Author: Robin Strong Elton

  • Review: Fuel Your Next Workout with Fuel For Fire Fruit + Protein Smoothies

    Review: Fuel Your Next Workout with Fuel For Fire Fruit + Protein Smoothies

    They don’t call protein the building blocks of the body for nothing. Here are my thoughts on the exercise portion of weight loss after regaining, plus an actually tasty way to get some pre- or post-workout whey protein (that’s 99.8% lactose free!) when you’re on the go.

    I received this product for free from Moms Meet (momsmeet.com) to use and post my honest opinions. Compensation for this post was provided and this page may contain affiliate links.

    My strength did not come from lifting weights.

    My strength came from lifting myself up when I was knocked down.

    -Bob Moore

    Alrighty, in my last post I talked about the holy trinity of weight loss— nutrition, energy expenditure and sleep— as I’m attempting to lose some weight I regained after I stopped exercising and my muscle turned to blub. I gave the Cliff Notes version of my first steps to get my nutrition back on point and how I’ve been using vegan protein powder to support that goal, and now I want to talk about protein and how it supports my goals of being STRONGER and more healthy overall.

    First, let me give you the Cliff’s Notes for my first steps trying to regain muscle.

    • Start slow. IT IS SO HARD. It’s so frustrating to not be able to do what I could when I was in competition shape or training for obstacle races. But if you go too hard, you get super sore and mentally defeated at best or you get hurt. Both of those mean taking time off and that does nothing to further your goals.
    • Go heavy. But not too heavy. What I mean is, don’t do things that aren’t too terribly taxing for long intervals, go for intensity or a heavier weight for shorter intervals. Light workouts for long periods don’t work on your body for long, and you’ll find yourself having to go longer and longer to get the same returns, which means plateaus and more mental defeatism.
    • Go bodyweight when you can. But give yourself grace. Bodyweight exercises are great, you can do them anywhere, and generally speaking you’re less likely to injure yourself than when you’ve got what you used to backsquat nagging at the back of your mind. That said, you’re doing this because you gained weight, remember? Bodyweight exercises are going to be harder because your heart and lungs aren’t as conditioned as they used to be, but also you’re moving more weight. Don’t be tempted to compare your performance now to then.
    • Be prepared for initial (seemingly) setbacks. As you rebuild muscle under the fat it’s going to push that fat out. You’re probably going to be drinking more water, too. You’re going to look puffy at first, and you’re probably going to GAIN a few pounds before you start losing. Remember though that the muscle is going to help you burn more calories; there’s a tipping point you have to reach. Focus on your overall fat-to-muscle body composition ratio and the long game and before long you’ll notice your clothes hanging differently on your frame.

    To put it simply, when you exercise you deliberately tax your muscles, causing miniscule tears. When you consume protein, ideally right around the time of your workout, it helps to repair those tears (they don’t call protein the building blocks of the body for nothing).

    It’s like the Japanese concept of Kintsugi, where broken pottery is repaired by sealing the cracks with gold: it is more beautiful and unique for having been broken, which is what the art form is getting at (related to wabi-sabi, a belief in the beauty of imperfection), but it’s also stronger because those cracks have been reinforced, which is what I’m getting at.

    The problem is, I LOATHE eating too close to a workout, either before or after. The LAST thing I want is food or a protein shake, which is the gym rat’s general post-workout go-to (I also have a level of lactose intolerance). I can do a protein bar pre-workout if it’s not too dense, but their texture sometimes puts me off and many have a surprising amount of sugar. I used to eat a banana before a lot of CrossFit WODs, but I HATE BANANAS and I’d be tasting it the whole time, which always made that hour particularly grueling.

    BUT, there’s a “magic window” that’s the optimal time to get that protein in to best rebuild those muscle tears.

    So I was pretty intrigued when I got to try out Fuel For Fire as part of the Moms Meet blogger program. These are “real food” snacks, made from 100% real fruit puree and a quality whey protein isolate that is 99.8% lactose free.

    Lemme say that again. 

    100% real fruit puree and a quality whey protein isolate that is 99.8% lactose free.

    They are similar to the pouches that some kid applesauces and such come in for packing in lunches and on-the-go, which would make them an easy sell to help fill in gaps in kids’ nutrition. I’m, obviously, bummed about the disposable packaging; I’d love to hear about a recycling program. But for my purposes— occasional use for fueling up before or after an outside-my-house workout or a 5K— I’m willing to loosen my grip on that point.

    Fuel For Fire was founded six years ago by professional chef and six-time Ironman Triathlete Rob Gilfeather, admirable credentials for someone creating real food workout fuel. (I was also delighted to learn that he handmade over 25,000 packs at home with his twin daughters when launching.)

    Fuel For Fire Fruit + Protein Smoothie fast facts:

    • no gluten, soy, nuts, GMOs, fat, or added sugar
    • less than 125 calories
    • each pouch has more protein than one whole egg
    • nine essential amino acids in each pack
    • comes in Sweet Potato Apple, Banana Cocoa, Tropical, Strawberry Banana and Coffee
    • let’s say it one more time: 100% real fruit puree and a quality whey protein isolate that is 99.8% lactose free.

    They don’t need refrigeration and will keep up to a year in your gym bag, but apparently a lot of people like them chilled. I’m weird and don’t like most food or drinks cold, so I can’t speak to that.

    But how does it taste?

    Shockingly good, actually, given that two of the flavors involve banana (which I hate) and one is tropical (which is also a flavor I’d never choose for myself). I particularly like the Sweet Potato Apple, which isn’t shocking as I love sweet potato. The coffee flavor actually contains 65 mg of caffeine! The consistency is thicker than applesauce but not quite as thick as yogurt, I’d say. And I don’t have to give my usual disclaimer of I’ve tried dozens of protein powders and similar products and I sort of like the taste myself: I can barely taste the whey protein. They go down easy, even after a workout. They’re just good.

    Just don’t tell your kids, your partner or your dad they’re good for them, and they’ll eat them without complaining.

    You can buy Fuel For Fire Fruit + Protein Smoothies at fuelforfire.com, on Amazon, and at select retail stores (full list here). 

    Get 40% off and free shipping on any purchase on fuelforfire.com with the discount code SAVE40. Offer expires July 31, 2018!

  • It Rained for 8 Days and All I Got Was My Own Personal Rainbow

    It Rained for 8 Days and All I Got Was My Own Personal Rainbow

    I can’t stand the rain
    Against my window
    Bringing back sweet memories…

    Hey window pane
    Tell me, do you remember
    How sweet it used to be

    -recorded by Ann Peebles,
    written by Peebles, Don Bryant, and Bernard “Bernie” Miller

    I haaaaaaate this time of year, when all it does is rain rain rain rain rain and the ground gets gross and saturated and you have to avoid worms on the sidewalk because even they can’t stand the rain. It’s basically been raining for as long as I can remember now and it only lets up long enough to warm up and pull all that moisture back out of the ground so we can get a thunderstorm as a change of pace.

    When this happens, “I can’t stand the rain” plays on a constant loop in my head, although it tends to be the version from the movie The Commitments, and I kind of keep a wary eye on myself for odd behavior, like Jack Nicholson’s wife does on her husband early on in The Shining.

    This particular week long stretch of liquid depression had a fairly impressive hailstorm involved, which took out all the flowering bushes that give me life after a long winter and provides our friendly rat snake a place to sun himself. There was also a lightning strike in our neighbor’s yard that raised all the hairs on my arms followed by a crack of thunder that left my ears ringing (that was pretty cool, actually, but probably caused me some more hearing damage and potentially could have killed me I guess). 

    After a couple of days of this, you start to become aware of how everything green is just going to EXPLODE once we get a dry spell, which would be exciting but you also have to worry about everyone being killed off by pollen. The pollen has been INSANE this year, which is likely related to climate change but we can talk about that in a less ridiculous post.

    All week long, all around me, people have been posting these rainbow photos on Instagram and Facebook and I’ve been so jealous. I love rainbows and it’s been a long time since I’ve seen one. I’ve gone so far as to get in the car and go rainbow hunting but nada.

    Last night we drove to the beach in the rain to ready it for the upcoming holiday weekend. I use the Waze app while driving, mostly for company but lately to alert me to the immense land crater potholes that have been cropping up everywhere, probably because of all the rain, and when I got close to the Delaware Memorial Bridge it warned me about a fog hazard.

    That was a new one. But she wasn’t kidding around. For reference, the Delaware Memorial looks like this on a clear day:

    and yesterday it looked like this as you were ascending:

    which was pretty nuts, that you couldn’t see the arches, but I HARDLY CALL THAT A TRAVEL HAZARD, WAZE.

    Anyway, when I woke up THE SUN WAS OUT and I felt like a mole woman being let out into the light but we had to get back home to the kids.

    On the drive back, it started to drizzle and I basically lost my mind. Heeeeeeere’s Johnny!

    There was another stretch of sunshine, just enough to set off another fast and overly dramatic storm, but this time Jeff hollered for me to get outside because there was a rainbow stretching between the treetops in our backyard. And it was glorious.

    It was our own private rainbow, only visible from a certain vantage point that nobody else in the world has and only in existence for about a minute. This photo was shot through the kitchen window; by the time I got outside it was already starting to fade.

    I feel like there’s some sort of beautiful metaphor there, about struggle and endurance and how fleeting perfect moments are, how privileged we are to get to experience them at all, and how you have to have open eyes and an adventurous heart so that you put yourself in their path and notice them as they’re happening.

    But right now, as I listen to the rain tapping against my window, all I can think is keep your rainbows, I’d rather not have any more rain right now.

    Please and thank you, amen.

  • Review: VeganSmart All-In-One (Vegan Protein Powder)

    Review: VeganSmart All-In-One (Vegan Protein Powder)

    Let’s talk about sustainable weight loss, getting your nutrition on point and vegan protein powder to support your goals. OK?


    I received this product for free from Moms Meet (momsmeet.com) to use and post my honest opinions. Compensation for this post was provided and this page may contain affiliate links.


    Where there is no struggle, there is no strength.

    -Oprah Winfrey

    (That feels like a quote that someone else probably said first—scratch that, probably tons of people have said it, but they weren’t Oprah, so there you go.)

    Confession: I’ve been struggling with my weight lately.

    Long story short, I put on some weight after Cass was born, then lost it alllll when I started running. Then I started CrossFit and the number on the scale crept back up again, but I legitimately didn’t care because the weight was distributed differently; I was mostly muscle. I was strong.

    And then I stopped going to CrossFit, and the muscle turned to fat with some extra sympathy fat joining in for company. I’ve started again with a home gym, but it’s so much harder this time around. I don’t have a coach busting my chops when I’m slacking, for one, but also I’m older and more tired and research shows it’s harder to exercise off the pounds after you’ve done it once.

    The good news is, I have done it and so I know deep down how to do it again. It’s just going to take longer for sustainable results because I’m hormonally, metabolically and physically different then I was at my last starting point. And that’s OK, because slow and steady means it’s more likely to stick longterm (or, rather, the weight is more likely to stay unstuck). 

    In my years writing extensively for a fitness-centric agency, I learned a LOT about weight loss and of course I also saw how that bore out with my own experience. So for those also going through this, here are my common sense Cliff’s notes.

    The holy trinity of weight loss is nutrition, energy expenditure and sleep.

    You gotta have all three, and lots of it, and the right kind. I talk about the benefits of sleep in this post, and I’ll get to energy expenditure in my next one. We’re talking nutrition broadly in this post.

    My diet was not terrible, but it wasn’t great either. I don’t eat a lot of junk food, I don’t have a sweet tooth, I’m not much of a snacker, I don’t stress eat or emotionally eat, the vast majority of what I eat is “real food” that I prepare myself. It felt like what I should be doing is just jumping in with both feet with exercise, but I know from last time that’s not the answer. Here’s what I’m doing instead.

    Tips to tighten up your nutrition

    • The first thing everybody should do is start tracking their food intake. Everything. It’s HUGELY eye opening for most people, whether to learn how many calories they’re actually taking in or how much difference that daily nightcap makes or how lacking they are in the recommended allowances for fruits & veg. This time around, I realized how deficient my current diet was in a number of vitamins (particularly calcium, Vitamin D and potassium). I like My Fitness Pal, but I was recently gifted a Fitbit and that app works fine for me as well.
    • The second thing most people should do is eat more fruits and veggies. And try to eat them first. Work with that food tracking app and figure out how much you should eat daily (and sticking with the kinds that you like is fine). Mentally sort them out into the times you usually eat, and then eat them first at those times; for instance, eat some peppers and carrots while you’re making dinner. For me it felt like a TON of food, and honestly I was never able to eat much of whatever the prepared meal was. It takes the pressure off of having to plan healthy meals all the time. Just fill up on fruits and veggies first, then go ahead and have some of whatever everyone else is having. You won’t feel like you’re making this huge sacrifice but you also won’t be able to eat as much of the more calorie dense offering.
    • Drink that water! A lot of hunger pangs are really a sign of dehydration, and you’re going to want to be chugging water to counter all that fiber you’re getting with your fruits and veg. You will feel the difference while exercising too. There’s a lot of back and forth on how much water a (wo)man really needs; it depends on a lot of factors. Just drink whenever you think about it, track it in your app, and aim for really light pee.
    • Up your (LEAN) protein. To put it really simply, protein plays an important part in the muscle building process, and having more muscle mass means more calorie burn. (Protein also plays a ton of other important roles in the body, but I don’t want to keep you here all day.) Protein has the added benefit of making you feel fuller for longer. What’s tricky is that some protein rich foods can have elements you don’t want; chicken is a better option than a cheeseburger, for instance, because cheeseburgers involve the added calories of cheese and whatever else is on it, plus ounce for ounce they have more fat and calories.

    If you’re really making the effort to eat more plant based foods, or if you’re already a vegetarian or vegan anyway, hitting your protein goals can take a little more planning. I’m a big fan of protein shakes— they’re one of my few regular choices that don’t fall under the “real food” umbrella— because I hate eating breakfast, and I’m never hungry after workouts. But I also have a bit of a lactose intolerance (that’s probably a contributing factor in those vitamins I’m chronically deficient in), and sometimes whey proteins can really put a damper on my day via my stomach. 

    Now, I’ve had the opportunity to try out a lot of different protein powders in the last five years or so. I would say they are, in general, an acquired taste; since I grew up drinking them (I was chronically underweight as a child) I kind of like it. There are a few that do taste great on the first go but they generally have a trade-off in terms of sugar content (or sugar substitutes, some of which I also have tolerance issues with). 

    I’ve tried a couple of plant based protein powders before but I wasn’t a fan. I won’t name any names, but no matter the flavor they all tasted… earthy. Like literally very mineral/dirt like.

    I’ve never had a plant based protein powder that I really enjoyed. Until now. Really.

    I tried VeganSmart All-In-One Nutritional Shakes through the MomsMeet blogger program and I’ve been having a shake for breakfast on weekdays (weekends are for brunch) for a few weeks now, made with either almond or soy milk. I usually also try to choke down a  small banana, even though I hate bananas, because I have a tendency to get leg and foot cramps when I run (as in, when I’m running somewhat regularly, not during the actual exercising) which some studies attribute to possible potassium deficiency, and I figure a banana a day certainly can’t hurt.

    Here’s what’s in VeganSmart All-In-One Nutritional Shakes:

    • a complete protein blend of five different non-GMO plant-based proteins, along with a whole food complex made from a rainbow of nine different fruits and vegetables
    • 22 vitamins and minerals
    • prebiotics to stimulate the growth and maintenance of beneficial intestinal flora
    • a digestive enzymes blend which assists in digesting foods more completely for better nutrient absorption 

    Here’s what’s not in VeganSmart All-In-One Nutritional Shakes:

    • cholesterol or trans fat
    • eggs, dairy, soy or gluten
    • artificial sweeteners, flavors, colors, and preservatives
    • acesulfame-k or MSG

    None of that matters unless it tastes good, and this definitely ranks up there on my top five. I like the vanilla better than the chocolate, but the chocolate is equal to the taste of most chocolate whey proteins out there. Like I said, I’ve been voluntarily drinking these 5x a week, and I plan to continue to do so until I hit some weight and fitness goals. It hits a lot of goalposts for me: I’m eating breakfast without fuss, I’m supplementing my nutrition gaps, especially those normal people would get from dairy, and I’m getting a protein boost to rebuild those muscles. More on that in my next post.

    A 15-serving jug of VeganSmart All-In-One Nutritional Shake typically retails for $36.99. It comes in Vanilla, Chocolate, Wild Berries, Chai, Peaches and Cream, Raspberry Chocolate, Strawberry Shortcake and Cookies and Cream. You can find it a lots of different places, including Walmart, Walgreens, The Vitamin Shoppe, Albertsons, and CVS. (Full list here.)

    Save $7.50 on VeganSmart with a printable coupon redeemable at your local brick and mortar retailer here: https://www.vegansmart.com/momsmeet.