Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Quest Protein Chip by @QuestNutrition Review

If you’re at all interested in eating better to go along with all those hours you swim, bike and run, then you have probably realized the importance of eating the right combination of fats, carbs and protein. It’s a delicate dance of factors from desired weight to expected race performance. If you’re not fueling the engine right, it doesn’t matter how many hours you train to overcome that.

But, how do you make sure you are getting what you need from your healthy snacks without sacrificing taste and appeal? Not everyone can kick back a can of tuna and a cup of cottage cheese and “enjoy” it. We’re all human. We like to enjoy taste and texture of what we eat.

There are all kinds of approaches from paleo to all natural grass fed no antibiotic hand combed cows and chickens, but lets get real. This day and age, if you want unaltered ingredients or something “simple”, you’re looking at higher prices and something that virtually financially unsustainable for a family. If it’s not mass produced and chalked full of preservatives for shelf life, it’s going to cost more.

In the never ending quest to find healthy snack alternatives, we found Quest Protein Chips. It’s kind of an oxymoron when you first come upon them. We found them at our gym and decided to buy a couple and give them a spin. We’ve heard of the bars they produce, and my wife loves them, but we were skeptical that a chip could be advertised as healthy.

Read on for our take on the Sour Cream and Cheddar and BBQ flavors.

Packaging / Shelf Appeal / Marketing


The packaging and images actually make you want to eat what’s inside. Not all health foods or those that pretend have the right marketing scheme. Some throw pictures of mascots and other junk not even related to the food inside that distract you from the real mission, finding quality food.

The picture on the package is pretty true to what the ships look like, unless your 4 year old sat on the bag in the car or punched it out of your hands when they were impatiently waiting to leave the gym waiting on you to pay for the chips. It happens. They still eat the same as whole chips or crushed pieces.


Form / Construction


Where the rubber meets the road. Are they full of crap? Do they have the advertised 21 grams of protein per serving and double the carbs? What are you getting for your $2.99 at the gym counter?

INGREDIENTS: Protein Blend (Milk Protein Isolate, Whey Protein Isolate), Dried Potatoes, Corn Starch, High Oleic Sunflower Oil. Contains less than 2% of the following: Tomato Powder, Onion Powder, Paprika, Garlic Powder, Spices, Salt, Paprika Extract (Color), Yeast Extract, Calcium Carbonate, Natural Flavors. CONTAINS: Milk Derived Ingredients

The bags say right on the front : NO SOY, GLUTEN FREE, 5G CARBS, 21G PROTEIN, BAKED NEVER FRIED



Pretty much all you need to know is on the front of the bag, but for you macronutrient counters, they have in 32 grams per serving (1 bag), 120 calories, 2g of fat, 5g of carbs and 21g of protein. For a quick snack on the go for the fitness types, that’s a quality 120 calories. I know I’m always looking for meals and snacks that won’t blow the calorie budget that give me my best protein ratio. Compare that with a not-to-be-named baked BBQ chip, 28g serving, 120 calories, 3g of fat, 22g of carbs and 2g of protein. The fat looks good, but you’ve just broke the bank for carbs without much protein benefit. Get ready to skimp on dinner to save your day nutrition wise. Hello tuna on a plate...

 

Fit / Function


Do Quest Chips go down easy, or do you have to choke them down like so many chalky protein powders and drinks that are out there?



I’m here to tell you they taste as good as any chip out there. They have that baked / popped chip look and light density when you bite into one. They crunch and that sweet nectar of cheddar or BBQ that you crave will be there for the taking. Consider your craving for crap satisfied, but you didn’t have to sacrifice your soul for the nutritional deficit that comes with most chips.

Cost


Where’s the catch you ask? We get taste and nutrition!? Well, it’s not free. We paid for these out of pocket, no freebie reviews, and at $2.99 a bag at the gym, it can get pricey. Your generic chips can go around $4 for 6 to 7 servings. Quest chips are $3 for 1 serving. Eat wisely, my friend. You get what you pay for.

 

Final thoughts


We will continue to buy Quest Chips. Santa may even drop a few in our stockings. If anyone could benefit from a healthier chip, it would be the big man from the north.

The taste and texture is spot on, the shelf appeal is there. It’s got all of the right ingredients, but you will pay a premium for 21 grams of protein, only 5 grams of carbs in 120 calories. You have to decide that if your chip craving can be satisfied for $3 a pop. Used wisely, this is a great alternative for a midday snack, or a companion to your meal. It holds you over for a tough workout without being too full, and serves well as a post-workout meal to replenish protein to rebuild muscle. That’s a big benefit in the winter months as most multi-sport athletes head to the gym for strength and conditioning.

Grab a bag and try for yourself, just don’t sit on them.

 

Disclaimer


* Writer's note - We purchased the chips for this review and Quest in no way influenced this review.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Hello, my name is Ryan and I drink caffeine

And sadly I rely on it way too much...
When you work full time, are married and have 2 young kids, you tend to burn the candle at both ends, and that's without tacking on things like triathlon training and keeping up with the ole blog.  I have had little luck getting up in the morning to work out, and now that it's cold and dark, it makes it even more tough.  Boo hoo, right?

This isn't a sob story, but delving into why I am hooked on caffeine.



I Googled "caffeine health studies" and it was surprising to see that a good majority of the results came up with somewhat positive views of caffeine.


  1. Caffeine and Health: Clarifying The Controversies

    www.afic.org/Caffeine%20&...
    Caffeine & Health: Clarifying The Controversies. Caffeine is one of the most comprehensively studied ingredients in the food supply. Yet, despite our ...
  2. Health effects of caffeine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_effects_of_caffeine
    The health effects of caffeine have been extensively studied. Short term side effects such as headache, nausea, and anxiety have been shown as symptoms of ...
  3. Caffeine-diabetes link still unresolved, study says | Fox News

    www.foxnews.com/health/.../caffeine-diabetes-link-still-unresolved-st...
    Nov 23, 2012 – Results of a large new U.S. study confirm that sugary drinks are linked to a heightened risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, but shed little light ...
  4. Caffeine Linked to Lower Skin Cancer Risk - ABC News

    abcnews.go.com › HealthHealth
    Jul 2, 2012 – PHOTO: A new study finds that coffee fanatics are less likely to ... too much caffeine -- not to mention sugar -- can have harmful health effects.
  5. Caffeine fix it: How a regular cup of coffee could help you live longer ...

    www.dailymail.co.uk/health/.../Caffeine-fix-How-regular-cup-coffee-...
    May 16, 2012 – Too much caffeine used to be considered a bad thing. ... and 173,000 women, taking part in a diet and health study between 1995 and 2008.
  6. Coffee: Friend or foe? | MNN - Mother Nature Network

    www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/coffee-friend-or-foe
    Oct 2, 2012 – With study after study being published about the health effects of caffeine — and the new attention in relation to vision issues — when all is said ...
  7. Information about Caffeine Research Study

    www.caffeinedependence.org/
    Caffeine is the most commonly used mood-altering drug in the world.
  8. Exercise and caffeine change your DNA in the same way, study ...

    www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120306131254.htm
    Mar 6, 2012 – When healthy but inactive men and women exercise for a matter of ... Perhaps even more tantalizing, the study suggests that the caffeine in ...
  9. Ask the Expert: Coffee and Health - Your Nutrition Questions ...

    www.hsph.harvard.edu › ... › Your Nutrition Questions Answered
    The latest Harvard study on coffee and health seems to offer good news for coffee drinkers. What did the research find? We looked at the relationship between ...
  10. Caffeine from two to four daily cups of coffee may reduce - CBS News

    www.cbsnews.com/.../caffeine-from-two-to-four-daily-cups-of-coffe...
    Aug 1, 2012 – In the latest study to tie coffee to health benefits, new research finds a daily caffeine boost may ease symptoms of Parkinson's disease in ...


Notice that any study that show benefits of caffeine correlate that benefit to drinking coffee, not soft drinks.

Sadly I've been known to suck down a diet pepsi or pepsi max in the morning, at lunch and find something to keep me going at night to stay up with the kids.  There's also studies about the negative effects of diet pops on the body and they chemcials and ingredients used to create a better taste with no sugar.  Caffeine + chemicals - calories = mood enhancing + health reducing side effects.

Luckily at the new office gig, they have an in-house cafeteria that had a little coffee / latte area.  So, I go about 2/3 coffee with some sugar free latte and a little hot chocolate mix to cover up the nasty coffee taste.  I'm not into the taste of coffee, just the boost from the caffeine.

Anyone else in this boat?

Sure, I could go to bed at 9pm every night, get my 8 hours and get up at 5am.  But I have to be at work by 7am at the latest and I face a 30 minute commute.  Tack in time to get ready for work, let the dogs out and feed them, grab whatever misc chores I need to do before heading to work and there's no time for workouts or basically anything else.

So, usually hit bed around 10pm, try and drag up around 5:30am and head to work.  Maybe work out over lunch, maybe grab a quick workout at the gym after work and head home.

That's a busy day and sadly I rely on caffeine to get me through it.

What about everyone else out there?  What do you use?  It's ok to share, we're in a safe place... in the trust tree.