The portobello burger. Delicious, nutritious and vegetatarian! (Except for the cheese, which you can leave off if you like)
Make as you would a regular burger, replace mince pattie with a portobello mushroom.
So very simple, and super yummy.
by:
Super Nutrition
portobello mushrooms
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 tsp. dried Italian seasoning, crushed
4 slices provolone cheese
4 ciabatta rolls, split, or wholegrain bread
1/3 cup mayonnaise mixed with EXTRA hot chilli sauce
4 to 8 pieces roasted red sweet pepper
3/4 cup fresh basil leaves
1.
Scrape gills from mushroom caps, if desired. Drizzle mushrooms with oil. Sprinkle salt, pepper and crushed Italian seasoning.
2.
On charcoal grill, cook mushrooms on rack of uncovered grill directly over medium coals for 6 to 8 minutes, turning once halfway through cooking. Top each mushroom with a cheese slice. Place rolls, split sides down, on grill rack. Grill 2 minutes more, until cheese is melted, mushrooms are tender, and rolls are toasted.
3.
Serve mushrooms on rolls. Pass mayonnaise, sweet pepper pieces, and basil leaves. Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition information
Per serving: Calories 520, Total Fat 29 g, Saturated Fat 9 g, Monounsaturated Fat 8 g, Polyunsaturated Fat 9 g, Cholesterol 25 mg, Sodium 972 mg, Carbohydrate 49 g, Total Sugar 2 g, Fiber 4 g, Protein 17 g. Daily Values: Vitamin A 0%, Vitamin C 88%, Calcium 31%, Iron 22%. Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet
Breakfast is very important, to set the tone for the rest of the day.
“Believe it or not, a lot of your brain is made of fat (about 60%)! The neurons in the brain are coated with a protective, fatty coating called myelin that “shrinks” when you lose excessive amounts of weight. So it’s not surprising that brain scans of patients with anorexia nervosa or bulimia show brain atrophy, which is reversible if the woman gains weight.”
From the book “The New Feminine Brain” by Mona Lisa Schulz, M.D. Ph.D.
Foto from this article “Walnuts: the Ultimate Brain Food”
(via livingkindly)
Healthy Alternatives to junk food!
Junk food ADDICTION
From the science-you-always-knew-was-true file comes evidence that eating junk food is addictive, triggering the same sorts of responses in the brain that lead to drug dependence.
A couple of clever researchers from the Scripps Research Institute in Florida put electrodes in rats’ brains and trained the animals to give themselves a jolt of electricity to their pleasure centers.
Some rats then got just lab chow, others got access for an hour a day to a buffet of high-fat, caloric food, and 11 really lucky animals, known as the “extended-access rats” got to graze at the rodent equivalent of a fast-food cafeteria for up to 23 hours a day for 40 days.
The rats with full access to the junky stuff just loved it, gorging on bacon, cheesecake and Ho Hos. As you might expect, they got pretty fat pretty fast.
Inside their little brains, the junk-food eating rats developed a big problem. Just like drug takers, the rats needed a bigger fix of junk food over time to maintain their pleasure. So they kept on eating, and kept on getting fatter. As the scientists explained in their paper, “extended access to palatable high-fat food can induce addiction-like deficits in brain reward function,” which can spur overeating and lead to obesity.
Or, in layman’s terms, “the animals completely lost control over their eating behavior, the primary hallmark of addiction,” neuroscientist Paul Kenny said in a statement describing the work.
Goji Berries, Higher antioxidants than most plants on earth