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Owned by Mike

The Core Collective

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Where heavy music meets heavy lifts. Fitness, food, & lifestyle united - Workouts made for your goal - Strong starts here. Join The Core Collective.

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16 contributions to Spirited Food
Christmas survey
Just curious to see what your favorite might be...
Poll
6 members have voted
Christmas survey
4 likes • 7d
We have a spot near me called “Christmas card lane” and it’s a whole long dead end road where all the houses are decorated and they have MASSIVE Christmas cards in each front yard. Different every year. I’ll have to see if I can snag a good photo or two when we go check them out this year
2 likes • 7d
@Patrick Horta dang I need to see some of that. I love some good lights
Dad Jokes
I forgot to post a Dad Joke on Friday due to the Holiday. I just forgot what day it was!
Dad Jokes
3 likes • 7d
How do you make a tissue dance? You put a little boogie in it!
New Members
Welcome aboard @Mike Flood @Ridpro Marketer and @James Makosa Glad to have you here! Please take a minute and introduce yourself to the community. Thanks!
3 likes • 7d
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Ultimate Tuna Salad
Excuse my photo, I was on the go and had to wrap it up and hit the road but here it is. Ingredients you will need 1 can tuna drained 1/2 cup carrot diced 1/2 cup celery diced 1/2 cup apple diced (I used a honey crisp for a bit of tart mixed in and that was a good choice) The sauce - put all ingredients in a bowl and blend together until smooth: 1/2 cup cottage cheese 1/3 cup Greek yogurt 1TBSP Dijon mustard 1TBSP garlic minced Salt and pepper to taste Dill optional Calories 408 Protein 52g Carbs 33g Fat 4g There’s enough substance you can just spoon feed it to yourself but you can opt for crackers if you want (adjust the macros accordingly)
Ultimate Tuna Salad
1 like • 20d
@Andrew Brooks That’s a really good point. I always think of it as art and all art is subjective so I agree
1 like • 19d
@Andrew Brooks I prefer Greek yogurt in any recipe that calls for mayo (if I can without wrecking the flavor). If I do use mayo it's avocado oil. I have seen some recipes recently of people making their own instead of buying and considering giving that a go too!
Fried Foods : What to make of them...
Pretty much everyone loves fried things. Fried chicken is obviously a standard but there are also pickles, okra, pork chops, snickers bars, tofu, zucchini, asparagus, peppers, fish, potatoes, sweet potatoes, the list goes on and on. You can pretty much fry anything. And it is delicious. Crispy, hot, salty...that experience is universally liked. But also most everyone says that fried foods are "bad". So let's explore that a bit. Let's first say that there is a BIG difference between making something fried at home and what you get in a restaurant. I'm making an assumption that you are at least semi-health minded. What's the difference? Restaurant version : Let's start with the cooking medium : most likely it will be canola oil or a canola/seed oil based shortening (which is even worse). We do know that Canola and other seed oils are not great for us and that is mostly due to the manner of extracting the oil. In many cases chemical solvents are used. You know that stuff to clean oil off your engine? Yes that stuff. And it is often extracted at very high heats, which damages the oil molecule, making it more likely to turn rancid and making a large percentage of the oil molecules carcinogenic. Yes, cancer causing. And everything in a restaurant is fried in that oil. Why? because it is cheap and restaurants just don't have the budget to fry in Avocado oil. Breading : it is so crispy and light! That crunch does something to our brain; it is a satisfying texture and makes us want more. To get a batter/crust like that oftentimes super refined starches are used because of the size of the starch grains (super tiny). This provides a light, crisp crust that traditional flour just can't touch. These starches really raise your blood sugar and do it very quickly (spike). Process : the process of frying creates millions of microscopic fissures all over the surface of the item being fried. And even when the food is removed from the fat and drained, all those microscopic fissures still hold onto the oil. Ever leave a piece of fried chicken on a paper towel? That's what I'm talking about. And how your fingers get coated just from handling the food. Now, fat isn't "bad" HOWEVER, speaking nutritionally, fats have 2X the calories of protein and carbohydrates. That means that it is really easy to get more calories than you need when eating fried foods. That fried food just holds onto the oil, and you eat it.
Fried Foods : What to make of them...
1 like • 19d
I am a big fan of just controlling as much as you can of what goes into your body. It's hard to trust restaurant methods unless you are at a super upscale place. (I've never worked in one so this is mainly conjecture)
1 like • 19d
@Andrew Brooks That's some good insight. I don't go to a restaurant just cause it says farm/table. I've never really believed it so I guess intuition wins sometimes lol. Would love to see some restaurants shake up the business space though by doing what your friend does!
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Mike Hillman
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@michael-hillman-1119
Fitness, food, baseball, business. Community builder Pop-punk and heavy metal fanatic. Laughter is the way Check out my community and let's connect!

Active 1h ago
Joined Nov 4, 2025
ENTJ
Kalamazoo
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