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Meatless Monday: Bento Box Deliciousness

This Meatless Monday make a meat-free bento box with Asian-inspired alive recipes.If you’re a fan of Japanese food like I am, you’ve probably ordered a bento box at one time or another, or at least ha

A Sophisticated Mid-Century Home In The Upper North Shore Trees

There’s a relaxed, Californian feel to the family home of James and Liana Shaw-Taylor – a tribute to the home’s mid-century architecture, and leafy surrounds in Wahroonga, on Sydney’s Upper-North Shore.

Working with interior designers Tom Mark Henry, the couple have maintained the original modernist spirit of the home, but in a contemporary manner inspired by nature and their own eclectic tastes.

The end result is equal parts playful and sophisticated, representing a modern take on the mid-century genre!

Soba What?

A longtime staple in the Japanese diet, soba noodles refer to long, thin noodles made out of buckwheat. Give them a try tonight!A longtime staple in the Japanese diet, soba noodles refer to long, thin
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Does Working Out More Really Make You Eat More?

Weight LossDoes Working Out More Really Make You Eat More?

For many years, we’ve been told exercise for weight loss is a double-edged sword. It makes reaching your goal easier if you combine it with cutting calories, but too much may make you eat more, negating any calorie burn you’ve achieved by working out. But a new small study published in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology found high levels of exercise may not make us eat more.

THE RESEARCH

Researchers split 36 sedentary, overweight and obese men and women into two groups. Both did personalized workouts five days a week for 12 weeks, but one worked out to burn 300 calories per session while the other sweated until they burned 600 calories per session.

In the end, the group who burned 1,500 calories a week compensated by 943 calories a week, while the exercisers who burned 3,000 calories compensated by 1,007 calories. “With more exercise, they didn’t compensate more,” says lead author Kyle Flack, PhD, RD, a professor of dietetics and human nutrition at the University of Kentucky. “They ate about 1,000 calories more, regardless of how much they exercised.”

Participants’ resting metabolic rate didn’t change, and they weren’t less active overall, so researchers believe they ate more, even though their food recalls didn’t show this. “When you have a negative energy balance due to exercise, you may not realize your potions and what you are eating,” Flack explains. Changes in hormones that control hunger and the rewarding aspect of food may make you eat more, he adds.

The bottom line isn’t that you need to burn 3,000 calories a week; rather, be aware that this compensation happens and pick the best plan for you.

FIGURE OUT YOUR STYLE

“There are three types of compensators,” says Dr. Tim Church, MPH, PhD, professor of preventive medicine at Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University and chief medical officer of ACAP Health Consulting. “A very, very small group of hypercompensators will somehow manage to gain weight. A huge group of people compensate a little bit and lose weight but not as much as you think. And a small group doesn’t compensate and loses more weight than you think.”

Figure out which you are — most of us know without much thinking — and adjust your program based on that and your goals, he says.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Flack says that if you want to lose weight, there are two options: “If you aren’t interested in changing your diet and counting calories, don’t worry about it, but you better exercise 5–6 days a week for an hour. Or, if you want to be more successful or can’t exercise that much, you better count calories and be sure you aren’t increasing your calorie compensation when you exercise.”

And, unlike the study participants who used 24-hour recalls, log your meals and snacks as you eat so you are aware of how much you are compensating in real-time. It will help you be more accurate, which will help with your weight-loss efforts.

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