Peteite sirloin steak

THE CoOlEsT tEsT sUbBy OuT dErE

2017.11.09 20:39 MoarKelBell THE CoOlEsT tEsT sUbBy OuT dErE

A cat usually has about 10 whiskers on each side of its face. Anyhow, a cat (like other pets) helps lower one's blood pressure because pet owners/cat owners calm down faster than people who don't have pets. Ok. Your way of answering is that a cat has a purpose to us. But what is the purpose of a cat outside of human purpose.
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2024.05.13 14:01 bluejaybiggin Where should I learn to cook from scratch?

I’m looking in to cooking from scratch. However, the most troublesome part for me is compiling the proper ingredients to enjoy a variety of meals. Advice, guides or books would be awesome.
Standard midwestern american. Omnivore diet. Will eat anything (not a huge fan of potatoes). Work essentially a 2on 2off 12hr schedule so I love leftovers. I also do like quick good meals and long set it and forget it meals. If offering guides or books the following is TLDR
Equipment: Crockpot owned. Dutch oven. Sous vide. Cast skillets. Electric range. Ninja air fryer. Microwave. Food processor. Vacuum Sealer. Pasta maker.
Freezer: My freezer stays stocked with chicken, prime steak (typically ribeye, sometimes sirloin), ground beef and pork chops. I also buy fish.
Fridge: Milk, eggs, stick butter, block of cheese (cheadar typically).
Pantry: Pasta (spaghetti, penne, elbow), rice, canned green beans, canned baked beans, canned tuna, canned chicken.
Other: Cooking oil, various spices (thyme, onion powder, garlic powder, meat seasoning, s&p, lawrys.
If you read that to give advice, thank you. Anything from meal ideas, menu ideas, things I need to add as essentials is appreciated.
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2024.05.13 05:58 kevin_s_03_ How to start

I’ve slowly introduced myself into the carnivore diet I’ve not had any drinks other than water for two weeks or so eggs steak pork chops, fish, and kerrygold butter. I’m roughly 250lbs 6’3 20yrs old I go to the gym aswell. The most difficult part is figuring out how much food I need I’ve been eating either once or twice a day if I eat breakfast it’s a 6-8oz sirloin with 2 eggs before the gym if it’s just dinner I’ll do a steak and 3 eggs Im just trying to figure out what’s the best goal to lose weight I’m looking to go to 220lbs I’m very active probably around 5-8 miles a day or so
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2024.05.12 19:56 kingcong95 Hell's Kitchen Thailand Episode 14

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNspIlqlJcc&ab_channel=Hell%27sKitchenThailand
Chef Willment asked the final four why they felt they deserved to win Hell's Kitchen and who they would like to compete against in the finale. Chef Ian announced that the final four would partake in a grueling series of challenges that will test their creativity, technique, and budget management. Only the top two finishers could advance to the finals.
Challenge 1: Each chef was given a sirloin, which they had 25 minutes to trim the fat, cut into 12 evenly sized steaks, and cook to a certain temperature (4 medium rare judged by Pom, 4 medium judged by Willment, 4 well done judged by Ian). The chefs would enter the kitchen staggered 10 minutes at a time, receiving 1 point for each steak cooked properly. In this round, Jib (burnt on the outside but undercooked inside due to her pan being way too hot) and Kerr (mostly undercooked with several not trimmed thoroughly) scored 2 each, Bill 6, and Lookchan (overcooked and untrimmed) merely 1.
Challenge 2: After a short break, the semifinalists received their next challenge. Pig's tail costs only 55 THB ($1.50) per kg, and they have to use it to create a restaurant quality dish, seasoning with either oregano, smoked paprika, or garlic salt. Jib had another mishap when her pressure cooker overheated, resulting in a severely undercooked dish as she had to get it off the heat, scoring only 1. The other three presented good to acceptable dishes with 9 for Kerr (it would have been a perfect 12 had Willment not found a hair in his dish), 7 for Bill, and 5 for Lookchan. At this point, the cumulative tally was Bill 13, Kerr 11, Lookchan 6, Jib 3.
Challenge 3: The final challenge is to create an elevated sea crab dish. Jib had the best dish of the day scoring 10 but it wasn't enough to overcome her other two dreadful performances. Bill's 8 points secured him a spot as the first finalist, but Lookchan didn't clean the crab thoroughly for her crab cake, scoring only 4 which eliminated her. Kerr needed only 3 points to advance over Jib's 13, and her crab ceviche was panned for sloppy presentation and the lack of cohesion between various components. However, all four head chefs gave Kerr a point each, which was enough to send her to the finals.
Chef Willment offered his praises to Jib and Lookchan for their hard work throughout the competition, then summoned the rest of the brigade members for Bill and Kerr's final service. Everyone who placed 12th or higher was eligible to return. The good news for the viewers is that Amm was not available due to a prior commitment overseas, so Phrikped took her place.
The next and final episode will begin with Bill and Kerr choosing their teams. Lookchan and Jib did not receive the 🥼🪝🖼️🔥 sequence, and the head chefs did not comment on their eliminations.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1j4QjBLPdreH_9UuyJadP0cGmAy_v6dob54fNAV9qIbg/edit#gid=0
submitted by kingcong95 to HellsKitchen [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 18:11 Olivesplace “Special Edition: Your Wartime Food” pamphlet, c.1941-1945, from Kroger Grocery & Baker Co.

“Special Edition: Your Wartime Food” pamphlet, c.1941-1945, from Kroger Grocery & Baker Co. submitted by Olivesplace to Olivesplace [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 03:11 ThrowRAGaryTheChimp I love their steak

I’ve never had a bad steak from Olive Garden . I always get the sirloin and pasta , it never fails the steak is always so juicy and flavorful. Can anyone else relate ? Does anyone know who they buy from ahaha
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2024.05.12 01:26 YukiHase Jorgensen's Inn, Stockholm, NJ, Mother's Day 1961.

Jorgensen's Inn, Stockholm, NJ, Mother's Day 1961. submitted by YukiHase to VintageMenus [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 20:46 Past_Strength_5381 Sirloin steaks and veg.

Sirloin steaks and veg.
Simple salt, pepper and garlic seasoning on the streaks and veg. The wife thinks the roasting basket is the best accessory that we have for the grill, she also says the same thing about the rotisserie.🔥🥦🫑🥕🤣
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2024.05.11 20:19 Figgy45 Tough Sirloin

I’m new to MS, but have ordered sirloins and fillets through Hello Fresh and Home Chef many times. While they might not be the best cuts of meat, they’ve been tasty and somewhat tender. I got the sirloin from MS this week and they were inedible! So tough. Both steaks. We couldn’t even choke them down so I put some frozen chicken nugs in the air fryer. I’m so bummed bc I didn’t realize I have them in my box for next week and it’s too late to change. AND a friend just signed up with my code after I was bragging about how good it was and they ordered sirloins! 🤦🏻‍♀️ please tell me this isn’t the norm!
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2024.05.11 17:54 Mrs-Davis $170 of Meat from the Butcher Shop

$170 of Meat from the Butcher Shop
Hit up your local butcher shop/abattoir. The prices are great and the meat is fresh. This would have been at least $400 at Loblaws.
For $170, I purchased:
3 x 1 pound packs of mild pepperettes
2 x 1 pound packs of hot pepperettes
2 x 2.5 pound sirloin steaks
6 Portuguese sausages
10 Tex Mex sausages
10 smoky cheddar sausages
4 pounds bacon strips
3.5 pounds bacon ends
4 butterfly pork chops
1 pig foot (for my dog)
As a bonus, it is right down the road from a cookie factory cash and carry where I got loads of cookies for lunches for $9/case.
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2024.05.11 15:11 he_cooks_co Coffee Ancho Chili Rubbed Sirloin Steak

Coffee Ancho Chili Rubbed Sirloin Steak submitted by he_cooks_co to steak [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 14:28 sinomaltanews The Lucky Goose

The Lucky Goose
Qatgħat ġodda - grilled kif jogħġobkom 🥩 #beef #steak #tbone #sashi #angus #sirloin #ribeye #TaXbiex #msida #theluckygoose #malta
Is-Sibt u l-Ħadd miftuħin il-ġurnata kollha
submitted by sinomaltanews to ahbarjietmaltanews [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 12:52 Everythingisachoice The All-Star is now $11. Coffee is sold separately $2.25

submitted by Everythingisachoice to inflation [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 09:16 Historical_Sky8774 Old-Scool Diet 2.O af

LOOKING FOR THE ABSOLUTE BEST, NO NONSENSE, SCIENCE-BASED ARTICLE ON PROPER DIETING?
LEARN THE MOST SPECIALIZED INFORMATION IN YOUR HOME, AT YOUR LEISURE, FOR FREE!
USE MY 2 DECADES OF ACADEMIC STUDY, IN THE TRENCHES EXPERIENCES, AND EMPIRICAL ADVICE WHEN IT COMES TO BOOSTING MUSCLE MASS, INCREASING STAMINA, HEALTH, AND WELLNESS, LOSING FAT, REDUCING OR ELIMINATING TYPE 2 DIABETES, INCREASING LONGEVITY, PROTECTING AND REGENERATING ORGAN TISSUES, AND DECREASING IMMOBILITY, STIFFNESS, ARTHRITIS,WHILE REBUILDING CARTILIGENOUS TISSUE.
Old-Scool Diet 2.O
"A comprehensive article on bodybuilding diet minutiae - and SO MUCH MORE
What follows is my version of an old school (mid-80s to early 90s) bodybuilding fat-loss diet/regimen, with an updated (2020's) dietary supplementation plan. This type of diet was very popular when I was a child and produced results for many who used it. I was reminded of such diets by bodybuilding writers such as John Romano, who wrote about the basic bodybuilding diet in an issue of Muscular Development sometime around 2008.
Although renowned for its simplicity, it can become somewhat monotonous. The key tenets of this type of fat loss diet are 1) being in a slightly negative caloric balance, 2) using a simplified shopping list of 15 or fewer items, and 3) taking in large amounts of protein, a moderately large amount of carbohydrates, and a small/modest amount of dietary fat.
You will consume 3-4 "whole-food" meals per day along with 1-3 protein shakes (more on workout days and less on off days). You should drink at least 1 gallon worth of calorie-free liquids per day.... the closer you get to 1.5 gal and even 2 gal (if you're really big) the better.
The Shopping List
So, you're at the grocery store and you're in and out within 10 minutes. You don't care about the weekly sales (unless they involve one of your "weekly 15" items). Thus, grocery shopping becomes a snap.
As for the items themselves, a basic "old school" bodybuilding diet would likely contain:
  1. Eggs
  2. Milk (skim or 2% or UF/CFM)
  3. Chicken Breast (boneless and skinless)
  4. Tuna chunk light, canned
  5. Cottage Cheese (2-4%) & red-fat cheese
  6. Lean Gr Beef or Sirloin, NY strip, etc Steak
  7. Rice
  8. Oatmeal
  9. Whole wheat (or white) Bread
  10. Apples
  11. Oranges
  12. Pasta
  13. Frozen Berries
  14. Bananas
  15. Broccoli
Of course, you can rotate in other vegetables such as corn on the cob, salad greens, and lettuces (with light balsamic or low-carb vinaigrette dressing if a salad) etc etc.
Eating a variety of wholesome foods that are (by and large) as unprocessed (aside from rice and oatmeal which must be processed as well as some dairy items) as possible typically means you'll be getting a wide spectrum of nutrients, including both macro and micronutrients. A daily multivitamin/mineral tablet can ensure you're filling any gaps in micronutrient needs (vitamins and minerals). As for macronutrients, this diet provides the bulk of its calories as protein and carbohydrate with only about 10% of the daily calorie allotment being reserved for fats.
What is the logic behind the macronutrient breakdown?
You'll be eating about 45-50 percent of your calories as carbohydrates and 40-45 percent as protein with only 10-15% as fat.
Why 45-50% as carbohydrate? Carbohydrate is stored in the liver and muscles as a substance called glycogen. For every gram of glycogen stored within the body, there are 2.7 grams of water attached. This gives the muscles a pumped appearance and feeling. This also means the muscles are well stocked with stored energy. The majority of your weight training sessions will involve anaerobic exercise. This type of exercise utilizes the glycolytic energy pathway to generate ATP or Adenosine Tri Phosphate.
(Note: The amino-acid-based dietary supplement Creatine also supports ATP synthesis by donating Phosphate to ADP).
Having adequate amounts of both calories and carbohydrates helps prevent dietary-induced drops in TSH.... or Thyroid Stimulating Hormone. This, in theory (and empirical practice) keeps one's metabolism humming and prevents one from "drying out." Simply put, you'll get great pumps in the gym thanks to all that stored water (remember 2.7 grams of water is stored per gram of glycogen).
Energy-rich carbohydrates (grains and fruits) differ from fiber-rich vegetables. Not only do energy-rich carbohydrates provide far more calories but the calories they supply raise blood glucose levels markedly and rapidly. These types of carbohydrates are more easily broken down into simple sugars (glucose etc). Simple sugars and carbohydrates such as rice and white bread are termed high-glycemic (they spike serum blood sugar and insulin levels) while whole wheat or rye bread and things like oatmeal and non-starchy vegetables are deemed low-glycemic.
To be completely forthright and technical all carbohydrates and macronutrients provide energy. The phytonutrients, micronutrients, and fiber aside, carbohydrates simply provide a "higher octane" energy (than protein or fat). ATP is regenerated via the glycolytic energy pathway; carbohydrates stoke the glycolytic energy pathway most efficiently. Despite this, carbohydrates are technically unessential.
Fat and in particular protein can both be used to create carbohydrates. And both fat and protein can supply energy. But fat and protein contain essential nutrients the body cannot manufacture. These essential nutrients are essential fatty acids (EFAs) and essential amino acids (EAAs).
What about Protein?
Because you're getting roughly half of your calories from carbohydrates the protein you take in will likely be spared from providing energy - at least that's what we're hoping for. You're going to shoot for 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. The actual range of values would be between 0.8g/lb to 1.4g/lb (grams of protein per pound).
You're going to want to consume high-quality, complete protein from sources such as meat, poultry, fish, and dairy. If you have 4 meals and a shake and are taking in let's say 225 grams of protein per day that works out to 45 grams per "feeding." To be more realistic we'll simply say take in between 40-50 grams of protein per feeding.
Protein supplies nitrogen and the "building blocks" of skeletal muscle tissue (amino acids). Protein is essential because 8-10 amino acids are considered essential (other amino acids can become essential in certain situations or circumstances, they are called conditionally essential amino acids).
If you're 200 lbs taking in 1.25 grams protein per pound of bodyweight you're consuming 250 grams of protein per day. Protein contains 4 calories per gram. Thus you'd be consuming 1,000 calories of protein. At 45-50% of total daily calories, carbohydrates would comprise app 1.25x worth of calories as compared to protein. Thus, carbohydrates would come to 1,250 calories. Total daily calories would thus far be 2,250.
2,250 divided by 0.9 yields 250 calories, and at 9 calories per gram that would afford us a mere (roughly) 25 grams of fat. I would at least double this figure (not counting supplemental fats). 50 grams of fat adds 450 calories. 450 plus 2,250 yields 2,700 calories total. Thus, your diet breakdown will be closer to 16-20% fat (20% when including supplemental EFAs), 40% protein, and 40-45% carbohydrate).
Note: If need be, you can cut down carbohydrates by a few hundred calories and increase your protein consumption. This would change the dietary breakdown to roughly 40/40/20 (popularized by Barry Sears as the Zone diet).
You'll want to stay on this diet for a week and record how you felt, what you ate, and how well you slept. Every other day weigh yourself after your morning shit, shower and shave. If you maintain your weight the 2,700 calorie mark is your body's "set-point target." To reduce excess weight (fat) reduce your total daily calories by roughly 10-15 percent and exercise 3-5 days per week. Include cardiovascular training in addition to your weight lifting to further speed up your fat loss efforts. You can do LISS (low-intensity steady state) cardio (walking) or you can do HIIT (High-intensity interval training) cardio 2-5 times per week. Personally, I would choose 5 45-minute leisurely walks over other forms of cardio.
What about "fat burners?"
When people say "fat burners" they're referring to thermogenic agents which speed up the body's metabolism by some 5% or so (5-8% for an hour or two). In the 90s both Phentermine and the ECA stack were popular. These catecholamine-based compounds were potent appetite suppressants, particularly phentermine. The ECA stack was/is also a beta-adrenergic agonist. Since then a host of other supposedly "thermogenic" compounds and preparations have come into the limelight. Yerba Mate comes to mind, as do the popular OTC products Xenadrine and Hydroxycut. Even plain old caffeine is sometimes considered a first-rate "fat burner."
The truth is these products barely increase metabolic rate enough to make much of a difference. Most of their worth comes from their appetite-suppressant effects. Now, I'm not saying if you're suddenly prescribed Adderall or start smoking ice you won't lose weight - you will. It's simply that most weight loss, even from strong stimulants, comes from their appetite-suppressant effects.
The only "fat burners" that truly increase fat burning without the need for appetite suppression are L Carnitine and Cardarine. Cardarine is a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-delta agonist. Cardarine enhances lipolysis during exercise. Training increases energy availability by promoting catabolism of proteins, and gluconeogenesis, whereas GW501516 enhances specific consumption of fatty acids and reduces glucose utilization. L Carnitine can be beneficial to exercise performance and fat loss; paradoxically it also suppresses T3, or active thyroid hormone.
T3 or Cytomel can be used to markedly increase resting metabolic rate, but "T3 burns through muscle and fat indiscriminately." You can reduce the amount of muscle tissue being burned and attenuate the reductions in "muscle pump" experienced when supplementing with extra T3.
To do so you'll need to drink water like a camel and supplement your diet with beetroot crystals and citrulline malate. You'll also want to utilize Tadalafil or Cialis. Surprisingly, aside from increasing the pump one experiences from lifting weights Cialis also increases fat burning and creates more BAT (Brown adipose Tissue as compared to WAT... white adipose tissue), relatively speaking. BAT is metabolically active and behaves more like muscle in this respect.
To reduce muscle loss while on higher doses of T3 nothing short of AAS (@ least 200-300 mg/wk, if not 400mg + per week) will truly help. SARMS such as RAD-140 may be of some (yet limited) value. To be honest I would avoid T3 supplementation unless also using Testosterone (Enanthate 400mg/wk) or other AAS.
As for fats, their consumption is largely incidental on this diet and comes from the dairy, red meat, poultry, occasional salad, or handful of mixed nuts one might expect to consume if adhering to the aforementioned dietary principles .
This means the amount of saturated fat as compared to MUFAs or PUFAs will be somewhat high. To remedy this one can consume tuna packed in soybean oil as well as by supplementing 3x per day with triple concentrated, enteric-coated, fish oil capsules. These fish oil capsules break down in the small intestine and there are no fishy burps with them thanks to that enteric coating. They are extremely rich in the special fatty acids EPA and DHA, Eicosapentaenoic acid and Docosohexanoic acid.
One might also supplement with an Udo's Omega 3:6:9 blend of daily supplemental oil.
As for specialty fats, one must purchase the next two in supplement form. CLA is conjugated linoleic acid and it helps improve body composition over time by increasing muscle mass and decreasing fat mass. Sesamin has a host of potential health benefits. Together these two designer fats can markedly improve physical aesthetics, health, and overall well-being.
Finally, there is GLA or gamma linoleic acid. Unless you eat a lot of cashews you'll want to get this fatty acid in supplement form as well.
Note: You needn't supplement every specialty fatty acid mentioned to reap benefits from each fatty acid you choose to use.
The GOLDEN RULE of DIETING: CICO
Calories in vs. calories out. It's so simple yet so misunderstood. When you reduce dieting down to its least common denominator it's CICO you're left with. If you aren't gaining or losing weight you're at an established set-point. You're at current equilibrium. It also means you're essentially burning just about every calorie you take in (burning every single calorie to be more precise, it's just the body's ebbs and flows and an equilibrium setpoint is usually somewhat elastic ).
If you begin to regularly consume more calories than your BMTMR allot (and than you burn via daily movement and exercise), you will put on additional body mass (including both fat and skeletal muscle). If you begin to consume less than your BMTMR allot, and/or begin exercising yourself into a negative caloric balance, you will lose weight, typically a combination of fat and muscle (but usually far more fat than muscle, particularly if one lifts weights throughout).
Note: BMTMR = Basal & Total Metabolic Rate
So are all macronutrients equal then? I mean, do all macronutrients convert into ATP at the same efficiency rate?
Technically no they do not. Protein is far less efficient in its conversion to ATP as compared to fat or carbohydrate. Thus, it takes MORE protein to create "x" amount of ATP. Remember, ATP stands for adenosine triphosphate. It is the body's preferred cellular fuel for high-intensity, high-octane activities. In this sense, protein's inefficiency in converting to ATP means a calorie really isn't a calorie after all. (Because) It takes more protein calories to create "x" amount of ATP than if one were creating that same "x" amount of ATP from carbohydrate or fat calories.
Now that that anomaly is out of the way it's best to simply memorize CICO, calories in vs. calories out, irrespective of macronutrient source. This is the most practical, tried and true way to diet scientifically.
So you've established your caloric allotment for metabolic equilibrium and lowered that figure by 10-15%. You've added in 3-4 30-minute LISS cardio sessions per week in addition to 4 weight-lifting workouts. You're beginning to lose weight week in and week out and then your progress slows and eventually stalls. Your body has become accustomed to the lower calories and the extra workload. Unfortunately, aside from supplementing your diet with substances such as Cardarine or Clenbuterol, there is little more you can do outside of dropping calories once more.... (or adding even more cardio).
Over time these successive reductions in calorie allotment lead to a reduction in TSH, or thyroid stimulating hormone. It's the body's way of slowing things down in an effort to maintain homeostasis. To continue improving body composition one mustn't merely lose as much fat as possible, but also must maintain the muscle mass one has - or even build a bit. Now I'll come right out and say it, if you're 6-10 weeks into a strict fat loss diet you're not going to be concerned with building additional muscle unless you're using Testosterone and/or other AAS and PEDs. Even then, if juicing quite a bit, at some point building muscle transitions into preserving muscle. No matter how much you're pinning if you aren't eating enough calories you simply cannot (physiologically) add appreciable lean fat-free body mass.
To boost the body's T3 levels one can supplement directly with T3 (Cytomel) or with pro-active-thyroid T4 (converts to T3 in body; Synthroid). There is supplemental T2 but I advise readers to steer clear of this thyroid analogue. Another way of boosting T3 levels, and a legal, natural way to boot, is by having periodic carbohydrate-rich refeeds and higher calorie days. Have a carbohydrate-rich meal every 3 days if on a lower carbohydrate diet as well as a higher calorie day once every seven to ten days whether on a mixed macronutrient or a lower carbohydrate type diet.
How many meals do you need to eat per day?
While there is potentially some slight advantage to eating several smaller to moderately sized meals spaced evenly throughout the day the science says "when you eat the bulk of your calories makes little to no difference." So if you'd rather have two larger-sized 1,350 calorie meals and then intermittently fast for the rest of your wake-sleep cycle (or "day" whether a 1st, 2nd, or 3rd shifter etc) go ahead. That said, I would personally recommend at least 2-3 whole food-based meals and 1-3 protein shakes per day for best results in the gym. As for weight loss, remember it boils down to CICO: whether you have 10 270-calorie mini-meals or one 2,700-calorie smorgasbord makes practically no difference.
What about enhancing insulin sensitivity and improving glucose metabolism while imparting a nutrient-partitioning effect?
I first learned of the term Glucose Disposal Agent while reading Dan Duchaine's Underground BodyOpus. Dan was recommending an isocaloric diet at one point but I believe he'd moved onto cyclical ketogenic-type dieting by the early to mid-90s - and obviously by the time he wrote Underground BodyOpus. Because catecholamines work better in low (serum) insulin environments and because high levels of insulin in the blood render fat-burning enzymes such as HSL largely inert, it is a good idea to release as little insulin as is necessary/possible. Postprandial serum insulin concentrations share a direct correlation with postprandial (after a meal) blood glucose levels. To help optimize glucose metabolism and loweoptimize postprandial glucose numbers far more efficiently - while also driving nutrient partitioning by enhancing the selective expression of GLUT 4 (on muscle cells and not fat cells), one should consider the use of glucose disposal agents such as Na R ALA and Berberine HCL.
Over time the use of GDAs improves insulin sensitivity markedly, assisting in the significant attenuation of metabolic syndrome. Berberine alone has been shown in some clinical trials to perform as good or better than the popular diabetic medication Metformin. Na R ALA is the most bioavailable form of alpha lipoic acid and you need only 250mg 2-3x/day to reap major benefits. If you use the cheaper form of alpha lipoic acid use 400-700 mg 2-3x/day.
To these two GDAs I would recommend a form of Vanadium, Vanadyl Sulfate. I would also add a form of chromium, either chromium picolinate or chromium polynicotinate. There are scores of various GDA or GDA-like compounds to choose from. For the most bang for your buck start and stick with this 4 part GDA stack before adding additional GDA compounds into the mix.
Note: If you combine the regular use of GDAs with a modified lower or low-carb diet one can literally reverse Type 2 Diabetes, particularly if the disease is in its early onset stage(s).
Maintaining Energy (to train intensely) while on a reduced-calorie diet
When you lift weights getting that all too familiar "pump" feels amazing. Arnold Schwarzenegger once compared it to sexual release - even going so far as to claim the "pump was better than cumming." I would have to disagree with Mr. Schwarzenegger on that, but I will concede that getting a vein-bursting, skin-splitting pump (obviously I'm embellishing: no pump bursts veins or splits the skin) gives one a major short-term motivational boost as well as an endorphin rush. It also feels great and makes one look more muscular and vascular. But getting a great pump while in a major caloric deficit, particularly if one is restricting carbohydrates, becomes difficult to say the least. So how does one boost the body's high-octane "energy" source, ATP, without taking in extra calories?
If you were unaware that ATP can be supplemented directly (orally), now you know. PEAK ATP is a well-known ATP supplement. In addition to supplementing directly with ATP one can also utilize Creatine Monohydrate (or other forms of creatine) to behave as a Phosphate donor. Creatine is stored within the body as creatine phosphate. Creatine phosphate donates its phosphate ring to ADP, or Adenosine Di-Phosphate, creating ATP, or Adenosine Tri-Phosphate. As you know ATP is the body's preferred "high-octane" cellular-energy-medium. Creatine and ATP are both important to high-intensity anaerobic exercise. But what about boosting the glycolytic energy pathway?
The body utilizes glucose and stored glycogen to replenish ATP. When glucose/glycogen is in low supply the body will utilize glycogenic amino acids (in a process called gluconeogenesis) to boost serum glucose concentrations, especially while involved in intense exercise such as weight lifting (bodybuilding). Supplementing (pre-workout) with whey protein isolate and/or EAA/BCAA+Glutamine can help prevent the body from utilizing its muscle tissue as a donor source for gluconeogenically-derived "energy."
Note: Glutamine can increase both hepatic and skeletal muscle glycogen stores (without carbohydrates).
Another thing you can do to enhance fat burning is to increase the proportion of fuel burned as fat during exercise. To achieve this supplement with the PPAR delta agonist Cardarine. Cardarine markedly increases cardiovasculaendurance capacity as well as muscular endurance. You'll be getting a few more reps per set on your higher rep sets and increasing the amount of fat (instead of blood sugar) your body is using while doing so.
Note: Stacking Cardarine with the infamous lipotropic L Carnitine may further enhance each supplement's effects.
Note: I have a separate article written on L Carnitine. See this article to learn everything you would ever want to know about L Carnitine in less than 5 minutes.
What about maintaining the muscle mass you built while in a caloric surplus after you diet your way into a significant negative caloric balance?
The supplement HMB, Beta Hydroxy Methyl Butyrate was over-hyped in the 90s. Everybody was looking for the "next creatine." And HMB showed promise. Then the research trickled in. Initially, HMB appeared to be of little value. Then more and more research poured in. Today we know HMB is most effective as an anticatabolic supplement.
HMB helps ensure the body remains in a positive nitrogen balance, but not by increasing protein synthesis. Rather, HMB reduces the breakdown of muscle mass (protein), and is particularly useful in lower-calorie settings, and/or high-stress situations (including recovery post-surgery and healing from serious burns).
You'll want to use a minimum of 3 grams of HMB per day. Amounts as high as 10 grams or more daily can be costly but are safe (and more effective than lower dosages, which does not necessarily hold true for other dietary supplements).
A second anticatabolic supplement you might consider is Phosphatidylserine or PS. The use of PS is reportedly effective in reducing excessive serum cortisol concentrations. Cortisol, a glucocorticoid, increases protein catabolism. This supplement can be costly to use, however.
Some trainees, gurus and gym pundits firmly believe the conditionally essential amino acid Glutamine is a potent anti-catabolic substance. The research on Glutamine's efficacy for athletes isn't clear; some studies show benefit(s) while others clearly do not.
If you're using appreciable amounts of protein powder (Whey Protein Isolate, Pea Protein Isolate, Caseinate, Milk Protein Isolate) you'll be getting about 4-5 grams of Glutamine (and precursors) per scoop (app 25 grams of protein. Most protein rich whole foods are also rich in Glutamine.
If you're in a caloric surplus (off season mode) then additional Glutamine is essentially a waste of money. Glutamine is best utilized while in the throes of strict dieting, when muscle mass losses are most likely. Glutamine can contribute to the Amino Acid Pool and act as a gluconeogenic donor if need be. Glutamine can also help restock both hepatic and skeletal muscle glycogen stores INDEPENDENTLY of carbohydrates (Glucose). To enhance glycogen replenishment, particularly in the peri-workout period, Glutamine must be taken in very large doses (up to 15-20 grams pre/intra workout & post workout).
Another thing you can do to reduce the loss of muscle mass while dieting is to raise your protein consumption to as high as 1.5 grams per pound of body weight. Of course, you'll have to have a commensurate reduction in calories from carbohydrates and/or fat.
And remember, while dieting to maximize fat-loss your goal isn't to build muscle, but instead to maintain that muscle which you've already built. This means you must take care to avoid overtraining. Not only is overtraining unnecessary at this stage, but it can be extremely damaging to one's physique. You run the risk of injury anytime you step foot in a gym but the probability of injury is geometrically increased if one is overtraining, particularly while on a low-calorie diet. Limit your weekly lifting sessions to no more than 5. Don't go crazy on the volume (# of sets) and stay in the 8-12 rep range most of the time (you can do more or fewer reps but 8-12 is a great rep range for most). You aren't going to be setting any PRs here.
Can you tell us what a sample day of eating might look like?
Let's say you decide on 3 whole-food meals, 2 shakes, and a snack every day. Let's assume your shakes are composed of ultrafiltered skim milk (12 g protein and 8 grams carbohydrate w/ 0g fat per 8oz), 2 scoops whey isolate (40 g protein), a small banana, and 1/2-1 cup frozen strawberries. By themselves, the two protein shakes will supply 130 grams of protein. And remember, at the beginning of this article we said our hypothetical dieter was 200 pounds. Thus your total daily protein goal in grams was 250 grams per day. Hence, you need only consume 120 more grams of protein, divided between 3 whole food meals and your optional snack.
Your total daily calorie and macronutrient allotment breakdown:
Calories: 2,700 Protein: 250 grams, 1,000 Cal Carbohydrate: 310 grams, 1250 Cal Fat: 50 grams, 450 Cal
Note: the caloric/macro breakdown above yields appx 37% protein, 46% carbohydrate, and 17% fat. This differs slightly from the 40/50/10 breakdown we began with but the actual percentages are simply a guide post. If you're more endomorphic you should probably drop the carbohydrates to 37% and raise the fat to make up the difference (or add protein for the same reason). If you're an ectomorph or mesomorph you can handle the 46% carbohydrate level without missing a beat.
Note: Supplemental fats do add additional fat grams (and calories to your daily totals). Thus, your total fat intake will likely be closer to 80 grams per day. You may also take a shot glass or two of extra virgin, cold-pressed organic olive oil 3-5 times per week to increase MUFAs in your diet.
Removing the protein shakes' nutritional values (130 grams protein, 0 grams fat, and roughly 60-120 grams of carbohydrates: one protein shake may be simply protein powder with milk or water and ice) leaves 120 grams of protein, 50 grams of meal-derived fats (excluding supplemental fats) and approximately 190-250 grams of carbohydrates for the remainder of the day. These figures will be spread (evenly or unevenly) over 3 whole-food meals and one snack. This works out to 40 grams of protein, 80 grams of carbohydrates, and about 15-20 grams of fat per meal. Under this scenario, your snack would have to be something like sugar-free jello which has practically no calories whatsoever.
As for how you put together your meals....
Because your list of foods was basic and limited to 15 items you'll have an easy time putting potential menus together. Choose foods from your list and match up their nutritional values to fit the macronutrient and caloric allotment for each of your 3 whole-food meals.
Note: If you need more variety go ahead. The number of different foods you eat has no intrinsic bearing on the results you'll achieve from dieting. I give the 15-item limit to reflect the authenticity of old-school bodybuilding dieting as told by John Romano, the famous bodybuilding author, and for simplicity's sake.
Look up the nutritional value of the various 15 (or more) foods you chose for your diet and write them down on the front page of your diet journal. You're going to want to make use of nutrition labels anytime you deviate from your list of foods. And if you're not accurately eyeing up proper portion sizes you'll want to invest in a food scale. Studies have shown that people who didn't record what they ate often overate far more than what they self-reported they'd eaten. The same goes for people commonly overestimating portion sizes. That's why you're going to record everything you eat and weigh out or measure proper portion sizes.
So how do you know how many calories you should begin the diet with?
There are many useful diet and macro calculators available online. One figure I've come across quite a bit is 15-17 calories per pound of body weight as a good, "average" starting point. For a 200 lb person, this works out to between 3,000 and 3,400 calories per day, which might be a bit high. If consuming even 1.25 grams of protein per pound of body weight that 15-17 cal/lb figure leaves 2,400 "energy" calories to come from carbohydrates and/or fats. Our hypothetical diet above was 2,700 calories with 250 grams of protein for a 200-lb individual.
So the two figures (2,700 cal and 3,000- 3,400 cal are close enough to be compatible and would likely fit any 200 lb hard training individual quite well - but we can't be certain. The only way to do that is to keep a diet journal for a minimum of 7 days where you record every morsel of every foodstuff you consume, each and every day and night. You also tally up your macronutrient totals for each of the seven days. At the end of those seven days, if your weight has remained the same, you have found your homeostatic caloric setpoint.
Add up the total amount of calories consumed over the seven days and then divide the resultant figure by seven. You now have your starting caloric allowance. If you want to gain quality mass you would increase your calories by 10-15%. But, we want to lose fat, so we will cut out starting caloric allowance (homeostatic-setpoint) by 10-15%.
If you simply don't have the discipline to keep a food journal you'll also have trouble keeping track of calories later on in the diet and end up overeating, even if unintentionally. That said, 15-17 cal/lb of body weight is a good average starting range for most lifters.
If you'd like, I'm open for consultations.
Contact me for nutritional, dietary supplementation, and exercise regimen consulting.
Mike Renteria BigMikeRenteria@gmail.com BPVA Summer 2024
Photo: Gunter Schlierkamp, IFBB LEGEND, 2002 GNC SOS CHAMPION (Defeated Reigning Mr Olympia Ronnie Coleman)
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2024.05.11 07:23 louielou8484 Help

Help
I don't know if this is allowed here, but can someone please advise me on how to cook this for mother's day? I am a fantastic home cook, but I have always been scared of steak. My mom requested scallops and shrimp, but I really wanted to do beef too, but I'm so worried to screw it up.
Thank you!!
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2024.05.11 00:23 RefuseKey1794 eternally grateful

eternally grateful
Thank you so much to those who helped, me and my boyfriend are extremely grateful. We can’t wait to be in a better position to share the love back❤️🥹
submitted by RefuseKey1794 to freemeal [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 18:52 Theskibidimewing No one can escape the fate that was chosen for them 🤓☝️

No one can escape the fate that was chosen for them 🤓☝️
Diavolo next death loop
submitted by Theskibidimewing to JoJoMemes [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 12:50 FuckinGandalfManWoah The Sugarbowl, Amsterdam NY c.1940s

The Sugarbowl, Amsterdam NY c.1940s submitted by FuckinGandalfManWoah to VintageMenus [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 08:10 Volta87 How to cook Wagyu

How to cook Wagyu
How would you cook this Steak guys? First time ever trying or cooking Wagyu.
I can use a Skillet, Weber (fire). I could reverse smoke it, or maybe Sous Vide?
They're 3/4 of an inch so I'm thinking sear over lump until 130f.
"” These Chilean Wagyu Sirloin Steaks with a Beef Marbling Score BMS 6-7 from Mollendo are absolutely cracking.
This is stunning Wagyu and for the price is superior to many more expensive brands from around the world. We don't muck around when we're cutting these so they're all chunky and ideal for sharing steaks. Exquisite texture and sublime flavours that are for sure, up there with the best beef we've ever had “”
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2024.05.10 06:06 ghostof_lisasbabytoe Has done what again 🤔 Made overcooked, over-seasoned sirloin steaks, boxed rice, and threw a roll on the heart attack plate? Gurl, a chef you are not.

Has done what again 🤔 Made overcooked, over-seasoned sirloin steaks, boxed rice, and threw a roll on the heart attack plate? Gurl, a chef you are not. submitted by ghostof_lisasbabytoe to MauriceMandy [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 04:19 SignStriking2983 What cuts for steak

First 1/2 beef going to the kill house next week and I'm figuring out what I want cut.
Brother in law gave me some steaks off his last beef from 2 years ago and wow I didn't know what I was missing, don't think I'll ever buy grocery store steak again. What really surprised me is the quality of even the sirloin steak which is usually not that great from a grocery store.
So my question is what else makes a good steak besides the usual t bone, porterhouse, ribeye and sirloin? I only want 4 roasts, 5 pounds of stew, brisket, skirt, ribs and the rest burger.
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2024.05.10 02:58 ArnieBird1 Seems like this should be delicious... who's tried it?

Seems like this should be delicious... who's tried it? submitted by ArnieBird1 to aldi [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 01:55 SingerOptimal3507 Need Help with Macros

(265lb, 25yo Male, 5'11) So I've started the journey to Carnivore recently (about 2.5 weeks ago) and I've noticed I haven't been eating enough since I get full. I've been averaging 130g of protein, only 60g of fat and 0g of carbs. Maybe 1500 calories tops. I feel way better than I've felt already in terms of steady energy and no fast dips in energy. I've lost alot of weight already, I'm currently 250lbs now but I assume I lost alot of water weight. I haven't lost anything else and it seems to fluctuate from 248lbs-251lbs now, for the last 3 days. I don't know if it's all in my head (I used to weigh 365lbs two years ago which I lost due to not eating enough, I went down to 205lbs then began eating again and gained some back) but noticed I was getting up there again so I decided to try and get back back down. My overall goal is 200lbs but starting goal is 230lbs. I recently read that I need to eat more protein and definitely more fat. I came into this diet thinking less fat, and more protein but it seems I didn't do enough research. I currently have lean meats, like chicken breast, sirloin steak and lean ground beef (90/10). I still use spices as well and cook only the chicken in a little bit of Avocado oil( need to cut that out but don'twant to burn the chicken), the rest is cooked with butter. Any advice on how to determine my macros and what I should eat to get there? I'm also drinking about a gallon of water a day. Thank you everyone for the help.
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