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March 16, 2017 By Trupti Hingad 1 Comment

Healthy Soups in a Bowl!

1

I still remember those days when I was following a light dinner habit as suggested by one of the health professionals for reducing my fat percentage. I would add lots of raw veggies to keep my stomach full and get the nutrients. But, later on, it got very monotonous and I terribly started disliking the idea of eating raw veggies. That led me to the thought of how these could be incorporated into my daily meal so as to get all the nutrients without putting too much effort of chewing it raw?

Bingo! I came up with several soup ideas. Today, I am sharing some of these soup recipes for the benefit of all.

Soup, a liquid food that can be cold or hot. You can throw in a variety of ingredients such as  meat, veggies mixed with stock, water or other liquids into a slow cooker in the morning before you leave for work or school and return home to a delicious meal in the evening

The wealth of ingredients in a bowl of soup provides a good balance of carbohydrates, protein and fats as well as the vitamins and minerals required to create energy and keep us going without getting tired.

Soup is healthy: Perhaps the easiest way to add vegetables to your daily meals is to have a soup. Eating vegetables is part of a healthy diet so veggie soups are highly recommended.

Soups are slimming and help you lose weight. Of course, that is if you strictly follow a weight-loss plan and exercise well. A bowl of soup packs minimal calories but is very nutritious.

Soup fills you up because it stretches the stomach. You easily feel full so it’s ideal to eat soup at the beginning of every meal.

Soup is easy to make and can make you feel better.

Ever wondered why a soup is recommended to people who are sick? That is because soup is easily digested and good for health.

Here are some hot and cold soup recipes:-

1.  SPRING ONION AND PEAS SOUP

Ingredients:
Spring Onion/Scallions – 1 bunch
Peas – 2 Cup boiled
Onion – 1 Medium chopped
Garlic – 1 Pod chopped
Olive Oil – 2 tsp
Vegetable Stock/Water – 3-4 Cups
Salt & Pepper – To taste

 Pea Soup

Method:

Heat 1 tsp oil in a pan sauté chopped onions, garlic and 1.5 cup boiled peas for 2-3mins.

Add finely chopped spring onion bulbs to this and sauté for 2-3mins.

Remove from the stove and let it cool for a while.

Blend it all to make a paste.

Heat 1 tsp of oil in a vessel, add chopped spring onion greens and ½ cup peas and stir fry for 2-3mins.

Add puree and veg stock and seasoning.

Cook until 1 boil & serve piping hot.

Serve with soup sticks or toasted brown bread slice.

2. DETOX SOUP

Ingredients

Tomato- 2 in nos

Pumpkin- 100gms

Carrot- 1 in no

Cabbage-100gms

Broccoli- ½ cup florets

Bell pepper- cut into julienne (red, yellow, green)

Ginger, garlic and chilli paste- 1 tsp

Olive oil- ½ tsp

detox-soup-7988-January-09-2016

Method:

Pressure cook tomato, pumpkin, carrot, cabbage, ginger garlic & blend to make a puree.

SauteBroccoli florets, bell pepper in olive oil.

Add the puree to it and water to make the soup consistency.

Serve piping hot.

3. HERBAL OATS SOUP

Ingredients     
Oats – 4 tablespoons
Garlic – 1 pod

Celery and Parsley- 1 stalk each
Pepper – 1/2 teaspoon
Salt to taste
Vegetable-Oats-Soup

Method

Roast oats in a heated vessel.

Add chopped garlic, celery and parsley.

Add 2 cups of water, salt and pepper and simmer for 5 minutes. Serve hot.

4. Green Gram (MOONG) SOUP WITH Cottage Cheese (PANEER)

Ingredients:

¾ cup Moong (Green Gram)

2tbsp Paneer( Cottage Cheese) chopped

1 tsp lemon juice

1 tspJeera (Cumin seeds )mustard

1/4thtsp, hing (Fenugreek), pepper.

2 tbsp ghee (Clarified Butter)

Salt to taste.

mung_toor_dal_soup1

METHOD:

Soak Green Gran (Moong) for 6hrs. Cook in a pressure cooker. Blend it and strain.

Heat clarified butter (ghee) in a pan, add cumin seeds, mustard, fenugreek seeds and green gram liquid.

Add lemon, salt, pepper, cottage cheese and cook for 2 min

Serve piping hot.(This is a high protein soup)

5. SUNSHINE DELIGHT.

Ingredients

Yellow Squash (pumpkin) – 100gms

White squash (pumpkin) – 100gms

Carrot- 1 in no

Onion- 1 in no

Ginger- a small piece

Garlic- 1 pod

287689-pumpkin-soup-halloween

Seasoning:

Salt & pepper- according to taste

Lime juice- 1 tsp

Method:

Pressure cook all veggies and then blend to make a Puree.  Add 1 cup water and cook until it comes to boil. Add seasoning and garnish with shredded carrot and pumpkin seeds.

Serve piping hot.

6. AVOCADO SOUP

Ingredients

½ seedless cucumber

1 medium avocado

1 shallot

2 tbsp. plain yogurt

2 tbsp. fresh mint

1 sprig fresh mint

4 tsp. fresh lime juice

1½ tsp. salt

¼ tsp. ground black pepper

¼ tsp. ground cumin

1 radish

s01-sweet-potato-avocado-soup-sort

Method:

Place the cucumber, avocado, shallot, yoghurt, 2 tablespoons mint, lime juice, salt, pepper, cumin, and 1 cup cold water in a blender, and process until smooth.

Chill for at least 1 hour. Serve garnished with the radish and remaining mint leaves. Perfect soup for this summer.

7. COLD CUCUMBER SOUP

Ingredients

3 medium seedless cucumbers

¾ c. Thinly sliced green onions

1 tbsp. lemon juice

1 tsp. lemon zest

1 tsp. Sea Salt

½ tsp. Freshly ground pepper

1½ c. vegetable broth

½ c. sour cream

cuke

Method:

Place cucumbers, green onions, lemon juice, lemon zest, sea salt, pepper, and vegetable broth in a blender or food processor and puree.

Stir in sour cream and chill until very cold, about 1 hour.

Serve topped with additional chopped cucumber, green onion, and lemon zest.

8. WATERMELON GAZPACHO

Ingredients:

About 8 cups watermelon, cubed

1 medium cucumber
1 medium tomato
2 medium shallots¼ cup loosely packed basil leaves
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
¼ teaspoon salt
No-Cook-Gazpacho-Recipe-Platted-e1434139708782

Chop the watermelon into rough cubes. Place it in a blender and blend (the blended amount should fill a 1 ½ quart blender). Pour into a bowl or container, and set aside.

Cut the cucumber in half; remove the seeds by scooping them out with a spoon. Peel the cucumber halves, then roughly chop them into a few smaller pieces. Roughly chop the tomato into quarters. Cut off the ends of the two shallots and peel them; cut them into quarters.

Place the cucumber, tomato, shallots, and ¼ cup loosely packed basil leaves into the pitcher of the blender. Blend until smooth. Pour the mixture into the container with the watermelon mixture and mix them with a spoon until fully combined.

Stir in 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar, ¼ teaspoon kosher salt, Place in the refrigerator and chill for about 2 to 3 hours, until cold.  If desired, garnish with a few drops of olive oil.

Try some of these soups and drink your wealth of nutrients with this bowl.

March 6, 2017 By Luke Coutinho 2 Comments

Lifestyle Change: Key to Good Health

GOQiiEcosystem

If there is any solution that has ever worked with any of my patients or clients over the last 10 years, it’s a lifestyle change. Be it cancer, weight loss, or just feeling better about one’s self, a lifestyle change has always provided the most effective and sustainable result.

Restrictive diets have never worked, in fact, they lead to collateral damage like depression, frustration, yo-yo and a feeling of deprivation. If you are eating an ice-cream or chocolate, eat it with love, enjoy it, or don’t eat it at all. GOQii’s coaches will coach you to do just that. They will coach you to eat mindfully, they will help you set up goals, encourage great habits and break down the bad ones.People have started measuring their worth with the wrong scale. The weighing scale dictates to people for beautiful or healthy they are or should be, and that’s so wrong.

The GOQii dream is to change the world. There are millions of people out there, struggling with their health and lifestyle. Most are lost and have no clue what’s right and what they should do to be healthy and fit. It doesn’t help that there is so much information and research out there that just confuses us even more.

The GOQii eco-system is designed out of passion and with an intention to change people lives, make a difference, add value and evoke change in people. It’s based on simplicity and believes that motivation is the energy for action. We can do anything when we are motivated. GOQii ties in Karma, ‘giving back to our communities, it’s such a self-fulfilling feeling when you know you can give back to society through an action that is making you healthier. This ecosystem ties in all of this and more.

Our coaches come from diverse backgrounds of nutrition, sports, fitness and other fields and go through a comprehensive training on behavior, nutrition, fitness and motivation. Our training material is designed by experts from Stanford University and Yale and delivered by professional trainers.

As an individual, there are only a handful of people I can professionally help in a day. Through GOQii, we can reach out to millions. Research today has proved that even if the unhealthiest person makes as little as one lifestyle change in a month, they are on the road to rejuvenation and better health.

February 17, 2017 By Dr Darshana Salve 2 Comments

Blood should circulate – Donate Blood!

blood-donation

We only understand the importance of blood donation when someone close to us is in need of it. A few days back my cousin contacted me to know the availability of blood for her friend’s father who met with an accident. Unfortunately, we lost him due to excess blood loss. We know of this incident because it’s a dear friend’s father but, on a daily basis there are so many such cases where there is loss of death due to non-availability of blood.

Statistics show that roughly every year in India there are 234 million major operations, 63 million trauma-induced surgeries, 31 million cancer-related procedures and 10 million pregnancy related complications which require blood transfusions.

Apart from these there are also disorders like sickle cell anemia, thalassemia and hemophilia that require repeated blood transfusions.

One of the main reasons for lack of blood is, many people are skeptical about blood donation. They have fears of contracting infections during blood donation, fear of the needle or feeling weak after blood donation. Human body approximately has 4.7-5.5 L of blood, out of it only 350/ 450 ml of blood is withdrawn during blood donation drives and it takes only a day or two to replenish the fluid volume in the body and three months for the regeneration of red cells to donate more blood.

There is no substitute for human blood. Blood cannot be manufactured – it can only come from
volunteer donors like you and me. One blood donation can save 3 lives. But, unfortunately only 1 % of volunteer donors come forward to donate blood and majority of the blood donation comes from replacement donors.

Blood Donation Camp

Replacement donors are friends and relatives of a patient who donate blood as replacement for the blood given to the patient.

At times, these replacement donors (friends and relatives) are more likely to harm the recipients by hiding or overlooking the many don’ts of donation.

Though voluntary self-referral to donate without citing reasons is widely accepted, replacement donors rarely adhere to it either to hide their high-risk behavior or due to pressure to meet the immediate demand for certain units of blood. As a result, the prevalence of HIV, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C is much higher among family donors when compared to voluntary donors, according to a 2012 study published in the Asian Journal of Transfusion Science.

Donation of safe blood can be achieved only when replacement donors are replaced by healthy volunteer donors to meet ‘over 95 per cent of blood requirement’. This can be done through increased awareness, providing appropriate facilities for people to donate blood, and improved donor retention.

While donating blood always be truthful about your health status!

Do not donate blood if you have any of these conditions

  • Cold / fever in the past 1 week.
  • Under treatment with antibiotics or any other medication.
  • Cardiac problems, hypertension, epilepsy, diabetes (on insulin therapy), history of cancer, chronic kidney or liver disease, bleeding tendencies, venereal disease etc.
  • Major surgery in the last 6 months.
  • Vaccination in the last 24 hours.
  • Miscarriage in the last 6 months or have been pregnant / lactating in the last one year.
  • Had fainting attacks during last donation.
  • Have regularly received treatment with blood products.
  • Shared a needle to inject drugs/ have history of drug addiction.
  • Had sexual relations with different partners or with a high risk individual.
  • Tested positive for antibodies to HIV.
  • If you are Underweight ( below 50 KGs)

Pregnancy and Menstrual Cycle

  • Females should not donate blood during pregnancy and lactation.
  • Females should not donate blood if they are having heavy menstrual flow or menstrual cramps.

Do donate blood if…

  • You are between age group of 18-60 years.
  • Weight is 50 kgs or more.
  • Hemoglobin is 12.5 gm% minimum.
  • Last blood donation was 3 months earlier.
  • You are healthy and have not suffered from malaria, typhoid or other transmissible disease in the recent past.

It’s time that we take up the responsibility to do voluntary blood donation. Donate Blood without waiting for a call.

February 10, 2017 By Anusha Subramanian Leave a Comment

How to train for High Altitude Trekking?

high-altitude-trekking

Almost a decade ago when I started trekking in the Himalayas, it was just a few enthusiasts who did this. It was not considered normal and people were under the impression that this is meant for only those who were super fit. Trekking is normally associated with arduous trudging on some hard and uneven ground, climbing and walking on moraines and all that’s associated with laborious tasks amidst hostile environments with bare shelter, food and clothing essentials.

While trekking you might come across situations where you are stuck and most times hit by the sheer untouched beauty of a picture perfect image that embeds itself permanently in your memory as you are exposed to the wilderness for a longer duration in a day. This beauty can be seldom enjoyed while in a car.

Having said this, trekking is not tough. If you know to walk then you can trek as well. But, this does not mean that one ventures into unknown territories on their own to explore the unknown. Walking along a trail around with a backpack does not require exceptional skills but does require certain amount of physical fitness, planning, the right clothes, shoes and above all old common sense.

For high altitude trekking it requires much more physical and mental preparation. At higher altitudes, the air is thinner, there is less available oxygen and it becomes more difficult to breathe. There are serious risks involved with high-altitude hiking, including altitude sickness, acute mountain syndrome that can lead to pulmonary or cerebral edema, all of which can result in death.

Therefore, before you go on a high-altitude hike, you need to train your body to work efficiently and effectively in environments with less oxygen.

How to Train for High Altitude Hiking

Here are few steps that will help train for high altitude:

** Begin training at least four tosix months in advance. This is especially important if you plan to hike at altitudes of more than 14,000 feet.

**See a doctor for a medical checkup in the early stages of training to ensure that high-altitude hiking is a safe and recommended activity for your age and physical condition.

** Hike as often as possible. The best thing you can do to prepare for higher-altitude hikes is to hike closer home as often as you can and at higher altitudes if available. Start gradually, increasing the distance and altitude of your treks with each week of training so that your body and lungs can become accustomed to functioning at increasing levels of altitude.

** Participate in interval training. Interval training is a method of training the cardiovascular system by elevating the heart rate significantly and then allowing it to recover for a period before elevating it again.

** Interval training could consist of running sprints, running hills or using the interval setting on a treadmill or exercise bike. Choose one day of the week for interval training and doing six repetitions of whatever exercise you have chosen. Each week, increase the intensity by running a faster sprint or a steeper hill. You also can train with your back pack with about 6 kgs in it to add weight and simulate the weight that you might be carrying during the high-altitude hike.

** For trekking you should work on developing a breathing rhythm and deep breathing. Your ability to control and conserve your breath and expand your breathing capacity will come in handy when the oxygen supply is reduced. Developing a breathing/stepping rhythm will prevent you from overexerting yourself at higher elevations. It also recommends practicing deep breathing on training hikes.Whenever you begin to feel breathless, concentrate on taking deep breaths and smaller steps until a more normal breathing pattern returns.Yoga asanas such as Kapalbhati, Vastrika, Anulom Vilom all of which entail breathing exercises.

** Lastly, you could also train with professionals who are trained in mountaineering to learn few basic techniques and nuances that may help while trekking.

My final advice: Try not to skip your work out if you can help it. Your safety and success depends on an how fit you are.

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