
I'd like to get it down to 140. If I cut out all or most added table salt to my food, and removed the skin from chicken thighs and legs, that should help reduce BP but if so, considerably? Or cholestrol? Or both?
Plan B wrote:Dead man walking.
Seeking medical advice on a fucking gaming board, no less.
Bye bye, drum.
I started an exercise regime couple of years back, jogging, running and sprinting every day. Like many, laziness got the better of me after a short period of time and I stopped.Plan B wrote:Seriously, love you drum.
Just cut the shit food (you know exactly what "shit food" is) and excecrise
Wrongscared? wrote:wtf is a 150 blood pressure? bordeline is 120-139 over 80-89...
what kind of moron adds table salt?..rofl...DRuM wrote:... added table salt...
Sorry to say drum, but I agree with this. Are you a smoker? Most food (unless you're eating a raw food diet) has shit loads of salt in it already. Just throw your salt shaker in the fuckin' can. Also, drink a tall glass of water with every meal to help with digestion and to flush out impurities in your food. Strange (or boring) as it may sound, try to compare the way modern people eat compared to the way we "should" eat. 50,000 years ago, fruit was a god-send. Added sugar was nowhere. Likely the same with salt. Same goes for processed foods. If you cut out salt and sugar, you will find that natural, raw foods will begin to taste sweet or salty on their own. Call me a weirdo, but when I eat an apple, I get a pretty big sugar rush for about half an hour.seremtan wrote:what kind of moron adds table salt?..rofl...DRuM wrote:... added table salt...
Sure, but too many people shake salt on their food until it looks like it's frosted.Tsakali wrote:salt preference is... a preference. I also like the idea of not tampering with prepared food, but sometimes the chef is a moron.
I've been meaning to buy a set of those bamboo basket things for ages... you can cook delicious thingies with steam & it's indeed very healthy. Shall look for em during the weekendSurvivor wrote:Recently started cooking with steam. Mucho flavour, absolutely no salt necessary. Even steamed potatoes taste well. If you get one of those specially designed pans with a few steamtrays you can even do it all on one pan. Less shit to clean up.
If you're not going the bamboo route ikea has easy stuff: As for cooking; I find ingredient based cooking an ideal waste of time. It usually takes me an hour or perhaps 2 to fully prepare a meal, but in the end this also means you're definitely hungry, and it'll taste even more awesome. I usually have lots of basics in store like the herbs and spices, but also stuff which is used up quickly anyway like cucumbers, tomatoes and paprikas. A walk through the store then only necesitates buying real fresh stuff like lettuce, meat or specific fruit.Ryoki wrote:I've been meaning to buy a set of those bamboo basket things for ages... you can cook delicious thingies with steam & it's indeed very healthy. Shall look for em during the weekendSurvivor wrote:Recently started cooking with steam. Mucho flavour, absolutely no salt necessary. Even steamed potatoes taste well. If you get one of those specially designed pans with a few steamtrays you can even do it all on one pan. Less shit to clean up.
And what mrd said; there's already way too much salt in literally everything - it should really be avoided unless you're cooking natural, unprocessed food from scratch. Same thing with sugar.
I sometimes find it damn hard to summon the will to go out of my way to buy fresh food every day and still have the energy to spend half an hour putting a decent meal together, if there wasn't a Turkish supermarket with fresh everything near my work i don't know if i'd keep it up. But man it does pay off, everything tastes loads better and it's actually a lot cheaper than the shit at a regular supermarket. I do cheat now and then and eat something godawful, but these days i feel like a guilty, unhappy swine afterwards
yes, but not before you start suffering from high blood pressure, failing kidneys, dehydration, digestive problems and osteoporosisMemphis wrote:guiltymrd wrote: Sure, but too many people shake salt on their food until it looks like it's frosted.![]()
oh noes, i might die before bladder control loss
That's pretty much all I do tbh. I pour some salt into water when I'm boiling pasta or potatoes or any veg. The only other thing I do is a pinch of salt in the palm of my hand to sprinkle on baked potatoes.mrd wrote:
I use salt when I'm cooking, that's it.
just cut out added salt period.DRuM wrote:That's pretty much all I do tbh. I pour some salt into water when I'm boiling pasta or potatoes or any veg. The only other thing I do is a pinch of salt in the palm of my hand to sprinkle on baked potatoes.mrd wrote:
I use salt when I'm cooking, that's it.
Still, I'm going to cut out the salt in the water. All other salt is already in a lot of food I buy, so yeah, I need to be more selective on what I'm buying and cooking. I eat some healthy'ish meals, like
for example, grilled chicken with boiled potatoes and boiled fresh veg (swede, cabbage, cauliflower, etc), but I also tend to eat a fair bit of oven chips and breadcrumb coated things like chicken kievs or escalopes, or worse still, sausages. I guess it's a case of everything in moderation, but I do need to reduce a lot of the crap. Cakes, biscuits, chocolate for starters, had way too much of that shit the last few months. I am a sucker for milky bars and maltesers though