Archive for November, 2007

5 Healthy and Easy Ways to Prepare Vegetables

Thursday, November 29th, 2007
Yuki Shoji asked:


It is a scientific fact that vegetables are good for you. However, people don’t eat them enough because they don’t realize that there are many ways in which to prepare them. People are often asking what is the absolute best way to prepare vegetables so that they get the full health benefits from them. The answer to this is that there is no best way, that preparing vegetables is ultimately a matter of preference for some, or a way to provide variety for others. Let’s look at the options available to healthy eaters when it comes to preparing vegetables.

Healthy and Easy Way to Prepare Vegetables #1 Raw

Vegetables such as lettuce, tomatoes, celery, onions, and carrots are an excellent choice here. However, in order to keep them healthy, avoid eating them with dips, such as ranch dressing. Try to eat them without extra. However, if you need more flavor then you can use salt, or non fat or sugar free peanut butter. But just make sure to use it sparingly.

Healthy and Easy Way to Prepare Vegetables #2 Steamed

Steamed vegetables are a great side dish to almost any meal and are highly popular. They they are softer in texture, and it’s an appeal for those people who don’t like to eat their vegetables raw. If you add a little splash of pepper to them and maybe a small portion of butter you will have quite a tasty meal.

Healthy and Easy Way to Prepare Vegetables #3 Boiling

While this type of vegetable preparation is going out of style, it is still an easy one. However, it is important that you know if you choose this method you will be losing out on many of the nutrients in the vegetables. The process removes them and leaves them in the water. Unless you’re a big fan of this type of preparation you may consider not using it.

Healthy and Easy Way to Prepare Vegetables #4 Baking

This method often gets overlooked unless the vegetable in question is a potato, but it also works great for turnips and carrots. Preparation is easy, just slice up the vegetables, lightly brush them with oil, (preferably olive oil and then set them in the over for 40 to 60 minutes and then you’re ready to eat.

Healthy and Easy Way to Prepare Vegetables #5 Barbeque

Yes, that’s right, barbeque. Most people don’t realize that they can barbeque vegetables. In fact, all too often barbecuing is considered a form of food preparation reserved only for meat, but who says a barbeque has to be completely unhealthy? If you’ve got a big enough barbeque, then save a spot on the grill for the vegetables. All you have to do is slice up the vegetables you want, wrap them in foil and them put them on the grill and not only are you getting your meat, but your veggies too.

Vegetables are important to a healthy lifestyle, but they don’t have to be boring. If you mix and match your vegetables with the different types of healthy preparations available you can keep your lifestyle interesting, but most importantly, healthy.



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Vegetable Nutrition For a Healthy Life

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
Shelley Green asked:


Fruit and vegetables are brimming with fibre, plus a whole range of vitamins and minerals, and because they’re low in calories, they make an important and healthy addition to any diet. Here is some information for you about vegetable nutrition. “Eat your fruits and vegetables” is one of the tried and true recommendations for a healthy diet, and for good reason. Eating plenty of fruits and vegetables can help you ward off heart disease and stroke, control blood pressure and cholesterol, prevent some types of cancer, avoid a painful intestinal ailment called diverticulitis, and guard against cataract and macular degeneration, two common causes of vision loss.”5 A Day” is a day is a national health programme in the USA and also in the UK to explain why you need vegetable nutrition as well as fruit and to encourage you to eat more servings of fruit and vegetables every day. People all over the world are becoming more and more aware of how important fruit nutrition and vegetable nutrition is to stay healthy.

In general, yellow and dark green vegetables are excellent sources of vitamin A. Green leafy vegetables are rich in calcium, iron, magnesium, vitamin C and many of the B vitamins. The greener the leaf, the richer the nutrients will be. Here are some suggestions to think about color to pack nutritional power in your diet: · White: Eat cauliflower more often than potatoes, onions and mushrooms.· Green: Add more dark lettuces, such as romaine and red leaf lettuce, spinach, broccoli and Brussels sprouts to replace iceberg lettuce and green beans. · Yellow-orange: Substitute more carrots, winter squashes, sweet potatoes, cantaloupe, oranges and grapefruit for corn or bananas. · Red: Select tomatoes, red peppers and strawberries in favor of apples. If you are trying to watch your weight, an idea is to make sure you are not eating too many calories if you are adding these foods to your diet. increasing the amounts of fruits and vegetables you eat can promote weight control, but only if they replace higher fat foods like ice cream, meat and chips to help you consume fewer calories. But if fruits and vegetables are simply added to what you already eat, total calories won’t significantly drop and weight loss should not be expected. The most important thing to do is to vary the fruit and vegetables that you eat from day to day. This is to give your body a variety but to also keep you interested in your food. There are always great new recipes, ideas and ways to make your food look and taste great!



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How Do I Possibly Eat All Those Fruits and Vegetables?

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007
Leeann Simons asked:


Copyright (c) 2008 At Peace With Food

You want to improve your eating, but you just don’t know if you can eat a crock of broccoli or a head of romaine lettuce. You want to reduce your heart disease risk, but the idea of steaming vegetables for each meal just doesn’t sit well with you.

Not only do you feel guilty about not wanting to eat these profoundly healthy products, you don’t even know which recommendations to follow-there are so many! You hear amounts anywhere from 5 servings/day to 9-14 servings/day. You hear these foods will treat anything from heart disease to high blood pressure (which you will surely get from reading articles about foods you don’t like to eat). You know all these things, and yet—you still don’t know how to manage any of this.

Let me try to help you.

First, let me explain where these numbers come from. The “5 a day” is a recommendation from the National Cancer Institute. Research suggests that following these recommendations you may be able to reduce your risk of certain types of cancer. Whether it is the plant chemicals involved in cancer reduction, or the fact that eating more fruits and vegetables means consuming less protein and saturated fat (primarily from animal products), populations of people following these guidelines seem to have lower cancer rates.

The “9-14 servings/day” resulted from the DASH study, the Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension. This study showed that consuming between 9 and 14 servings of vegetables and fruits each day helped reduce blood pressure as much as certain medications. If you are taking blood pressure medications, talk to your health care provider before trying this diet-but it is certainly worth considering if you have experienced side effects from your medication.

Before I go further, let me just tell you that if you want to try this approach, you should know is considered a serving size. This way you won’t worry about spending your entire budget at the produce counter. A serving of fruit is about the size of a baseball or 4 ounces of juice; a serving of vegetables is ½ cup of cooked or 1 cup of fresh vegetables.

Now, let’s talk about some ways to sneak these foods into your daily meal plan.

What about using a banana instead of jelly the next time you make a peanut butter sandwich? A medium sized banana counts as two servings of fruit.

While it may not seem like much, how about a few pieces of fresh spinach or Boston lettuce on your next roast beef sandwich? It adds crunch, and also a half of a serving of vegetables.

Do you like spaghetti? Why not try cooking some carrots until they are really soft, then blending them in with your spaghetti sauce? Saut?g onions in a little olive oil also adds vegetables to your sauce-and helps reduce your risk of chronic disease.

How about soup? One way I get my son to eat vegetables is to cook LOTS of vegetables (carrots, broccoli, onions, potatoes) in broth, then blending the entire mixture and serving it in a bowl. Using frozen vegetables reducing the cooking time, if you are in a rush.

If you want to add fruits, as well as bone building calcium, how about fruit smoothies? You can mix frozen berries (or unfrozen bananas) with low fat vanilla yogurt and there you have it! A snack that’s good for your heart, your bones, and most importantly, your taste buds.

While I don’t recommend drinking juices (fruit sugar is the same as table sugar, as far as calories go; “natural” doesn’t really mean healthier), 4-6 ounces a day is the maximum I tell anyone to drink. So if you need ONE more serving, go ahead, have a small glass of orange juice (or whatever juice you like).

Hopefully these suggestions are helpful for you. One of my newsletters, has a wonderful, colorful handout entitled “Eat From The Rainbow.” When in doubt, think about the rainbow, and see if you can find one fruit and/or vegetable from each color, and add it to your diet.

Here’s to your health!



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Health of Green Vegetables

Thursday, November 8th, 2007
prabakar asked:


Healthful eating is never so easy as it is in the spring. With fresh fruits and vegetables flourishing, you only need minimal preparation to bring out maximum flavor. From salads to sides, entrées to desserts, here is a collection of our wholesome springtime favorites.

Fresh fruits and vegetables are healthy in part because they contain phytochemicals, or beneficial compounds, such as beta-carotene, folate, and lycopene, which aid in the prevention of cancer. There is truth to the old “apple a day” adage, though this time of year, think seasonally and make it a “strawberry” or “artichoke” a day…. Beyond having weight-watching benefits, a diet plentiful in fruits and vegetables decreases your risk of stroke and heart attack, helps lower blood pressure, and even guards against eye disease.

Spring favorites asparagus and artichokes are often associated with rich, luxurious menus, but they’re also incredibly healthy: They are both excellent sources of fiber and contain a host of nutrients, including vitamins C, K, and folate. “Asparagus is a particularly well-rounded vegetable, nutritionally speaking,” says Monica Reinagel, chief nutritionist for our sister site NutritionData.com, writing in Epicurious and NutritionData’s joint newsletter Healthy Dinner Tonight. “It’s high in antioxidants A, C, and E, as well as vitamin K (for healthy bones), and has an array of B vitamins for energy.”

Eat plenty of green leafy vegetables, at least two to three servings every day. They are loaded with the absorbable calcium, iron, and many vitamins that children need. Have plenty of other vegetables, too, selecting the freshest organic vegetables at a farmer’s market or a local garden or, if you can, grow your own. It helps to offer more than one vegetable at a meal and to avoid pushing children to eat vegetables they do not care for. Overall, vegetables should make up 25 to 30 percent of the diet. For more details visit www.indomunch.com



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