by Dr. Oler, ND | Apr 10, 2012 | Cooking Tips, Food Allergies
Dairy-free, egg-free, sugar-free… cooking allergen free, especially baking, can get a little confusing. We’re here to help. Here are some substitutions you can make for some of those common allergen-containing ingredients.
For 1 cup of butter, you can substitute 1 cup nondairy, non-hydrogenated butter spread OR 1 cup coconut oil OR 3/4 cup vegetable shortening.
For 1 cup of milk, you can substitute 1 cup nondairy milk (almond, coconut, hemp, rice, soy, etc)
For 1 cup of heavy cream, you can substitute 1 cup soy creamer OR 1 cup full-fat unsweetened coconut milk or coconut cream.
For 1 egg used for binding purposes (cakes, cookies), use 2 tablespoons arrowroot or cornstarch whisked with 2 tablespoons water OR 2 1/2 tablespoons flaxseed meal whisked with 3 tablespoons warm water OR 1/4 cup blended silken tofu OR 1/4 cup applesauce, pumpkin or other fruit/vegetable puree.
For 1 egg used for leavening purposes (fluffy cakes, muffins, quick breads), you can substitute 1 1/2 teaspoons egg replacer powder whisked with 2 tablespoons warm water OR 1/4 cup yogurt.
For 1 cup brown or white sugar, you can substitute 2/3 cup liquid sweetener (agave nectar, barley malt, brown rice syrup or molasses). Decrease other liquids by 1/4 to 1/3 cup.
For 1 cup powdered sugar, you can substitute 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons evaporated cane juice ground to a fine powder in a very dry blender or food processor.
How to use stevia and xylitol:
2 teaspoons of white sugar is equal to…
1/2 teaspoon stevia or xylitol bulk blends
1/4 teaspoon clear liquid stevia
a pinch of pure stevia powder
2 teaspoons of pure xylitol
Source: Taste for Life. Dec 2011.
by Dr. Oler, ND | Apr 3, 2012 | Food Allergies, Gut Dysbiosis, Weight Loss |
I haven’t heard much about MSG in a while. Actually, the first time I heard about MSG was when I was working at Flat Top Grill during college. We had to specially label all of our stir fry sauces that contained MSG to differentiate them, and customers would often come in and tell me they were allergic to MSG. This was back when I was still an early childhood education major, not a nutritional sciences major, so I didn’t really have any idea what they were talking about. I just assured them that we had everything labeled and that there wouldn’t be any MSG cross contamination.
When I got more involved in the nutritional world, I learned why those customers were avoiding MSG. MSG is a flavor additive and it can be found in a wide variety of foods, but is most common in Asian cuisines (which explains why people were asking about it so often at Flat Top). Concerns about MSG have been around for many years; people complain of a smorgasbord of reactions after consuming MSG and many nutritional and scientific experts believe that MSG has dangerous addictive effects. There are studies to bak up these concerns, but currently, MSG has Generally Recognized as Safe status as a food additive. So it can be found in many processed foods, and it can hide in labels under different names.
Even more interesting, or alarming, is that new research suggests that MSG causes weight gain no matter how many calories you eat. A study conduced by the University of North Carolina and the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention found that people who ate 5 grams of MSG per day on average were 33% more likely to be overweight than those people who ate less than .5 grams per day on average.
This link held true when confounding factors of age, physical activity, calorie intake and other lifestyle factors were removed.
Many professionals and experts had already come to the conclusion that MSG had something to do with weight gain, but they believed that the weight gain arose from people eating more because MSG makes it tastes better. This study shows that weight gain happens independent of calorie intake, so that theory is false. More research is needed, but the idea now is that MSG may cause disruptions in appetite regulation.
So go check the labels your canned soup and bagged chips. I don’t advocate eating anything that has these sorts of additives that were made off in a lab somewhere. If you’re reading a food label and you don’t recognize an ingredient as a food, don’t put it into your body.
Also, for some great take-out meals sans MSG, check out our Take-out Fake-out cooking class recipes.
Source:
Gray, Nathan. “MSG linked with weight gain: Study” foodnavigator.com. May 31, 2011.
by Dr. Oler, ND | Mar 21, 2012 | Weight Loss
Most diets these days focus heavily on calorie counting. Most people believe that weight loss results from creating a calorie deficit, burning more calories with physical activity than you consume. Seems simple and logical, but it doesn’t hold water. (more…)
by Dr. Oler, ND | Feb 29, 2012 | Weight Loss
Have you ever found yourself eating the last french fries out their little fast food bag even though they are cold and taste like nothing? Or maybe you ate a whole package of microwaveable chicken nuggets even though they were so dry you had to cover them in ketchup? Why do we eat things like that? A study published in the journal Personality and Social Psychology may have discovered at least part of the answer. (more…)
by Dr. Oler, ND | Feb 15, 2012 | Testimonials
Congrats, Lisa! 13 pounds and 27 inches lost in 13 weeks!
Lisa before the OBB program...
Lisa after 13 weeks!
Please Read This!
Reading these testimonials are what prompted me to make the decision to join the OBB program. The results of this decision make me happy every day. I lost a few things (inches….fat….weight…bad feelings). I truly gained a better perspective toward myself, food and so many other things. Do not hesitate, OBB teaches how to live better.
I will be happy to talk with anyone about this experience, give Sheila your number and I’ll give you a call. Best to you. NUFF Said!
Enthusiastically,
Lisa
by Dr. Oler, ND | Feb 8, 2012 | Hormone Imbalances, Natural Weight Loss, Neurotransmitter Imbalances, Weight Loss
The full diet is a 500 calorie per day plan plus daily injections of the pregnancy hormone hCG. Obviously, you’re going to lose weight eating only 500 calories a day. The hormone was included because it was thought that it would help people on the diet reduce their hunger. It was also believed that the hormone would help mobilize fat from areas where it’s typically hard to lose. (more…)
by Dr. Oler, ND | Feb 1, 2012 | Weight Loss
Diet sodas are actually one of the biggest enemies of weight loss. People make the switch to diet sodas with the best of intentions, trading in high calorie beverages for zero calorie alternatives, but really, diet sodas are just as bad as their high-fructose sweetened partners. Helen P. Hazuda, a professor at University of Texas Science Center who has researched diet sodas and their effect on weight says, “they may be free of calories, but not of consequences.” (more…)
by Sheila | Jan 25, 2012 | Testimonials
Congratulations, Terri! 15.5 pounds of fat and 22.5 inches lost in 13 weeks! Amazing!
Terri before the OBB program...
Terri after 13 weeks!
(more…)
by Sheila | Jan 24, 2012 | Areas of Weight Loss Resistance, Natural Weight Loss, Weight Loss
Counting calories doesn’t work. How many times have we said it? We like to talk about it though, because so many people still believe that if you just eat less calories or burn more calories, weight loss will happen. If it were that simple, losing weight would be much easier. And we probably wouldn’t be in business. The truth is that losing weight (and gaining weight) happens differently for everyone. (more…)
by Sheila | Jan 20, 2012 | Cooking Tips
I recently got a question from one of our Optimal Body Balance ladies about how to make the creamy soups she loves so much without the dairy. I told her about my usual tricks – adding beans, nuts or coconut milk into the puree – but she wasn’t really a fan of any of these ideas. I am not the biggest fan of creamy soups, I prefer big chunks of veggies and protein, so I turned to the internet for some more inspiration. (more…)