Tag: heart health

Sweat Week: Beat the heat with watermelon

The Discovery Channel’s got Shark Week; well, I bring you Sweat Week — a week of posts on surviving the heat waves this summer.

In April, I had the opportunity to go to Fort Myers, Florida, to learn all about watermelon from an Ontario watermelon grower, Brian Arrigo. Here are a few things I learned about watermelon while down in Florida:

  • Watermelon’s been shown to help reverse the effects of hardening arteries.
  • It’s beneficial for the cardiovascular system (due to the citrolene it contains).
  • It’s the cheapest per lb of anything you’ll find in the produce section.
  • The watermelons I was seeing in Florida being picked on Thursday would be in stores up here in Toronto as quickly as Monday (ie. four days!).
  • Once a watermelon is sliced, you should consume it within the next 10 days.

No worries about needing to consume it within 10 days for me, especially when there are delicious recipes such as this watermelon cairpirinha — yet another way I’m keeping cool in the heat.

Watermelon Cairpirinha

1 lime
5 quarter-sized   slices ginger
2   tsp (10 mL) sugar
6 chopped   mint leaves
2   oz (56.8 mL) watermelon purée
2   oz (56.8 mL) cachaça
1   oz (56.8 mL) grenadine

Muddle lime, ginger, sugar and mint and transfer to a martini shaker. Add watermelon purée, grenadine, cachaça and ice. Shake. Pour into a glass and serve.

Makes one cocktail.

TIP: Vodka or rum can be used in place of cachaça.

PER SERVING:283 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 12 mg sodium, 39 g carbohydrates, 0 g fibre, 0 g protein. % RDI: 0% calcium, 2% iron, 1% vitamin A, 13% vitamin C.

SOURCE: National Watermelon Promotion Board, www.watermelon.org.

5 Comments July 9, 2012

Sprint your way fit

If you follow me on Twitter, you probably notice that I gripe about hill training once a week or so. Truth is, I don’t hate it…it’s just a tougher workout and I have a mild dislike for it, but in reality it’s not absolutely excruciating.

What I really, really, really don’t like? Speed training. Which is why I didn’t want to read the details on the findings of this study (in fact, I was very tempted to just gloss over it and block it from my mind — in the same way I try to pretend my eyes haven’t seen tweets spoiling the finale for Top Chef).

This research published in the American Journal of Human  Biology set out to find whether high-intensity workouts versus endurance workouts offer equal cardio benefits, and I had a sinking feeling it was high-intensity that would win–and it did.

Both groups experienced cardiovascular benefits, however, the high-intensity group experienced them in having worked out 15 percent of the time of the endurance group.

I’ll take working out less efficiently over more time to get similar healthy-heart results–such is the hate-on I have for sprints.

1 Comment April 7, 2011

Laugh it up

Having a good giggle is healthy not only for your mental well-being, but your physical health, too–laughing increases blood flow and improves vessel function, according to a doctor from the Society for Vascular Surgery in the U.S.

So whether it’s planning some gags on friends for April Fool’s Day, watching Role Models again (hilarity!), or brunchin’ with your BFFs, make sure laughing it up is on tap.

(and remember, a hearty, open-mouth laugh will get others to join in more than a discreet little chuckle).

Leave a Comment March 30, 2011

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