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Archive for June, 2008
Free Printable Workout Log | Exercise & Training Logs
June 28, 2008 on 12:12 pm | By Matt | In Workout, Exercise and Training Logs | 24 CommentsUse This Free Printable Workout Log To Keep Track of Your Exercise and Fitness Training & Progress in the Gym
Keeping a regular workout log or exercise log sheet is one of the best ways to make sure that you are constantly making progress toward your fitness and exercise goals in the gym.
Regardless of your goals or fitness experience, recording your workouts, cardio, and weight training in a daily exercise log can help you make sure that you are always moving forward in beating your last workout, as well as let you identify possible sticking points in your training before you hit a wall or plateau.
As I’ve mentioned before in previous articles, one of the seven habits of highly fit people is that they keep a log of their workouts and exercise to not only make sure they are always progressing, but also to hold themselves accountable. Writing down your daily exercise in a log makes you mindful of what you are doing and allows you to review your progress after each workout or training session. It also let’s you build on each subsequent workout, so that you are always pushing yourself a little harder each time you hit the gym.
Why I Created This Free Workout Log
There are a number of free printable workout and exercise logs available on the Internet, as well as some excellent exercise logs that can be purchased at your local bookstore. However, after taking a look at the dozens of free blank exercise log sheets available on the web, I generally found that they didn’t treat exercise holistically enough.
Most of the workout logs used the generic Exercise/Weight/Reps/Sets formatting, and didn’t take into account other key factors that you need to keep track of, including rest periods, pre-and-post workout nutrition, training and fitness goals, sleep, duration of exercise and mind-body factors. All of these variables can impact your training performance and progress, regardless of whether you are a beginner or an advanced bodybuilder.
I also found that the formatting and visual presentation of most free printable workout logs left something to be desired. Having kept regular exercise logs for nearly five years, I know first hand the usability factors that can impact how easy it is for a person to consistently and effectively keep an exercise or workout log in a busy gym environment.
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Skim Milk | Healthy Food of the Day
June 21, 2008 on 7:33 am | By Matt | In Healthy Eating | 6 CommentsLearn how adding skim milk to your diet can help you build muscle, strengthen bones and maybe even lose some body fat along the way.
“Milk - it does a body good” has a new meaning for people looking to add muscle, stave-off bone loss and reduce body fat.
A flurry of research — albeit, mostly funded by the dairy industry — over the past few years has suggested that including skim milk or fat-free milk into your diet can actually help you lose weight. But aside from the weight loss claims (which we’ll take a look at later), there are additional reasons that including skim milk in your diet can keep you fit, trim and healthy.
What is Skim Milk?
Skim milk is whole milk from dairy cows that has most or all of it’s fat removed.
Traditionally, this was done by letting milk settle, and then “skimming” the fat off the top of the milk. What is left is the protein-rich, low-fat liquid below the layer of fat. In modern milk processing, the de-fatting process is done with centrifuges (basically the milk is spun around inside a big stainless steel tank and the fat is separated and drained off.)
Skim milk (also labeled as “fat-free milk” or “non-fat” milk) generally has less than 0.5 percent milk fat. Low-fat, semi-skimmed milk or “1% milk” has between 1 and 2 percent fat. For comparisons sake, whole cows milk has around 3.5 percent fat, or 7.9 grams of fat (4.6 grams of which are the “bad” saturated type of fat) in a 1 cup (16 oz) serving. In terms of calories, whole milk weighs in at 147 calories, in comparison to the 91 calories in skim milk.
Clearly choosing skim milk over whole or even 2% milk makes the most sense from a fat and calorie perspective.
But what about the difference in nutrition between skim milk and whole milk? Does the skimming process remove any nutrients?
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Total Body Workout with Weight Machines | Workout Routines
June 15, 2008 on 1:33 pm | By Matt | In Workout Routines | 5 CommentsNot ready for the free weight room? This total body workout routine uses the most common weight machines at the gym to give your entire body a great workout in under 60 minutes.
Total body workouts (also known as “full body workouts”) are a great way to build muscle, burn fat, develop core stability and strength, and cut down on your overall time in the gym. Generally, total body workouts are most effective when they are built around compound, multi-joint exercises that use free weights like dumbbells and barbells.
But not everyone feels comfortable in the free weight room, and if you are just starting a resistance or weight training routine, it can take some practice to learn how to perform free weight exercises with good form. Weight machines can provide a way for newcomers to get a feel for basic form and movement, build a nice strength foundation, and eventually feel more comfortable transitioning into free weight exercises.
Incorporating weight training machines into your workout can also benefit advanced trainees as well, since machines allow you to go with heavier weight than you can typically use in a free weight lift. This can be useful for breaking training plateaus. And because weight machines don’t require you to swap out plates, you can typically move through your workout more quickly — a plus if you are pressed for time.
So by popular demand, I’ve created a version of my free weight full body workout that is adapted to give you a total body workout using weight machines alone. Actually, this workout uses a combination of multi station weight training machines, cable exercise machines and some body weight exercise equipment like chin/dip stations. With a few exceptions, the same rules and guidelines of that total body workout apply to this version. We’ll recap those a bit later.
But first, let’s take a quick look at the advantages and disadvantages of using weight machines, instead of free weights, as part of a total body workout routine.
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Weight Machines | A Visual Guide to Gym Weight Machines
June 15, 2008 on 11:04 am | By Matt | In Weight Machines | No CommentsWhat do all those different weight machines at the gym do? Learn to identify and use the most common weight machines.
Making sense of all of the fitness equipment available to you in the gym can be daunting, especially for beginners. Use this illustrated, visual guide to identify the most common weight machines and equipment in the gym.
Weight Machines for Your Chest
Chest Press Machine 

Chest Pec Deck/Chest Fly Machine

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Mexican Cheese Dip Recipe | Healthy Recipes
June 10, 2008 on 6:38 am | By Matt | In Dips | 1 CommentTry this healthy low-fat version of Mexican Cheese Dip for an amazing high-protein, low-calorie snack. And it doubles as a healthy enchilada filling!
Who doesn’t love a restaurant-style Mexican cheese dip? Cool, creamy and spicy all at the same time, there’s nothing quite like the combination of cheese dip, tortillas and a side of salsa to kick off Mexican fiesta.
Of course, most Mexican cheese dips - especially the restaurant variety — are loaded with sour cream and full-fat cheese. Not a great combination if you’re counting calories, trying to lose that gut or keep your summer abs nice and defined.
This version of Mexican Cheese Dip has been lightened up (it comes in at around 80 calories per 1/2 cup serving,) without losing one iota of flavor. Trust me, it’s that good.
One of the great things about Mexican food is that the predominance of highly-flavorful spices and ingredients like cumin, coriander, garlic, onion and chiles allows you to create healthy versions of most Mexican dishes without losing the flavors you’ve come to love.
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Baked Blue Corn Chips with Flaxseed from Garden of Eatin | Healthy Snack of the Day
June 7, 2008 on 7:34 am | By Matt | In Healthy Recipes & Snacks | 1 CommentLooking for a healthy alternative to traditional corn chips? Check out these tasty organic blue corn tortilla chips that include … flaxseed!
Okay, despite trying to stay away from processed grains, it’s hard to resist eating tortilla chips every now and then.
In the past, most health-conscious people reserved corn chips for ”cheat days” or special occasions. Loaded with high-glycemic carbs, fat and sodium, corn chips generally aren’t considered a “health food.”
However, with the new crop of baked chips that have hit the market over the past few years, it’s become possible to find corn chips that not only taste good, but can be part of a healthy diet.
That doesn’t mean all baked corn chips are created equal, or even taste particularly good. I’ve had plenty of baked corn and potato chips that ranked only slightly above paperboard on the taste and texture scale. And many baked chips are simply too fragile to hold up to a thick dip.
Garden of Eatin Baked Blue Corn Chips: Finally A Healthy Corn Chip!
So imagine my surprise when I took a chance on a new brand of baked corn chips and discovered probably the tastiest non-fried tortilla chip that ever found its way to a bowl of fresh salsa: Garden of Eatin Baked Blue Corn Chips Tortilla Chips.
There are a couple of things I really like about these corn chips.
First, they are certified USDA organic. While that alone wouldn’t make up for a bad tasting baked chip, it’s definitely a plus (I especially like the fact that they are made without any genetically-engineered grains.)
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Full Body Workout Plan | Workout Routines
June 6, 2008 on 7:48 pm | By Matt | In Workout Routines | 142 CommentsFull Body Workout Routine Not Only Builds Muscle But It Torches Fat … in Less Than 60 Minutes.
Can you spare 60 minutes, three times a week?
If the answer is “yes” I have the perfect workout routine for you: A “Full Body Workout” program that will get you in-and-out of the gym in
less than an hour, will amp up your metabolism for the next 48 hours and — after about a month — will give you noticeable improvements not only in your strength, but also your physique.
Oh, and expect to drop some body fat in the process.
Why A Full Body Workout?
Full body workouts are probably the single most under-utilized workout routines in the gym.
Regardless of your experience level or existing strength, working your entire body in a single session is not only challenging, but an extremely effective way to build muscle, strength and even burn fat in the process. Even experienced bodybuilders can reap the benefits of switching to a full body workout, especially if they’ve been on a split routine plan for an extended period of time.
Before we actually take a look at a full body workout routine, let’s quickly discuss some of the advantages of working your entire body in a single session and the basics you need to know about before getting started.
The Benefits of Full Body Workouts
There are a number of benefits to performing full body workouts, including:
- Better core development
- Less overall time in the gym
- Improved recovery intervals
- Reduced risk of overtraining
- Greater training frequency per muscle group
- Increased energy expenditure during and after training
- Increases in beneficial growth hormones
- Highly customizable to different training goals, whether that is strength, muscle size (hypertrophy) , endurance or a combination of the three
- Better overall muscular development and symmetry
- Reduced risk of developing muscle imbalances, especially among smaller stabilizer muscles
- Secondary cardiovascular benefits
- Appropriate for all ages and levels of experience, from beginners to advanced trainees
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