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Protect Your Arteries from Saturated Fat with These Foods

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If you’re going to have something unhealthy, is there anything you can eat with it to help mitigate the damage it may cause?

If you compare the artery function of vegetarians and meat-eaters, the healthy ability of arteries to dilate and let more blood flow is significantly better among those eating a vegetarian diet. And not just by a little—we’re talking four times better, as you can see below and at 0:24 in my video Foods to Help Protect Your Arteries from Saturated Fat.

Vegetarians do tend to be younger, smoke less, be slimmer, and have lower rates of diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and heart disease. But the researchers controlled for all that and only let healthy nonsmokers into the study. They also recruited a group of meat eaters who were similarly slim, with comparable blood pressure and nearly identical cholesterol levels. Yet the really healthy cohort of omnivores still got their arteries handed to them by the vegetarians, and the longer someone was meat-free, the better. The degree of superior artery function correlated with the number of years eating meat-free. Instead of their artery function worsening over time as they aged, it got better the longer they ate that way, as you can see below and at 1:03 in my video.

This suggests that vegetarian diets, on their own, have a direct beneficial effect on artery function and may help explain the lower rates of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular mortality.

Since researchers were able to control for other known risk factors, they figured it must be the food. But what aspect of the food? Is it simply the absence of meat’s harmful effects? Or could it also be that the vegetarians are eating more whole, healthy plant foods? For example, they could be eating up to a serving more vegetables per day.

Researchers compared two junky meals—an Egg McMuffin, Sausage McMuffin, and hash brown patties to Frosted Flakes—and found the fatty fast-food meal impaired artery function within hours, but the sugary cereal meal didn’t. They blamed the fat, but it may just be the animal fat, since high-fat whole plant foods like nuts don’t have the same effect. In fact, a systematic review of all the randomized controlled trials on the effect of nut consumption on artery function shows that nuts actually result in significant improvements over time.

Enough to counter the artery-crippling effects of a salami sandwich? The answer is yes for walnuts, but no for almonds.

Just like some fruits are better than others, like blueberries over bananas, some nuts are better than others. Walnuts appear to be the blueberries of nuts.

What about the blueberry of berries? That would be blueberries themselves. A randomized, controlled crossover trial tested the effects of cooked blueberries, raw blueberries, or no blueberries at all. Researchers fed people buns made out of white flour, eggs, butter, and salt—filled with mostly sugar and eggs—and saw a gradual drop in artery function over the next six hours. But when the equivalent of a cup of wild blueberries was added to that same bun, there was a big boost in artery function, almost as if the blueberries had been just mixed with water, as you can see below and at 2:57 in my video.

About the same amount of strawberries failed to rescue artery function from the likes of two cheese blintzes, whipped cream, sugary syrup, egg, and bacon, but that is quite the heavy load to bear.

What about testing açai berries against a meal with a similar amount of fat? One and a half frozen açai smoothie packs blended with half a small banana in water significantly rehabilitated arterial function compared to a control smoothie with the same banana and water, colored to look like the açai version. (Though, obviously, it would have tasted different.) You can see the results below and at 3:20 in my video.

Another group of researchers went all out and performed a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial with raspberries. They measured artery function at 2 hours and again at 24 hours after participants drank either a smoothie made with frozen red raspberries (about ¾ cup or about 1½ cups, blended with water) or a placebo drink designed to match both color and taste. The fake berry drink had no effect on artery function, but both raspberry drinks did, as you can see below and at 3:56 in my video.

Note the ¾ cup dose seemed to work just as well as the 1½ cups dose, which is what you see with blueberries: The benefits plateau after about a cup.

The bottom line is that consuming “dietarily achievable amounts of red raspberries acutely improves” artery function for up to 24 hours. Yes, that’s true, but by the end of the day, you may only be up by about 1%. At a population level, however, each 1% increase is associated with a 12% reduction in risk of a cardiovascular event like a heart attack or stroke. All from just having a berry smoothie.

What about berry juice? Researchers tested five different concentrations of cranberry juice, along with a placebo control evidently indistinguishable in color and taste. The 25% cranberry juice drink gave a little bump to artery function at two hours; the 50% juice was still working eight hours later. The other three—the 75% juice, the one that was nearly pure juice, and the ultraconcentrated juice—also improved artery function within hours of consumption, as you can see below and at 4:52 in my video.

But this, like that last raspberry study, just involved straight berries without some artery-crushing meal.

Would berry juice be able to stop artery dysfunction caused by a high-fat meal, which can reduce artery function within hours? Researchers created a cocktail of grapes, blueberries, strawberries, lingonberries, and black aronia berries, but found no significant change after the high-fat meal. (Of course, drinking the berries alone would likely improve artery function, but it’s better than nothing.)

Well, what about drinking something a little less exotic than black aronia berries, like orange juice? Study participants were given a high-fat meal of ham and cheese croissants, along with either a cup of water, orange juice, green tea, or red wine. Their arteries didn’t much like the croissants, and orange juice was useless, as was a cup of green tea and the red wine, so, it’s probably best not to eat ham and cheese croissants in the first place.

In fact, drinking orange juice with a fatty meal could actually make things worse. When study participants were given bacon and cheese muffins with or without orange juice, researchers found that the orange juice led to a longer period of elevated fat levels in the blood. This may be because the body preferentially burns for energy all the rapidly absorbed free sugars in the juice—meaning sugars not encased in cell walls as they are in whole fruit.

Doctor’s Note

This is the third in a three-video series on fast food. If you missed the first two, check out How a Single Meal Can Cripple Your Arteries and Lungs and Can Exercise Counteract a High-Fat Meal?.

If you want to go deeper into the effects of specific foods, see the related posts below.

 



If You Can’t Do This, You’re Not Fit (Even If You Look It)

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Start a free two-week trial of the BWS+ App: https://bws.plus/16a

Watch us test every cardio exercise for fat loss: https://youtu.be/Fz89dJTZsko

What does healthy aging look like? How do you know if you’re aging well? Mariana is almost 60 and can still pull herself up with just three fingers. Melinda is 61 and has never touched a weight. Both faced 7 science-backed fitness tests, including the sit to stand test, alongside younger participants — each worth 1 point for baseline, 2 for advanced — to find out what age and lifestyle really do to the body. We’ll also learn how to optimize your performance on these tests for longevity’s sake.

The broad jump tests lower body power, one of the first qualities to decline from ageing. Baseline: jump your own height if younger, at least half your height if over 55. Advanced is 2 meters for women and 2.5 for men. Ravin does not train at all but passed at 29. Yash passed. Melinda barely cleared the minimum. Mariana, at nearly 60, came much closer to the younger men. To improve: jumps, sprints, or kettlebell swings. Beginners start with a goblet squat.

The reverse lunge tests single-leg strength and stability. Baseline is 8 reps with 25% of body weight in each hand, both sides. Advanced is 8 Bulgarian split squats with 50% for men and 30% for women. Melinda was out in less than a rep. Ravin lasted a little longer with poor form. Yash and Mariana both passed the baseline, but the advanced test split them: Yash had strength but not stability. Mariana passed. Bilateral lifts let the stronger leg quietly do more work, hiding imbalances that single-leg tests expose — gaps that tend to widen with age. Progression for healthy aging: stationary split squats, reverse lunges, Bulgarian split squats.

The chin-up tests whether you’re aging well by determining if the upper body can pull its own weight. Baseline for men is 1 clean rep. Advanced is 3 weighted reps at 50% body weight for men, or 5 clean bodyweight reps for women. Ravin and Melinda both failed. Yash cleared the baseline and nearly reached the advanced mark at around two and a half reps. Mariana cleared the women’s advanced range and kept going — finishing with a three-finger pull-up at nearly 60. She climbs regularly and her DXA showed around 17% body fat, exceptionally lean for her age. Path: inverted rows, band-assisted reps, lighter bands, unassisted, then weighted.

The one-mile run estimates cardiovascular fitness. Baseline is under 10 minutes if younger, under 12 if over 55. Advanced is under 7 minutes and 9 minutes or less respectively. Ravin burned out early; Yash nearly hit the advanced time from a running and sports base maintained without direct cardio. Mariana was the only one to beat the advanced benchmark for her age. Low cardio fitness carries risk comparable to high blood pressure and diabetes, and declines roughly 1% per year after your mid-20s. Melinda and Ravin both had alarmingly high visceral fat on their DXA scans. Mariana had almost none. Start with challenging walking intervals, then build toward running, cycling, swimming, or sport.

The wall mobility test checks the shoulders and upper back, which is often tight from sitting and poor posture. Stand a foot from a wall with glutes and upper back against it, raise arms to a goalpost position, and keep the head touching without arching the back or flaring the ribs. The problem is pressing muscles overpowering the mid and lower traps, driving upper back rounding that raises fracture and injury risk with age. Fix: over-and-backs with a band or towel, then wall slides, done daily. This can help fix rounded shoulders and other posture issues as well as neck pain and shoulder pain.

The roll-down test assesses core strength through controlled repetitions. Baseline is 25, advanced is more than 50. A weak core hurts posture, balance, and back health — visible abs are a separate matter, driven mainly by body fat, roughly 15% for men and 25% for women. Most participants finished quickly. Mariana kept going and showed part of her routine, starting with a 45-pound plate. To improve core strength, the best core exercises are progressing with the roll-downs, then progress to RKC planks, ab rollouts, and weighted crunches.

The sit-to-stand test is the most predictive of the group for longevity: sit on the floor and stand back up without using hands, knees, or support. In a study of roughly 2,000 adults aged 51 to 80, poor scorers were 5 to 6 times more likely to die over the following six years. Progression hip stretches for hip mobility: 90/90 hip stretch, unsupported transitions, windshield-wiper leg movements, full get-up.

0:00 – 0:38 What We’re Testing
0:38 – 4:31 Test 1
4:40 – 7:55 Test 2
8:18 – 12:15 Test 3
12:21 – 17:42 Test 4
17:43 – 20:10 Test 5
20:11 – 23:15 Test 6
23:16 – 26:22 Test 7
26:23 – 26:57 How You Rank

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If you Eat Less… #shorts | Stay Fit with Ramya

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Stop Weighting Book :
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#stayfitwithramya #shorts #eatless

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Sausage and Peppers Recipe (Grill or Stovetop)


This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.

This Sausage and Peppers Recipe is an easy Italian dinner with juicy sausage, sweet peppers, and onions. Perfect for grilling or cooking indoors.

Sausage and Peppers

Sausage and Peppers Recipe

Sausage and peppers is a dinner I never get tired of. It’s been a family favorite for years because it’s quick, everyone loves it, and it couldn’t be easier to make. I use Italian chicken sausage, which has all the flavor of traditional pork sausage but with less fat, and I’ve found a few brands my family prefers. During the colder months, I cook it indoors, but once grilling season starts, everything, including the peppers and onions, goes on the grill. It’s a staple at our backyard gatherings, served with plenty of crusty bread. More variations try my Sheet Pan Roasted Potatoes, Sausage, and Peppers, which is great in the winter, and this Cheesy Sausage and Peppers in foil packets, which is perfect for grilling while camping.

Why You’ll Love Italian Sausage and Peppers

Gina @ Skinnytaste.com

Sausage and peppers is one of my go-to meals when I need a simple dinner year-round. It’s perfect for entertaining in the summer and easy enough for weeknight dinners.

  • Versatile: If you don’t have a grill, I provide instructions for three different cooking methods.
  • Quick and Easy: Just a few ingredients, ready in about 30 minutes.
  • Family-friendly: Even if your kids don’t love the peppers and onions, you can serve the sausage with bread.
Gina signature

Ingredients

Sausage and peppers are the main ingredients here. Just add some bread and a few other kitchen staples for a fast and easy dinner. See the recipe card below for the exact measurements.

Ingredients for Sausage and Peppers

  • Olive oil for sauteing the vegetables
  • Vegetables: Red and yellow bell peppers, onion
  • Kosher salt and black pepper for seasoning
  • Italian chicken sausage: My favorites are Premio and Al Fresco. Whole Foods also carries a great option. Use sweet or hot Italian sausage, depending on your spice preference.
  • Italian bread: I like serving sausage and peppers with crusty Italian bread, or French bread.

 

How to Make Sausage and Peppers

During the summer, I cook everything on the grill, but I included stovetop instructions for the vegetables in case you don’t have a cast-iron skillet. If you’d like to grill the peppers and onions, place them in a cast-iron skillet on the grill over low heat. Close the grill lid and let the vegetables cook until tender. See the recipe card at the bottom for printable directions.

  1. Cook the vegetables: Add the peppers and onions to a large skillet over medium-low heat. Season with salt and pepper, cover the pan, and cook until they soften.
  2. Grill the sausage over medium heat for about 10 to 15 minutes. Keep turning it so it doesn’t burn.
  3. How to serve: Once the sausage is cooked through, slice it in half and serve it on a platter with the peppers, onions, and bread.

No grill? No problem! 

Here are three more ways to cook the sausage if you don’t have an outdoor grill.

  • Skillet: Brown the sausage over medium-low heat, turning occasionally, for 10 to 15 minutes until cooked through.
  • Oven: Broil on a rack 6 inches from the top for 12 to 15 minutes, turning every 4 to 5 minutes, until browned.
  • Air Fryer: Air fry at 400°F for 10 to 23 minutes, flipping halfway through.
Sausage and Peppers

How do I know when the sausage is fully cooked?

If you’re not sure the sausage is fully cooked, check one link with an instant-read thermometer. The internal temperature should be 165°F. If you’re using fully cooked sausage, heat it until it’s warm in the center. You might need to reduce the cooking time.

plated arugula salad

3

5 mins

Summer tomato salad

1

25 mins

Chopped romaine hearts, shredded mozzarella, olives, prosciutto, turkey pepperoni, roasted red peppers, cucumbers, tomatoes, pepperoncini and Giardiniera (colorful vegetables in vinegar) – this quick Italian antipasto salad requires no cooking, which makes it perfect to whip up or pack for lunch.

6

10 mins

Cucumber Tomato Salad

3

15 mins

Variations

  • Sausage: Substitute Italian turkey or pork sausage. Use vegan sausage to make it plant based.
  • Bell peppers: Use whatever color peppers you prefer. I like using 2 different colors, but you could use all red or add an orange or green pepper. 
  • Bread: Swap Italian bread for sourdough, baguette, ciabatta, or focaccia.

Storage

  • Refrigerate the grilled sausage and peppers for 4 days.
  • Freeze in an airtight container for up to 3 months. Then, thaw in the fridge before reheating.
  • Reheat in the microwave, air fryer (at 350°F), or stove (over medium-low heat) until warm.
Italian Sausage and Peppers

More Sausage Recipes You’ll Love

Skinnytaste High Protein cookbook protein

Prep: 15 minutes

Cook: 20 minutes

Total: 35 minutes

Serving Size: 1 cup sausage and peppers, 2 oz bread

  • Preheat the grill or broiler.

  • Heat a large skillet over medium-low heat, when hot add the olive oil, peppers and onions, tossing to coat well. Season with salt and black pepper, to taste; cover the pan and cook over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally until the vegetables are soft.

  • Meanwhile, grill the sausage over medium heat, turning until golden and cooked through, about 10 to 15 minutes, careful not to burn until it’s cooked through. Set aside on a cutting board and slice sausage in half lengthwise. Place the cooked peppers and onions on a platter alongside the sausage. Serve with crusty bread.

  • Note: To make this entirely on the grill, use a cast iron skillet and cook the onions and peppers over low heat with the grill covered until the onions and peppers are soft, stirring often, then set them aside and grill the sausage.

Last Step:

Please leave a rating and comment letting us know how you liked this recipe! This helps our business to thrive and continue providing free, high-quality recipes for you.
No Grill? No Problem
  • Skillet: Brown over medium-low heat, turning occasionally, until cooked through, about 10 to 15 minutes.
  • Oven: Broil on a rack 6 inches from the heating element for 12 to 15 minutes, turning every 4 to 5 minutes, until browned and the internal temperature reaches 165°F.
  • Air Fryer: Air fry at 400°F, 10 to 23 minutes, turning halfway, until cooked through.

Serving: 1 cup sausage and peppers, 2 oz bread, Calories: 413 kcal, Carbohydrates: 38 g, Protein: 28 g, Fat: 17 g, Saturated Fat: 5 g, Cholesterol: 107.5 mg, Sodium: 1300 mg, Fiber: 2.5 g, Sugar: 9.5 g


💖 Nimra Khan Opens Up About Weight Gain After Marriage

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💖 Nimra Khan Opens Up About Weight Gain After Marriage
Pakistani actress Nimra Khan, who tied the knot earlier this year in the United Kingdom with a professional pilot, recently shared a candid glimpse into her married life during a television appearance. ✨
The actress revealed that since getting married, she has been enjoying life, eating happily, and as a result has gained some weight. While Nimra admitted that the increase in weight sometimes makes her feel concerned, she also shared a heartwarming detail about her husband’s support. ❤️
According to Nimra, her husband reassures her by saying that her happiness matters most and that she should do what makes her comfortable. However, he also encourages her to set realistic goals and adopt healthy habits if she wants to see positive changes in her fitness and overall well-being.
Many fans appreciated the couple’s balanced approach, noting that true support in a relationship means accepting your partner while also motivating them to achieve their personal goals. 🌸
Nimra’s honest remarks have resonated with many married women who can relate to lifestyle changes after marriage and the challenge of maintaining a healthy routine.
Do you think a supportive partner plays an important role in achieving fitness and health goals? 🤔
#NimraKhan
#PakistaniActress
#MarriageLife
#RelationshipGoals
#HealthyLifestyle
#FitnessJourney
#ShowbizPakistan
#EntertainmentNews
#TrendingPakistan
#CelebrityNews
#PublicReaction
#PakistaniCelebrities
#YouTubeShorts
#ViralShorts
#PakistanTrending

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Cottage Cheese Cookie Dough (No Protein Powder!)


I’ve made cottage cheese cheesecake bars, cookies, brownies, and ice cream for this site — and this cottage cheese cookie dough is the simplest one yet. Five ingredients, no protein powder in sight, and it honestly tastes like you raided the cookie dough jar. Eat it straight from the bowl or freeze it into bark for a snack you can grab all week (like I did in these photos!).

This cottage cheese cookie dough is creamy, sweet, and secretly packed with protein — no protein powder needed. Blended cottage cheese disappears into a smooth, scoopable dough with almond flour, maple syrup, vanilla, and chocolate chips. Eat it straight from the bowl or spread it into frozen bark for a make-ahead treat. Five ingredients, zero cooking, ready in 15 minutes. What’s not to love?!

cottage cheese cookie dough bark broken into pieces on parchment paper
  • Only 5 real ingredients: Cottage cheese, almond flour, maple syrup, vanilla, and chocolate chips. No protein powder, no nut butter, no specialty supplements.
  • Tastes nothing like cottage cheese: Once blended smooth, the cottage cheese completely disappears. What you taste is vanilla, maple syrup, and chocolate — just like real cookie dough.
  • Two ways to enjoy it: Eat it scoopable straight from the bowl, or spread it into frozen bark and snap into pieces. One recipe, two formats.
  • High protein, no powder needed: The cottage cheese alone delivers the protein. I’ve made dozens of cottage cheese desserts for this site, and this is the most stripped-down, pantry-friendly one I’ve ever posted.

What You Need (Ingredient Notes)

  • Cottage cheese: Full-fat or 2% gives the creamiest results. If your cottage cheese has visible liquid pooling on top, drain it through a fine-mesh strainer for 2–3 minutes before blending. Avoid fat-free — it’s too watery and makes the dough runny. I’ve found that Good Culture and Daisy brands tend to be less watery than store brands.
  • Fine-ground almond flour: This is what gives the dough its body and keeps it gluten-free. Make sure you’re using fine-ground almond flour (not almond meal), which blends into a smoother texture. Bob’s Red Mill super fine works great.
  • Maple syrup: The only sweetener you need — 2 tablespoons keeps it lightly sweet without masking the cookie dough flavor. Honey works as a swap.
  • Vanilla extract: Classic cookie dough flavor in one teaspoon.
  • Chocolate chips: 1/4 cup folded into the dough, plus 2 tablespoons melted with coconut oil for the bark topping. Mini chips distribute better in a thin bark layer. Dark, semi-sweet, or sugar-free all work.
  • Coconut oil (for bark topping): Just 1/2 teaspoon melted with the chocolate chips creates a thin, snappy chocolate shell that cracks when you bite through it.

If you love cottage cheese desserts, my cottage cheese cheesecake bars are another freezer-friendly favorite.

Tips for the Best Texture

Texture is everything with cottage cheese cookie dough — here’s how to nail it every time.

  • Blend the cottage cheese until completely smooth: This is non-negotiable. If there are still visible curds, the dough will taste like cottage cheese. A blender or food processor works best — 60 to 90 seconds until it’s silky. An immersion blender in a tall cup (or right in the cottage cheese container) works in a pinch.
  • Drain watery cottage cheese first: If there’s visible liquid pooling in the container, pour through a fine-mesh strainer for 2–3 minutes before blending. This is the number one fix for runny dough.
  • Adjust flour if needed: If the dough still seems loose after mixing, add 1–2 tablespoons more almond flour. Different brands of cottage cheese and almond flour absorb differently, so trust what you see.
  • Chill before eating scoopable: 15–20 minutes in the fridge firms it up noticeably and lets the flavors meld. I know it’s ready when the dough holds its shape on a spoon for a few seconds before slowly sliding off.

How to Make It Into Bark

This is where the recipe gets fun. The cookie dough base is great on its own, but spreading it into frozen bark turns it into a make-ahead snack you can grab from the freezer all week (and that’s exactly what I did in these photos — aren’t they gorgeous?!).

Spread the dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet, roll it to about 1/2-inch thickness, and freeze it briefly. Then top with a thin layer of melted chocolate mixed with coconut oil — that’s what creates the satisfying snap when you bite through. A quick 10-minute freeze sets the chocolate, and then you just break or cut it into pieces.

A few things I’ve learned: 1/2-inch thickness is the sweet spot — any thinner and the bark is too fragile, any thicker and it won’t freeze evenly. And the coconut oil in the chocolate topping is doing real work — without it, the chocolate layer cracks and falls off instead of snapping cleanly.

whole slab of cottage cheese cookie dough bark topped with chocolate and sea salt

For another frozen cottage cheese treat, try my cookies and cream cottage cheese ice cream.

Serving Ideas

  • Straight from the bowl: With a spoon — the classic.
  • Frozen bark pieces: Snappy chocolate shell with a creamy dough center.
  • On top of rice cakes: A high-protein twist on a classic snack.
  • Rolled into balls: Freeze on a lined sheet, then store in a bag for grab-and-go bites.
  • With fruit: Apple slices, strawberries, or banana make great dippers.
  • Crumbled over yogurt or ice cream: A cookie dough topping that actually has protein.

Variations and Swaps

  • Sweetener: Honey works in place of maple syrup. For lower sugar, use a sugar-free maple syrup.
  • Flour: Oat flour works if you need a nut-free option (use 3/4 cup oat flour per 1 cup almond flour, since the density differs). Coconut flour absorbs more liquid — use only 1/3 cup.
  • Mix-ins: White chocolate chips, mini M&Ms, crushed Oreos, peanut butter chips, cacao nibs, or chopped nuts.
  • Flavor riffs: Swap vanilla for almond extract for an almond bark. Add 1 tablespoon cocoa powder for a double-chocolate version. Stir in 1 tablespoon peanut butter for a PB cookie dough.
  • Add protein powder (optional): If you want even more protein, add 1 scoop vanilla protein powder with the almond flour — just increase the maple syrup by 1 tablespoon to offset the dryness.

Love chocolate and cottage cheese together? My single-serve cottage cheese brownie is another quick fix.

hand holding a piece of cottage cheese cookie dough bark with sea salt
  • Fridge (scoopable): Airtight container, up to 5 days. Stir before serving — it may firm up.
  • Freezer (bark): Store bark pieces in a single layer in a freezer bag or airtight container with parchment between layers. Keeps for up to 2 months.
  • Freezer (scoopable balls): Scoop into tablespoon-sized balls, freeze on a lined sheet, then transfer to a bag. Grab straight from the freezer — no thaw needed.

FAQ

Does cottage cheese cookie dough taste like cottage cheese?

Not at all. Once the cottage cheese is blended until completely smooth, the flavor disappears. What you taste is vanilla, maple syrup, and chocolate — just like real cookie dough. The cottage cheese is there for protein and creaminess, not flavor.

Can I make cottage cheese cookie dough without protein powder?

Yes — this recipe doesn’t use any protein powder at all. The cottage cheese provides the protein (about 14g per cup), and the almond flour gives the dough its body. No supplements needed.

Why is my cottage cheese cookie dough runny?

The most common cause is excess liquid in the cottage cheese. Fix it by draining your cottage cheese through a fine-mesh strainer before blending, or stir in 1–2 extra tablespoons of almond flour until the texture thickens. Using full-fat or 2% cottage cheese also helps.

How long does cottage cheese cookie dough last in the fridge?

Up to 5 days in an airtight container. The bark version lasts up to 2 months in the freezer. Both are great for meal prep.

Can I bake this cookie dough into actual cookies?

This recipe is designed to be eaten raw — no eggs, totally safe as-is. If you want bakeable cottage cheese cookies, try my cottage cheese chocolate chip cookies instead. They’re made with a slightly different ratio that holds up in the oven.

Is it safe to eat raw almond flour?

Yes. Commercially sold almond flour is made from blanched, processed almonds and is safe to consume without cooking. There are no raw eggs or raw wheat flour in this recipe, so it’s completely safe to eat unbaked.

cottage cheese cookie dough bark stacked to show layers of dough and chocolate

Looking for more cottage cheese recipe ideas? Check out my 30 best cottage cheese recipes for even more high-protein inspiration.

Chocolate Topping (for bark)

  • Add the cottage cheese to a blender or food processor. Blend for 60–90 seconds until completely smooth and silky with no visible curds remaining.

  • Transfer the blended cottage cheese to a large mixing bowl. Add the almond flour, maple syrup, and vanilla extract. Stir until a thick cookie dough forms.

  • Fold in 1/4 cup chocolate chips until evenly distributed throughout the dough.

  • For scoopable cookie dough: Transfer the dough to an airtight container and refrigerate for 15–20 minutes to firm up. Serve chilled with a spoon.

  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Transfer the cookie dough to the sheet. Place another piece of parchment paper on top and roll the dough to about 1/2-inch thickness.

  • Remove the top layer of parchment and place the baking sheet in the freezer for 5 minutes.

  • While the dough freezes, prepare the chocolate topping. Add 2 tablespoons of chocolate chips and 1/2 teaspoon coconut oil to a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave on high in 20-second increments, stirring between each, until the chocolate is fully melted and smooth.

  • Remove the baking sheet from the freezer. Spread the melted chocolate evenly over the top of the cookie dough layer.

  • Return the baking sheet to the freezer for 10 minutes, or until the chocolate is set and firm.

  • Remove from the freezer and break or cut the bark into pieces. Serve immediately or store in the freezer.

Sweetener swap: Honey can be used in place of maple syrup.
Flavor variation: Use almond extract instead of vanilla for an almond cookie dough bark.
Add protein powder (optional): Stir in 1 scoop vanilla protein powder with the almond flour. Add 1 extra tablespoon of maple syrup to offset dryness.
Storage: Scoopable dough keeps in the fridge for up to 5 days. Bark pieces keep in the freezer in an airtight container (with parchment between layers) for up to 2 months.

Calories: 208 kcal, Carbohydrates: 17 g, Protein: 6 g, Fat: 14 g, Fiber: 2 g, Sugar: 12 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.



How to Freeze Bananas (for Smoothies and Baking!)


I’ve tested every freezing method out there because frozen bananas are the backbone of half my recipe archive — smoothies, nice cream, banana bread, you name it. If you’ve got ripe bananas piling up on the counter, freezing them takes 5 minutes and means you’ll always have them ready when inspiration strikes.

Freezing bananas is the easiest way to save ripe bananas before they go bad. Peel, slice, flash-freeze on a baking sheet, and store in a freezer bag for up to 6 months. Frozen bananas blend into ultra-creamy smoothies, make instant nice cream, and work perfectly in banana bread and muffins — all with zero added sugar and zero waste.

a person freezing bananas on a cutting board

Why You’ll Love Freezing Bananas

  • They make smoothies incredibly thick and creamy: Frozen bananas replace ice and add natural sweetness — no protein powder or sweetener needed.
  • They turn into instant nice cream: Blend frozen banana slices in a food processor and you have soft-serve ice cream in under 2 minutes. I’ve made so many nice cream flavors on FFF that I keep a gallon bag of frozen banana slices on standby at all times.
  • They save bananas from the trash: Instead of watching ripe bananas turn to mush, freeze them and use whenever you’re ready.
  • They work perfectly in baking: Thawed frozen bananas mash up beautifully for banana bread, muffins, and pancakes — no difference from fresh.

When to Freeze Bananas (Ripeness Guide)

Not all bananas are created equal when it comes to freezing. Here’s how to pick the right ripeness for what you’re making:

  • For smoothies and nice cream: Yellow with brown spots — peak sweetness without being mushy.
  • For banana bread and baking: Heavily spotted or brown-black peel — maximum sugar development and moisture.
  • Too green: Don’t freeze yet. Let them ripen at room temperature for 3–5 days.
  • Too far gone (liquified/fermented smell): Compost. Even freezing can’t save these.

Here’s the science: bananas convert starch to sugar as they ripen, which is why browner peels mean sweeter fruit. Freezing at peak ripeness locks in that sweetness so it’s there whenever you need it.

How to Freeze Banana Slices (Best for Smoothies)

This is the method I use most often — if you’re wondering how to freeze bananas for smoothies, this is it. Slices blend easily straight from the freezer, no thawing needed.

Freeze sliced bananas on a baking sheet
  1. Peel and slice: Cut each banana into ½-inch rounds.
  2. Line a baking sheet: Cover it with parchment paper.
  3. Arrange in a single layer: Don’t let the slices touch — this prevents them from freezing into one giant clump.
  4. Flash-freeze for 1–2 hours: Until completely solid.
  5. Transfer to a freezer bag: Squeeze out as much air as possible before sealing.
  6. Label with the date: Store for up to 6 months.

My tip: I count roughly how many slices come from each banana and write it on the bag (something like “~12 slices = 1 banana”). That way when a banana smoothie recipe calls for 1 banana, I know exactly how many slices to grab.

how to freeze sliced bananas

How to Freeze Whole Bananas (Best for Baking)

If you’re freezing bananas for banana bread or muffins, keeping them whole is the easiest approach. Most baking recipes call for “2 bananas” — whole frozen bananas make measuring a breeze.

  1. Peel the banana: Always peel before freezing — frozen peels are nearly impossible to remove.
  2. Place in a freezer bag or container: You can fit 3–4 bananas per gallon bag.
  3. Freeze for up to 6 months: If you’re worried about sticking, flash-freeze on a baking sheet first, then transfer.

How to Freeze Mashed Bananas (Best for Baking Prep)

This method is perfect for banana bread meal-prep — all the mashing is done ahead of time so you can go straight from freezer to mixing bowl.

  1. Mash ripe bananas: Use a fork for chunky or a blender for smooth puree.
  2. Portion into measured amounts: ½-cup or 1-cup portions in freezer bags or silicone ice cube trays.
  3. Lay bags flat and freeze: Once solid, stack them to save space.
  4. Label with the date and portion size: Store for up to 6 months.

How to Prevent Frozen Bananas from Browning

Browning happens from air exposure (oxidation), not because the banana is going bad. Here’s how to keep your frozen bananas looking bright:

  • Airtight seal is everything: Bananas stay yellow for 3+ months in a tightly sealed container.
  • Squeeze air out of bags before sealing: A straw inserted at the corner works great for removing extra air.
  • Use rigid containers for long-term storage: Snap-lid containers protect better than bags if you have the freezer space.
  • Don’t panic if they darken slightly: A little browning is cosmetic only — flavor and nutrition are completely unaffected.

How to Thaw Frozen Bananas

For smoothies, don’t thaw at all — toss frozen slices straight into the blender. For baking, here are your options:

  • Room temperature: Set in a bowl for about 2 hours. Fastest no-tool option.
  • Refrigerator: Thaw overnight — best for planned baking prep.
  • Microwave: 50% power for 60–90 seconds. Quick but watch closely so they don’t cook.

Important for baking: When thawed bananas release brown liquid, strain it off before mashing. If you mash the liquid in, the batter gets too wet and baked goods come out dense and heavy. I learned this the hard way when a batch of banana muffins came out flat and gummy. Now I always strain the liquid off and the texture is perfect every time. If your recipe calls for milk or another liquid, you can replace some of it with the strained banana liquid instead — zero waste.

What to Use Frozen Bananas For

This is the fun part. Here are my favorite ways to use up that freezer stash:

Smoothies

Nice Cream

Baking

Tips for Freezing Bananas

  • Always peel before freezing: Frozen peels are a nightmare to remove.
  • Flash-freeze first, then bag: Skipping the baking-sheet step gives you one giant banana blob.
  • Use rigid containers for whole bananas, bags for slices: Bags save space for slices; containers protect whole bananas from getting crushed.
  • Date your bags: First in, first out. Use the oldest bananas first.
  • Buy in bulk when on sale: Bananas are the cheapest fruit — stock up, let them ripen on the counter, and freeze the whole batch.
  • a person freezing bananas in a plastic bag

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you freeze bananas?

Yes! Freezing bananas is one of the easiest ways to preserve them. Peel first, then freeze sliced, whole, or mashed. They’ll keep for up to 6 months and work great in smoothies, nice cream, and baking.

How long do frozen bananas last?

Frozen bananas stay good for up to 6 months. After that they’re still safe but may develop freezer burn and lose some flavor. For best quality, use within 3 months.

Is it better to freeze bananas with or without the peel?

Without the peel, always. Frozen banana peels are extremely difficult to remove and add no benefit. Peel before freezing to save yourself a headache later.

Can you freeze bananas for banana bread?

Absolutely. Freeze ripe bananas whole, then thaw at room temperature or in the microwave when you’re ready to bake. Strain off the brown liquid before mashing for best results — otherwise your banana bread can come out too dense.

How long does it take bananas to freeze?

Banana slices freeze solid in 1–2 hours on a baking sheet. Whole bananas take 4–6 hours. Both should be transferred to a sealed container once frozen.

Can you use frozen bananas in smoothies without thawing?

Yes — that’s one of the best uses! Toss frozen banana slices directly into the blender. They make smoothies thick and creamy without watering them down like ice does.

Sliced Bananas

  • Peel each banana and slice into ½-inch rounds.

  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and arrange slices in a single layer, ensuring they don’t touch.

  • Freeze for 1–2 hours until solid.

  • Transfer frozen slices to a freezer-safe bag or airtight container. Squeeze out excess air and seal tightly.

  • Label with the date. Store in the freezer for up to 6 months.

Whole Bananas

  • Peel each banana.

  • Place whole peeled bananas on a parchment-lined baking sheet, spaced apart.

  • Freeze for 4–6 hours until solid.

  • Transfer to a freezer-safe bag or container. Seal tightly and label with the date.

  • Store in the freezer for up to 6 months.

Mashed Bananas

  • Peel ripe bananas and mash with a fork until smooth (or puree in a blender).

  • Portion mashed banana into ½-cup or 1-cup amounts in freezer bags or silicone ice cube trays.

  • Lay bags flat in the freezer. Once frozen, stack to save space.

  • Label with the date and portion size. Store for up to 6 months.

For smoothies, use banana slices — they blend easily without thawing.
For baking, use whole or mashed — thaw at room temperature for 2 hours or microwave at 50% power for 60–90 seconds. Strain off the brown liquid before mashing for better baked-good texture.
Frozen bananas stay yellow for months in an airtight container. Browning is caused by air exposure, not spoilage.
Count your slices per banana and write it on the bag so you know how many slices = 1 banana for recipes.

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.



प्रेगनेंसी में बच्चे का वजन कैसे बढाये |Food for baby growth in pregnancy #shorts #Drgourirai

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प्रेगनेंसी में बच्चे का वजन कैसे बढाये |Food for baby growth in pregnancy #shorts #Drgourirai

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The intention of making these videos is just to increase awareness and knowledge of general public regarding health issues. This is not at all a substitute of patients going to hospital and taking treatment by a doctor after getting clinically examined.

source

Chocolate Chip Zucchini Bread – WellPlated.com


Step-By-Step Instructions

Prepare the Pan. Preheat the oven to 325°F. Lightly coat a 9×5-inch loaf pan with nonstick spray, then line it with parchment paper, leaving two sides overhanging. Spray the parchment as well.

Prep the Zucchini. Grate the zucchini and measure 2 loosely packed cups. To squeeze it dry, I usually wrap the zucchini in paper towels and squeeze with all my might until very little moisture remains. 

Mix the Wet Ingredients (photo 1). In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, honey, Greek yogurt, oil, and vanilla until smooth. 

Add the Dry Ingredients (photo 2). Sprinkle the cinnamon, baking soda, and salt over the wet ingredients. Whisk briefly to combine. Add both flours, then stir just until the flour disappears. (Overmixing develops gluten and can make quick breads tough.)

Fold Everything Together (photo 3). Fold in the zucchini and chocolate chips. 

Bake. Transfer the batter to the prepared loaf pan and smooth the top. Scatter a few extra chocolate chips over the surface. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes. Around the 50-minute mark, start checking for doneness. A toothpick inserted into the center should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs (melted chocolate doesn’t count) and the loaf should also spring back lightly when gently pressed in the center.

Cool. Let the bread cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then use the parchment handles to lift it onto a wire rack. Wait until it’s completely cool before slicing. ENJOY!

where we ate in Tokyo (and gluten-free picks!)

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Sharing some of the best things we ate in Tokyo and some gluten-free picks! 

Hi friends! How are you? I hope you had a wonderful weekend and hope that my US friends had a lovely 4th of July. We went to Mt. Lemmon with friends and it was perfection.

Before I head into today’s post, I wanted to share some amazing 4th of July deals that are still happening if you’re in the shopping mood. (TBR I’m always in the shopping mood)

Organifi- Hair Launch: Buy 3, Save 30% + 20% off with code FITNESSISTA here! I love their Gold, Green, Red, Shilajit gummies, and lately I’m obsessed with their hydrogen water tablets. Check it all out here.

EquiLife– up to 30% off sitewide, get a new tote on all orders over $149, and enjoy 25% off community favorites

My top choices:

Omega 3

Full-spectrum magnesium

Detox

Daily Detox Support

Adrenal Energy

Andrenal Soothe

Melatonin

Lumebox– 45% off through tonight! If you don’t have one yet, I LOVE ours and use it every single day. The kids use it, too. Here’s the link.

Oliveda – huge sitewide discounts and a free F59 (my FAVE!) on orders. Check everything out here! I use the Olive Peeling, F59, Corrective Face Cream, Mint Shower Gel, and Olive Rose Skin Tint.

Farm Rio!!! 4th of July sale ends toniiiiight. Extra 50% off sale styles with code SALE50. I LOVE this dress.

Real talk

TBH it’s been a bit hard for me to blog lately. The nutshell version is that the blog landscape has been extra rough… I’ll share more in an upcoming post. For now, I’m trying to just enjoy a 90s summer with the girls (swimming, roller skating, time with friends, going to the mall) and reminiscing on our AMAZING trip to Japan and Korea.

We ate SO much delicious food that I still think about daily, and I wanted to share some of the highlights in today’s post

where we ate in Tokyo (and gluten-free picks!)

7-11

We had 7-11 every single day.

It’s funny because the 7-11 in the US leaves…much to be desired… but the 7-11s in Japan are packed with amazing food, desserts, snacks and drinks. Sushi, onigiri, pasta, fried chicken, sandwiches, smoothies, it was all incredible. Of course, I enjoyed the viral drinks (the C1000 is the best), multiple tuna onigiri, and everything muscat flavored.

(if you go, find these!! And send me some please lol)

We fell in love with muscat and of course we stocked up on all of the frozen muscat treats, gummies, and mints.

We all had so many onigiri 🙂 Tuna and mayo was the best!

Tsujiki fish market

The fish market is lined with hundreds of food stands and street vendors. The sashimi is the best I’ve had in my entire life. We also had a container of muscat grapes (so sweet and crunchy) and I also saw people walking around with skewers, crab legs, omelets, caramelized sweet potatoes, and sushi rolls.

We also stumbled upon a hidden gem that had fluffly gluten-free soufle pancakes.

They were sweet and light, and somehow not egg-y at all. We wanted to go back but we didn’t end up having time.

Omakase meal at Gluten-free Kushiage Sû

This meal was a top five culinary experience for me. I went to book a table in advance when I was looking for gluten-free dinner options, but it was booked out. I sent a message on IG asking to be considered if they had any last-minute cancelations, and they reached out the day before to let us know that spots had become available!

There were only seven seats in the restaurant, and everything was made fresh in house by chef Sû.

I started with a crisp and sweet glass of sparkling sake.

Everything is gluten-free and the kushiage consists of skewers. It’s a popular Japanese dish and everything is coated in Panko breadcrumbs and fried. Each flavor profile was completely different, using various meats, veggies, fish, and seasonal ingredients. This felt like an extra special treat for P and me, because usually we’re not able to eat fried or crispy things because… gluten.

Even though the skewers were fried, they were light, cripspy, not the least bit greasy, and incredibly flavorful.

Some of the highlights:

This braised beef tendon inside deep-fried tofu in dashi broth

Mackerel marinated in plum vinegar and sabayon sauce

Gluten-free crab cream croquet

The meal finished off with homemade apple ginger warabi mochi

Chef Sû is truly an artist and so incredibly talented. He does not speak English, but we used google translate with no probs at all. I highly highly recommend this experience if you’re going to Tokyo and have gluten-free friends or family members.

Ginza Senryo

We went for late-night sushi one evening and shared platters of rolls, sashimi, salad, pickled veggie, and best potato salad I’ve had in my life. I had another sparkling sake just to try the different options, you know? It’s worth mentioning here that all of the restaurant servers we encountered were so lovely; the service was above and beyond, but especially at this restaurant. The server was crouched down talking to the girls and was so sweet and friendly.

So tell me friend: what are some of your all-time favorite vacation meals?

My other top meals are:

– Alinea in Chicago

– The beach club in Mykonos

– Zucchini pasta in Sorrento

– Al pastor taco in Mexico with a Mexican coke

xo

Gina