Be Challenged Be Changed

Are you ready to take your Fitness to the next level? Tired of the same old routine? Not getting the results your looking for? We all train with different goals but we all have one thing in common, we are looking for CHANGE! Are you looking to get faster, stronger, more flexible, increased endurance or weight loss well it is all CHANGE!

Now its time to step out of your comfort zone and start creating CHANGE with improvements to your strength, endurance and flexibility.

Personal Training and/or Outdoor classes are the answers your looking for. The workouts are always changing. Some times we use Body Weight exercises, other times using Kettle Bells, Battle Ropes, Steel Mace, Medicine Balls, Bands, Suspension Training and many other variables.

Whether your training for a particular sport or weight loss or that upcoming 5K or maybe an Obstacle Course Race. I will help you be at your very best!

Personal Training can be one on one or team up with a friend for added accountability. Get a group of your friends together and train for that special upcoming event!

Call me now or send me a text to set up your free initial consultation at 623-302-4944. Or fill out the contact me information on the right side of this page.

BE CHALLENGED! BE CHANGED!!!

Sunday, June 30, 2013

6 Unhealthy Restaurant Foods

Some Sugar With Your Fat?

Few people would pour themselves a half-cup of sugar and eat it for dessert. Nor would you (hopefully) sit down and gobble up five breakfast sandwiches sprinkled with 10 packets of sugar. Yet U.S. restaurants are serving the equivalents of those things every day, no matter how much bad press their woefully unhealthy offerings garner. Each year, the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) releases its annual "Xtreme Eating Awards" (dis)honoring the lows to which chain restaurants will stoop to get you to buy their food.

"This year, we found the highest-calorie menu items we've ever seen," says Paige Einstein, a registered dietician with CSPI, despite the fact that the Food and Drug Administration is getting closer to finalizing calorie-labeling rules for chain restaurants. Such labeling was required as part of the 2010 healthcare overhaul, and, says Einstein, it's probably the only way people will be able to dodge nutritional landmines like this year's "honorees." Without further ado, here's the CSPI list.

1)   Johnny Rockets

Bacon Cheddar Double Cheeseburger, Sweet Potato Fries, and Big Apple Milkshake

The tally: 3,500 calories; 88 grams (g) saturated fat; 3,720 milligrams (mg) sodium; and about 1/3 cup added sugar

Lesson learned: Sit-down restaurants aren't always healthier than drive-throughs, and "sweet potato" fries are still fried potatoes, says Einstein, who notes that, at 1,770 calories, the burger alone would have you eating more calories than if you ate three McDonald's Quarter Pounders with Cheese. Also, don't drink your food: The Big Apple Milkshake includes an entire slice of apple pie blended with ice cream. "People don't register liquid calories the way they do solid food calories," she says. If you want apple pie…don't slurp it through a straw.

2)  IHOP

Country Fried Steak & Eggs

The tally: 1,760 calories; 23 g saturated fat; 3,729 mg sodium; and almost ¼ cup sugar. As CSPI puts it, the combo is equal to eating five McDonald's Egg McMuffins sprinkled with 10 packets of sugar.

Lesson learned: Combo meals are gut-busting. "An eight-ounce steak that's been breaded, deep-fried, and covered in gravy in itself would be a meal," Einstein says. Throw on two of IHOP's plate-size pancakes and a side of fried potatoes, and you may as well not eat for the rest of the day.

3)  The Cheesecake Factory

Bistro Shrimp Pasta

The tally: 3,120 calories; 89 g saturated fat; and 1,090 mg sodium

Lesson learned: Restaurant portions are unforgivingly huge. The dish has the most calories of any dish ever featured in CSPI's Xtreme Eating Awards, largely, says Einstein, because it clocks in at 3½ cups of pasta—plus toppings that include a buttery sauce and fried shrimp—when a standard serving is 1 cup. Even dividing the meal in half would still leave you with three-fourths of your daily calorie requirements. Ask your waiter if smaller portion sizes are available before you order.

4)  Smoothie King

40-ounce Peanut Power Plus Grape Smoothie

The tally: 1,460 calories and 22 teaspoons sugar (nearly ½ a cup!)

Lesson learned: Smoothies you buy at the store are nothing like the healthy smoothies you could make for yourself at home. "Most people make healthy smoothies at home, with yogurt and a little fruit," says Einstein. Not so at restaurants. This one, for instance, isn't fortified with healthy grapes but with grape juice, one of the least healthy and sugary juices out there. In fact, when you factor in the naturally occurring sugar in grape juice, the sugar content of this smoothie shoots up to 39 teaspoons, or ¾ cup of sugar—in one drink! Stick with homemade smoothies and not only will you get real fruit, but you're less likely to drink an entire blender-full in one sitting.


5)  Chili's

Full Rack of Baby Back Ribs with Shiner Bock BBQ Sauce, Homestyle Fries, and Cinnamon Apples

The tally: 2,330 calories; 45 g saturated fat; and 6,490 mg sodium (keep in mind that 1,500 mg is the recommended daily amount of sodium)

Lesson learned: Order your sauce on the side. The staggering levels of sodium in this particular meal are owed, in part, to the BBQ sauce, which, Einstein says, is a notoriously salty condiment. Another lesson? Learn to substitute. This meal comes with two calorie- and sugar-dense sides, but chains like Chili's often allow you to substitute sides, even if it's not explicitly stated on the menu.


6)  The Cheesecake Factory

Crispy Chicken Costoletta

The tally: 2,610 calories; 89 g saturated fat; and 2,720 mg sodium

Lesson learned: Don't let healthy sides lead you astray. The fact that breaded chicken (enough to serve as three meals in a normal household) are accompanied by mashed potatoes instead of fries and bright green asparagus may lead you to believe that this chicken dish can't be that bad, but it is. The serving of mashed potatoes equals three-quarters of a pound. "And the way they served it to us, there was a pool of sauce on the bottom of the plate, and everything was sitting in it," says Einstein—even that healthy asparagus!


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