Onion-Mushroom-Cabbage-Barley Soup

•January 21, 2012 • 2 Comments

Faced with an empty kitchen, and a lack of my go-to flavors (I ran out of everything, from fennel seeds, to herbs de Provence, to corriander seeds, to soy sauce, to garlic, to ginger), I began with a stir fry…

onions in olive oil

…and decided to chuck in that bag of near-over-the-hill slimy mushrooms.

added the near-off mushrooms

…emptied the last of my rosemary, and went heavy with black pepper…

rosemary and black pepper

…and I let it simmer and juice for a while, before chucking in a ton of cabbage.

big old pile of cabbage

I thought… hmm… this is boring.  What else can I chuck in there?  I’ve got some left over barley in the fridge.

my left-over barley

Hmmm…. this is starting to feel like a soup.  Soup needs liquid, and something to “fatten” it.  Enter the water and oil.  And some whole pepper corns.

added water and 3 TB of oil... and some pepper corns

It simmered.  But something was missing.  There was no excitement.  Until my eye caught the long-forgotten mustard.

Found it! Dijon. 1 TB.

Bam.  Done.  Covered it and let it stew for 5-10 minutes.

Gorgeous.

  • 2 onions
  • sack of mushrooms
  • 1/3 green cabbage
  • some barley
  • water to cover
  • 3 TB olive oil
  • ground pepper + some whole pepper corns
  • some rosemary
  • 1 TB dijon
  • NO SALT!  NONE.

Onion-Mushroom-Cabbage-Barley Soup (or is it a stew?)

Eat The Rainbow

•January 21, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Lunch – January 19th, 2010

Black beans; raisins; raw fennel, raw leeks, raw purple cabbage, raw beets and beet greens, raw almonds; raw sprouted barley; garbanzo beans with chopped raw carrot, raw onion, raw green cabbage; dressed with oil, raw apple cider vinegar and dill.

Against The Grain: Effects From Starch In The Diet

•January 13, 2012 • Leave a Comment

The human digestive tract is a subject of great controversy.  Those professing that humans are innately carnivorous, herbivorous, or omnivorous argue at length about the differences in cheeks, teeth, stomach acids, length of intestines, etc.  My readers already know that I lean toward the herbivorous side of things, but do agree that small amounts of animal-based foods are beneficial.  Everything in moderation, after all.

The subject of carbohydrates is also highly controversial.  Everyone agrees that sugar (a carbohydrate) is harmful in our modern amounts–especially fructose when it doesn’t come directly from a fruit.  For non-fruit-and-vegetable carbohydrates, such as beans and grains, the jury is still out.

Gluten, a protein found in high quantities in wheat, is getting the spotlight as everyone’s new favorite fad diet.  ”Gluten free” is a popular labeling tool to make consumers feel all warm as fuzzy about their purchase.  My co-worker reported not too long ago that his shampoo bottle said “gluten free.” “It’s not like I’m going to drink the stuff!” he exclaimed.  So what’s all the hype about gluten, starch, and carbs in general?  Are they good for us?  Bad for us? Do they make us fat?

Before we go into it, let’s take a look at digestion…

The digestive process can be divided into two main categories: mechanical and chemical.  Mechanical is simple: processing a food, and chewing it.  Chemical digestion, however, is a little more complicated.  It occurs in the mouth, the stomach, and the small intestine.  Digestive action is dependent on receptors that send messages to the brain, which responds sequentially by sending water, digestive enzymes (from the pancreas), enzyme precursors, coenzymes, electrolytes, acids, bases, buffer salts, hormones, and more.

Chemical digestion begins in the mouth with the secretion of amylase, an enzyme that breaks down starch.  Stomach acid, however, neautralizes amylase and effectively stops starch digestion, until it is resumed again in the small intestine (considering that carbohydrates are quick to leave the stomach, this makes sense).    Protein digestion is mechanical in the mouth (not chemical); protein is broken from long to short chains of amino acids in the stomach’s hydrochloric acid.

When starches are consumed without proteins, the acidity of the stomach approaches neutral and it will not hinder starch digestion.  When proteins are consumed without starches, stomach acid becomes strong.  But when starches and proteins are consumed at the same time (a hamburger, chicken and rice?), the body must provide two opposing digestive mediums, and it cannot.  The result is impaired or partial starch digestion and impaired or partial protein digestion.

Partial grain digestion can have adverse health effects.  ”Undigested particles of grain get stuck in the microvilli of our intestinal walls, building up with time, ultimately undermining our ability to properly digest other foods because of this interference. If the interference becomes extreme, a host of intestinal and auto-immune disorders can result including leaky gut syndrome, gluten intolerance, celiac disease, and irritable bowel syndrome,” (Kristen M., from foodrenegade.com).

Partial animal protein digestion also causes problems.  Animal proteins contain no fiber and so they pass through the digestive tract more slowly.  In the words of Dr. Douglas N. Graham, a leading spokesman for raw foods, “At one hundred degrees, in a dark, wet environment, undigested meat will go bad (rot) rather rapidly.  The partial digestion of meat that occurs when it is eaten with grains very often accounts for the putrefication so obvious when feces are expelled.”

Grains don’t putrefy.  But they do ferment, producing some ethanol (alcohol) and gas.  While there is nothing inherently harmful about gas, alcohol does not belong in the body, as it is a poison that kills cells with which it comes into contact.  Alcohol is also an addictive substance.

Chemists have also discovered over a dozen separate opiates in wheat (opium is a narcotic known for its addictive and sedating qualities), which explains the “brain fog” people often report from too much gluten.  Turning to a high energy food that leaves you feeling drugged and addicted is not advisable.

Gluten in most starchy foods is mucous-forming, leading to congestion and impaired breathing.  Due to this, as well as their digestive speed, starches (particularly wheat) are ill-advised for athletes.  Starches are recommended due to their slow release of energy, but from an athlete’s point of view (athletes demand rapid energy release), this makes little sense.  Eating a complex carbohydrate after a training sessions has the athlete waiting for hours before he obtains any benefit, and by then, the receptors for glycogen storage are less sensitive, leading to delayed glycogen repletion.

Slow digestion requires much more digestive energy, when compared to the rapid digestion of fruits, resulting in lower “net” energy.  Simple sugar is the body’s preferred source of energy: glucose and fructose.  The two behave very differently in the body.  Glucose goes right to the blood stream to fuel muscles and cells.  Fructose gets metabolized into the liver and is converted into fat (roughly 30%–an evolutionary survival strategy, I’m sure) and glycogen (the fuel reserve for the muscles and brain).

Sugar and starch (which breaks down into sugar) are highly addictive–sugar, primarily, because we are hard-wired to seek sweet foods as naturally bioavailable sources of energy; and both sugar and starch (high-glycemic starch, really… like flour products and processed grains), due to their direct influence on serotonin (the happy neurotransmitter) levels.  Once released, serotonin elevates the mood, having a powerful effect on our demeanor.  Cravings for sugary and starchy foods are typically your brain’s attempt to make you feel better.

If that weren’t enough, there are the acid-forming properties of grain that should be considered.  Grains (and beans, nuts, and seeds) contain phytic acid (phytic acid is tightly bound in the phosphorus content of grains and legumes, especially the bran portion of grain or the outer layer of legumes. It is considered the “principle storage form of phoshorus.”).  The human body is more alkaline, and a diet high in acid-forming foods leads to blood acidification, de-mineralization (and alkaline minerals are pulled from the body’s reserves in order to neutralize acid), and inflammation.

Grains only entered the human diet about 10,000 years ago–a mere blink in evolutionary time.  Traditional human societies all found ways of coping with phytic acid.  According to Kimi Harris, author of thenourishinggourmet.com, “Phytase is the enzyme generally present in phytic containing grains and legumes that neutralizes phytic acid. Sprouting, soaking and fermenting raw grains allows phytase to become activated, which then reduces the phytic acid. We as humans do produce some phytase in our bodies, which explains why some can eat a high, unsoaked whole grain diet without negative impact. Since lactobacilli and other digestive microflora can also produce phytase, those of us with a robust intestinal health will have a much easier time digesting grains, soaked or unsoaked.  But regardless, all of us can benefit from less phytic acid in our grains.”

  • Sprouting — This is when the whole grain kernel is sprouted.
  • Soaking — This is when the already milled whole grain flour is soaked in an acidic medium like buttermilk, whey, yogurt, lemon juice, or vinegar before being cooked.
  • Fermenting — This is when the grain is naturally fermented with wild yeast, as is the case with all sourdough breads.

More recently, due to the Industrial Revolution and the hyper-mechanization of grain milling, the advent of processing techniques to increase shelf life, the saturation of refined carbohydrate products into supermarkets, and the subsidization of grain production, never have grains been so negatively influential in the human diet.  We have abandoned most of our traditional processing methods.

So what to do?  Should we stop eating grain?

No.  But consider the following tips:

1) Grain should not dominate the diet.  The majority of carbohydrates should be sourced some whole fruits and vegetables.  Too often we see individuals who consume scarce amounts of fresh produce and subsist off cheap, easy-to-eat grain products.  Grain should be an accompaniment, not a centerpiece of the dinner plate.

2) Avoid as much as possible (consider the true social impact of eschewing all of it) hyper-processed grain products like most store-bought bread, cakes, cookies, pastas, pita chips, crackers, pancakes, etc.

3) Eat a variety of whole grains, and consider soaking, sprouting, or fermenting them before consumption if you suspect you have impaired digestion.

4) Abandon the old starch-and-protein paradigm, to improve digestion.  Whole grains are a great morning recommendation, as they do give slow-releasing energy for daily activity and concentration.  They are fiber-rich and increase satiety.  Save your protein for later in the day, especially after your training sessions, in order to give your body the building blocks it needs when it shifts into repair mode (rest and sleep); or, eat protein separately as a small snack.

How To Write A Workout

•January 11, 2012 • 1 Comment

When it comes to weight loss, all that really matters is how much you move, period.  It can be sets and reps and long bouts of cardio at the gym, or it can be regular evening walks.  The point is to move more often.

When it comes to functional movement, posture, and muscular balance, then the how of writing your own workout comes into play.  Every week, I meet people at the gym who do, “…about 30 minutes on the elliptical, and then I go downstairs and do some abs, and some lifting.”

“What kind?”

“You know, like sit-ups, and crunches, and that big chair where you lift your legs up and down… and then I do some biceps curls, and some front shoulder raises, and some of these…” and then they demonstrate a military press.

I nod, thinking that they’re a perfect candidate for personal training–and not because they’re overweight or at risk for heart disease–but because they seem bored, aimless.

Writing a workout is easy.  Writing a balanced workout takes more concentration.  It’s important to first expand your exercise library.   Start by making a chart like this, filling it in with your own exercises, by whatever name you call them.

LEGS

ARMS/CHEST

CORE

BACKSIDE

AEROBIC

Squats Military Press Sit-ups Seated Row Jump Rope
Step-ups Pushups Crunches S.L. Dead Lift KB Swing
Lateral Step-ups Shoulder Raises Leg lifts SDLHP Run
Lunges Haloes Cherry Pickers KB Swing Box Jumps
Side Lunges High Pull Plank High Pull Ice Skaters
V-Lunges Triceps Extensions Obliq. Side Raises Sumo Dead Lift Burpees
Box Jumps Biceps Curls Oblique V-ups S.L Dead Lift Ribbons
S.L. Dead Lifts Dips Scullers Seated Row Slam Ball
KB Swing Front Squat Lat Pull Down
Jumpies Weighted Sit-up Supermans
Ice Skaters KB Swing
Cable Twists

As you can see, some of the exercises overlap categories, since they are compound movements.

When writing a total body circuit workout, it’s important to hit the whole body.  By no means is this is hard rule, but if your goal is a good balanced effort, stick with the rule.  If you are working on something specifically (such as an imbalance between your anterior and posterior chains, you may decide to omit certain muscle groups).

By choosing an exercise from each group (we’ll take the first exercise from each column), you get a list that looks like this: Squats, Military Press, Sit-ups, Seated Row, and Jump Rope.  You could make a ton of different workouts with these exercises, depending on the weights you want to use and the intensity you’re going for, but to keep it simple, we’ll just say:

Complete 7 rounds of:

10 Squats, 10 Military Presses, 10 Sit-ups, 10 Seated Rows, and 100 skips with the rope.

This is a 280-rep workout + 700 skips with the jump rope. My guess is that it would take anywhere from 25-35 minutes to complete.

But there’s something wrong with this workout in terms of balance.  Yes, we have most of the body covered, but it’s extremely dominant in the sagittal plane.  It’s important to understand planes of motion.  Sagittal plane motions are exercises that move forward and backward, or up and down in a forward backward direction.  Frontal plane motions are exercises that adduct and abduct, or move out to the side, and back in.  Transverse plane motions are rotational.

Planes Of Motion

SAGITTAL

FRONTAL

TRANSVERSE

Pushups Jumping Jacks Cable Twists
Squats Lateral Step-ups Cherry Pickers
Box Jumps Jane Fonda Leg Lifts Wood Choppers
Burpees Oblique Side Raises Ice Skaters
KB Swing Side Plank Figure-8 Swings
Sit-ups Military Press Windmills
Leg Lifts Side Lunges Arm Circles
Step-ups Side Shoulder Raises Leg Circles
Dead Lifts Upright Rows Haloes
Seated Row Oblique V-ups
Plank
Slam ball

This is just to name a few.  As you can see, the sagittal column is dominant (I have no trouble filling in the exercises in the other columns to catch them up, but it’s my job to know, whereas the average gym-goer has a much more difficult time thinking of exercises for the frontal and transverse planes). When writing your workout, make sure you select at least one exercise from each plane.

So our original workout of 7 x (10 Squats (S), 10 Military Presses (F), 10 Sit-ups (S), 10 Seated Rows (S), and 100 skips with the rope (S)) needs modification.  It would be wise to substitute one of the sagittal exercises with a transverse exercise.  Transverse exercises typically originate in the core, so the easiest substitution to make it to swap out the sit-ups for cherry pickers.  Both work the core, but the latter breaks you out of the monotony of sagittal dominance.

Now the workout looks like this:

7 x (10 Squats (Legs-S), 10 Military Presses (Shoulders-F),  10 Cherry Pickers (Core-T), 10 Seated Rows (Back-S), 100 skips with the rope (Aerobic-S)

Choosing only five exercises certainly doesn’t cover every part of the body, but it’s a good start.  When writing your circuit workout, or as I like to call it, aerobic resistance training, you are more time-efficient at the gym, you get a great cardio workout by cycling through the non-competing exercises, and you end up sore the next day.  Not a bad approach.

“Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” from Robert H. Lustig, MD: A Summary

•January 2, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Dr. Robert H. Lustig begins with the question, “What do the Atkins diet and the Japanese diet have in common?”  It’s an odd question, as the two diets seem diametrically opposed.  The Atkins diet is all fat, no carb.  And the Japanese diet is all carb, no fat.  They both work.  So, what do they have in common?

They both eliminate the sugar fructose.

Lustig continues into a 90-minute lecture, called “Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” which can be viewed for free on Youtube.  Amazingly, this 90-minute talk on sugar and biochemistry was viewed by over 1.5 million people.  1.5 million people wanted to learn how fructose is basically the common denominator for virtually every aspect of Metabolic Syndrome.

Lustig begins with a basic law: if you eat it, you better burn it, or you’re going to store it.  This is the law of thermodynamics, pushed forward by fitness trainers and fad diets.  For many, it’s true.  Calories in vs. calories out will determine skinny or fat.

But it’s not true.  I’ve always said that if you eat 2,000 calories of protein vs. 2,000 calories of sugar, you will achieve a very different body shape.

Energy expenditure equals quality of life, Lustig continues.  The more energy you burn, the better you feel.  But we are not burning this energy, and America is suffering from an obesity epidemic.

There is a hormone in our body that tells us to stop eating.  It’s called leptin.  It’s supposed to tell us to stop eating, but Americans are eating more than ever, so clearly leptin isn’t working anymore.  There is something we are eating that is distorting our normal biochemical negative feedback system.

Is it the fat in our diet?

Nope, he says dismissively.  We’ve actually decreased our fat intake, as a country, from 40 to 30% over the past few decades.

It’s the carbs, Lustig declares.  There’s something in the carbohydrate we are eating that has shut down leptin.

Americans consume 65 lbs of high fructose corn syrup a year.  HFCS is much sweeter than most sugars.  The syrup is comprised of glucose and fructose (fructose will vary from 42-50%).  Sucrose (table sugar) is also a fructose and a glucose; table sugar is 50% glucose, 50% fructose.

Lustig declares, HFCS and sugar are the same.  They are both poison.  Sugar isn’t just about empty calories. Fructose is a poison, and it distorts your body’s chemistry.

Every single year, Americans not only eat more, but they eat more of their calories from sugar.

After summarizing how the Nixon administration would change the face of American food production and culture forever, and the tight correlation between soft drink consumption and obesity, Lustig asks his audience to hang on tight for a whirlwind tour of how glucose, fructose, and ethanol (alcohol) break down in the body.

Fructose is not glucose:

1. Fructose is 7 times more likely to form advanced glycation end products

2. Fructose does not suppress ghrelin (the hunger hormone) because it does not break down until it reaches the liver.

3. Fructose does not stimulate insulin or leptin.

4. Fructose is the only sugar metabolized by the liver.

5. It promotes metabolic syndrome.

Compare 2 slices of white bread (which is roughly 120 calories of glucose), to liquor (roughly 120 calories of ethanol), to a glass of a sugar-sweetened beverage (about 120 calories of sucrose, half of which is fructose).

The Bread (glucose) – 120 calories:

-80% of the glucose will be used by the body.

-About 20% of the glucose will hit the liver and get stored as glycogen (for future physical activity).

-A tiny fraction of the glucose will be made into ATP which, if not burned, will go through a number of biochemical processes, turning into citrate, and may be stored as fat.

-Perhaps 1/2 a calorie will end up as Pattern B Cholesterol (very low density lipoprotein), but it is negligible.  This is why you can live off white rice and not die of a heart attack.

The Alcohol (ethanol) – 120 calories:

- 24 calories will hit the kidneys, muscle, and brain.

-96 calories hit the liver.  This is four times the amount, compared to white bread (glucose).

-What hits the liver metabolizes into acetaldehyde (like formaldehyde), which is toxic.

- Like glucose, it breaks down into lots of citrate, and will be stored as fat (four times the amount!).

-The other by-product of this metabolic process is the production of Pattern B Cholesterol (VLDL), again, four times the amount.

The Sugary Beverage (sucrose) – 120 calories:

-60 calories from glucose will break down similarly to the white bread (48 calories to the body, 12 calories to the liver to be stored as glycogen).

-60 calories from fructose will all go to the liver.

-In total, 72 calories reaching the liver will need to be phosphoralated (turned into energy–ATP–adenosine tri phosphate).  That is a lot–three times the amount, when compared to white bread.

-You lose a lot of phosphate in this process, and so the body provides a rescue molecule, and the end waste product from the metabolism of these calories is uric acid (which causes gout and hypertension, among other things).

-Uric acid blocks the your body’s chemical–endothelial nitric oxide synthase–for maintaining low blood pressure.

-Citrate, again, arises from the metabolism of all these calories, which promotes fat retention, dyslipidemia, VLDL, and high blood triglycerides.

-In short, from any fructose load, 30% of it will end up as fat.

-An excess of body fat changes the way your body responds to leptin.  Leptin is a hormone produced by adipocytes (fat cells).  The more fat you have, the more leptin is produced to act on your brain’s hypothalamus.  But when there is too much, you develop leptin insensitivity; your brain can no longer recognize it and thinks you’re starving.  So you eat more.

A final comparison between soda and beer:

COKE BEER
Calories 150 150
Calories from fructose 75 (4.1 kcal/g) 0
Calories from other carbs 75 (glucose) 60 (maltose)
Calories from alcohol 0 90 (7kcal/g)
1st pass G.I. metabolism 0% 0%
Calories reaching the liver 90 92

Lustig says fructose is ethanol without the buzz.

Fructose is like drinking fat.  30% goes to fat storage.  It is metabolized like fat.

A high sugar diet is essentially a high fat diet.

Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT): A Better Way To Manage Weight

•December 30, 2011 • Leave a Comment

I know I always say it: “Move more, eat less.”  I wrote it plainly and simply in a previous article, How To Lose Fat which, depressingly (though not surprisingly), topped the charts for the most-viewed article I’d written to date.

“Move more, eat less.”  Or consider my modified slogan: “Move more, eat well.”

Increase your total movement, not necessarily your exercise.  That’s what Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT) is all about.

After donning an expensive ($238) armband purported to track not only my heart rate, but also my calories burned, my steps, my physical activity, and my sleep patterns, I was shocked to see that my calorie burn sitting on the couch was indistinguishable from my calorie burn while sleeping.  I was more shocked to see that I actually burned more calories in an hour of ambling around the gym floor chatting up members than I did during my high intensity 30′ workoutfar more.

Seriously!?  What’s up with with this epidemic gym culture?  We’re told it’s diet and exercise, right?

Sure.  Exercise still has its place in terms of balancing hormones and neurotransmitters, posture, stamina, flexibility, and muscle mass–but in terms of weight management, it pales in comparison to NEAT.

NEAT represents the energy expenditure of daily activities such as standing, walking, moving, and shifting while sitting.  None of these are considered planned physical exercise.  They will make or break your weight loss goals.  Research by Levine et al. (2005) recruited 20 healthy volunteers of varying body masses  and tracked their movement over 10 days.  What they found was not surprising: obese subjects (half of the group) were seated on average 164 minutes longer than the leaner participants.  That’s two and a half hours!  Additionally, the lean participants were standing and moving for 153 minutes more per day than the obese subjects, and sleep times did not very at all between the groups.

The extra movement from the lean subjects averaged 352 +/- 65 calories per day, which is the equivalent of 36.5 pound of fat in one year.  All because they move around more.

Take home lesson: have an active lifestyle.  Find ways to inconvenience yourself.  Consider three rules to make and never break.

The following is a list of suggestions on how to be more active during the day (source: ACE Lifestyle & Weight Management Consultant Manual, 2nd Ed.):

  • Walk to work.
  • Walk during your lunch hour.
  • Walk instead of drive whenever you can.
  • Take a family walk after dinner.
  • Skate to work instead of driving.
  • Walking to your place of worship instead of driving.
  • Mow the lawn with a push mower.
  • Walk your dog.
  • Replace the Sunday drive with a Sunday walk.
  • Work and walk around the house.
  • Take your dog to a park.
  • Wash the car by hand.
  • Run or walk fast when doing errands.
  • Pace the sidelines at your kids’ athletic games.
  • Take the wheels off your luggage.
  • Walk to a coworker’s desk instead of emailing or calling.
  • Make time in your day for physical activity.
  • If you find it difficult to be active after work,  try to fit exercise in before work.
  • Take a walk break instead of a coffee break.
  • Perform gardening and/or easy-to-do home-repair activities.
  • Bring your groceries (from your car) into your house one bag at a time.
  • Play with your kids at least 30 minutes a day.
  • Dance to music.
  • Walk briskly in the mall.
  • Take the long way tot he water cooler or break room.
  • Take the stairs instead of the escalator.
  • Go for a hike.

Your Hormones: How They Affect Your Weight (part 5: Testosterone)

•December 29, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Hormones are powerful things; they affect everything.  Different hormones, of course, directly affect different things. Here’s what you need to know about testosterone.

Testosterone, popularly known as the male sex hormone, is present in both men and women (but in amounts averaging ten times higher in men) as an anabolic (promoting growth) steroid hormone.  In men, it is made in large amounts in the testicles; in women, it is made in smaller amounts in the ovaries; and in both men and women, small amounts in the adrenal glands.

Roles:

Testosterone is essential for the development of male reproductive tissues, but has many secondary roles in both men and women: it helps build muscle, burn fat, boost energy, increase strength, increase bone density, lift depression, increase sex drive, and more.  In women, higher levels of testosterone are associated with higher levels of assertiveness.

Testosterone can affect fat metabolism:

Testosterone is a muscle building hormone, and muscle helps you burn more calories at rest, while also giving the body a tighter, more compact shape.

Testosterone blocks the effects of lipoprotein lipase, an enzyme that enables the body’s fat cells to store fat.  Testosterone also increases fat metabolism by increasing certain key receptors on the fat cell-membrane to release fat.  (See article)  Through this mechanism, testosterone also increases insulin sensitivity.

*One study suggests that weight loss makes fat men more masculine by preserving testosterone; fat cells synthesize the enzyme aromatase which converts testosterone, the male sex hormone, into estradiol, the female sex hormone (estogen); a decrease in fat cells would lead to a decrease in the synthesis of aromatase, responsible for this phenomenon.

Things that affect testosterone levels in both sexes:

Aging lowers levels of testosterone, along with other factors such as poor diet, alcohol consumption, smoking, caffeine, excess body fat, and stress.  It has been suggested that inadequate levels of Vitamin D are associated with decreased levels of testosterone in men.

A nutritious diet, especially one rich in vitamin A, zinc, magnesium, and B6, healthy omega-3s (fish oil, chia seed), and especially amino acids (the building blocks of protein) will promote testosterone production. This is accomplished by eating a variety of fresh vegetables, complete proteins, and healthy fats in the form of nuts, seeds, and olive oil.  Watching fat intake is key, as the Standard American high-fat Diet lowers testosterone levels.  When seeking complete proteins, watch fat content, as animal-based saturated fats tend to be stored (as fat*, see above), whereas monounsaturated fats (nuts, olives, avocado) and polyunsaturated fats (omega 3s) are used preferentially for fuel.

The incorporation of resistance training–weight bearing exercise–into your fitness program is essential for increasing levels of this slimming hormone.  Compound exercises are better than isolated exercises, as they recruit more muscle fibers.  Lifting heavier encourages more testosterone production that high-rep, light-weight endurance lifting.

 
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