This post was originally published on this site

Originally posted at: http://www.nerdfitness.com/

I bet you’ve always wanted to do a handstand.

It’s okay, you can admit it.

It demonstrates balance and control over your body, something we happen to put great importance upon here at Nerd Fitness. It’s also one HELL of a party trick, something you can work on without a single piece of equipment, builds functional strength and muscular endurance, and it’s a skill you can work on in just a few minutes every single day.

How do I know this? Because I’m typing this while in a handstand RIGHT NOW. Okay, I can’t do that. But Jim, Master of the NF Fitness Universe can:

jim typing

I love working with gymnastic rings, because they have such a great tutorial level. Handstands are exactly the same way: it’s a great skill to work on as a beginner, but also is infinitely challenging depending on your skill level.

Plus, in addition to Jim, Luke Skywalker does them. It’s time to stop looking at other people doing cool things and start today saying “hey, I can do that too!”

Why handstands are awesome

Jim-Bathurst

Team Nerd Fitness member Jim Bathurst has been training and working on handstands for years. From humble beginnings, he taught himself a standard handstand and eventually worked his way up to one-handed tricks like the photo above.

Now, you won’t be doing this anytime soon, but it doesn’t mean you can’t start today learning how to go inverted.

Fun fact: I can’t say the word inverted without thinking of Top Gun’s line “because we were inverted,” but that’s only because I used to watch that movie with my brother every day from ages 3 to 5.

I’ve fallen in love with handstands for a few reasons:

Like other bodyweight training, there’s no excuse. If you have room to stand up, you have room to practice handstands.

It recruits DOZENS of muscles in your body. From arm strength to wrist mobility to core strength to shoulder mobility and muscular endurance, handstands do it all. When you are trying to balance, it makes your body work as one complete unit.

It scares you – yes, that’s a positive. We grow outside our comfort zone and for many people, just the thought of a handstand is enough to make their palms sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy. Vomi… nevermind. The point is that the handstand is just as much of a mental challenge as it is a physical one. How scared do you think this guy gets on a regular basis?

jim chair

The biggest challenge with handstands isn’t what you think

fear egg crush

Sure, we need to build strength to support ourselves upside-down, but even that hurdle is overblown.

A proper handstand actually starts to feel easy. That’s because once you’re balanced and aligned, it becomes uber efficient. Just as you don’t exert yourself much if you stand straight with good posture, a good efficient handstand is the same way… it will soon start to feel effortless.

Actually, the biggest hurdle to overcome – especially at the beginning – is the mental fear. The voice/feeling in the back of your head that says “you could get hurt doing this!” SCARY!

And I won’t sugar-coat things, you can hurt yourself working these skills… but it’s no different than if you walked into the gym first day, slapped 315 lbs on the bench press and gave it a go. Or went out and tried to run 13 miles without training. The exercise itself isn’t dangerous. Only if you approach it too fast.

If you wouldn’t load up a bar to 500 lbs your first day, why do so many people just kick and fling themselves up into a handstand, failing repeatedly, hoping one day they’ll “get” it? There’s a smarter way!

How do we overcome this fear and keep ourselves safe? Just like learning any other fitness skill: slow, easy, successful steps! These small victories accumulate over time to bring us to our goals safely while having a lot of fun.

Are you ready to learn?

Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered. Read on for ways to safely progress to handstand mastery!

The Safe Way To Start: Wrist and Shoulder Handstand Warm-up

For any handstand exercise, there is going to be a significant amount of stress on the hands and wrists… you’re not Cap! So, it’s important you stretch and warm things up.

Here is a video going over some of our favorite wrist stretches to prepare to get upside-down. Go through each stretch about 10 times.

 

The shoulders are another stressed area in the handstand. There are several ways we can prepare them for work, but a few rounds of jumping jacks or even just arm circles will get the blood moving and the area ready.

Beginning Handstand Progression: Start Small and Level Up As You Get Stronger & More Confident

wall walk 2

For the first two weeks of your handstand journey, we’ll have you work with some balance drills and some positional drills. Nothing too crazy, and in fact some of these might seem TOO EASY. That’s fine! That’s what we want, remember?

We’re using small victories to motivate us. Dropping you on your head in the quest for a handstand is not a way to motivate anyone. Well, maybe this guy.

We recommend you focus on four exercises: the wall walk, hollow body, quadruped rock, and crow pose:

Wall walks

wall walk

In this drill, we’ll get started right away working toward something that actually looks like a handstand! If you’re like me, you’ll probably get excited and start to overreach a bit at this point. But I believe in you: don’t let the enthusiasm and suspense get the best of you!

All we’re trying to do with this exercise is support our bodyweight on our straightened arms (just like the front plank or pushup).

So, the first level of this exercise is to simply get yourself up into the top of a pushup and hold. If that’s too hard,put your hands up on an elevated surface and/or rest on your knees and hands instead.

Once this is mastered, level up by simply lifting your hips in the air into a down dog position!

From here, it’ll be a matter of getting your feet onto a higher and higher surface. Note: putting your feet up something (I like bumper plates) even a few inches off the floor counts – small steps! As you progress, add more bumper plates (or whatever you’re using) so your feet are higher and higher.

Once you are supporting yourself with your feet on a high box, try walking your feet up the wall. (Think of it like a really tall box!)

Be careful at this step: Be sure you have enough energy to walk back down safely and second, and that you don’t walk too close to the wall and risk flipping onto your back!

With each of these variations, we’re looking to build up to a solid 15 seconds under control before moving forward.

Hollow body

hollow body

The hollow body is one of the best ways to to engage the midsection and stabilize the body. It will help to give your handstand a good shape. Do you need to master the hollow body to master the handstand? Not necessarily, as there are plenty of handstands out there that are a bit banana-shaped. But the hollow body will help you create a more efficient position.

Start by laying down a yoga or exercise mat on the ground and laying on the ground face up. Think about pressing your lower back down into the ground and engaging your midsection like you’re coughing. You should still be able to breath!

Once the midsection is set, tuck your knees to your chest and hold your shins like you’re getting ready for a wicked cannonball. Holding the shins will help you maintain that lower back and midsection position.

Still feeling good? Then try rocking! Rock your body forward and back slightly from the upper back to the lower back, like a rocking chair. Head and feet stay off the ground. If you are stable then you should move as one unit.

If you need more of a challenge, reach your arms by your ears, keep the knees tucked, and rock some more. Without the hands holding the shins, the midsection really has to keep engaged in order to give you a smooth rock.

Again, with any of these positions, build up to be able to rock for a full 15 seconds under control.

Quadruped Rock

quad rock

You may be thinking that feeling the balance of a handstand is going to be brutally difficult. Not so! We can start quite easily on our hands and knees in the quadruped position.

From here, we will simply rock forwards and backwards on our hands. Seem familiar? If you did the wrist mobility we described above, it’s the same motion! Isn’t that handy?

As you are rocking back and forth, feel where the weight rests in your hands. When you rock back, it sits more in the heel of your hands. When you rock forward, you’ll feel it in your knuckles and fingertips.

Where do we want it in the handstand? Right around the knuckles. This is a balanced spot – similar to the balance you find when standing. You don’t sit all your weight on your heels, and you don’t lean all your weight forward, gripping your toes hard into the ground, do you? Find and feel that balance when you rock.

Ready for the next step? Try Crow Pose.

Crow Pose

crow pose

To enter Crow Pose, move forward from the Quadruped Rock position so that your knees are on the outside of your arms. You can even bend the elbows a little and rest your legs on them.

Rock forward in the same manner as before, putting a little more weight on the hands and a little less weight on the feet.

Important: this isn’t Assassin’s Creed… We are not making a leap of faith here! Don’t jump!! We are simply looking for less and less weight on the feet. Take things slow and easy – rising up on the toes when you can. When you are ready to pick the feet up and hold yourself off the ground on just your hands, it should come naturally.

Be sure to grab into the ground hard to hold and control yourself, and feel free to put down a pile of pillows or mats in front of you if you should fall!

All these rocking and balance drills can be done for several sets of 5-10 reps. Listen to your wrists and give things a rest as needed.

Tips and Tricks

handstand tips

Nothing beats patience and hard work, but there are a few tips and tricks we can provide that will allow you the best chance for success.

Make sure you go through a proper warm-up: We’ve given you several options for the wrists and shoulders. Not only will a warm-up help prevent injury, but it will get the muscles and joints properly prepared to get the most out of your training.

Prioritize Your Handstand: You can work the skill on its own time, and it won’t interfere or be interfered by anything else, but what if you’re doing other exercises during your workout? When do you handstand?

The best time to work the balancing drills is at the beginning of your workout, after you’ve warmed up. These skills require concentration and a fresh focus to really benefit and progress with them. Trying to balance after you’ve exhausted yourself with a tough cardio session is an exercise in futility (pun intended).

The best time to work the positional drills would be sometime during your strength session, and before your cardio. These drills are not as dependent on completely fresh muscles, but we still don’t want to try and hold ourselves upside-down after a grueling workout.

Too much, too soon.

We’ve mentioned this a million times because it’s so important. Taking on too much too soon is a way to develop bad habits and possibly injure yourself. Take your time! Enjoy and really master each step!

Take it Easy: In the same vein, we want to look for success. What do I usually see when people practice handstands? Someone kicking up 100 times and kinda getting a handstand once or twice. How much sense does that make? While we might not be batting 1,000 with all our attempts, but we should be looking to successfully complete around 8 out of 10 attempts. If we’re not? Then we might have taken on too much, too soon!

The 5-Minute Rule: Practice Handstands Every Day and Be Amazed at What Happens

Commit to 5 minutes a day. That’s it. But do it every day.

I’ll see a lot of people go all in for a single handstand session, and then not touch the skill for a week or more. Dan Gable once said, “If it’s important, do it every day.” Now this is a simplification, but with handstands, this is ESPECIALLY important.

When you first start out, your arms and shoulder may only be able to do 5 minutes before they are DONE. Doing them for a short time each day is the best strategy to improve strength, endurance, and balance.

And if you’re interested in diving deep into handstands, we have something awesome for you next week. Stay tuned!

Have you ever tried to kick up into a handstand?

What’s the one thing holding you back?

What questions can I answer?

-Steve

###

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

Originally posted at: http://www.nerdfitness.com/

I bet you’ve always wanted to do a handstand.

It’s okay, you can admit it.

It demonstrates balance and control over your body, something we happen to put great importance upon here at Nerd Fitness. It’s also one HELL of a party trick, something you can work on without a single piece of equipment, builds functional strength and muscular endurance, and it’s a skill you can work on in just a few minutes every single day.

How do I know this? Because I’m typing this while in a handstand RIGHT NOW. Okay, I can’t do that. But Jim, Master of the NF Fitness Universe can:

jim typing

I love working with gymnastic rings, because they have such a great tutorial level. Handstands are exactly the same way: it’s a great skill to work on as a beginner, but also is infinitely challenging depending on your skill level.

Plus, in addition to Jim, Luke Skywalker does them. It’s time to stop looking at other people doing cool things and start today saying “hey, I can do that too!”

Why handstands are awesome

Jim-Bathurst

Team Nerd Fitness member Jim Bathurst (Aka Master of the Universe) has been training and working on handstands for years. From humble beginnings, he taught himself a standard handstand and eventually worked his way up to one-handed tricks like the photo above.

Now, you won’t be doing this anytime soon, but it doesn’t mean you can’t start today learning how to go inverted.

Fun fact: I can’t say the word inverted without thinking of Top Gun’s line “because we were inverted,” but that’s only because I used to watch that movie with my brother every day from ages 3 to 5.

I’ve fallen in love with handstands for a few reasons:

Like other bodyweight training, there’s no excuse. If you have room to stand up, you have room to practice handstands.

It recruits DOZENS of muscles in your body. From arm strength to wrist mobility to core strength to shoulder mobility and muscular endurance, handstands do it all. When you are trying to balance, it makes your body work as one complete unit.

It scares you – yes, that’s a positive. We grow outside our comfort zone and for many people, just the thought of a handstand is enough to make their palms sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy. Vomi… nevermind. The point is that the handstand is just as much of a mental challenge as it is a physical one. How scared do you think this guy gets on a regular basis?

jim chair

The biggest challenge with handstands isn’t what you think

fear egg crush

Sure, we need to build strength to support ourselves upside-down, but even that hurdle is overblown.

A proper handstand actually starts to feel easy. That’s because once your balanced and aligned, it becomes uber efficient. Just as you don’t exert yourself much if you stand straight with good posture, a good efficient handstand is the same way… it will soon start to feel effortless.

Actually, the biggest hurdle to overcome – especially at the beginning – is the mental fear. The voice/feeling in the back of your head that says “you could get hurt doing this!” SCARY!

And I won’t sugar-coat things, you can hurt yourself working these skills… but it’s no different than if you walked into the gym first day, slapped 315 lbs on the bench press and gave it a go. Or went out and tried to run 13 miles without training. The exercise itself isn’t dangerous. Only if you approach it too fast.

If you wouldn’t load up a bar to 500 lbs your first day, why do so many people just kick and fling themselves up into a handstand, failing repeatedly, hoping one day they’ll “get” it? There’s a smarter way!

How do we overcome this fear and keep ourselves safe? Just like learning any other fitness skill: slow, easy, successful steps! These small victories accumulate overtime to bring us to our goals safely while having a lot of fun.

Are you ready to learn?

Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered. Read on for ways to safely progress to handstand mastery!

The Safe Way To Start: Wrist and Shoulder Handstand Warm-up

For any handstand exercise, there is going to be a significant amount of stress on the hands and wrists… you’re not Cap! So, it’s important you stretch and warm things up.

Here is a video going over some of our favorite wrist stretches to prepare to get upside-down. Go through each stretch about 10 times.

 

The shoulders are another stressed area in the handstand. There are several ways we can prepare them for work, but a few rounds of jumping jacks or even just arm circles will get the blood moving and the area ready.

Beginning Handstand Progression: Start Small and Level Up As You Get Stronger & More Confident

wall walk 2

For the first two weeks of your handstand journey, we’ll have you work with some balance drills and some positional drills. Nothing too crazy, and in fact some of these might seem TOO EASY. That’s fine! That’s what we want, remember?

We’re using small victories to motivate us. Dropping you on your head in the quest for a handstand is not a way to motivate anyone. Well, maybe this guy.

We recommend you focus on four exercises: the wall walk,hollow body, quadruped rock, and crow pose:

Wall walks

wall walk

In this drill, we’ll get started right away working toward something that actually looks like a handstand! If you’re like me, you’ll probably get excited and start to overreach a bit at this point. But I believe in you: don’t let the enthusiasm and suspense get the best of you!

All we’re trying to do with this exercise is support our bodyweight on our straightened arms (just like the front plank or pushup).

So, the first level of this exercise is to simply get yourself up into the top of a pushup and holding.If that’s too hard,put your hands up on an elevated surface and/or rest on your knees and hands instead.

Once this is mastered, level up by simply lifting your hips in the air into a down dog position!

From here, it’ll be a matter of getting your feet onto a higher and higher surface. Note: putting your feet up something (I like bumper plates) even a few inches off the floor counts – small steps! As you progress, add more bumper plates (or whatever you’re using) so your feet are higher and higher.

Once you are supporting yourself with your feet on a high box, try walking your feet up the wall. (Think of it like a really tall box!)

Be careful at this step: Be sure you have enough energy to walk back down safely and second, and that you don’t walk too close to the wall and risk flipping onto your back!

With each of these variations, we’re looking to build up to a solid 15 seconds under control before moving forward.

Hollow body

hollow body

The hollow body is one of the best ways to to engage the midsection and stabilize the body. It will help to give your handstand a good shape. Do you need to master the hollow body to master the handstand? Not necessarily, as there are plenty of handstands out there that are a bit banana-shaped. But the hollow body will help you create a more efficient position.

Start by laying down a yoga or exercise mat on the ground and laying on the ground face up. Think about pressing your lower back down into the ground and engaging your midsection like you’re coughing. You should still be able to breath!

Once the midsection is set, tuck your knees to your chest and hold your shins like you’re getting ready for a wicked cannonball. Holding the shins will help you maintain that lower back and midsection position.

Still feeling good? Then try rocking! Rock your body forward and back slightly from the upper back to the lower back, like a rocking chair. Head and feet stay off the ground. If you are stable then you should move as one unit.

If you need more of a challenge, reach your arms by your ears, keep the knees tucked, and rock some more. Without the hands holding the shins, the midsection really has to keep engaged in order to give you a smooth rock.

Again, with any of these positions, build up to be able to rock for a full 15 seconds under control.

Quadruped Rock

quad rock

You may be thinking that feeling the balance of a handstand is going to be brutally difficult. Not so! We can start quite easily on our hands and knees in the quadruped position.

From here, we will simply rock forwards and backwards on our hands. Seem familiar? If you did the wrist mobility we described above, it’s the same motion! Isn’t that handy?

As you are rocking back and forth, feel where the weight rests in your hands. When you rock back, it sits more in the heel of your hands. When you rock forward, you’ll feel it in your knuckles and fingertips.

Where do we want it in the handstand? Right around the knuckles. This is a balanced spot – similar to the balance you find when standing. You don’t sit all your weight on your heels, and you don’t lean all your weight forward, gripping your toes hard into the ground, do you? Find and feel that balance when you rock.

Ready for the next step? Try Crow Pose.

Crow Pose

crow pose

To enter Crow Pose, move forward from the Quadruped Rock position so that your knees are on the outside of your arms. You can even bend the elbows a little and rest your legs on them.

Rock forward in the same manner as before, putting a little more weight on the hands and a little less weight on the feet.

Important: this isn’t Assassin’s Creed… We are not making a leap of faith here! Don’t jump!! We are simply looking for less and less weight on the feet. Take things slow and easy – rising up on the toes when you can. When you are ready to pick the feet up and hold yourself off the ground on just your hands, it should come naturally.

Be sure to grab into the ground hard to hold and control yourself, and feel free to put down a pile of pillows or mats in front of you if you should fall!

All these rocking and balance drills can be done for several sets of 5-10 reps. Listen to your wrists and give things a rest as needed.

Tips and Tricks

handstand tips

Nothing beats patience and hard work, but there are a few tips and tricks we can provide that will allow you the best chance for success.

Make sure you go through a proper warm-up: We’ve given you several options for the wrists and shoulders. Not only will a warm-up help prevent injury, but it will get the muscles and joints properly prepared to get the most out of your training.

Prioritize Your Handstand: You can work the skill on its own time, and it won’t interfere or be interfered by anything else, but what if you’re doing other exercises during your workout? When do you handstand?

The best time to work the balancing drills is at the beginning of your workout, after you’ve warmed up. These skills require concentration and a fresh focus to really benefit and progress with them. Trying to balance after you’ve exhausted yourself with a tough cardio session is an exercise in futility (pun intended).

The best time to work the positional drills would be sometime during your strength session, and before your cardio. These drills are not as dependent on completely fresh muscles, but we still don’t want to try and hold ourselves upside-down after a grueling workout.

Too much, too soon.

We’ve mentioned this a million times because it’s so important. Taking on too much too soon is a way to develop bad habits and possibly injure yourself. Take your time! Enjoy and really master each step!

Take it Easy: In the same vein, we want to look for success. What do I usually see when people practice handstands? Someone kicking up 100 times and kinda getting a handstand once or twice. How much sense does that make? While we might not be batting 1,000 with all our attempts, but we should be looking to successfully complete around 8 out of 10 attempts. If we’re not? Then we might have taken on too much, too soon!

The 5-Minute Rule: Practice Handstands Every Day and Be Amazed at What Happens

Commit to 5 minutes a day. That’s it. But do it every day.

I’ll see a lot of people go all in for a single handstand session, and then not touch the skill for a week or more. Dan Gable once said, “If it’s important, do it every day.” Now this is a simplification, but with handstands, this is ESPECIALLY important.

When you first start out, your arms and shoulder may only be able to do 5 minutes before they are DONE. Doing them for a short time each day is the best strategy to improve strength, endurance, and balance.

And if you’re interested in diving deep into handstands, we have something awesome for you next week. Stay tuned!

Have you ever tried to kick up into a handstand?

What’s the one thing holding you back?

What questions can I answer?

-Steve

###

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.marksdailyapple.com/

dear mark longevity in lineFor today’s Dear Mark, I’m answering a question about the optimal diet for longevity. An article sent in by a reader claims that a recent mouse study has identified the perfect diet for everyone, but especially for older people: a high-carb, low-protein one. They even manage to throw in some stuff maligning the paleo diet (they just can’t resist).

Find out below if the claim holds water. Let’s go:

Hey Mark,

What’s your take on this new study claiming that the best diet for longevity is a high-carb, low-protein one?

Interesting paper. Here’s how it went:

Researchers placed mice on a bunch of different diets to see how they’d affect levels of fibroblast growth factor 21, or FGF21. The 25 diets ranged from 5-60% protein and 5-75% fat or carbohydrate. They tried pretty much every permutation and found that the low-protein, high-carb combo produced the greatest increase in FGF21.

Why FGF21?

FGF21 “plays a role” in longevity, immune and metabolic health, energy metabolism, and appetite. Implicit in the study’s aims is that higher FGF21 is a good thing. It helps us live longer and healthier. If all that’s true, of course we’d want to find the macronutrient ratio that increases FGF21 most.

FGF21 is ultimately a marker of mitochondrial stress (PDF). By doing things that boost FGF21—which include fasting, low-calorie diets, low-carb/high-fat diets, and even acute exercise—we are applying a moderate amount of stress to our mitochondria. This is a good thing, provided the fasting doesn’t lapse into starvation, the diets don’t become chronic deprivation diets, and you allow sufficient recovery from the exercise. It’s hormesis: apply a stressor and bounce back stronger than before.

And sure enough, FGF21 does some good things, like helping us transition into ketosis and improves glucose control. Researchers are even exploring it as treatment for various metabolic disorders, obesity, and diabetes.

With most hormetic stressors, the benefits turn into negatives if the exposure persists or accumulates. There’s the chance of getting too much of a bad thing.

Is there any evidence of too much FGF21 being bad for us?

  • Among Chinese males, those with the highest FGF21 levels are more likely to have a heart attack and to have another within 30 days of the last one.
  • Both the highest and lowest FGF21 levels are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and death from heart attack.
  • Higher levels of FGF21 are linked to fatty liver, cardiovascular disease, and other metabolic disorders.
  • Independent of other risk factors, high serum FGF21 predicts the severity of atherosclerosis.

FGF21 may not be causing these things, but its elevated presence is at least a marker of something bad going on.

What does this all mean?

We have human evidence that various FGF21 genetic variants can help determine how well a person does on high-carb diets and low-carb diets. Those with the C variant lost more weight, waist circumference, and body fat on a high carb diet and less on the low-carb diet. Meanwhile—and this wasn’t reported in the study abstract—those with the T variant lost more weight, body fat, and waist circumference on the low-carb diet and were still losing body fat after two years.

I guess what I’m saying is this: Go with the diet that works for you.

Losing body fat on a diet? Keep it up.

Feel good? Keep eating the way you’re eating.

Don’t eat constantly—get hungry in between meals.

Fast if you can handle it. Men may be better at it than women.

Exercise on a regular basis.

All these things will increase FGF21 in the manner that’s likely to be healthiest without getting into excessive, chronic elevation.

What about the original article’s contention that older people should eat high-carb, low-protein diets to stave off death?

Nonsense.

We know that in older individuals, a higher protein intake is healthiest because as we age, we get less efficient at processing protein. We need more protein. Research shows that more protein promotes all the things we need to remain healthy and functional as the years accumulate.

Seniors who eat a half pound of red meat each day enjoy better physical function, get stronger, and build more lean muscle mass. That lean mass becomes ever more important the older we get. It’s a reserve for illness, injury, and bedrest. It keeps us spry and vibrant. It makes us strong; strong enough to take care of ourselves and actually engage with the outside world.

More protein (via red meat) also improves cognitive function in older adults. If you can’t use your brain, a long life gets a whole less enjoyable.

Seniors need higher protein intakes to maintain ever-critical bone density. A fractured hip is terrible for longevity.

I’ll have more to say about diet and longevity later. Bur for now, don’t tell Grandpa to ditch the protein and start slamming carbs.

That’s it for this week, folks. Take care and be sure to leave a comment down below!

phc2_640x80

The post Dear Mark: Is a High-Carb, Low-Protein Diet Best for Longevity? appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

Have you noticed a proliferation of teal-hued pumpkins adorning the steps and porches in your neighborhood? No, you haven’t stumbled into a particularly ardent enclave of Martha Stewart acolytes. These bright turquoise jack-o’-lanterns, whether a simple paper cutout or an actual pumpkin that’s been given a fresh coat of paint, indicate a home that is participating in The Teal Pumpkin Project.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/what-is-the-teal-pumpkin-project-236473′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

(Image credit: altafulla/Shutterstock)

Pop into any Oktoberfest celebration and you’re likely to encounter oceans of men dressed in lederhosen. Some fellas wear these Old World-style leather shorts with suspenders to pay homage to their Bavarian roots. Originally worn by the Bavarian working class and men in the Alpine region engaging in outdoor activities like hunting and riding, lederhosen are associated with brawn and strength, like kilts in Scotland or cowboy hats in the States.

Others wear lederhosen because, well, they’re awesome. In fact, we’re pretty sure wearing these traditional knickers makes drinking beer more fun. To be sure, we looked to Instagram to find out.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/does-wearing-lederhosen-make-drinking-beer-more-fun-236739′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

(Image credit: Anjali Prasertong)

Peek into my cupboards and you’ll know I drink coffee. My mugs have the stubborn brown stains to prove it. Even worse is the bottom of my Chemex carafe, which builds up an ugly residue that no amount of scrubbing with soap can remove. Luckily, I found a cheap, quick way to clean away old coffee stains without any harsh chemicals or special cleansers.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/the-best-way-to-remove-old-coffee-stains-from-mugs-carafes-tips-from-the-kitchn-200957′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

The National Retail Federation estimates Americans will spend as much as $2.5 billion on Halloween candy this year. That’s a lot of bags of sugary stuff. But not all candy is created equal (we’re looking at you, Tootsie Rolls).

Whether you’re the kind of person who snaps up bags of candy as soon as they hit the stores or wait until the night before and stock up on whatever’s left on the shelf, avoid these common mistakes when buying your Halloween candy. The neighborhood kids will thank you.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/5-mistakes-to-avoid-when-buying-halloween-candy-236565′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

(Image credit: Apartment Therapy )

From Apartment Therapy → How To Travel Alone If You’re An Introvert

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/an-introverts-guide-to-traveling-alone-237343′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

If you love a loaded baked potato, have we got a casserole for you. It’s the ultimate baked potato — but in a casserole for all to share. This is inspired by crispy stuffed baked potato skins and the pleasures of bacon-topped baked potatoes, bringing both together to create one dreamy, creamy, crowd-pleasing casserole.

Chill some beer, set out your favorite hot sauces, and get read to turn yesterday’s potato scraps into a next-day meal worth planning for.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/recipe-stuffed-baked-potato-skin-casserole-237256′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

(Image credit: Pinch of Yum)

I don’t think anyone needs a national food holiday to convince them to eat a big, comforting bowl of pasta on a chilly fall evening, but hey — a little extra encouragement never hurts. If you’re on the hunt for the perfect recipe to celebrate, this one, with a pumpkin-tomato sauce, ground turkey, and kale, should do the trick.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/celebrate-national-pasta-day-with-this-creamy-pumpkin-spaghetti-237310′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

Be Nice and Share!