You Don’t Need to be a Strongman to Train Like One

Similar to “American Ninja Warrior” and the obstacle-based fitness trend it spawned, strongman training first started as a hit TV show strictly for our own entertainment. In 1977, CBS aired the first edition of a contest called “World’s Strongest Man,” where participants — a mix of bodybuilders, weightlifters, football players and the like — literally strapped refrigerators to their backs and sprinted for 17 seconds.

Four decades later, strongman training techniques and equipment have evolved, and the trend is making its way into commercial gyms. While this fitness method is much more thoughtful, functional and safe than it once was, it still tends to attract spectators. But you no longer have to sit on the sidelines. You can try these muscle-building, fat-torching moves regardless of your fitness level. In other words, you don’t need to be a strongman to train like one.

“[Commercial gyms] are starting to get variations of strongman equipment that won’t destroy their facility. You might see super heavy medicine balls that people use to simulate a stone load. Or you’ll see people carry dumbbells like farmer handles. There might be sandbags for people to lift and carry,” says Chad Canter, a trainer at the strength and conditioning studio, TS Fitness, and coach for PowerNYC, where he works with 20 male and female strongman athletes, including four pros, a national and world champion.

WHY NOW?

Strongman training is nothing new. In fact, the concept is centuries’ old. But in recent years, it has progressed to “focus not just on maximal strength, but also endurance, conditioning and an emphasis on skill and speed as well as brute strength,” says Lee Bell, MS, lecturer at The Muscle Mechanic UK. Other reasons for the sudden spike in popularity may include boredom and the fulfillment of a basic human need.

“People just don’t do manual labor like they used to, so they need more of a variety of movement at the gym now. It’s not just about coming in, sitting on a machine and doing your presses, then sitting at another machine and doing extensions. Strongman lets you pick things up and move them around in a much more dynamic way that’s also more mentally stimulating,” says Canter, who also regularly competes at 200 pounds in qualifiers for national strongman competitions.

There’s a cool, creative component to strongman training, too. “A stone or sandbag is not like a bench press, where you just press it up and down and rack it. With a stone or sandbag, you can pick it up and carry it. You can press it to your shoulders. You can load it over a bar repeatedly. There’s lots of things you can do, so you’re not as limited as you are with machines. Plus, it’s all very functional fitness that helps with day-to-day tasks. Farmers carries prep you for hauling your groceries, lifting a stone over a bar is like putting a box on a shelf and a clean and press is like picking up your kid.”


READ MORE > MASTER THE MOVE | THE PUSHUP


An additional appeal is that anyone can do it. “Anybody can learn how to pick something off the ground and put it on top of something else.You just need to scale things back to where you can handle it, and build up,” Cantor says. “I have a 75-year-old client who does farmers carries.”

Science also suggests strongman workouts are better at burning fat. “An interesting study published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that the sheer intensity and volume of these exercises [i.e., farmers walk, log press and the stones] helped strongmen form an athletic look with high muscle levels and a lean body composition,” Bell says. “Any exercise that requires repeated, high-intensity activities with multiple muscle groups will improve conditioning and burn a lot of calories. Couple that with some a muscle-building stimulus from the heavy loads and strongman training will soon improve body composition.”

STRENGTH TRAINING VS. STRONGMAN TRAINING?

The larger and heavier equipment is the most obvious difference, but not the biggest. How you move with these tools is really what separates these methods. “In regular strength training, every movement has an A and a B move. If you squat, you lower your body down (A), then you stand up (B). In strongman training, the moves are much more dynamic, involving the total body, which is why I think it’s now gaining popularity,” Canter explains. “For example, you might pick up a yoke — a giant metal frame with a crossbar designed as a lifting station — and carry it 60 feet. Or if you lift a stone, you have to do a deadlift then row to get it to your lap, squat to stand up, then walk. You’re rarely ever picking something up and just standing in one place.”

While you can certainly perform strongman training on your own, it is smart to seek advice from someone knowledgeable as you would whenever you’re learning a new activity. “It’s good to have a trainer or coach introduce you to it and show you how to do it properly. You want to make sure that you’re going to pick things up in a safe way. Once you get it down, you can do it on your own,” Canter says.

The odds of getting hurt are no greater in strongman training than in regular weight-room work, but, as always, it’s good to be cautious and calculated. “Usually, pushing through a movement when you shouldn’t is when you get into trouble,” Canter warns. So when you power through, try to stay closer to 7 or 8 on a difficulty scale of 1–10.

Ready to become a strongman? Incorporate the following workout from Canter once a week and see how you feel — and look — over time.

1. SINGLE-ARM PUSH PRESS

Grab a bar or a dumbbell (such as the circus dumbbell, pictured) and hold it at shoulder level. Choose a weight you find challenging to straight press for a few reps. Standing with your feet hip-width apart, dip down as if you’re about to squat, then spring up, pressing the weight skyward. Slowly lower your arm, then repeat. This total-body exercise generates power from your lower body, which means you can lift more than you think. Do 34 sets of 812 reps, alternating sides.

2. FARMERS CARRY

Start this move the same way you would a deadlift. Grip the handles of dumbbells or kettle-bells tightly, keeping your back straight. Stand up and start walking. Not only does this strengthen your back and legs, but also it engages your core. Make sure your hands are actively squeezing the handles. If you don’t feel a strain in your hands by the end of each set, the weight is too light. Aim to cover 50100 feet as fast as possible (or 45 seconds) for 24 sets.

3. SANDBAG CARRY

This variation of a carry lets you work through how to hold heavy objects in front of your body, engaging your core, hamstrings and glutes. If your gym doesn’t have sandbags, take a 45-pound weight plate (be sure to deadlift it up), bear hug it, slightly lean back and start walking. Set a timer to see how far you can go in 30 seconds. Each time you do this exercise, try to beat your distance. Aim for 50–100 feet as fast as possible for 2–4 sets.

4. DEADLIFT

You’ve already had to deadlift heavy weights for all the previous movements, so you know very well how to do this. The checklist to keep in mind here is to make sure your back is tight, not arched like a scared cat. Don’t let your hips come up before your shoulders when you stand up. If you break form, don’t go up in weight yet. Start with 510 reps for 4 sets.


GEAR UP FOR YOUR NEXT WORKOUT

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Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/?p=24084

Top Athletes On Why They Prioritize Sleep

This article is an excerpt from THE SLEEP REVOLUTION by Arianna Huffington. Copyright © 2016 by Christabella, LLC. Published by Harmony Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. It was originally published at Thrive Global.

One of the teams leading the way in capitalizing on the sleep advantage is the Seattle Seahawks, who won the Super Bowl in 2013 and came within two yards of repeating their victory in 2014. Head coach Pete Carroll is known as much for his innovation off the field as on it.

“When it comes to the precision and science of sleep for optimal performance,” says Carroll. “We’ve been fortunate to work with experts to help guide us on both the physical and mental strategies to enhance our recovery process.”

Two of the experts leading his science team are Sam Ramsden, the team’s director of player health and performance, and Michael Gervais, the director of high -performance psychology at the DISC Sports & Spine Center. Together, they educate both players and coaches on the importance of sleep.

“Fatigue and performance are intimately linked,” they tell me. “And sleep is one of the important variables to get right to help athletes sustain high effort and enthusiasm for the long haul.”

This isn’t news to the New England Patriots’ quarterback Tom Brady, who managed to beat the Seahawks in the last Super Bowl — and win the MVP title. Brady goes to bed at 8:30 p.m. and is still managing to play at the highest level, even as he approaches forty.

“The decisions that I make always center around performance enhancement,” he says. “I want to be the best I can be every day.”

The Chicago Bears are employing a similar strategy. Their sport-science coordinator, Jennifer Gibson, teaches players how to develop good sleep habits and proper napping techniques as a way to maximize performance, and provides them with memory-foam mattresses during training camp.

Pro Bowl guard Kyle Long has become an enthusiastic sleep advocate. “Getting that eight, nine hours is just as important as weightlifting and studying your playbook,” he says. “I can know all the plays like the back of my hand. I can lift all the weights in the world. But if I get five, six hours of sleep, I’m going to have that doubt in my head and that sluggish nature, and you can’t have that when you’re trying to block these elite guys. I’d absolutely say sleep is a weapon.”

As former NBA All-Star Grant Hill puts it, “People talk about diet and exercise, [but] sleep is just as important.”

“Sleep is one of the important variables to get right to help athletes sustain high effort and enthusiasm for the long haul.”

Four-time NBA MVP LeBron James swears by twelve hours a day when practicing.

Two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash believes that “napping every game day, whether you feel like it or not, not only has a positive effect on your performance that night but also a cumulative effect on your body throughout the season.”

Professional triathlete Jarrod Shoemaker describes sleep as “half my training,” while Usain Bolt, the world’s fastest man, explains, “Sleep is extremely important to me. I need to rest and recover in order for the training I do to be absorbed by my body.”

Volleyball player Kerri Walsh Jennings, a three-time Olympic gold-medal winner, admits that sleep “could be the hardest thing to accomplish on my to-do list, but it always makes a difference.”

But tennis great Roger Federer trumps them all. “If I don’t sleep eleven to twelve hours a day, it’s not right,” he says. “If I don’t have that amount of sleep, I hurt myself.” Before Wimbledon in 2015, he even rented two houses: one for his family to sleep in and one for him (and his training team), so the family activities wouldn’t wake him.

This recognition of sleep’s impact on performance is now a worldwide phenomenon. In the United Kingdom, the Southampton soccer club has its own sleep app, which players use each morning to log the previous night’s sleep. If a player’s sleep-quality level drops, team officials will intervene. The Manchester City soccer club has a new £200 million training center that includes eighty bedrooms. The team sleeps in the training center the night before home matches — a recognition by the coaching staff that sleep isn’t just for training, but an integral part of game-day preparation.

Nick Littlehales, a sleep coach for Manchester United, as well as other top soccer clubs, rugby teams and the UK cycling team, will often go to a venue ahead of the players to make changes to their hotel rooms.

“I had been preparing with various teams for the 2016 Rio games,” he says. “A key part of that is ensuring the hotels being used in the run up to the games are ticking all of our recovery boxes.”

At the college level, making the sleep/performance link is even more important, since the athletes are younger and even more likely to be in the ‘I’ll sleep when I’m dead’ phase of life. A 2015 Wall Street Journal headline read, “College Football Wakes Up to a New Statistic: Sleep.” in 2012, Pat Fitzgerald, the head football coach for Northwestern University, noticed that many of his players seemed especially tired during afternoon games. It turns out the reason was that the games occurred right when his players were used to taking afternoon naps. So he started a policy of mandatory game-day naps. That year, the team won ten games for only the third time in the history of Northwestern football.

“At first, we didn’t really know much about sleep and we were just curious,” say then-defensive end Tyler Scott. “But we really embraced it, and after a while, we got really competitive about sleep efficiency. We started checking our data every day.”

Other teams are taking note. At their 2015 training camp, University of Tennessee football coach Butch Jones introduced his team to a new part of their practice routine — sleep trackers and sleep coaches. The team worked with Rise Science, a company that helps athletes improve performance through sleep. They paired each athlete with a sleep coach and monitored everything — from the amount of time players sleep to how long it takes them to fall asleep to the quality of their sleep — with the results sent directly to a smartphone app. The players also wear orange-tinted glasses an hour before they go to bed to help eliminate the blue light from screens that can disrupt sleep.

“It was very powerful to see the cultural shift at the University,” says cofounder Leon Sasson. “It went from who can sleep less and still do well at practice to it being cool if you show up to practices with nine-plus hours of sleep under your belts.”

At the University of Pittsburgh, coach Pat Narduzzi makes sure his players get enough sleep by coming into their dorms and tucking them in at night himself.

“We’ve got lights out at 10:30 and bed check at 10:45 every night, so we’re trying to get them down early. We can’t close their eyes at night for them, but you can see it on the field that I think our kids are getting better rest.”


GEAR UP FOR SLEEP

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The post Top Athletes On Why They Prioritize Sleep appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/top-athletes-prioritize-sleep/

What Lizards Can Teach Us About the Effects of Training

It’s safe to say comparing yourself to a lizard has probably never crossed your mind. And for good reason. But, we actually have more in common with these ancient, cold-blooded reptiles than you may think — especially when it comes to athletic ability.

Humans are often compared to closer animal relatives like primates, but when it comes to humans and reptiles, similarities are harder to wrap our heads around — especially when we think about training. It’s hard to see commonalities between us, and, say, an iguana. However, research led by Jerry Husak, PhD, an assistant professor at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, is beginning to open our minds to the possibility we’ve got more in common with lizards than we realize.

“My work is essentially about trying to see what kinds of trade-offs lizards make regarding athletic performance, because the responses lizards have are shared across all vertebrates, including humans,” Husak explains. “Lizards have their entire genome sequenced, so we know that they have all of the same genes [as humans] that turn on and off during exercise.”

THE LIZARD-HUMAN CONNECTION

Because of this shared response and their sequenced genome, lizards are actually an ideal specimen to study to understand the effect exercise has on our bodies. Related factors, like diet, can be manipulated in a drastic way in lizards that isn’t possible for humans. “We give the lizards different exercises, but by also restricting their diet, we can really get at metabolic things like the mechanism behind obesity and how it might work on the molecular level since we can manipulate these conditions extremely in lizards,” Husak explains.

After exposing the lizards to endurance training, “their oxygen carrying capacity [also known as RBC] increases, their hearts get larger [like we see in human athletes], and we notice changes in their muscle fibers. The big-level effects are the same.” Knowing  about the bigger effects means scientists can study the small-scale, molecular effects. They’re exploring whether the molecular pathways in lizards are the same as they are in humans. This is important because molecular pathways essentially define what our cells do and how they function at the most basic level.

THE EFFECTS OF EXTREME EXERCISE

“[Through our lizard research], we’ve been able to see the whole molecular cascade [i.e., what’s happening at the molecular and cellular level when we exercise] and we can get a sense of all the benefits of exercise for us, like decreasing obesity and even the cognitive benefits that actually change the metabolic structure of the human brain,” Husak explains. Additionally, his work can begin to model and point to the long-term effects of extreme exercises like HIIT and CrossFit on human bodies.

“[Extreme exercises] don’t just affect a couple of things — they have really widespread effects in the [entire] body,” Husak notes. His lizard research also shows it’s possible to advance athletic ability to the detriment of other vital body functions. His work has illustrated that, even when their immune systems are repressed and their ability to reproduce has been compromised, lizards continue to improve their endurance skills. We can see this in humans, too, when women do extreme exercise, overtrain and lose the ability to menstruate.


READ MORE > GOT 15 MINUTES? SHORTER WORKOUTS MIGHT BE BEST


Therefore, it’s likely our athletic ability has evolved over time, pointing to the idea that training is an inherent, important trait for all humans, regardless of how often we work out. Our athletic ability isn’t some kind of bonus talent only elite humans possess. “Because the response to exercise is seen across all vertebrates, it’s really implied that our ability to exercise the way that we do is something we inherited hundreds of millions of years ago — it must have been adaptive at some point in the past,” Husak hypothesizes.

The post What Lizards Can Teach Us About the Effects of Training appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/lizards-can-teach-us-effects-training/

Why Slowing Down Leads to Better Results

There’s no denying that HIIT is a great way to train and improve your health and fitness. But HIIT-mania has many of us in the mindset that more is more and faster is better. After all, that’s the goal of all those AMRAP exercises and ladder workouts — as many as possible, as fast as possible.

However, that’s not the only way to build muscle. “If you want to improve muscle definition and see muscle growth, you have to induce muscle fatigue, which will stimulate repair,” explains Pete McCall, spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise and host of the podcast All About Fitness.

HIIT, which is considered explosive exercise, is one way to do that. But “at some point, you need a new stimulus to the body,” McCall says. And one new stimulus is to slow down.

THE BENEFITS OF SLOWING DOWN

You may roll your eyes at the idea of slowing down, especially if you’ve been told to do this in other areas of your life (work, dating, life overall). But just as completing a work project with haste or starting to plan a wedding after a good first date can lead to bad results, working out too quickly can lead to poor form, which can then lead to injuries.

It’s especially important for beginners to perform strength exercises slowly. “Your joints, ligaments and tendons haven’t become acclimated to so much stress,” explains Noam Tamir, founder of TS Fitness in New York City. Moving slowly allows your body and brain to learn how your muscles should move and feel during an exercise so you can perform it safely and effectively.

But experienced exercisers also benefit from slowing down. It’s a principle called time under tension, which refers to how long your muscles are under tension during an exercise. The slower you move, the harder your muscle fibers have to work to control the motion, which leads to muscle growth, McCall explains.

For example, 10 squats at a speed of 1 second down and 1 second up will take you 20 seconds. If you slow down and take 4 seconds to lower and 2 seconds to lift, it’ll take 60 seconds. That’s three times more time under tension.


READ MORE > IDEAL REP RANGES FOR WEIGHT LOSS AND 4 MORE GOALS


Now, that doesn’t mean three times the muscle growth. It’s simply a different way of training and can help you grow stronger in different areas. “If you are constantly training fast, you’re not teaching yourself to decelerate, which minimizes the potential for strength gains,” says Tamir. “We’re stronger in our negative movements than our positive ones.”

Translation: You are stronger when you are moving against gravity (lowering into a squat, lowering dumbbells to your chest in a bench press) than you are powering up (rising to stand, pushing the dumbbells up). So don’t ignore working on that strength.

HOW SLOW SHOULD YOU GO?

McCall recommends weight training slowly one day a week. There is no one-set protocol for slow training. He suggests moving at a pace of 4–6 seconds down and 4–6 seconds up. You only need to do two sets of 10–12 reps really slowly to have it be effective.

If that sounds like it’ll take decades to complete your workout, consider Tamir’s paces. He has beginners start at 4 seconds down, 2 seconds hold, 2 seconds up, then transition to something like 3 seconds down, 1 second hold, 2 seconds up.

Whatever pace you choose, remember to breathe. “Inhale during the negative phase and exhale during the positive phase or at the top,” Tamir recommends. “This will eliminate creating too much extra tension in your body.”

Be warned: You will be sore the next day since your muscles aren’t used to being under tension for so long. Foam roll or do other recovery work, and you’ll feel better and be prepared for your next workout.

The post Why Slowing Down Leads to Better Results appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/slowing-leads-better-results/

Recipe: High-Protein Chicken Salad [Video]

If you have leftover rotisserie chicken or cooked chicken breast, make this high-protein chicken salad as an easy lunch option. Lean shredded chicken is combined with creamy yogurt, crispy apples and sweet grapes for a tasty, tangy combo. Serve between 100% whole grain bread and you have a satisfying, packable lunch. If you’d rather go low-carb, you can sub in a side salad instead of the bread.

High-Protein Chicken Salad

Ingredients

  • 1 pound (454 grams) cooked chicken breast or rotisserie chicken, shredded (about 4 cups shredded)
  • 1/2 cup diced red onion (about 1/2 medium red onion or 60 grams)
  • 1/2 cup diced apple (about 1/2 small apple or 75 grams)
  • 2/3 cup (100 grams) quartered or halved grapes
  • 2/3 cup (165 grams) plain 2% fat Greek yogurt (certified gluten-free if necessary)
  • 2 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice, or more, to taste
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 12 slices of 100% whole grain bread (about 100 calories each)
  • 6 medium lettuce leaves

Directions

In a large bowl, combine shredded chicken, red onion, apple, grapes, Greek yogurt, lemon juice, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Mix until well combined.

Using a 3/4 cup measuring scoop, portion out the chicken salad. Serve with a lettuce leaf and 2 slices of 100% whole grain bread.

Nutrition Information

Serves: 6 |  Serving Size: 3/4 cup (about 5 ounces or 142 grams) + 2 slices whole grain bread + 1 medium lettuce leaf

Per serving: Calories: 364; Total Fat: 6g; Saturated Fat: 1g; Monounsaturated Fat: 1g; Cholesterol: 65mg; Sodium: 412mg; Carbohydrate: 44g; Dietary Fiber: 7g; Sugar: 10g; Protein: 34g

Nutrition Bonus: Potassium: 249mg; Iron: 17%; Vitamin A: 1%; Vitamin C: 7%; Calcium: 12%

Energizing Tips (optional)

  • Add 1/3 cup dried cranberries into the chicken salad before mixing to increase calories, carbs and sweetness. (Per serving: Calories: 384; Total Fat: 6g; Carbohydrate: 50g; Dietary Fiber: 7g; Sugar: 15g; Protein: 34g)
  • Add 1/2 cup chopped almonds or nut of choice into the chicken salad before mixing to increase calories, protein and healthy fats. (Per serving: Calories: 420; Total Fat: 11g; Carbohydrate: 46g; Dietary Fiber: 8g; Sugar: 11g; Protein: 36g)

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Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/high-protein-chicken-salad/

7 Quick-Packing Picnic Tips

There are a few months out of the year when that mountain vista, grassy knoll, local park bench and rooftop make suitable dining rooms. The next time you have the romantic (and relaxing!) urge to “eat out,” don’t reach for a bucket of greasy fried chicken or limp grocery store sandwiches. With these healthy, easy-to-make, quick-pack formulas, you’ll be out the door and dining healthfully al fresco in no time!

Before you go, here are seven tips to optimize your picnic basket:

1. WHAT TO LEAVE AT HOME …

  • Stuffy serving pieces. Pick disposable wrappings, lightweight, bio-friendly wrappings or plastic tupperware. You can even use a small serving bowl, tie a kitchen towel over it and carry it with you.
  • Fancy recipes that require hours of prep. Sometimes the best way to picnic is to raid the fridge for pickles, cheese, leftover cold cuts and the rest of that loaf of bread.

2. DON’T FORGET …

  • You’re leaving the fridge (and the A/C) at home. Even if you bring a cooler, you won’t be able to keep your spread chilled while you dine, so choose foods that won’t wilt, spoil or mind being out a little while.
  • To keep it simple. One-bowl meals, dips and finger foods are picnic blanket friendly and mean you can crash in the grass or set up on a table without much forethought.
  • To bring utensils, bowls and a board. There’s nothing worse than packing a beautiful one-bowl meal and realizing you forgot forks, bowls or spoons. A small, portable cutting board that fits in your basket, a pocket knife for cutting. Plastic dinnerware comes in handy, too.
  • To keep it fresh. Packing fruits, veggies and foods in their original state makes for an easier picnic.

3. PICK VEGGIES AND FRUITS

Fresh produce is always ready, and there’s very little you need to do other than load it in your basket. When you’re eating “out,” fresh produce is a great menu move because your dishes won’t spoil, veggies are easy to eat and they capitalize on the bounty of summer and great weather that lured you outside in the first place. Our best ideas for fresh veggies and fruits in your picnic basket:

  • Slice fresh tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers and peppers and serve with a healthy bean dip, hummus or guacamole.
  • Chop up watermelon, cantaloupe or honeydew, combine with a few torn mint leaves and sprinkle with salt.
  • Bust out a big salad. Choose kale or chard for salads. These greens can stand up to warmer dinner tables. Spring greens and other delicate leaves wilt under even light dressings in warmer weather making your perky salad soggy.
  • Serve avocados on the “half shell.” Scoop out the buttery meat and serve on crackers with salt.
  • Roughly chop peaches, tomatoes and plums. Drizzle with olive oil and lemon, sprinkle with basil and add chunks of bread for a picnic-ready panzanella.

READ MORE > HOW TO STORE SUMMER FRUITS AND VEGETABLES


4. BRING PICNIC-READY PROTEINS

Salami, prosciutto and other cured-meats are a nice way to start your meal without worrying about spoilage (or messy cleanup and transport). A rotisserie chicken is an easy, finger-friendly way to add protein, too, though it can’t live outside of temperature control for very long.  Beans, nuts and eggs are also great choices since their spoiling points are a bit less sensitive. A few protein-packed picnic ideas:

  • Mix up a bean salad with freshly cooked or canned white beans, black beans or lentils. Drain the beans, drizzle with olive oil and lemon and add a sprinkle of salt and fresh herbs. Serve with crackers or toss into your salad!
  • Make a dip with those same beans by pureeing in a blender or food processor, seasoning with whatever favorite spices, salt and pepper you have on hand. Serve with chopped veggies.
  • Put an egg on it. (Or in it.) Mix up an egg salad for sandwiches, mash up hard-boiled eggs and toss into salads, or carry the little hard-boiled eggs on their own and eat with salt and pepper. (Stay away from poached or fried eggs. No one wants yolks in their picnic basket.)
  • Stack a sando. Is there anything more summery than a fresh BLT? Make up sandwiches with your favorite meats and cheeses before you leave to picnic for the easiest and ultimate in picnic packing (and cleanup!) ease.

5. MIX IN HEALTHY CARBOHYDRATES

Almost  any carbohydrate is easy to pack and can be combined with veggies and proteins to make a picnic-friendly meal. Potatoes, polenta, cooled cooked rice, pasta, quinoa or even crusty loaves of bread fit the bill — no worrying about spoilage in this macronutrient department! Here are some of our tastiest meal-making ideas:

  • Cook and cool your favorite pasta, rice or grain. Toss into a big salad with hearty greens, fresh veggies and beans to complete the meal. (Add seeds or nuts for texture, top with your favorite easy dressing!)
  • Whip up a bowl of potato salad. Using olive oil instead of mayo helps your salad last longer al fresco.
  • Toss a box of whole-grain crackers or crusty bread into your picnic basket. Serve with bean dips, use to scoop up bean salads or eat with fresh veggies and eggs.

6. A NOTE ABOUT FATS

When it comes to eating outside, not all fats are created equal. Choose healthy fats that won’t melt or change composition when the temperature rises. Leave the butter at home and opt instead for healthy drizzles of olive oil, avocado oil or your favorite nut oil for flavor. Avocados and fresh cheese are a great way to add texture to your meals without the melty-ness.

7. ADD A SWEET FINISH!

Packable desserts are awesome but typically require extra forethought to prepare. Pass up the pre-packaged sweets and stuff a couple of 70% dark chocolate bars into your basket, or bring a pint of fresh berries or stone fruits to slice and share. These sweets are simple and easy to enjoy as you’re gathering around your picnic blanket, celebrating a meal well served.

The post 7 Quick-Packing Picnic Tips appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/7-quick-packing-picnic-tips/

4 Healthy Swaps to Help You Lose Weight

Although you work out and stay physically fit, you can always boost your efforts to make healthy choices and stave off extra pounds. To start, try healthy lifestyle swaps like these four below, which can impact your overall well-being.

AFTERNOON SWAP

Why: Research published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine suggests ingesting caffeine hours before nightfall causes a disturbance in sleep. In this study, participants who consumed caffeine up to six hours before bed lost more than an hour of sleep.

The Swap: To avoid the 4 p.m. slump, hit the stairs. A new study published in Physiology & Behavior found that 10 minutes of walking up and down stairs at a regular pace was more likely to make participants feel energized than ingesting 50 milligrams of caffeine. (This is the equivalent to about a cup of green tea (59 mg), two cans of soda (58 mg) or just less than a shot of espresso (63 mg)).

WORK SWAP

Why: The American Heart Association released a science advisory on the dangers of sedentary behavior. It states that Americans, on average, sit 6–8 hours per day, which leads to all types of health issues, ranging from diabetes to death. Even those who stay active in their personal time don’t have the same problematic health reductions as those who move more.


READ MORE > A NEW TREND IN WALKING MISTAKES (THANKS, AUSTRALIA)


The Swap: To improve your daily mobility, try switching your smaller work meetings, such as one-on-ones, to walking meetings. “The goal with walking meetings isn’t to sweat up a storm. The goal is just to integrate a little more natural movement into daily life,” says Dani Singer, fitness director of Fit2Go Personal Training in Baltimore, Maryland. “The boost you receive in mood and energy will pay off much higher than the calories you burn.” As added bonuses: research published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology suggests that walking leads to increased creative thinking, and an exploratory study from the Harvard Business Review proposes that walking meetings support better cognitive engagement on the job.

VACATION SWAPS

Why: A vacation may not only leave you with extra weight, but it can hang around for six weeks post vacation. In a study published in Physiology & Behavior, participants who took a one- to three-week vacation gained an average of almost 1 pound. To put this amount in perspective, the average American gains 1–2 pounds per year. 

The Swap: Skip the depressing hotel gym and build exercise into your vacation by doing what the locals do. “Different places often have different cultures when it comes to exercise, and trying working out their way can add a fantastic experience to your trip. In India, try yoga; in China, try tai chi,” says Julia Buckley, a trainer in the U.K. and author of “The Fat Burn Revolution.” “Change your mindset from seeing exercise as a chore which you shouldn’t have to do on vacation to thinking of it as something that will enhance your vacation by energizing your body and calming your mind.”


READ MORE > IS SITTING TRULY THE NEW SMOKING?


SHOPPING SWAP

Why: Although the percentage of online shoppers continues to outpace in-person buyers, the statistics show people still prefer brick-and-mortar stores. Retail TouchPoints, an online publishing network for retail executives, conducted a survey of consumers and found that 85% prefer to shop in person because they like to touch and feel products before they purchase; 36% don’t like waiting for items to be delivered and 30% like to receive advice on what products they should purchase.                                                               

The Swap: Park your car far from the front and enjoy the time spent strolling around — you’re burning calories. Use a basket instead of a shopping cart if you’re only picking up a few items. To find out how many calories you’ll burn, use the MapMyRun calorie calculator.  

The post 4 Healthy Swaps to Help You Lose Weight appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/4-healthy-swaps-help-lose-weight/

The Perfect Formula for Smoothie Breakfast Bowls

At home, yogurt, granola and fruit is a pretty pedestrian breakfast. But if you’ve ever had an acai bowl for breakfast, you know that “ho-hum” breakfast is next level when it’s topped with fresh fruit and crunchy nuts and seeds. There’s just something delicious and decadent about a smoothie bowl for breakfast.

You can recreate the magic of this tropical treat at home (it’s shockingly easy!). It’s a pretty straightforward formula that can be flexible and leads to a refreshing, healthy and flavorful breakfast.

The Main Components

A great smoothie breakfast bowl has the following important components:

Protein

Think of this as an important supporting actor. Include protein from yogurt, milk, chia or your favorite nut milk. Choose unsweetened varieties to prevent added sugars from sneaking into your bowl.

Fruit

The star of your smoothie bowl is flavorful fruit. Strawberries! Raspberries! Blueberries! Cherries! All of these juicy summer fruits are bursting with antioxidants and healthy fiber. Freezing them is a great way to preserve the best of the season.

The Boosts

The boosts that make the bowl special are:

Crunch

The best part about eating a smoothie is the texture that comes from dressing up a bowl. Add toasted nuts to boost protein and fiber and your favorite granola for more crunch.

Super-nutritious Extras

Bee pollen, hemp seed, cacao nibs and sesame seeds are healthy ingredients that add crunch and nutrition. They also make it colorful and beautiful!

Follow our simple recipe below and use it to create a special breakfast all your own:

Smoothie Breakfast Bowl

For the base:

  • 1 cup fresh or frozen fruit or berries
  • 2 teaspoons chia seeds
  • 1/2 cup milk or nondairy milk (coconut, almond or hemp)
  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup or honey
    Optional toppings:
  • 1/4–1/2 cup yogurt or milk
  • 1/4 cup fruit (Think: bananas, berries, pineapple, mandarin segments)
  • Healthy crunch (Think: granola, toasted coconut, toasted almonds, pepitas, cacao nibs, hemp seeds, bee pollen)

Combine base ingredients and blend in a food processor or blender. Divide and transfer to individual bowls. Add toppings of your choice. Recipe makes 2 servings at 2 cups each.

Nutrition (per serving of smoothie bowl base): Calories: 49; Total Fat: 2g; Saturated Fat: 0g; Monounsaturated Fat: 0g; Cholesterol: 0mg; Sodium: 40mg; Carbohydrate: 7g; Dietary Fiber: 2g; Sugar: 2g; Protein: 1g

The post The Perfect Formula for Smoothie Breakfast Bowls appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/23970-2/

Peaches ‘n Cream Smoothie | Recipe

Get your post-workout protein boost with this smoothie from Love and Zest. It has a whopping 17 grams of protein and only 186 calories. With just five ingredients, this shake is a snap to whip up so you can get on with your day.

The post Peaches ‘n Cream Smoothie | Recipe appeared first on Under Armour.

Source: http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/peaches-n-cream-protein-shake-recipe/