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SoLo Low-Glycemic Nutrition Bars | Energy and Protein Bar Reviews
November 9, 2008 on 11:41 pm | By Matt | In Product Reviews and Ratings | 5 CommentsThe endorsements for SoLo Nutrition Bars from athletes are impressive, but how does this low-glycemic nutrition bar hold up in the taste and nutrition department?
SoLo Bar Rating
Scale: 1-5 (1 Being Worst and 5 Being Best)
Flavor: 4
Texture: 3
Nutritional Profile: 4.5
Overall Rating: 3.8
Would You Eat It Again? Yes.
Price: $1.99
I’ve had box of SoLo Nutrition Bars sitting in my panty for a couple of months now.
My plan was to include them next round of head-to-head energy and protein bar reviews (which I still plan on doing), but then a week ago before my usual 5K run, I needed a quick pick-me-up. A protein shake just wasn’t cutting it, so I decided to dig in early and try out one of the SoLo Bars. Afterall, if they are good enough for Paul Tichelaar, member of the Canadian Olympic Triathalon Team, I figured they’d be fine for my measly little 3.1 mile run.
So I gave in, broke the seal on the box, and grabbed a Chocolate Charger.
.
Who Is SoLo Nutrition?
SoLo Nutrition Bars are manufactured and marketed by SoLo GI Nutrition in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. According to the company’s website, SoLo GI Nutrition is planning on developing a series of low-GI specialty performance foods and snacks, with SoLo Nutrition Bars being the first of these products.
SoLo Nutrition Bars: High Performance Nutrition?
SoLo’s unique claim to fame is that unlike many energy bars, the SoLo bars are formulated to reduce glycemic load on the body. Glycemic load is a measure of how a carbohydrate raises blood glucose (blood sugar) levels.
While this might seem like a marketing hook, there are actually some very solid, practical nutritional reasons why you might want to choose a nutrition and energy bar that minimizes blood glucose spikes. While blood glucose spikes can deliver a quick burst of power, rapid increases in blood sugar levels also have a tendency to cause energy crashes later on — exactly not the thing you want to happen during any type of endurance activity, like running, biking or even working out at the gym.
The manufacturers of SoLo Energy Bars claim that their particular low-glycemic nutrition bars are formulated to have minimal impact on blood sugar levels, providing more sustained energy to power your performance, exercise or endurance activity. They call this “Controlled Energy Response”, which is really just marketese for “slow-burning carbs.”
What you need to understand is that most energy and nutrition bars are extremely high in simple sugars, which make them suitable for post-workout nutrition when insulin sensitivity is increased and the body can more effectively utilize carbohydrates.
However, the high sugar content doesn’t make them as well suited as a pre-workout snack, when complex carbohydrates are the preferred source of sustained energy. And most energy bars are also too high in simple sugars to make them a smart choice for in-between meal snacking at the office. In fact, some “nutrition” bars are so high in sugar, that you’d be just as well off to grab a Snickers bar.
SoLo claims that their nutrition bars cause blood sugar to rise more slowly than the average energy bar, and those levels are sustained for longer periods of time.
According to SoLo’s literature, the first rise in blood sugar with a SoLo Bar occurs over a period of about 60 minutes, and then begins to trail off gradually over 180 minutes. This is much less pronounced than the spike you see with high-sugar, high-glycemic energy bars, where the initial blood sugar spike takes place in a very short window — typically within 30-40 minutes of ingesting the bar, and then drops back to pre-consumption levels within 60-90 minutes.
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Sphere: Related ContentEzekiel 4:9 Sprouted Grain Bread | Healthy Food of The Day
October 31, 2008 on 10:58 pm | By Matt | In Clean Eating, Healthy Eating | 3 CommentsFood For Life’s Ezekiel 4:9 Sprouted Grain Bread Is A Crunchy, Healthy, Protein-Balanced Slice of Organic Goodness
Bread made without flour? Out of sprouted grains, legumes and seeds? This couldn’t possibly taste good, could it?
In the past, I’ve sung the praises of Food for Life’s Ezekiel 4:9 sprouted grain cereal.
Based loosely on a Biblical recipe culled from the Book of Ezekiel, Food for Life (the company that makes Ezekiel bread) has introduced a whole line of sprouted grain foods that run the gamut from Cereal, to bread to pasta
and even tortillas.
Regardless of how you feel about the scriptural roots of these foods (or even your interpretation of the related Biblical passages — and there are many), the folks who make Ezekiel 4:9 bread and cereal are on to something. At the end of the day, you could be a pagan and still benefit from this bread.
While it seems inconceivable that you could make a crunchy cereal or fluffy, light loaf of bread out of sprouted grains and beans, Food for Life has figured out how to do it.
And even better, they’ve done it without sacrificing nutrition, flavor or using preservatives or sweeteners like high fructose corn syrup.
In the case of Ezekiel 4:9 Sprouted Grain Bread, the result is an organic, nutritionally-dense, high fiber bread that also is a complete protein — one of the few breads on the market that contain all 9 essential amino acids, is low in fat, has no Trans Fats or cholesterol and is generally low in sodium.
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Sphere: Related ContentDietary Fat: Five Myths About Fat | Diet Tips
April 9, 2008 on 6:47 pm | By Matt | In Diet Tips | 2 CommentsThink eating less fat will make you thinner? Not necessarily. Answer Fitness debunks the five most common myths people have around dietary fat.
Navigating the sometimes contradictory research and information around dietary fat can make a person’s head spin.
Should I eat more fat? Less fat? A different kind of fat? Here are the five most common myths around dietary fat:
Myth #1: Eating more fat makes you fatter
Not true.
Eating more calories than you burn makes you gain fat.
Whether those excess calories come from protein, carbohydrates or dietary fat, any calories that you eat above your daily energy requirements will get stored away as body fat.
The issue with dietary fat is that it’s extremely calorie dense, meaning that it contains more calories per gram than other macro-nutrients like protein or carbohydrates. This means that gram-for-gram, foods with a higher fat content contain more calories (9 calories per gram of fat versus 4 calories per gram for carbohydrates and protein.)
So if you aren’t careful, you can end up eating more calories in foods with higher fat content, even though you are eating the same amount of food.
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