Thursday, September 8, 2022

Muscle growth in calorie deficit

So i’ve asked this already and have tried doing some research on it but it seems to get mixed answers. (6ft Male, 228 lbs, 31% bf) I’m wondering if it is possible/worthwhile to be weightlifting for muscle growth while in a calorie deficit. I am consuming about 1500 calories daily (-500 deficit) with protein intake at about 125g. I started lifting today and I feel fine in terms of hunger/energy. My main goal is to put on muscle and lose body fat. Is this goal attainable or unrealistic? I’m confused whether or not I should just hold off and focus on weight loss and then start putting on muscle or start putting on muscle now while burning fat. Im looking to get down to 185-200lbs. Really just trying to obtain a lean physique.

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20 Healthy Recipes You Can Make for the Whole Family

Cooking up delicious, nourishing meals for your family is one of the best ways to keep everybody at home healthy and happy. It’s surprisingly easy to make dishes that every member of the family will enjoy while you stay on track to your weight loss goal. To inspire you, we’ve gathered 20 of our favorite healthy family recipes that are Nutrisystem-approved. They’re made with ingredients you can find in any grocery store and they don’t require hours in the kitchen to prepare. Some of them are sure to become new favorites for your family.

9 Healthy Living Tips for the Whole Family

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Here are 20 healthy recipes the whole family will enjoy:

1. Cauliflower Breakfast Hash Skillet >

Cauliflower breakfast hash healthy family recipe

Calories per Serving: 164

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 2 Extras and 1 Vegetable

A warm and hearty family breakfast is the perfect start to a busy day. However, it can be hard to find the time in the morning to cook for your family. When you are all home, you can treat everyone (and yourself) to a skillet full of savory flavors that features everybody’s favorites, bacon and eggs. We made ours with turkey bacon (no one will notice it’s lower in fat than the usual kind) and fragrant peppers and onions. The base is fiber-rich cauliflower rice—now found in the produce and frozen food sections at many supermarkets. It absorbs the rich flavors of the other ingredients and leaves you all feeling full for hours after breakfast time ends.

Bonus: You begin the day with one of your daily four servings of vegetables already done.

2. Three-Step Chicken Zucchini Nuggets >

Healthy Chicken Zucchini Nuggets Snack Ideas family recipes

Calories per Serving: 138

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, ½ Vegetable and ½ Extra

The tempting aroma of fresh-from-the-oven chicken nuggets is sure to bring the whole family into the kitchen. With just six healthy ingredients and three easy steps, you can whip up a batch of these nuggets as a delicious meal idea or quick snack recipe your gang will love. The tasty little bites are crispy on the outside and, thanks to the grated zucchini, they stay tender and moist on the inside. You can make them on your stovetop or in the oven.

Bonus: You get to enjoy a serving of six, which has just 138 calories.

3. Bell Pepper Nachos >

The Leaf Healthy Nachos with bell pepper

Calories per Serving: 141

On Nutrisystem, Count As: ½ PowerFuel, 1 Extra and 1 Vegetable

Crunchy peppers, creamy cheese and zesty salsa come together to create this fresh take on classic nachos. Each colorful mini pepper is stuffed with avocado, salsa and beans, then topped with cheese. Pop this healthy nacho recipe in the oven for a few minutes to melt the cheese and you’ve got a bite-sized snack for the whole family. These nachos could even be an appetizer before making a low calorie Cinco de Mayo dinner! The kids won’t mind this serving of vegetables and its immune-boosting nutrients.

Bonus: Spice up these nachos with a dash of chili powder to pump up the flavor and boost your metabolism. Learn more about the benefits of spicy food. >

17 Excellent Family-Friendly Meals Every Dieter Will Love

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4. Creamy Clam Chowder >

Low Calorie Homemade Clam Chowder

Calories per Serving: 240

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 1 SmartCarb, 1 Extra and 1 Vegetable

Even when you’re not at the beach, you can bring a little bit of the seashore to your table when you make a batch of this homemade clam chowder. Look near the canned tuna in your supermarket to find minced clams that will give your soup that authentic flavor. For even fewer calories and fat, you can make the soup with unsweetened almond, soy or coconut milk instead of the usual dairy milk.

Bonus: Double up on the recipe and freeze half of the soup to enjoy on a day when you don’t have time to cook.

5. Sweet and Sour Chicken >

The Leaf healthy family recipes sweet and sour chicken

Calories per Serving: 440

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 2 PowerFuels, 3 Extras and 1 Vegetable

No need to call for takeout to enjoy this popular Asian-style dish. Make some homemade sweet and sour chicken with tender chunks of lean chicken breast, sweet bell peppers and a tangy sauce that’s simple to whip up. We kept all of the flavor you love but cut out all the excess calories and fats. That way your family will ask for more and you’ll stay on track with your Nutrisystem weight loss plan.

Bonus: Serve this dish over brown instead of white rice for a healthy dose of belly-filling fiber.

6. Five-Ingredient Buffalo Cauliflower Breadsticks >

The Leaf Cauliflower Breadsticks Recipe

Calories per Serving: 116

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Vegetable

Once your family tries this savory cauliflower breadsticks recipe, they’ll ask for it again and again. The base is a perfectly chewy foundation for gooey melted cheese and zesty buffalo sauce. Only you need to know the dish starts with fiber-full cauliflower rice, which you can make yourself or find in the produce or frozen food sections of many grocery stores. The preparation takes a few minutes and these cauliflower breadsticks come out of the oven warm and fragrant in less than 30 minutes.

Bonus: For a different flavor, season these breadsticks with olive oil, garlic and oregano instead of the buffalo sauce and cheese.

It’s National Family Meals Month! 5 Ways Family Meals Help Your Children

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7. Air Fryer Honey Mustard Bites >

Air Fryer Chicken and Honey Mustard Bites

Calories per Serving: 144

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 2 Extras

An air fryer is a powerful tool for cooking homemade dishes that everyone will be happy to dig into. For instance, you can use it to make these crispy chicken bites paired with the sweet and tangy flavors of honey mustard. The air fryer cooks them quickly and easily but doesn’t load you up with the extra calories and fats you get from deep-fried foods. Each batch makes six delicious servings.

Bonus: With the air fryer, there’s no messy oil to splatter in your kitchen.

8. Eggplant Margherita Pizza >

Healthy Pizza Recipe with Eggplant

Calories per Serving: 120

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Vegetable

Yes, you can enjoy family pizza night and stay on track to your weight loss goal. With this healthy pizza recipe, firm slices of eggplant are the substitute for the carb-heavy dough. They’re topped with zesty marinara sauce and melted cheese and come bubbling out of the oven with just 120 calories per serving. Best of all, you get four (yes four!) slices per serving of this pizza.

Bonus: Eggplant is rich in polyphenols, phytochemicals that can help reduce your risk of diabetes, according to the International Journal of Molecular Sciences.

9. Buffalo Blue Cauliflower Mac and Cheese >

Healthy Cauliflower Mac and Cheese Family Recipes

Calories per Serving: 169

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 1 Vegetable and 2 Extras

Vegetables can be a hard sell at many dinner tables. However, we all need the immune-boosting vitamins that you can only get from foods like cauliflower. So, here’s the plan: heat cauliflower florets until they’re as tender as cooked macaroni, then mix them in a cheesy sauce spiked with that spicy Buffalo wing flavor. Wait for the vegetable-haters to ask for seconds.

Bonus: You can use fresh or frozen cauliflower to reduce the carbohydrates in many family recipes.

16 Tasty Soup Recipes the Whole Family Will Love

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10. Zoodle Mac and Cheese with Roasted Veggies >

The Leaf healthy family recipes zucchini noodles

Calories per Serving: 156

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 1 Extra and 1 Vegetable

Zoodles are spiralized zucchini and they’re as much fun to slurp as your family’s favorite spaghetti. You can find zoodles in the produce or frozen foods sections at many supermarkets, or you can make them yourself with a simple tool known as a spiralizer. In this recipe, we tossed zucchini noodles or “zoodles” with melted cheese and sweet and savory vegetables like onions, broccoli and peppers to make a filling dish for hungry families.

Bonus: Make your family recipes even more colorful with noodles made from spiralized carrots or beets.

11. Roasted Chicken with Rainbow Carrots and Potatoes >

The Leaf healthy family recipes roasted chicken

Calories per Serving: 253

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel, 2 Extras and ½ Vegetable

Is there any place cozier than a home filled with the aroma of chicken slowly roasting in the oven? Maybe that’s because everybody loves tender, juicy chicken, whether it’s the drumsticks and wings or the lean breast meat (AKA the healthiest choice for you). Add carrots and potatoes and you’ve got a meal that will satisfy the hungriest of appetites while leaving plenty of delicious soup options for leftovers!

Bonus: Prepping the whole meal takes minutes, then you get to relax while it all cooks at once.

12. Instant Pot Smoked Brisket >

The Leaf Instant Pot Brisket

Calories per Serving: 139

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

Brisket is the meat lovers’ choice because it is so flavorful and tender. Plus, it’s loaded with protein, so everyone leaves the table feeling well-fed. A conventional version takes just about all day to cook. But with a handy instant pot and this epic dinner recipe, you get the deep, smoky flavor that meat lovers want in just over an hour. When buying the meat, ask for the leanest option available to keep the saturated fat to a minimum.

Bonus: Leftover brisket is delicious on sandwiches, salads and other family recipes.

8 Chicken and Rice Recipes the Whole Family Will Love

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13. Sweet and Savory Spaghetti Squash Bowl >

The Leaf healthy family recipes spaghetti squash

Calories per Serving: 288

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel, 3 Extras and 1 Vegetable

When everyone is craving a big, filling bowl of spaghetti, cook up the squash that looks like pasta but comes with less than 25 percent of the calories and carbs you get from conventional noodles, says the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). The squash blends in with any flavors you add to it, whether it’s classic tomato sauce or this version served with melt-in-your mouth roasted sweet potato chunks and creamy goat cheese.

Bonus: Make extra spaghetti squash and freeze it for the next time spaghetti is on the dinner menu.

14. Sweet Potato Hash Power Bowl >

The Leaf Family Breakfast Recipes

Calories per Serving: 242

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel, ½ Vegetable and 2 Extras

Potato hash makes a filling breakfast to start your day. We took it up a notch by starting with super-nutritious sweet potatoes, along with savory peppers and onions. For a topping, add slices of creamy avocado and an egg made any way you’d like—poached, scrambled or sunny-side up. Season to your family’s taste with chili powder and gather the gang for a sit-down breakfast in the morning.

Bonus: There are no rules against eating breakfast favorites at dinner time.

15. Chicken Lettuce Wraps >

Chicken Lettuce Wraps Recipe for Families

Calories per Serving: 198

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 1 Extra and 1 Vegetable

If your family likes Asian flavors, they’ll wolf down this tasty chicken lettuce wraps recipe. Inside the crunchy lettuce leaves they’ll get bites full of tender chicken, crispy water chestnuts and spunky green onions, all bathed in a tangy dressing made with fresh garlic and ginger. The lean chicken breast keeps the calorie count low without skimping on the satisfaction.

Bonus: For those in the family who don’t care for lettuce wraps, just spoon the filling into any tortilla or wrap.

How To Get Your Family to Support Your New Lifestyle

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16. Three-Step Tuna Patties >

The Leaf healthy family recipes tuna patty

Calories per Serving: 125

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

Fresh seafood can be costly when you’re feeding the whole family. Consider using tuna packed in water, which can create these tasty tuna patties that are crispy on the outside, flaky on the inside and delicious from the first bite to the last. Just mix the tuna with zingy mustard, creamy mayonnaise, an egg, a few herbs and spices and breadcrumbs, then form it into patties. Sauté them for a few minutes and they’re ready to eat on a sandwich, salad or as a dinner entrée like a crab cake!

Bonus: You can make these with canned salmon instead of tuna, if that’s your family’s preference.

17. Avocado Tuna Melt Panini >

The Leaf healthy family recipes Homemade Tuna Melt

Calories per Serving: 344

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel, 3 Extras and 1/2 a Vegetable

When your gang is wishing they could go out to the local bistro for a hot lunch, treat them to this grilled sandwich packed with flavorful tuna, melted cheese and juicy tomato. Instead of high-carb bread, use sandwich thins that get perfectly crispy on the griddle. Look for tuna that’s packed in water and low in sodium to avoid extra oil and salt.

Bonus: If you don’t have a panini maker, you can make this epic tuna melt on your stovetop or grill.

18. Broccoli and Cheese Breakfast Muffins >

The Leaf healthy family recipes

Calories per Serving: 247

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

Tired of the same old family recipes for breakfast? These cheese-laden muffins just might become a new go-to breakfast for your family. Made with high-fiber whole wheat flour, they are as filling as they are delicious. Using reduced fat cheese and fat-free milk keeps the calorie count down, so you get to eat two muffins per serving.

Bonus: Bake these muffins when you have the time and store them in the refrigerator (for up to a week) or in the freezer to heat up when you’re ready to eat them.

10 Easy One-Pan Recipes for Busy Weeknights

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19. Cashew Cream Veggie Pasta >

The Leaf healthy vegan family recipes

Calories per Serving: 272

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel, 1 Vegetable and 1 Extra

Many families today include a vegan or two around the table (maybe it’s you), so you need good meal ideas that will please everyone. This pasta dish is made with cashew cream that’s easy to prepare and high in healthy fats from the nuts. Add a few herbs and spices, toss with whole wheat fettuccini, fresh cherry tomatoes and spinach, then get ready to listen to the sound of lips smacking.

Bonus: Add a PowerFuel such as chicken or shrimp for those that crave animal protein.

20. French Onion Stuffed Chicken >

The Leaf healthy family recipes

Calories per Serving: 225

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 2 PowerFuels, 1 Vegetable and 1 Extra

Sophisticated family recipes don’t have to take hours to prepare or require expert chef skills. You can transform ordinary chicken breasts into an entrée with the robust flavor of French onion soup in less than 45 minutes. You probably even have the required ingredients in your kitchen! Just slice open chicken breasts, fill them with mozzarella cheese and onions, sear them quickly and bake until the chicken is done.

Bonus: Chicken breast is a family-favorite protein, making this a dish that everyone will enjoy.

21 Breakfast Recipes for a Flex-Approved Start to Your Day

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The post 20 Healthy Recipes You Can Make for the Whole Family appeared first on The Leaf.



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I lost 10 pounds, but I am gaining weight and have lost motivation. Advice, please?

I'm 25 F, due to the pandemic and depression I went from 130 lbs to 150lbs. Recently, starting in March I was able to lose about 10 lbs thanks to a better diet and more exercise. I was excited and static but I think in "celebrating" my weight loss I also let myself relax too much and I lost that momentum I had going. My weight loss was stagnant at first but now I have been gaining about 3 lbs back. I know it's due to a lack of motivation and having trouble focusing on my goals again, I haven't been cooking home meals as much nor exercising, but somehow I seem to find "excuses" for it, like being sick or just feeling tired after work. I don't want to lose the progress that I have made but I can't seem to get myself back into the wagon as easily as when I first started.

What can I do to regain that lost motivation? How do I get the momentum going again?

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What is something that you love about your body, right now, as is?

I was thinking today about how I do NOT want my weight loss journey to be about negativity, like "oh, I hate my body so I'm going to beat it into shape." I'm an alcoholic in recovery (17 months sober, can I get a what what?!? Lol) so I feel like I know a little something about self loathing and how defeating it is, for me anyway. I want my weight loss and fitness journey to be an act of love towards myself, something that I do for my body, not something I do to my body. So with all that said, I think it's important to celebrate the things that are already great/amazing/cool about our bodies. Right now, however they are in this moment, not someday.

I'll start. My body is amazing because it made people! 2 of them! And they are sort of like me, but also completely themselves, so it's not like I just made copies of myself, I made 2 whole new people that are unique unto themselves. That's freaking astonishing when you think about it.

Also, I have great legs. Like, right now, at this moment, no weight loss needed, my stems are chef's kiss. They are long, and shapely, and when I stand with my feet and knees together there is even this gorgeous little gap above my knees. It's not a thigh gap, it doesn't go all the way up. But it goes up enough that in any skirt I would wear in public, it's all gap.

My butt is pretty great too. It's not a Kim K butt, but it's nice. It looks good in jeans.

Over all, I would say it's a body that is worthy of love and effort and devotion. It deserves to be nourished well and given plenty of sun light, fresh air, and movement. And an excuse to wear little gym shorts. 😂

Now you, tell me how rad your body is, right now. Not someday, today.

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Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Metformin Miracle?

I’ve spent the last 10 years since graduating college consistently gaining weight. I played sports in college and while I’ve never been thin, I was absolutely in shape and felt great. Since graduating in 2012, I quit smoking, got married, had two babies, and went from 160 lbs to 240 lbs.

I maintain that the biggest factor in my weight gain is constant hunger. I have been ravenously hungry for years, and I just came to accept it. I would wake up starving, eat breakfast immediately, and start planning lunch. Would have to force myself to wait as long as possible to eat lunch, and would normally cave by 11am. Then be eating snacks all afternoon. Then a huge dinner - eating portion sizes as if I hadn’t eaten anything the entire day, because that’s how it felt.

I would get so discouraged when I would hear people say things like, “Just eat when you’re hungry!” But I’m ALWAYS hungry. “Eat intuitively.” My intuition makes me eat all day.

Earlier this year I finally sought professional help with my weight loss journey, and after going through a 6 month program with them and only losing 8 lbs, my doctor sat me down and asked if I was interested in taking Metformin. At first, I was really scared, because I thought she was telling me I had Diabetes, but she told me I didn’t. But she did seem to think that there was a chemical imbalance causing my hunger, and metformin might help. I started the pills a week ago, and today, I felt…different.

I woke up for the first time in years not thinking about what I was going to eat for breakfast. In fact, I wasn’t concerned with breakfast at all until about 8am. I had a couple of eggs, was satisfied (never remember feeling that before) and went on with my morning. Didn’t even think about eating again until 1:00, when I ate my lunch, and didn’t finish it all. I had an actual normal, portion size, and again, felt satisfied, and put the rest away. Again, I didn’t even think about food until after I got home from work. I made my family dinner, and for the first time EVER, I didn’t return for seconds.

I didn’t consciously TRY to do any of these decisions, they just happened. It’s like the hunger demon that has possessed my body went on vacation. I was able to focus on non-food related activities the entire day, which up until now seemed nearly impossible for me.

I know I still have to put in the work of increasing activity and making healthy food choices, but for the first time in my adult life I feel like I actually have a chance at controlling my weight.

Hoping to hear other people’s metformin experiences; the good, the bad, and the ugly.

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Hey y’all I’m back with an update on my weight loss, 8/14-333lbs 9/5-330.6 lost almost 3lbs since my last post!

Hey y’all I made a few posts here in mid august (around the 14th) and I figured I should update y’all.

I started by counting calories, and I did that for a few weeks before it became to much work… but I still check calorie facts and try to stay within my caloric limits. I also discovered it’s the calories that are harder to measure, that you usually go over on. For example, 2tbsp of the cream I use for my coffee is 70cal, but it’s really not a lot of cream, and I can’t drink black coffee anymore. So if I just creamed my coffee to taste, I’d probably have an extra couple hundred calories unaccounted for if I didn’t measure it. Same goes with cheese, or cookies, or ice cream, or that dinner somebody else cooked. So the way I usually get past that is over assuming caloric amount, and saving calories for when I can’t do any educated assumption. My goal caloric intake is under 2400, when I was counting (still eating around the same amount) I would only eat around 1800cal which gave me enough leeway with what I eat.

I was weighing myself every week but now I usually forget, and that’s probably a good thing. However the scale is still going down! However when I do weigh myself I do it 3 times to make sure it’s correct and then I write it down, so I have all the facts on how much I’ve lost.

So far I’m down 20lbs+ since March! Wednesday March, 23rd- 351lbs Monday September, 5th- 330.6lbs

This is just an update but I’ll end it with a bit of advice. Get good sleep, I always sleep like shit but I was getting better sleep, and now I’m not, my schedule is back to being shit. But sleep made losing weight so much easier, had more energy, mood was better, didn’t have to deal with depression spirals with bad foods. Seriously, get good sleep, and drink water (this is obvious but if I find out you HAVENT been drinking water I will be upset!)

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I hate myself

I don’t know where else I’m able to say this. I hate myself, I hate the way I look, I hate the way I feel.

I’ve been meaning to get around starting my weight loss for months and I haven’t done anything. All this time just wasted when I could have done something.

Everyday I have the motivation to get started but I end up binge eating later on in the day and tell myself I’ll start tomorrow. I’m tired of doing that. I want to look good, I want to feel good and I want to be healthy.

I can’t remember the last time I went to a store and bought clothes in person because they usually never have my sizes and I have to shop online. I don’t want to be wearing a 2XL or 3XL clothes anymore. I want to be able to enter stores and be able to try on and fit any piece of clothing I want. I want to be able to have a good relationship with food and not having to worry about overeating. I want to be able to exercise frequently without feeling tired. I want to be a healthier person

I want to be more confident And I want to succeed in my weight loss journey. But everyday I think about all the time I had wasted and if I didn’t waste time earlier, I would have already lost the weight by now.

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