Skip to content

Wellness Blog

BrainMD

The New Science of Sleep: Personalized Supplements for Stress, Discomfort and Racing Thoughts

BrainMD

Here Are 6 of the Best Ways to Avoid Cognitive Decline

BrainMD

Smart Electrolytes: We Just Gave Your Water the Health Boost It Needs!

10 Foods & Beverages to Warm You Up This Winter

10 Foods & Beverages to Warm You Up This Winter

Q: What keeps you warm but doesn’t involve turning up the thermostat, starting a fire, or putting on a coat? (No, this isn’t a riddle.) A: Warming foods. It’s true. Some foods can make you feel warmer. The following 10 foods, spices, and beverages have properties that can stoke your metabolism and help increase blood flow to warm your body while also delighting your senses and taste buds. 10 Delicious Foods & Beverages to Keep Warm This Winter 1. Garlic Garlic is well-known for its warming properties, as are its close relatives – onion, shallot, leek, and chives. Research shows that garlic enhances thermogenesis (the body’s process of metabolizing a substance or nutrient to produce heat). Enjoy garlic and onion together as the perfect additions to any winter soup and stew. 2. Root Vegetables Root vegetables (such as beets, carrots, parsnips, sweet potatoes, and yams) can make a perfect side dish for winter meals. Made of complex carbohydrates, which are high in fiber, they digest more slowly, which generates heat in the body. It’s no accident that many traditional holiday meals include whole, sliced, or mashed vegetables…they help keep us warm! 3. Ginger Whether you enjoy ginger in tea or a savory stir-fry, it will deliver heat. Ginger has vasodilating properties, meaning it relaxes blood vessels, which helps to increase blood flow causing a warming effect throughout the body. A 2018 study found that ginger increased body temperature in women just ten minutes after consuming a ginger tea and that it kept women warm for longer than other hot beverages. Ginger tea is also soothing for the tummy. 4. Cayenne Spicy foods are often eaten in warm climates as they promote sweating, which cools you down. But this versatile spice also can warm you up. Cayenne contains a phytochemical called capsaicin, which helps turn up the heat in your body. Capsaicin digests slowly and increases gastric blood flow, which benefits your gut and warms your body. Jalapeños and ultra-spicy habaneros also contain capsaicin. Add a warming “kick” to a winter meal with any of these hot spices. 5. Meat Proteins are harder to digest than carbs or fats, and an intensely protein-rich meal can help warm you up. A study found that meat-based protein requires more energy to break down than plant-sourced protein, such as soy. Meats are also rich in minerals such as iron and B vitamins, which can help warm you if you’re iron deficient. Winter is the perfect time to make a savory beef stew or a chicken casserole dish. 6. Black Beans If you aren’t a meat-eater, enjoy a plant-based protein, like black beans, to produce warmth. A half-cup of these beans contains nearly eight grams of protein and lots of fiber to help keep you full. Black beans also have loads of nutrients, some of which enhance blood flow. A study that looked at thermogenesis with protein-rich and fat-rich meals found that protein will keep you three times warmer than a fat. Make a delicious black bean soup on a cold day to stoke your inner heat. Add some cayenne or other hot peppers for a warming boost. 7. Coffee Turn on your body heat with a morning cup of Joe. It’s actually the caffeine in coffee that activates thermogenesis, warming you up (so don’t drink decaf). If you prefer black or green tea, you’ll still warm up as they contain some caffeine. 8. Oats Whole grains such as oats are high in bran and fiber, which are slow to break down. The slow digestion releases warming energy and prevents spikes in blood sugar that can heat you up before quickly cooling you down. Other whole grains, such as brown rice, quinoa, millet, barley, and buckwheat, also break down slowly and deliver similar warming effects. Make yourself a delicious hot cereal with nuts and dried fruit for a thoroughly warming breakfast. Enjoy it with a caffeinated, warm beverage for an extra boost of heat. 9. Cinnamon  Cinnamon is the spice of winter. There’s a reason for that. It has thermogenic properties that can raise your body temperature in cold weather. As an added bonus, cinnamon may help boost memory, learning, and mood, as well as help support healthy blood sugar levels. You can warm your body and boost your mood and brain function at the same time. Enjoy it in beverages (hot apple cider anyone?) or on your morning oats. 10. Bananas  It may seem unlikely that a tropical fruit can warm you up, but banana’s B vitamins and magnesium can help do the trick. These nutrients support thyroid and adrenal gland health, which help regulate body temperature in cold weather. Enjoy a banana on a winter’s day with a nut butter, which adds complexity to create further warmth in the body. While these foods may warm you up from the inside this winter, don’t forget to put on your coat!   At BrainMD, we’re dedicated to providing the highest purity nutrients to improve your physical health and overall well-being. For more information about our full list of brain healthy supplements, please visit us at BrainMD.

Learn more
Avoid These Foods When You Feel Anxious or Stressed

Avoid These Foods When You Feel Anxious or Stressed

Many people would do just about anything to alleviate their stress and worry. This kind of desperation can lead to making rash decisions, which can have potentially dire consequences on overall health and well-being. Unhealthy Cravings When you’re stressed out, you may be tempted to use food as a coping mechanism. Craving foods loaded with sugar, salt, and simple carbohydrates can make you feel worse by causing your blood sugar to spike and then crash. Consider typical comfort foods like mac and cheese, mashed potatoes and gravy, and ice cream. Your brain might crave these foods when you’re stressed. Your brain might even tell you that bingeing on these foods will help alleviate your stress. But, if you listen to your stressed-out brain, you may end up feeling worse. These high carb foods can increase your levels of the stress hormone cortisol. This can make it more difficult to calm your anxious thoughts. Foods that Cause Stress & Anxiousness Foods that contain sugar and gluten can trigger pleasure centers in your brain, which might keep you reaching for unhealthy foods. Let’s look at some foods you should avoid: Corn – Eating corn or corn-based products can make you more anxious and stressed. Corn is high in carbohydrates, which can spike your blood sugar. Corn is also high in starch, which can leave you feeling drowsy and lousy. Sugar – Processed, sugary treats can seem irresistible when you have low mood or energy. Your brain might try to convince you that you’ll have more energy after grabbing a snack from the fridge at home or vending machines at work. However, soon after the sugar rush, you’ll experience an energy crash, which can leave you feeling lethargic and unable to focus. Wheat – Wheat-based products (bread, tortillas, toast, etc.) can be difficult to drop from your diet. When these carbohydrates are processed in your body, they’re immediately broken down into sugar. Gluten in wheat can damage your intestinal lining, but switching to healthier foods – like fruits, vegetables, healthy fats, and proteins – can help enhance well-being. Since stress is one of the most common triggers for emotional overeating, reducing your anxious thoughts can be an important part of improving your eating habits. These 5 calming foods can promote calm when you feel anxious or stressed… 5 Calming Foods to Boost Your Mood & Relieve Stress 1. Poultry Poultry is an excellent source of tryptophan, an amino acid that your body can’t produce on its own. Tryptophan is necessary for the creation of serotonin, one of the brain’s primary mood-regulating chemicals. As more tryptophan enters the brain, it facilitates circuits that use serotonin, which can then improve your mood. Be sure to purchase organic, free-range poultry that hasn’t been pumped full of hormones or antibiotics. Also, make sure your bird has been kept in an air-chilled case at the store. 2. Berries Berries are one of the most concentrated sources of antioxidants in the plant kingdom. The greater the variety of berries you eat, the broader the antioxidant protection you’ll have. Blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries are all high in antioxidants. The antioxidants in these berries help protect the brain and the rest of the body against oxidative stress, including from toxic pollutants. 3. Dark Chocolate Chocolate is one of the ultimate comfort foods. The very taste of chocolate can produce a near euphoric state in many people. Dark chocolate is full of protein and fiber, improves blood flow to the brain, and supports a positive mood and healthy cognition. Multiple research studies have shown that dark chocolate slows down the production of cortisol. Also, chocolate promotes the brain’s release of dopamine and endorphins and boosts serotonin levels, all of which help create a more positive mood. 4. Green Tea Green tea contains GABA, the brain’s major calming neurotransmitter. Additionally, green tea contains l-theanine, which is known for reducing stress and worry while improving mood, focus, memory, and mental alertness. Green tea is just one of the many healthy varieties of tea. Many herbal teas, such as chamomile, have calming properties, and black, white, and red (rooibos) teas are rich in antioxidants. Drinking a cup of warm tea can help relieve stress and lift the spirits. 5. Leafy Greens Spinach is loaded with mood-moderating magnesium. Raw spinach is so nutritious, some people believe it contains bliss-enhancing nutrients. It’s a good source of fiber and is loaded with vitamin A, potassium, folate, and magnesium. In addition to leafy green vegetables, different colored vegetables, such as bell peppers, squash, broccoli, and cauliflower, all have tremendous health benefits. They provide an enormous array of vitamins, essential minerals, carotenoids, and free-radical blocking antioxidants to help protect the brain and body against toxins. To help boost your calm, try these good mood foods the next time you feel anxious or stressed!   At BrainMD, we’re dedicated to providing the highest quality supplements to improve your physical health and overall well-being. For more information about our full list of brain healthy supplements, please visit us at BrainMD. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This content is for informational purposes only. It is not meant to substitute for medical or healthcare advice from a physician, nor is it intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your healthcare provider before beginning a new health regimen.

Learn more
10 Ways to Make Your Meal Prep Brain Healthy

10 Ways to Make Your Meal Prep Brain Healthy

These days, with hectic schedules jam-packed with school projects, work presentations, meetings, errands, sporting events, concerts, and other social functions, who has time to think about meals? Fortunately, there’s a super helpful way to relieve the stress that can come from buying and making food every day. Learning the essentials of meal prepping is a great way to save time and money…and eat healthily. To streamline your mealtime, here are 10 simple ways to plan out and create a series of savory and healthy meals... 10 Easy and Healthy Meal Prep Tip 1. Make a Plan As Benjamin Franklin once said, “If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail!” Before heading out to the store to purchase a week’s worth of groceries, take stock of what you already have on hand. Make an inventory of what’s in your refrigerator, freezer, pantry and spice rack. In the long run, you’ll save time and money if you have a solid plan in place for everything you need to buy for your weekly meal prep. It might surprise you just how much easier it is to make healthy meals when you plan ahead.  2. The Power of Protein Be sure to include protein with every meal. Protein helps maintain healthy blood sugar levels, decrease cravings, and power your metabolism more than high-carb, sugar-filled foods. Nuts, seeds, legumes, grains, and vegetables all contain some of the 20 essential amino acids you need. Fish, poultry, and most meats contain all of them. Shop for animal protein that is free-range, grass-fed, and free of hormones and antibiotics. For fish, seek out sustainably harvested and mercury-free sources. Though more expensive than industrial, farm-raised animal protein, quality fish and other meats are a good investment in your health. 3. Smart Shopping Pick one day a week to go food shopping. Fill your cart with vegetables and other nutrient-rich foods to help fuel your body and keep your brain active and healthy. Avoid processed, boxed foods as much as possible. Never shop without a grocery list as this can create the need to make multiple trips to the store if you forget important items. Try to purchase everything you need for meal prep in just one shopping trip each week. 4. Eat from the Rainbow In addition to leafy green vegetables like spinach, kale, and collard greens, different colored vegetables, such as bell peppers, squash, broccoli, and cauliflower, all have tremendous health benefits. They provide an enormous array of vitamins, essential minerals, free radical-blocking carotenoids, and flavonoids that are excellent antioxidants. Plant foods (phytonutrients) also can help balance healthy inflammatory response and lessen your chances of brain, heart, blood pressure, blood sugar, joint, or gastrointestinal problems. 5. Prepare Together If possible, try tackling your “to do” list with others. Spending time with friends and family while you share tasks, like shopping, cooking, and cleaning can be an enjoyable time of bonding. Plus, the more helping hands you have, the quicker the meal prep process should go. You don’t have to do it all by yourself, so don’t be afraid to enlist some help. 6. “Smart” Carbohydrates So-called “smart” carbohydrates are essential to life because they’re loaded with nutrients, help keep your blood sugar in healthy balance, and decrease cravings. Most vegetables, legumes, and low glycemic fruits (apples, pears, and berries) are smart carbs. When shopping for fruits, only purchase those that have the lowest sugar content and the lowest glycemic (unlikely to raise blood sugar) indexes. 7. Schedule a Time Set aside one day each week to prepare meals that are balanced and healthy. Having a set time hardwired into everyone’s schedule will help make meal prep a priority while giving your handy helpers something to look forward to. If something comes up and you need to change your meal prep day, that’s okay. Try to reestablish a consistent day as soon as your schedule allows. 8. Healthy Fats The body needs fats to build cell structure. The most healthy fats tend to come from foods that contain omega-3 fatty acids, which are found in chia seeds, ground flaxseeds, walnuts, avocados, and sweet potatoes. Though the body can convert some of these into small amounts of EPA and DHA, cold-water fish (salmon, tuna, mackerel, sardines, anchovies, and cod) are good sources of actual, preformed EPA and DHA. Avoid farmed salmon and try to get cold-water fish from Alaska or close to the Antarctic, where the ocean waters are the least contaminated. 9. Antioxidant-Rich Berries The brain is vulnerable to attack by free radicals – highly reactive molecules that burn away antioxidants. Berries are one of the most concentrated sources of antioxidants in the plant kingdom. The antioxidants in blueberries help protect the brain against oxidative stress (including from toxic pollutants), support learning capability and motor skills and have shown promise for memory in clinical trials. Other berries, including strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries, as well as goji, mangosteen, and noni, provide differing classes of antioxidants. The greater the variety of berries you eat, the broader the antioxidant protection you’ll have. 10. Quality Storage Containers After you’ve prepared several delicious and nutritious meals, make sure you have adequate means to preserve the food. Storage containers are one of the most important parts of meal prep. If you don’t already own quality storage containers, now is the time to invest in some. Select containers that are specifically designed to hold healthy portions and make sure they’re dishwasher and microwave safe. Whether glass or plastic, purchase durable containers that will last for several years. If you intend to freeze foods, make sure the containers have tight seals to prevent freezer burn. Following these 10 meal prep tips can help relieve the stress and tedium of making piecemeal meals and free up more time for you to do the things you love. You can find many delicious, brain-healthy recipes in The Brain Warrior’s Way Cookbook.   At BrainMD, we’re dedicated to providing the highest quality supplements to improve your physical health and overall well-being. For more information about our full list of brain healthy supplements, please visit us at BrainMD. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This content is for informational purposes only. It is not meant to substitute for medical or healthcare advice from a physician, nor is it intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your healthcare provider before beginning a new health regimen.

Learn more