Nutritional Supplements Tested
Forget about whether vitamins and herbal supplements actually help you. The question today is: do your vitamins and herbal supplements really contain what they say they do? Consumerlab.com has tested a wide variety of products to determine whether they contained 100% of the labeled amount of vitamins, minerals or herbal supplement.
This company offers a summary report for each testing for free. You do not have to subscribe to see the results of those tests. They show the brand names of the drugs tested (i.e. Vitamin World, Nature Made, CVS Pharmacy brand) and whether they passed the tests or not.
If you want exact measurements and all the full details, they have a one-year subscription to their website for $24, with savings for multiple-year subscriptions. Thirty-day access to one test is $9. I was able to find out a lot from just the summary report.
Check out the Nutrition Bar Testing to find the bars that actually contain what they say they do. To find the ones that contain more carbs than they actually do, you have to pay for the full report. Might as well just stick with the ones that are what they say they are.
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Dish up the leftovers into individual sized portions. – I use 
I’m not young enough to buy the kid’s meals and I’m not old enough to buy the Senior meals. You know what? Ninety percent of the time, my server doesn’t care. If you are polite and order nicely, they will give you the kid’s meal or the senior meal ninety percent of the time. It’s the other ten percent of the time I’m talking about.
Shape magazine has what they call a boredom busting workout that is supposed to break you out of your physical fitness rut.
When I heard that Adidas was making a tennis shoe with a built-in microprocessor, I got really excited. At first, I thought it could be something to gauge my mileage and speed. Maybe it could even monitor my heart rate. It could at least tell me if I’m running too slow to finish the race on time, right?