes them easier to digest. It's also easier for your body to absorb more lycopene, a cancer-fighting antioxidant, in cooked tomato sauce than from raw tomatoes.

Steam or roast veggies instead of boiling, which leaches out water-soluble vitamins into the cooking water.


Myth: Iceberg lettuce doesn't have any nutrients

Fact: Iceberg lettuce is mostly water so it's hardly loaded with vitamins, but a large head does contain small amounts of protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals.

You'll get more nutrients from other greens that have less water such as romaine or butterhead lettuce, but contrary to popular belief, iceberg lettuce does have some nutritional value.


Myth: Local vegetables are always cheaper

Fact: It's certainly true that local produce can be good for your budget. This is especially true during the peak of harvest when farmers need to get rid of an abundant crop and there is a lot of competition.

However, there are no guarantees. Local food "is not in any way subsidized so you are paying the real cost of producing the food, and the economies of scale are not there," says Nestle.

Some tips for finding the best deals at your local farmers' market: Shop at the end of the day when farmers are likely to mark down their prices in order to get rid of their inventory. (Go early in the day if selection is more important than price.) Ask your farmer for a volume discount if he or she doesn't already offer one. Take advantage of special deals on bruised or overripe veggies. Prices vary from farmer to farmer so shop around before buying.


Myth: Potatoes make you fat

Fact: Potatoes are virtually fat-free and low in calories. These delicious and inexpensive root vegetables contain a healthy dose of fiber, which can actually make you feel satisfied for longer and help you lose weight.

It's not the potatoes themselves that make you fat. It's how you cook them and what you slather on your spuds that can cause you to pack on the pounds.


Myth: Bagged salads are squeaky clean

Fact: They're not nearly as clean as you may think. Consumer Reports tests found bacteria that are "common indicators of poor sanitation and fecal contamination" in 39 percent of the 208 packages of salad greens it tested. It didn't find E. coli 0157:H7, listeria, or other disease-causing bacteria in its samples.

But it's still a good idea to give greens a good rinse to remove residual soil before eating even if the bag says they're "pre-washed" or "triple-washed."


Myth: Farmer's markets only have organics

Fact: Just because a vegetable (or anything for that matter) is sold at a farmers' market does not mean that it's organic. It still must be certified organic by the U.S. Department of Agriculture for a guarantee that it was grown without synthetic fertilizers and pesticides.

Some farmers will say they are in the process of getting certified, they grow crops without synthetic chemicals but can't afford the certification process, or they only use chemicals when they have no choice and don't use them when it's close to harvest time. It's your call on whether you trust that farmer.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

An Article on Pregnancy and Lactating Women ... by Tamanna Shaikh (T.Y.B.A) 2010

Effect of Maternal Health on Pregnancy outcome



Maternal health refers to the health of women during pregnancy, child birth and the post par tum period. Thus,maternal is really important for the fetus to grow healthy in utres. the health of the infant till the child is being breast fed. Thus nutrition of the mother plays a vital role in the development of the fetus.

  • Nutrition of the mother

The state of the moter's health especially the reproductive system at the time when she is consived has a considerble influence on the growth of the fetus. The height and weight of the mother has it's influence on the child's height and weight and also in it's changes of survival stunning in mother cannot be overcome by a good diet in pregnancy and the some applied to reproductive efficiency. thus it is a better option to prepare for pregnancy should begin with good nutrition and health care at childhoodso that they can become a healthier mothers giving birth to healthier babies. it ha been known the height of the mother is closely related to birth weight and pregnancy out come. this was shown by a demonstrated in surveys of pri-natal mortality in U.K. these surveys has also revealed that there are more sgirt nithers in the lower socio economic groups, which means that inadequate nutrition and large number of illness prevent many girls in this social group from achieving optimal physique.Thus, child bearing of such mothers are at disadvantage. The survey has also shown that mothers who weight more than 68kgs. at conception and gain more than 13.6kgs. weight during pregnancy tend to have a lower and healthier babies with in a lower pre natal mortality than compared to mothers who do not weigh or gain less weight than above.
There are two factors of special significant for pregnant woman in the developing world that is in al traditional societies girls are married at a very young age or before menarche. Hence,child bearing also occurs earlier. So now it is agreed that major risk of low birth weight occurs with in two years of menarche. Now the baby or the fetus also needs nutrition and the growing mother also needs nutrients thus there is a competition as well as the hormonal changes of pregnancy may be significant factors in the short stature of women in many developing countries. In traditional societies even today women are considered as inferior in thier status. This is a reflected in high mortality rate of infant and a shorter life expectancy at birth for females as well as higher deficiency in women. Thus, the requirement of nutrition of mother is a very high than required by a non pregnant women.

  • Weight gain in Pregnancy
During pregnancy the mother gains a lot of weight ie; 12.5 kg's including 3.5 Kg's laid down as fat in the mother the weight gain is due to additional calorie ntake and the enlargement of the plasanta utres and breast as well as the fat storage near the hip in order to give energy during delivery and also help during lactation. All these enlargements growths and increase in the blood volume requires a lot of energy which will be acquired by the proper diet that meets the additional nutritive requirement.

  • Iron ans Folic Acid Requirement.
Iron requirement is high as compared to Folic acid. There is a loss of Iron in women and the child needs iron stores in his body that is provided to him by his mother.The requirement of iron increases in the first hald of the gestation. Iron stores in the body are in bone marrow but frequently the amount is not sufficient to meet the demand. If a women gets pregnant with less or no stores of iron then she is supposed to take a high dosage or intake of iron because iron helps in the synthesis of hemoglobin. Thus anemia is a common complication during pregnancy.
Maternal amenia is an increased risk of low birth-weight and prenatal death. The hemoglobin level in mothers play a vital role in the birth weight of the child and also still birth if the hemoglobin is very less.


  • Maternal Health
Preperation for pregnancy should be done before marriage or before thinking of conciving. Because as said earlier the health of the mother has direct reflection to the health of the fetus. If the mother is healthy and has a good height,weight the child also tend to have a good height and weight. Thus the baby is healthy during pregnancy/labour or at birth.


  • Effect on Placental Weight on Pregnancy
The placenta plays a very important role as all the nutrients are passed trough it and is being utilized by the fetus. A healthy placenta would help in a healthy child.A weak or a malnourished placenta may have reduced D.N.A. content and protein D.N.A. ratio. The weight of the placenta has it's efect on the chold because a malnourished placenta would not be able to properly provide full nutrients required by the fetus.

A heavy infection of the placenta with malasia parasite can interfere with the fatal growth of the child ie; the child may be still born. Chemo-prophylaxis with an anti malasia during pregnancy will not only ensure adequate placental funciton but also help protect the mother form anemia.

  • Nutrition During Pregnancy
The gestation period is a rapid growth period. The growth of the fetus and other developments take place to facilitate it's maintainance thorughout pregnancy and delivery of the child involve an increase in the nutritional requirement of a pregnant women.
The increase in the nutritional requirements of a pregnant women can be attributed to
  1. Rapid growth of fetus
  2. Development of the placenta
  3. Enlargemant of the maternal tissues
  4. Increase in the circulation of the blood colume
  5. Formulation of amniotic fluid
  6. Storage reserves
  7. Mineralization of the skeleton and bones

  • CONCLUSION
Human beings at all age groups require a balance diet that are benefitial to the health and well being of a person. A pregnant mother has a grater responsibility towards the health status during these periods her affects the baby's physical and mental development. Thus it is more improtant for a pregnant women to take care of her health than a non- pregnant women...