Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Betty's Baked Chicken Breasts with Sour Cream Gravy Recipe

In this video, Betty demonstrates how to make her impressive Baked Chicken breasts with Sour Cream Gravy recipe. This chicken is slow-baked in the oven and is lusciously tender with a mushroom-sour cream gravy that is tangy and as smooth as silk! Ingredients: 2.5 pounds chicken breasts (I came out with 10 fairly evenly-sized serving pieces.) 2.25 oz. jar of dried beef or sliced deli ham (I used the dried beef, but only 10 half circles of it.) 1 pint (16 oz.) sour cream 10 3/4 oz.can condensed cream of mushroom soup 5 or 6 slices of bacon, mostly cooked oil spray for baking dish Trim all excess fat and gristle from the chicken breasts, and then cut them into pieces that can be rolled up. If your pieces are thick and hard to roll, try pounding them flat with a mallet or hammer covered with aluminum foil. Place 1 or 2 half rounds of dried beef, or an appropriate amount of sliced ham on top of an uncooked chicken breast. Roll the chicken breast, until it encompasses the filling. Close with a toothpick, and place in an 8-inch by 10-inch baking dish that has been sprayed with cooking spray. Continue until you have used up all your chicken breasts and filling. now, make your gravy. Combine 1 pint of sour cream and a 10 3/4 oz. can condensed cream of mushroom soup. Stir until the two ingredients are completely blended. Pour the mushroom-sour cream gravy over the top of the individual chicken rolls that are in your baking dish. Spread the gravy as evenly as you can on top, and let ...

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Best BBQ Sauce Recipe? No Such Thing

!±8± Best BBQ Sauce Recipe? No Such Thing

Picking out the best BBQ sauce recipe is like trying to decide which of your children you love the most. It's just not that cut and dried.

If you are looking for the best BBQ sauce, you will find it wherever you go. In other words, if you go to Memphis and ask what is the best BBQ sauce, most of the people there will tell you a Memphis style sauce. It's like Clint Black's song says, "wherever you go, there you are". Without getting into all the history and background, let's just say that BBQ sauce varies by region of the country. If anything is agreed upon in the world of BBQ, it's that BBQ sauce is different depending on where you go.

So, you now have to decide for yourself which recipe is the best. Because... no one else knows. Most people have their own choice of what's the best BBQ sauce, but nobody can agree. There are too many of them out there to pick from. Even areas in regions of the sub-regions have their own variations of the same style (what a mouthful).

Who cares which sauce is the best? You do... right? (Say right.) OK, then....the best BBQ sauce recipe is the one that is your favorite. The best way to find that out is to make it yourself. So, let's get started. BBQ sauces have combinations of sweet, sour, spicy, and tangy ingredients. The primary ingredients for most styles of sauce are tomato (sauce, paste, or ketchup), vinegar, spices and sweetness, or combinations of these.

The Memphis style of BBQ sauce is a good place to start, since it has a moderate balance of sweet, sour, spicy, and tang. Here is a basic...

Memphis style BBQ sauce

4 Tbs butter

1/4 c chopped onion

1 c tomato sauce

1 c vinegar

1/4 c Worcestershire sauce

1 Tbs brown sugar

1 tsp salt

1/2 tsp black pepper

1/8 tsp cayenne pepper

Dash Tabasco sauce

Sauté the onion in butter, then add the remaining ingredients. Heat the mixture until it thickens (15 to 20 minutes).

Any of the ingredients can be changed, added or deleted. A BBQ sauce can be as simple as tomato sauce and Worcestershire, or even vinegar and pepper flakes. But you can also make it as complex as you like, too. You could even use salsa as a base ingredient.

Notice, in the above recipe, that tomato sauce and vinegar are of equal amounts. These are the two prime ingredients that will determine a basic style. As the ratio of these ingredients change, so does the location of where it is made.

Kansas City style sauce is thick, sticky and sweet. To change the above recipe to a KC style, try reducing the vinegar to 1/4 cup and replace the Worcestershire with dark molasses. Add a few select seasonings like paprika, chili powder, and allspice (maybe a touch of cinnamon).

To go the other direction from Memphis, change the tomato sauce to 1/2 cup of ketchup and add some garlic, cloves and 1 cup of water. Increase the brown sugar to 1/2 cup. This will result in a thinner BBQ sauce similar to that used in North Carolina. A Texas style sauce would mean to decrease the vinegar to 1/2 cup and add 1 1/2 cups of water. Add some additional celery, garlic, paprika, and (of course) chili powder.

This may sound like a lot of work, but it is also a lot of fun, too. It's really, though, the best way for you to answer that question, "what is the best BBQ sauce recipe?". And you don't have to start with this recipe, either. There are many, many, many of them available in cookbooks and online. Find one that is close to what you want (thick, thin, sweet, spice, etc.), get yourself another drink, and go to town.

There may be no such thing as the best, but this is a way you can find your favorite. And by the way, you will know it when you find it.


Best BBQ Sauce Recipe? No Such Thing

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

From 274 Pounds to ULTRA Runner in Less Than 2 Years

!±8± From 274 Pounds to ULTRA Runner in Less Than 2 Years

Bluemont, Virginia's Susan Jennings, 48, recently transformed herself from seriously overweight to ULTRAFit. In less than two years she lost 135 pounds or almost half her body weight and ran her first ultradistance race - a 50K (31 miles). Her inspiring story is revealed in this interview with author Ed Mayhew.

Ed: Susan, you recently traded being seriously overweight for some serious running. In May, for example, you ran 64 miles in a 24-hour race. Were you always overweight? What led to your reaching 274 pounds?  

Susan: In my younger days, I was always on the edge of being overweight. As long as I stayed active, I was okay, but I seemed to constantly be on a diet, each time having to lose a little more to get to my goal weight. After I got married, I wasn't as active and the weight starting creeping up. It didn't help that my thin husband could eat anything he wanted! The weight really became an issue after the birth of my daughter. It was then that I was diagnosed with hypothyroidism. Medicine stabilized the blood levels, but I never felt right after that. With raising a child and a long commute to work each day, exercise became less and less, and I continued to gain. Food became the tool I used to combat fatigue and stress. It was my friend and my enemy. I felt so out of control. 

Ed: What ways had you tried to lose the weight over the years and what finally worked for you? 

Susan: I think I have tried every diet on the planet! The list is extensive: the Lemonade Cleansing Fast, the Hallelujah Diet, Nutrisystem, Physicians Weight Loss, South Beach Diet, Atkins, Pritikin, etc. I have spent thousands of dollars on programs, meals, and supplements trying to find the magic formula. Most diets worked for a while. But after a while, I would stop losing. Some were just too hard to follow. Others just stopped working. I couldn't figure it out. How could I lose 30 or 40 pounds and then plateau or start to gain without changing anything that I was doing? In frustration, I would quit because it didn't seem to matter, and quickly gain the weight back. My health issues got worse. I snored when I slept, and would often wake up with my heart racing. Sometimes in the evening, I just felt so bad. I remember looking into the mirror one morning and stared at the blotchy face looking back at me. "I don't know who you are, "I said, and began to cry. I had to keep trying. I read of a connection with gluten sensitivity and hypothyroidism so I decided to give up wheat for one week. In three days, my snoring stopped. In one week, I lost 10 pounds. It was the motivation I needed to try to lose one more time. I decided to go back to Weight Watchers because I knew I needed accountability, and a structured program to deal with the other reasons I ate. Then I did one thing I had never done before. I took several "before" pictures. I had decided that this was it, last chance. At my first meeting on May 31, 2007, the leader was talking about excuses we make for why we gain weight, including "it's my thyroid." I raised my hand and said, "Well, I have hypothyroidism, but I'm not going to use it as an excuse any longer." That became my mantra - no excuses. If I was tired, I still got up and exercised. If I was stressed, that wasn't an excuse for eating. So the combination of a gluten free diet, Weight Watchers, and exercise is what finally worked. 

Ed: How did you go from being overweight with significant health issues to being an Ultra Runner? 

Susan: It's funny, because I had always joked about my efficient metabolism and how I was designed to be a long distance runner. But that was the furthest thing from my mind at the time. I just wanted to be able to walk a mile or two. We live on the mountain and I felt uncomfortable on our curvy roads. Then, after I had experienced a few rude comments yelled from passing vehicles, my husband suggested I hike on the Appalachian Trail, which is a stone's throw from our house. He even bought me some trekking poles. The only problem was that the section we live near is called the "Roller Coaster," a series of 400-600 ft rocky climbs and descents. The first day I made it about a fourth of the way up the ridge before I quit and went home. But I got up the next morning and went back out. Soon my half hour hikes turned into one hour hikes, and then two hour hikes. At other times, while my daughter was dancing, I would walk around the 2 mile loop in Berryville. There, I would see runners. One woman particularly interested me. She was older, and she wasn't really fast, but she was faithfully running every time I went to the park. I thought that if she could run, why couldn't I. By this time, I had lost about 75 lbs. So I would run a few feet, and then walk again. This progressed to running all the downhill sections, then all the flat sections, and finally I pushed up those "big" hills at the park. I especially enjoyed "running" on the trails. The day I left my trekking poles at home was the day I became a real trail runner. After a couple of months of this, I got a crazy notion in my head that I wanted to run a trail race. I found a half-marathon that was at the end of September (2008). I had about 4 months to train for it, and about 30 more pounds to lose. My two hour hikes now became two hour trail runs. Fearfully, I toed the line for that race. I wasn't even sure I could go the distance and was sure I would finish in last place. But once on the trails, I found my rhythm. The last three miles is when I experienced the runners high. I was flying down the mountain, letting gravity take me and crossed the finish line 19th out of 56 runners. Later that day, I broke down and sobbed. I felt like the butterfly who, after years of being trapped in a cocoon of fat and self-doubt, had been set free to fly. If I could lose 135 pounds, train for, and run a half marathon in a year and a half, then what else could I do? I wasn't through pushing my limits and so I signed up for my first ultra - an 8 hour trail run in February. On my two year anniversary(in May) of walking into a Weight Watchers meeting, I celebrated by running 49 miles in a 10 hour endurance run.   

Ed: Can you give us an example of one of your more difficult workouts/runs? 

Susan: I try not to take myself too seriously, so I make the challenging runs fun. For instance, I have a run called Woman vs. Mountain. I start at the bottom of a mountain road that climbs in 2 ½ miles about 1000 ft, with 9% grades in parts. If I don't walk at all, then I win. If I have to walk then the mountain wins. Of course, the fun thing is to run back down the mountain and do it again, trying to better your time on the second go round. Or I make a race course. I have a 20k that starts on the Roller Coaster, climbs 4 ridges for the first 10k, then sprints down the mountain on the shoulder of Route 7; the last 10k is on a hilly mountain road, and ends with a section of "Woman vs. Mountain."   

Ed: How did you learn so quickly about how to survive and thrive doing ultra-distance runs and races? 

Susan: I'm still learning! I've read everything I can find on training for an ultra. It's interesting that most formal training programs only go up to the marathon distance. So the wisdom comes from other ultra runners who blog and post online how they trained for certain races. I try to follow the standard running advice and then adapt it for longer distances. I also learn from my mistakes. In my 24 hour run, I had my family there and they set up an area for me that I could go to at the end of each 8 mile loop. The problem was, I was taking too long to get back on the trail. I wouldn't be surprised if I didn't lose over 2 hours of running time, relaxing between loops. In my 10 hour run which was on a horse track, I was feeling good, started out too fast, and didn't drink enough at the beginning. I got leg cramps around mile 16 and had them the rest of the night. It really slowed me down. I think I could have done over 50 miles without them. But that's how you learn.   

Ed: What is your eating/diet like from day to day now compared with what it was like before?  

Susan: Probably the biggest difference in meal times is being gluten-free and learning to control portions. We haven't gone out for pizza in over 2 years. In fact, our eating out has greatly diminished, mainly because it's too hard to make sure the meals don't have gluten in them. One area where I struggled with before was the in between meal times. The quick and easy pick me up is a candy bar, or a bag of chips or a coke. Now I try to pack fruit and veggies for my snacks, and if I run out, I just tell myself that I won't starve if I don't eat before supper time. It's silly to think that we have to put something in our mouth every time we get a little hungry. But I still struggle with and give in to cravings. I'm a confessed chocolaholic. The key for me is tracking every meal. I still use the Weight Watcher's point system. Some people wonder what you eat, if you can't have wheat. I made it a point not to substitute with gluten-free bread, cookies, etc. but rather to fill the "bread" spot with brown rice, quinoa, potato or other whole grain. Fish, turkey, lean beef and vegetarian dishes make up the bulk of our entrees. Salads are also a mainstay of the diet. When I come in from a workout, I make a smoothie with frozen fruit and a hemp protein mix. I try to find protein powders that have lots of vitamins and minerals that help with recovery. 

Ed: What do you eat and drink to stay hydrated and keep your glycogen levels up during long runs? 

Susan: Training runs are for experimenting with food and drink. I have tried everything from gels, to clif blocks, to trail mix and dried fruit. On my long trail runs without access to water, I fill a hydration bladder, and wear a mule pack. It also holds several emergency items. On my last 36.5 mile training run, I used the first aid kit, the emergency rain poncho, the parachute chord, and the knife. So while I complain about the 10 lbs I carry on my back, those things came in handy! For that run I ate a combination of gels and bars, and put an electrolyte solution in my water. I will also carry a source of protein if I'm going to be out all day - protein bars, cheese, or chipped beef (extra sodium). My last shorter run of 20 miles, I only had a couple of gels and still felt fine. During 24 hour races, anything goes. Whatever keeps you moving and that includes chocolate and soda!   

Ed: What goes through your mind during hard workouts and races? Are there any mental techniques you use to keep running when your exhausted and your body wants to quit? What do you mentally tell yourself when the going gets tough? 

Susan: I consider every run an adventure and I look forward to retelling my tales of getting locked into Skyline Drive at night, or screaming at a bobcat, or running with a herd of cattle (this morning's run) to my friends and fellow runners. So if I come home after running in single digit weather with icicles in my hair, or blood running down my leg from a fall, it's another story to tell. Because of this I've been dubbed the "Warrior Princess." So if I feel like quitting when the going gets tough I say, "I can't quit, I'm the Warrior Princess!" During the ultras, the motto is "keep moving forward." As long as you're moving forward, no matter how slow, you're making progress. I try to focus on form. I have a mental checklist - posture, arms, foot strike, etc. that I go through. And since faith is such a big part of who I am, I quote scripture "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me," or "I am strong in the Lord and in the power of his might." There is a Drill Sergeant who "lives" in my head and barks out orders during my runs. "Get a move on it, you wimp!" she yells. "My grandmother can run faster than that!" And when all else fails, I sing my favorite hymn "It is Well with My Sole." (Just kidding).  

Ed: Is there a religious or spiritual component to your trading in your knife and fork for running shoes? 

Susan: My faith is the foundation of my life. I prayed for years that the Lord would help me lose weight. In retrospect, the struggles I faced have allowed me to help others. So God answered my prayer, just not in my time, but in His. I prayed everyday that I would be strong, not give into temptation, and that my journey could be an inspiration to others and a testimony to God's faithfulness. I believe that I have been transformed from the inside out. Mentally, I was in a bad place, so self conscious and negative, struggling with who I was, and wondering what I was meant to do on this earth. Now, I run for Christ, for the spiritual rebirth He gave me and the strength that comes from knowing Him.    

Ed: What would you like folks who are struggling with their weight to know?  

Susan: Here are a few things I learned in this journey:

1) Don't quit, don't ever give up. Keep trying different things and eventually it will happen.

2) Believe in yourself and your ability to lose weight. Actions follow belief. If you believe you can, you will.

3) Don't be afraid to ask for help. For me, help came through a structured program, through friends and family, and through my faith.

4) Don't try to climb the mountain in one day. Take little steps, make small changes. Little steps add up to big results.

5) Take joy in the journey. This is a lifestyle, not a quick fix. Live life to the fullest - carpe diem - seize the day.

These things, by the way, apply to all areas of our life, not just losing weight. 

Ed: What's next?

Susan: I decided that since I skipped the marathon and went on to the ultras, I should go back and run one. So the Marine Corps Marathon is on the schedule for late October. I also have the JFK 50 in November, a 12 hr run in September, and a trail 50 miler in early October. From these I hope to be ready for the next test - the Umstead 100 miler in March. I keep pressing on, the journey never ends, just changes courses every now and then. 

Ed: Susan, is there anything we haven't covered that you would like to say to our readers?  

Susan: Most limits we place on ourselves are our limits. We have the potential to do much more than we think. When someone says they could never run a marathon, I reply "Yes, you could, if you were willing to put the time and energy into training for it."  I wrote the following in my training blog after my ten hour race. It is for me, and it is for all of us who are reaching for the stars: 

"Nothing is impossible. I stand on the shore of a vast sea, my goals and dreams a shadow on the distant shore. I can hesitate, I can think that they are too lofty and too far away to attain. Or I can believe in the human spirit, and in my God who strengthens me. I take a deep breath and plunge in." 

Ed: Thanks, Susan! You're a true inspiration and role model to the multitudes who are struggling with weight issues.


From 274 Pounds to ULTRA Runner in Less Than 2 Years

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Eat More Vegetables - 12 Easy Sneaky Ways to Get More Vegetables on Your Plate

!±8± Eat More Vegetables - 12 Easy Sneaky Ways to Get More Vegetables on Your Plate

Do you get 5-12 servings of fruits and vegetables every day?

I bet you would love to get your family eating more fruits and vegetables (and yourself too!) The latest recommendation is 5 - 12 servings and I am pretty sure MOST people don't eat nearly that!

I have some really sneaky ways to hide fruit and vegetable servings!

I don't find it difficult to personally get my recommended fruits and vegetables. My house is loaded with fresh produce of all descriptions. I have fresh watermelon, honey dew melon, cantaloupe, pears, apples (red delicious and granny smith), naval oranges, tangerines, blueberries, green and red grapes, bananas, a mango, black plums, nectarines, lemons, limes, avocado... and I am probably missing something. I also have several bags of frozen fruits in the freezer (mostly berries). That's just the fruit!

I won't begin to list all the fresh vegetables I have on hand... I know I would miss a lot. Health is not, however, about what I eat today (or what my family eats today). Health is about what we eat consistently over time. Each day of getting an abundance of fresh whole fruits and vegetables adds up to the grand total that will make a difference over the entire course of your life. It will affect how you feel, how you look, how you move, how you respond to viruses, how you fight off things like cancer. It is important that you pay attention to this now. It is not too late to start eating more fruits and vegetables.

As a mom, I found a number of creative ways over the years to get extra servings of vegetables into meals and snacks. You know the obvious ways, i.e. salads, veggie side dishes, and fresh fruit snacks or desserts, but these can get boring or tedious.

Here are 12 ways to make sure you get more fruits and vegetables.

Use grated vegetables in pasta sauces - When I used a canned pasta sauce I always saute onions, garlic, fresh mushrooms, green and red peppers and add the sauce with or with out browned ground beef, but I ALSO grate several large carrots to put in. Carrots give the sauce a real fresh flavored lift and the tomato sauce disguises the carrot flavor. To this day my family does not know I put carrots in their pasta sauce. Grated vegetables are also good in meat loaf or hamburger patties. When having spaghetti, grate a zucchini or 2 lengthwise and add it to the long noodles. If you peeled it they may not even know! Mix grated vegetables (carrots, onions, into salad dressings or sour cream and use as a veggie or corn chip dip. Smoothies - Using fresh or frozen berries as a base throw in some flax seed oil, a banana, and some melon (water melon, honey dew or cantaloupe) Then for more liquid JUICE 2 large carrots per person, and 1 pear per person, to dump in the blender instead of water! Add some "super fruit" powder or "green" powder to your smoothies for added wallop. Today it's easy to find organic freeze dried acai powder, goji powder, raspberry powder or any number of high antioxidant pure fruit powders. You can even find a mix of greens and fruits... these powders dramatically increase the power of your smoothie. Semi-frozen strawberry yogurt- take a cup of frozen strawberries, 1 cup of strawberry yogurt, 2 scoops of protein powder, and 2 tablespoons on flax seed oil. Blend. Add just enough apple or orange juice (or water) so the berries blend) Pour into bowls. This is MUCH more delicious than ice cream and makes a wonderful breakfast for children who don't like to eat in the morning Make more casseroles- meatless casseroles with cheese and spices are a yummy way to load up on veggies, and their easy too! Chop. Stir. Bake. Serve. Make it accessible... Veggies always fresh chopped and in serving sizes... with meals I put the large salad out and I get out their favorite salad dressings ad open the top and set it right next to the silverware, I always have fresh home made salsa available and they will often scoop that up as a condiment or side dish. Make fresh cobblers for dessert instead of pies. Lots of fruit in a very lightly greased baking dish topped with a crumble of equal parts raw oatmeal, almond meal, shaved coconut and a tablespoon of brown sugar. Add a bit of coconut oil to make a crumbly mixture and bake at 350 until fruit is soft and bubbly. If using apples or peaches sprinkle a bit of cinnamon. Berries may require a bit of your choice of sweetener. It is very fast to do something like this up and pop it in the oven after you take the casserole out. It is ready when your meal is done! Wrap large lettuce leaves around sandwich filling instead of bread. And don't forget celery or carrot sticks spread with peanut butter. YUM!

The other night my teen age daughter actually ASKED for a vegetarian dinner. I had taken some pita breads, brushed them with olive oil and sprinkled them with garlic powder and sea salt and then baked them until lightly browned at 450 degrees. Then I served some home made salsa, a guacamole made with fresh avocado, juice of one lime, garlic clove crushed, and cilantro, and served both dips with the "chips" and some carrots, celery, cucumbers, broccoli, and cherry tomatoes. The ONLY reason she asked for this is because she LOVES the "homemade nacho chips".

My rule of thumb is.. if I am having something they aren't crazy about, I serve it with something they love!

Happy healthy eating to you, and get your 5-12 a day! Twelveliness is next to healthiness!


Eat More Vegetables - 12 Easy Sneaky Ways to Get More Vegetables on Your Plate

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Friday, November 4, 2011

Medifast Food - A Wide Variety Of Nutrition Packed Diet Meals

!±8± Medifast Food - A Wide Variety Of Nutrition Packed Diet Meals

One of the most popular weight reduction plans today may be the Medifast food diet. It has been established to help individuals lose weight for 30 years. The key is in the daily meals that are ordered from their website and therefore are high in protein but lower in calories. There's a large choice with regards to Medifast food. It may take some trial and error to find those will be your favorites. The meals are created to be as tasty as you possibly can however the foremost concern is within offering you nutrient dense food full of protein, fiber, minerals and vitamins.

You can order the meals you prefer best and combine your personal daily menu, or select a package of Medifast food that's been selected for you. For example, you can order the women's four week package which has 143 meals just for under 0. This offers a savings of over ordering the meals individually. You will receive 42 shakes, 14 oatmeals, 28 nutrition bars, 14 soups, 7 scrambled eggs, 7 brownies, 14 soft serves, 7 cappuccinos, 7 chocolate chip pancakes, and 3 bonus meals.

While ordering a package of Medifast meals doesn't allow you to customize your options, it is an easy way to look for an entire month's price of meals. Other packages include a men's plan, diabetes package, and gluten free diet regime. All of these can be ordered with four weeks or fourteen days worth of food. You may also decide to enhance your food packages with the addition of Omega 3 fatty acid supplements.

When ordering individually, a few of the Medifast foods you are able to choose from include chocolate, peanut butter, or coffee soft serve, apple cinnamon, peach, or blueberry oatmeal, chocolate, banana, or vanilla pudding, and original or chocolate chip pancakes. For snacking, you may enjoy chili nacho or Parmesan cheese puffs, and cinnamon or honey mustard pretzels. Medifast offers 13 different flavors of nutritional bars including chocolate mint crunch, caramel crunch, cinnamon roll, fruit and nut, strawberry, and oatmeal raisin.

There are also several flavors of shakes to choose from such as Dutch chocolate, French vanilla, Swiss mocha, orange creme, strawberry creme, and cherry pomegranate. You will also be able to choose from several soups for example chicken noodle, chicken and rice, Maryland crab, cream of broccoli, beef vegetable, and chili.

You can observe there's a wide selection of Medifast food. These are delivered ready to eat or dried. It might take some obtaining the technique down when making soups and soft serve from dried ingredients. The meals should be prepared properly in order to achieve a pleasing consistency. Just as with all foods, there's a difference of opinion when it comes to taste. You might hear others raving about the chili and find you cannot stand it. The only method to be sure would be to get one of these particular meal on your own and see. That's why it may be smart to order an assortment pack so you can sample an extensive range from the menu prior to ordering individual items. Whenever you order individual foods, you always need to order a box of several servings at any given time which means you don't wish to order something you cannot stand.

One thing is perfect for sure, Medifast meals are convenient and can simplify your diet plan. That's half the battle to sticking with dieting. The other half is controlling your hunger, and Medifast will help you do this too because of the nutritional composition of the foods.


Medifast Food - A Wide Variety Of Nutrition Packed Diet Meals

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