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Salads
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Sharing a roundup of my top finds from this year’s Prime Day!
Hiii friends! How are you? I hope that your week is going well! We celebrated Father’s Day, the Pilot and I had a much-needed date night, and P had a soccer friends swim party.
Today, I wanted to share a roundup of the best finds from Prime Day sales.
TBH, this sale can be overwhelming and so many creatorsare sharing their favorite finds. I wanted to make my list a bit smaller, majorly focusing on quality over quantity. Everything on this list is something that we use and love, or that I’m planning on buying. It’s a great time to stock up on some things you need, new products you’ve had your eye on, or maybe order a couple of holiday gifts in advance.
Here are my top picks for this year!
My Amazon storefront has the full roundup for easy browsing, too.
*a little note: this post contains affiliate links which allow me to earn a small commission. Every click and purchase make a huge difference, and I’m so grateful for your support.

This electric kettle. I have a similar one and use it to make tea every single night.
A KitchenAid mixer. We got one for our wedding, alomst 20 years ago, and it still looks and works extremely well.
Little Green Machine. With kids and pets…this is essential.
Great deal on a Dyson cordless vaccuum. Ours died, but I’m thinking of replacing it.
A healthier air fryer. We have a very similar one and I’m so glad that it’s not leeching plastics and chemicals into the food.
An Instant Pot! I use this every.single.day. It’s great for busy school nights and also makes the most perfect rice.
Plastic BPA free wine glasses for poolside wine.
Owala water bottles! We love ours. When I went to create the link, it told me I’ve bought 6 of them!
Kindle. I love having one because it keeps me from scrolling on my phone.
A Ring camera.
The only blender you ever need.
I use these glass meal prep containers every day.


Medicube capsule cream with PDRN. I recently fell in love with Medicube (like this Vitamin C cream) and their PDRN products are amazing.
This sleep mask. It has zero eye pressure and it’s my go-to for travel and during the summer months when the sun is awake before I’d like to be awake. I’ll wake up around 5am with the sun, put on this sleep mask, and fall bask asleep for a couple more hours or until the dogs wake me up.
Really tempted to try this at-home hair zapper.
My favorite eye cream.
I’ve been using this hair oil once a week and loooove it.
Makeup remover cloths.
The best clean self tanner.


The most I’ll spend for these trendy jellies shoes.
These wide-leg flowy pants.
This cute two-piece set.
Everyday kinda dress.
This looks just like my favorite Tuckernuck dress.
Lightweight loafers.
This striped maxi dress.
This beaded gem stone necklace is so cute.
This dress is giving Anthro vibes.
I had a similar suit to this one and wore it for years – love that it’s sexy but still flattering.


A weighted vest. I like to use this while I’m on the walking pad for extra resistance.
Bala bangles. Love these for sculpt and barre classes.
Ordering these barefoot sneakers for weightlifting.
Vibration plate.
Pilates socks with grips.
P’s favorite goggles.
The famous watermelon ball. This has been a huge hit at our summer pool parties.
Resuable water balloons.
Pool shoes.
We love this portable JBL speaker
I’ve linked to everything on my Amazon storefront, too. You can grab the link and everything is listed here!
Are you shopping Prime Day? What’s on your list??
I’ll be adding more to this and to my storefront as the sale goes on, too.
xo
Gina
What happened when ultra-processed foods were matched for calories, sugar, fat, and fiber content in the first randomized controlled trial?
In the United States, “junk food” is often used to describe less-healthy foods, like candy, ice cream, and chips, but there isn’t a consistent definition, so nutrition researchers came up with the concept of ultra-processed.
The term “ultra-processed food”—if you want to call it that—describes industrial formulations that are typically seen in those long list of ingredients, which, besides salt, sugar, and fat, aren’t typically found in any cookbook, like various flavors, sweeteners, colors, emulsifiers, and other additives used to imitate real foods or to hide undesirable qualities of the final product. This roughly corresponds to my idea of “red light foods” in my traffic light system, in which, ideally, we should maximize intake of green light foods, minimize yellow light foods, and avoid red light foods. Indeed, most of what people eat are red light foods: soda, ice cream, candy, cakes, most bread and breakfast cereals, TV dinner-type ready-to-heat products, chicken nuggets, fish sticks, sausages, burgers, and hot dogs. There has been a dramatic rise in ultra-processed foods. In fact, the U.S. food supply is dominated by them. More than 200,000 products were assessed, and 71% were classified as ultra-processed.
And, of course, they aren’t only in grocery stores. Sugary drinks and processed junk are ubiquitous even at non-food retailers, sending pervasive cues to consume products that are dense in calories but poor in nutrition. As a former head executive of Coca-Cola put it, the soda should be kept within an “arm’s reach of desire.” A major candy brand boasted, “We put them everywhere: grocery stores and supermarkets, gas stations and chiropractors’ offices, bowling alleys and grocery stores, which we already mentioned. Not sorry.”
So, this is where we are today. What proportion of food consumed by U.S. children and adolescents is classified as junk? An unbelievable 56% to 70% of what our children and teens eat over the entire day is junk. But kids will be kids, right? In the United States, more than half of the calories taken in across the board are junk. In fact, around the world, ultra-processed foods consistently account for more than 50% of the dietary caloric intake in the higher-income countries. No wonder unhealthy diets are humanity’s greatest killer, the leading risk factor for death globally, as you can see below and at 2:25 in my video Ultra-Processed Junk Food Put to the Test.
What exactly are the health consequences? The biological effects of modern foods have been studied using rats, showing they gorge themselves into dramatic weight gain, inflammation, and cognitive and metabolic abnormalities. And just as ultra-processed foods were taking over, binge eating was recognized as a new eating disorder, and it grew into the most common form of eating disorder. And not surprisingly, binge foods were found to be 100% ultra-processed. That’s no surprise—these foods are engineered so you can’t have just one. People don’t tend to binge on broccoli.
About 9 out of 10 studies found that ultra-processed food consumption was associated with adverse health outcomes—and not just obesity, but cancer, cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, irritable bowel syndrome, depression, frailty, and all-cause mortality (meaning living a shorter life). Studies on youth add asthma to the list and also report higher DNA damage. Not a single study reported a link between ultra-processed foods and beneficial health outcomes.
In contrast, populations with low meat consumption, high fiber intake, and low intake of minimally processed foods have far fewer chronic diseases, enjoy lower obesity rates, and live longer disease-free. But most of the findings were based on observational studies. You don’t know for sure if ultra-processed foods themselves are to blame until you put it to the test.
In the first randomized controlled trial on ultra-processed foods, 20 people were essentially locked in a hospital ward and received both ultra-processed and unprocessed diets for 14 days each. Here’s the kicker: The diets were designed to provide the same calories, sugar, fiber, fat, and macronutrients. Why? In response to criticism, manufacturers are now proposing reformulating their products, keeping them ultra-processed but tweaking them by adding some fiber, for instance, or reducing the sugar, fat, or salt. So, the researchers wanted to try to tease out the effect of ultra-processing by giving the study participants the same amount of calories, sugar, fat, fiber, carbs, and protein in each of the two diets. So, for instance, for breakfast in the ultra-processed weeks, the participants would get Cheerios and a muffin, or an egg and cheese muffin with turkey bacon and orange juice. When it was time for the less-processed breakfasts, people would get, say, oatmeal with blueberries and almonds. The meals had the same amount of overall sugar and fat, but the unprocessed option was presented more in whole food form. For lunch, the ultra-processed group might get a turkey sandwich with nonfat Greek yogurt, canned peaches, baked potato chips, and sugar-free Crystal Light Lemonade, versus a Southwest entrée salad with black beans, carrots, corn, avocados, and nuts, along with grapes and apples on the unprocessed diet. The same calories were offered, with the instruction to eat as much or as little as they wanted.
So, what happened? On the ultra-processed diet, people ate about 500 more calories a day and, unsurprisingly, gained about two pounds on the processed diet, or actively lost two pounds on the less-processed diet, as you can see below and at 5:31 in my video.

So, the problem wasn’t just the unbalanced nutrient profile of ultra-processed foods. Simply tweaking them wouldn’t magically make them healthy, but that’s what the industry would rather do. Reformulation is referred to as the “unobtrusive strategy,” creating “the prospect of nutritional improvement without dietary change.” But what this study showed is that it may be better to limit the consumption of ultra-processed foods altogether.
Why does the industry love them so much? They’re made with dirt-cheap ingredients, like taxpayer-subsidized corn syrup, allowing for huge corporate profit margins. But at what cost? The food industry takes in more than a trillion dollars every year, yet most of our healthcare dollars go to treat chronic diseases exacerbated by these very same foods, like diabetes and heart disease. So, you could argue “we lose triple what the food industry makes.” The food industry argues that these days, it’s “unrealistic” to tell people to avoid ultra-processed food, given societal time constraints and the difficulties of food prep, but this may just be acquiescing to the same propaganda and disinformation campaign that the processed food industry has used to co-opt families for decades. Those who think healthy foods can’t be convenient have never met an apple.
That was a response to Dr. Lustig’s essay on processed food as a failed experiment, in which he said: “One-third of American mothers today don’t even know what real food is or how to cook; they and their children are destined to remain hostages to the processed food industry.” I don’t like his mother-blaming, but I do appreciate his prescription: “There’s only one recourse—real food, which is low in sugar and high in fiber.” We need to start thinking outside the box.
Doctor’s Note
It’s no surprise processed foods are wreaking havoc on our health. Learn about The Role of Processed Foods in the Obesity Epidemic. Is there a solution? Yes. Cut the Calorie-Rich-And-Processed Foods.
This is the third video in a series on junk food. If you missed the first two, check out Do Healthy Fast Food Options Lead to Healthier Choices? and How We Won the Fight to Ban Trans Fat.
I mentioned my traffic light system for choosing the healthiest foods. Learn all about it in Dining by Traffic Light: Green Is for Go, Red Is for Stop.
On today’s carnivore diet menu I am having some pork sausage, bacon, and eggs & ground beef. Quick and easy!
I’m Jenny and I am a first time mom to twins Max and Harry. I post videos about homemaking, parenting, and self-care.
#carnivore #carnivorediet #carnivoregroceryshopping #costcogroceryhaul
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I can’t tell you how many times grilled red potatoes have saved the day. I almost always have baby red potatoes on hand during the summer because they’re truly the most crowd-pleasing side to make on the grill. Plus, the foil pack method never fails!
These grilled potatoes in foil are crispy on the outside, fork-tender on the inside, and ready in just 30 minutes with almost zero cleanup. Toss them in olive oil and spices, wrap them up, and let the grill do the work. They’re my go-to side for cookouts, camping trips, and weeknight grilling all summer long.

Grilling season is here, and these grilled red potatoes have gotten countless ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ reviews and are a summer staple for so many readers!
Wash 2 lbs of red potatoes and quarter them — just cut each potato in half, then in half again. You want the pieces to be about 1 to 1.5 inches so they cook evenly. Finely dice the yellow onion.
Place the potatoes and onion into a large gallon-sized plastic bag (or a big bowl). Drizzle in the olive oil, add all the spices, seal the bag, and shake until everything is evenly coated. This bag method is my favorite trick — it gets every piece perfectly seasoned with zero mess.

I’ve officially mastered the foil pack fold, and the more you practice, the easier it gets — I promise!

Heat your grill to 400ºF. Place the foil pack directly over the flames, cover the grill, and cook for 15–20 minutes. The potatoes are done when you can easily pierce them with a fork through the foil.

Red potatoes are my top pick because they’re naturally bite-sized and hold their shape perfectly, but I’ve made this recipe with plenty of other varieties:
The Italian herb version in this recipe is my classic go-to, but here are some of my favorite ways to switch it up:
Once your foil pack potatoes are off the grill, the toppings are where you can really have fun. Open the pack, pile these on, and serve straight from the foil:
No grill? No problem. This foil pack method works beautifully with other cooking methods, too:
Preheat to 400ºF. Place the sealed foil pack on a baking sheet and bake for 25–30 minutes. Check tenderness at 25 minutes and continue baking until fork-tender. This is my go-to rainy-day backup.
Preheat air fryer to 400ºF. Place the foil pack in the basket (you may need to make a smaller pack to fit) and cook for 15–18 minutes, shaking the basket halfway through. The air fryer gets the edges extra crispy — I actually love this method almost as much as the grill.
Place foil packs directly on hot coals (not in the flames) and cook for 20–30 minutes, turning the pack every 10 minutes with tongs. Double-wrap with heavy-duty foil to prevent tearing on the coals. This is absolutely perfect for camping and 4th of July bonfires.

Nope! You do not need to boil your potatoes before grilling. The sealed foil pack creates steam that cooks the potatoes fast and evenly — no par-cooking required.
At 400ºF over direct heat, foil pack potatoes take 15–20 minutes. If you move them to indirect heat (upper rack), they’ll take closer to 25–30 minutes.
Sear the foil pack over direct heat for 5 minutes to get things going, then move it to the upper rack to finish cooking while you grill your other food. Just add an extra 5–10 minutes to the cook time.
Yes! Assemble the foil packs up to 4 hours ahead and store them in the fridge. When you’re ready, place them straight on the grill — just add a couple of extra minutes since they’ll be cold.
For grill marks and extra char, open the foil pack for the last 3–5 minutes and place the potatoes directly on the grates. The olive oil coating helps them crisp up beautifully.
Every grilled potatoes recipe needs to be paired with other delicious grilled foods! Here are my favorites:
Heavy-duty aluminum foil
Grill
Large bowl or gallon-sized plastic bag
Fork
Heat your grill to 400ºF with direct and indirect heat zones set up.
Wash and pat dry the red potatoes. Cut into quarters (about 1-inch pieces). Finely dice the onion.
Place potatoes and onion into a large bowl or gallon-sized plastic bag. Drizzle with olive oil and add your chosen seasoning blend. Toss until everything is evenly coated.
Lay out a large piece of heavy-duty aluminum foil (about 18 inches long). Transfer the seasoned potatoes onto the center. Place a second sheet of foil on top and crimp all the edges tightly to seal. Poke 5-6 small holes in the top of the foil pack with a fork to let steam escape.
Place the foil pack on the grill over direct heat. Cover the grill and cook for 15 minutes. Carefully flip the pack and cook for another 10-15 minutes, until potatoes are fork-tender when tested through the foil.
Carefully open the foil pack (watch for steam!), season with additional salt and pepper if needed, and serve immediately.
[adthrive-in-post-video-player video-id=”DssBerLU” upload-date=”2019-04-12T00:00:00.000Z” name=”Grilled Potatoes in Foil” description=”These foil pack grilled red potatoes are seriously the BEST grilled potatoes on the internet. All you need to do to make these grilled potatoes in foil is toss them in olive oil, spices, and create foil-pack!”]
Calories: 136 kcal, Carbohydrates: 20 g, Protein: 2 g, Fat: 5 g, Fiber: 3 g, Sugar: 2 g
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Photography by: The Wooden Skillet
This easy Grilled Chicken Salad combines juicy grilled chicken, fresh vegetables, sweet mango, black beans, and a creamy cilantro lime yogurt dressing for a high-protein, high-fiber meal that’s perfect for lunch or dinner.

Grilled Chicken Salad is one of my favorite summer meals because it’s easy, high in protein, and packed with fresh ingredients. This version features juicy grilled chicken, mango, black beans, crisp romaine, cucumbers, and tomatoes, all tossed with a creamy cilantro lime dressing with Greek yogurt that adds so much flavor. The dressing also doubles as a marinade for the chicken, making every bite bright, zesty, and delicious.
The creamy cilantro lime dressing serves two purposes: as a salad dressing and as a chicken marinade, adding bright, savory flavor to every bite. See the recipe card below for the exact measurements.

Cilantro Lime Dressing for Salad
Don’t worry about perfectly dicing all the ingredients. A rough chop works because everything gets blended anyway.
If you don’t have a grill or grill pan, use a cast-iron skillet or an air fryer (air fry at 380°F for 5 minutes per side). Also, letting the chicken rest before slicing it will help it stay juicy, so don’t rush it! See the recipe card at the bottom for printable directions.





For more summer dinner ideas, try one of these five simple grilled chicken salad recipes to inspire your next meal!

Yield: servings
Serving Size: 1 salad, about 2 ¼ cups
To make the dressing, add the cilantro, jalapeño, green onions, lime juice, garlic, greek yogurt, mayo and ½ teaspoon salt to a blender. Blend until completely smooth. Transfer 2 tablespoons into a mixing bowl. Cover the remaining dressing with plastic wrap and set aside in the fridge until ready to use.
Pound the chicken breasts slightly to make them an even thickness throughout, this helps prevent them from drying out on the grill. Season with salt. Add the chicken breasts to the mixing bowl with the reserved dressing. Toss well to combine. Cover and let marinate in the fridge for at least 30 minutes but up to 8 hours.
Preheat an outdoor grill or indoor grill pan to medium high heat and lightly oil the grates. Place the chicken breast on the grill in an even layer. Cook for 4-6 minutes per side, until the chicken is nicely charred on both sides and cooked through. The internal temperature should be 165° F. Remove the chicken from the grill and rest 5 minutes. When the chicken is cool enough to handle, slice it on the bias.
To assemble the salad, add the romaine to a salad bowl. Top with the cherry tomatoes, red onion, cucumbers, mango, and black beans. Top with the sliced chicken. Drizzle the dressing on top of the salad and top with cilantro leaves.
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** dressing makes 1 cup
** total salad makes about 9 cups
Serving: 1 salad, about 2 ¼ cups, Calories: 325 kcal, Carbohydrates: 31.5 g, Protein: 34.5 g, Fat: 7.5 g, Saturated Fat: 1.5 g, Cholesterol: 88.5 mg, Sodium: 316 mg, Fiber: 9 g, Sugar: 15.5 g
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This Red Potato Salad has everything you love about classic potato salad—the creamy dressing, the tender potatoes, the make-ahead convenience that makes it a no-brainer for backyard barbecues—but brightens it up with Greek yogurt, fresh herbs, grainy mustard, and plenty of crunch from celery.

The potato salad I make for every cookout!

I am a potato salad snob and I’m not ashamed to admit it.
Too many potato salads end up with potatoes that are overcooked, underseasoned, or drowning in gloppy dressing. And sometimes all three!
With this in mind, I had three goals with this red potato salad recipe:
Like my Healthy Potato Salad, the dressing in this potato salad uses Greek yogurt as the base, with just enough mayonnaise to provide richness and classic flavor.
I tested using all yogurt and no mayo, but found that the dressing tasted a little sharp and lacked the roundness people expect from potato salad. The small amount of mayo bridges that gap nicely.

You’ll find the full list of ingredients in the recipe card below, but here are some notes to keep in mind.




Cook the Potatoes (photo 1). Place the potatoes in a large pot and cover them with water by about an inch. Add 2 tablespoons kosher salt. (This may seem like a lot, but much of it stays behind in the cooking water!) Bring the water to a boil, then reduce to a steady simmer. Cook for 8 to 10 minutes and start checking for doneness early. The potatoes should be easily pierced with a fork, but they should not be falling apart. Drain and let cool slightly.
Make the Dressing (photo 2). Whisk together all of the ingredients in a bowl. The dressing will be fairly sassy and strong. Don’t worry about it! The potatoes will absorb some of that flavor as the salad rests and it will all balance out in the end.
Assemble (photo 3). Transfer the potatoes to a large bowl and pour the dressing over the top. Gently fold in the celery, dill, chives, and parsley. (Gentle folding keeps from breaking the potatoes apart.)
Chill and Serve (photo 4). Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. Toss and taste again right before serving and add more salt and/or pepper if needed. ENJOY!


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Salads

Salads

Salads