
Triglycerides - What Are They?
Triglycerides are a type of fat in your blood. Oil, margarine, butter, and most other fats in your food are triglycerides and your blood absorbs them after you eat. But that’s not the only source. Your body also turns extra calories -- especially from “simple carbs” such as pastries, white bread, candy, sugar, and alcohol -- into triglycerides and stores them in fat cells.

What Is Cholesterol?
We've spoken before about fats: saturated, unsaturated, and trans fat – and how they affect cholesterol levels in our bodies. Today let’s learn more about what cholesterol is. And what it is not...

How to Lose that Resistant Fat Around Your Belly
We call that resistant fat around our midsection a muffin top, jelly-belly, or beer belly and no one wants it hanging around.