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What Is Fuelling Your Body?

Chemicals in processed food? “Empty calories” from high fat, high sugar foods or fast food?

Artifical this? Artificial that? It’s scary when you read the ingredient labels on some processed foods. You would need to be a scientist to even pronounce some of the ingredient names. And “they” expect us to eat it.

IN REALITY, NATURE KNOWS BEST!

Fresh whole foods really are what we should be eating. Nature has provided all the components to make a complete nutritionally balanced diet.

What’s more, because they are not processed they are more affordable, and with minimal packaging, the impact on the environment is lessened.

So what are nature’s whole foods?

VEGETABLES

  • Asparagus
  • Avocados
  • Beets
  • Bell peppers (capsicum)
  • Broccoli
  • Brussels sprouts
  • Cabbage
  • Carrots
  • Cauliflower
  • Celery
  • Collard greens
  • Cucumbers
  • Eggplant
  • Fennel
  • Garlic
  • Green beans
  • Green peas
  • Kale
  • Leeks
  • Mushrooms, crimini
  • Mushrooms, shiitake
  • Mustard greens
  • Olives
  • Onions
  • Parsley
  • Potatoes
  • Romaine lettuce
  • Sea vegetables
  • Spinach
  • Squash
  • Sweet potatoes
  • Swiss chard
  • Tomatoes
  • Turnip greens
  • Yams

FISH & SEAFOOD

  • Cod
  • Halibut
  • Salmon
  • Scallops
  • Shrimp
  • Tuna

FRUITS

  • Apples
  • Apricots
  • Bananas
  • Blueberries
  • Cantaloupe (Rockmelon)
  • Cranberries
  • Figs
  • Grapefruit
  • Grapes
  • Kiwifruit
  • Lemon/Limes
  • Oranges
  • Papaya
  • Pears
  • Pineapple
  • Plums
  • Prunes
  • Raisins
  • Raspberries
  • Strawberries
  • Watermelon

LOW-FAT DAIRY

  • Cheese, low-fat
  • Eggs
  • Milk, 2%, cow’s
  • Milk, goat
  • Yogurt

BEANS & LEGUMES

  • Black beans
  • Dried peas
  • Garbanzo beans (chickpeas)
  • Kidney beans
  • Lentils
  • Lima beans
  • Miso
  • Navy beans
  • Pinto beans
  • Soybeans
  • Tempeh
  • Tofu

POULTRY & LEAN MEATS

  • Beef, lean organic
  • Calf’s liver
  • Chicken
  • Lamb
  • Turkey
  • Venison

NUTS & SEEDS

  • Almonds
  • Cashews
  • Flaxseeds
  • Olive oil, extra virgin
  • Peanuts
  • Pumpkin seeds
  • Sesame seeds
  • Sunflower seeds
  • Walnuts

GRAINS

  • Barley
  • Brown rice
  • Buckwheat
  • Corn
  • Millet
  • Oats
  • Quinoa
  • Rye
  • Spelt
  • Whole wheat

SPICES & HERBS

  • Basil
  • Black pepper
  • Cayenne pepper
  • Chilli pepper, dried
  • Cilantro/Coriander seeds
  • Cinnamon, ground
  • Cloves
  • Cumin seeds
  • Dill
  • Ginger
  • Mustard seeds
  • Oregano
  • Peppermint
  • Rosemary
  • Sage
  • Thyme
  • Turmeric

NATURAL SWEETENERS

  • Blackstrap molasses
  • Cane juice
  • Honey
  • Maple syrup

OTHER

  • Green tea
  • Soy sauce (tamari)
  • Water

It isn’t always easy to get the right amount of nutrition, even from whole foods. That’s where NATURAL SUPERFOODS come to the rescue , nutrient dense foods like:-

Chlorella

Certified Organic Spirulina

Stabilized Rice Bran

Lecithin

Liquid Chlorophyll

Wheatgrass Powder

Certified Organic Green Tea

And engergized Hexagon water

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Couple of cups of green tea before exercise could help burn fat

Drinking a couple of cups of green tea before exercise could help burn fat, researchers at the University of Birmingham suggest.

Scientists have found that green tea can increase fat oxidation – the rate at which fat is broken down inside the body – during moderate intensity exercise. The beverage can also improve insulin sensitivity and glucose intolerance, meaning it could have the potential to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes.It is believed that green tea exerts its effects on fat oxidation through the inhibition of catechol O-methyltransferase, an enzyme that degrades the hormone noradrenaline. Higher concentrations of noradrenaline could potentially result in a continuing stimulation of the mobilisation of fats from fat stores. These fats may then be transported to the muscle and used as a fuel during exercise.Experts from the School of Sport and Exercise Sciences carried out the study, published in the current edition of The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

The team of researchers, led by Dr Asker Jeukendrup, carried out two studies on young healthy men, who took either Green Tea Extract (GTE) – the equivalent of 3.5 cups - or a placebo before performing in cycling trials. Scientists found that in the first group, the average fat oxidation rates were higher and that the contribution of fat oxidation to total energy expenditure was also significantly higher.

Green tea, discovered in China nearly 5,000 years ago, has long been thought to have health benefits. Dr Jeukendrup said: ” Over the last 10 years we have tried to find ways to increase fat burning during exercise. Apart from exercise training none of these ways have been very successful. EGCG, the active compound in green tea, seems to be different and caused a significant increase in fat burning. This has potentially positive effects for athletes who want to increase their fat burning capacity or obese and diabetic patients who want to burn fat and lose weight.”

In addition to effects on fat metabolism, green tea may have an effect on glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity by improving glycemic control after an oral glucose load. After a meal insulin increases and this hormone makes sure that the nutrients are taken up by different tissues. In patients with type 2 diabetes tissues are insensitive to insulin. The study showed, however, that green tea extract ingestion can increase insulin sensitivity by 13 per cent and can reduce the insulin response to a glucose load of 15 per cent.

Dr Jeukendrup said: “There is indirect evidence that the capacity to burn fat is related to various health benefits. An increased ability to burn fat may reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and obesity.

“The best way to increase the capacity to burn fat is by regular physical activity. Nutrition supplements, sold as ‘fat burners’, are often claimed to have these effects but most of them are ineffective. Therefore the findings of this study are very exciting. The green tea extract had substantial effects on fat oxidation. We now need to study this further and find out what doses are needed and what the clinical implications are for obese and diabetic patients.”

Source: By University Of Birmingham

Reference

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7 Great Reasons to Drink Green Tea

Do you need more reasons to drink this popular beverage?

Find Out Here

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Boost Your Green Tea with Lemon Juice

November 13, 2007 - News release from Purdue University

Citrus juice, vitamin C give staying power to green tea antioxidants

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - To get more out of your next cup of tea, just add juice.

A study found that citrus juices enable more of green tea’s unique antioxidants to remain after simulated digestion, making the pairing even healthier than previously thought.

The study compared the effect of various beverage additives on catechins, naturally occurring antioxidants found in tea. Results suggest that complementing green tea with either citrus juices or vitamin C likely increases the amount of catechins available for the body to absorb.

“Although these results are preliminary, I think it’s encouraging that a big part of the puzzle comes down to simple chemistry,” said Mario Ferruzzi, assistant professor of food science at Purdue University and the study’s lead author.

Catechins (pronounced KA’-teh-kins), display health-promoting qualities and may be responsible for some of green tea’s reported health benefits, like reduced risk of cancer, heart attack and stroke. The problem, Ferruzzi said, is that catechins are relatively unstable in non-acidic environments, such as the intestines, and less than 20 percent of the total remains after digestion.

“Off the bat you are eliminating a large majority of the catechins from plain green tea,” Ferruzzi said. “We have to address this fact if we want to improve bodily absorption.”

Ferruzzi tested juices, creamers and other additives that are either commonly added to fresh-brewed tea or used to make ready-to-drink tea products by putting them through a model simulating gastric and small-intestinal digestion. Citrus juice increased recovered catechin levels by more than five times, the study found. Ascorbic acid, or vitamin C, used to increase shelf life in ready-to-drink products, increased recovered levels of the two most abundant catechins by sixfold and 13-fold, respectively.

The study, published this month in Molecular Nutrition and Food Research, also found that soy, dairy and rice milk appeared to have moderate stabilizing effects. But Ferruzzi said the result is misleading; a chemical interaction between milk proteins and tea catechins apparently helps shelter the complex from degradation, a force likely overcome by enzymes within a healthy human digestive system.

Lemons and tea go even better together than their popularity might suggest. Lemon juice caused 80 percent of tea’s catechins to remain, the study found. Following lemon, in terms of stabilizing power, were orange, lime and grapefruit juices. Ferruzzi said both vitamin C and citrus juices must interact with catechins to prevent their degradation in the intestines, although data made it clear that citrus juices have stabilizing effects beyond what would be predicted solely based on their vitamin C content.

“If you want more out of your green tea, add some citrus juice to your cup after brewing or pick a ready-to-drink product formulated with ascorbic acid,” Ferruzzi said.

Ready-to-drink green tea products should optimally contain 100-200 mg of catechins, but oftentimes do not have sufficient levels of tea extract since some people do not like green tea’s flavor, Ferruzzi said.

Although this study only examined green tea, Ferruzzi said he suspects that some of the results also could apply to black tea, which is produced by fermenting green tea. Many prefer black tea’s flavor, although it contains lower total levels of catechins.

Studies have shown catechins from the green tea plant, Camellia sinensis, are able to detoxify toxic chemicals, inhibit cancer cell activity and stimulate production of immune-strengthening enzymes. Finding methods to improve uptake of these catechins may, therefore, be important in improving health, part of the study’s goal, Ferruzzi said.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Ferruzzi currently is conducting an in vivo study, or study on a live organism, to quantify the ability of juices and vitamin C to increase levels of catechins in the intestines and bloodstream of animals and, by extension, in humans. He collaborates with the NIH-funded Purdue Botanicals Research Center on this project.

“This next study is designed to get us past the limitations imposed by our digestive model, which is really just a simple screening process that relies on preset physiology parameters,” he said. “Human digestion is a lot more complicated.”

To see if juices and vitamin C actually increase catechin absorption, researchers will have to find out if increased levels of intestinal catechins translate to higher levels of absorbed catechins in live animals and humans. They also will need to better document effects upon catechin metabolism in order to prove, for instance, that increased levels of absorbed catechins are not leveled off by metabolic factors, Ferruzzi said.

“This study tells us a lot of interesting things, but it raises many questions that have yet to be answered,” he said.

Writer: Douglas M. Main, (765) 496-2050, dmain@purdue.edu

Source: Mario Ferruzzi, (765) 494-0625, mferruzz@purdue.edu

Ag Communications: (765) 494-2722;
Beth Forbes, forbes@purdue.edu

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Certified Organic Green Tea

Enjoy A Healthier CuppaCertified Organic Green Tea

Premium Quality Certified Organic Green Tea

Studies have confirmed green tea’s many health-enhancing conponents, which include catechin polyphenols (100% stronger than Vitamin C), polsaccarides, flavonoids, Vitamin bs, Vitamin E, R-Amino Butyric Acid and minerals.

Health benefits of Green Tea include:-

  • Anti-Aging
  • Better complexion
  • Strengthened immune function
  • Reduced stress
  • Improve energy
  • Encourage healthier blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels
  • Encourage healthier intestinal flora which improves nutrient absorption
  • Improves oral health (controls dental decay, plaque build-up and bad breath)
  • Assists in weight loss (promotes thermogenesis and metabolsim of fat)

Remember to make you Organic Green Tea with Hexagon Water for an even better taste.

So, drink up and flash those pearly whites today!

Contents (per unit): 20 sachets x 2g


Oriyen Certified Organic Green Tea is prepared from finest grade, health-promoting green tea leaves from leading tea producer and exporter Stassen Group, Sri Lanka. Conforms strictly to the most stringent international standards for organic cultivation set by the International Federation of Agricultural Movements (IFOAM), Naturland of Germany, and the National Association for Sustainable Agriculture of Australia

• Great Taste Award, London, 2001
• Manufactured under ISO 9002 Quality System

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