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16
Ways to Leave Your Blubber
By
Kathleen Daelemans
You don't have to give up your favorite comfort
foods if you slim down your favorite recipes. Here's how:
- Be
a miser. Be frugal and save calories everywhere you
can. If a salad dressing calls for a cup of olive oil,
add it last and do so a Tablespoon at a time, tasting
between each addition. At 120 calories and 15 grams of
fat per Tablespoon, you'll see savings mount up.
- Fool
your sweet tooth. When you're in the mood to bake,
cut back on the sugar by 25%. It might seem drastic but
a cup of sugar contains 774 calories. Leave 1/4 cup in
the sugar bowl, and you'll save 193 calories. Decide if
you can cut back the sugar even more next time and make
a note of it, penning it directly on the recipe.
- Be
a protein watch dog. Portion protein in advance of
cooking. A 32-oz steak for one? A 3-pound meatloaf for
6? Not if you're trying to maintain a healthy heart! Most
recipes call for more protein than you need. Four ounces
is usually enough for one serving. When you're reading
through recipes, adjust the quantity of protein accordingly.
- Dress
for success. Make salad dressings that are good for
you. Whisk in equal amounts of buttermilk and very low
fat mayonnaise, add honey mustard, finely minced garlic
and salt and pepper to taste for a super fast and savory,
guilt free, good for you dressing.
Give
Popeye a Run For His Money
Sometimes all it takes to start losing weight is to increase
the amount of good calories you consume in a day and to
eat them first. 9 times out of ten you'll consume smaller
quantities of less nutritious foods.
- Double
Up! On vegetables, of course. Full of bulk and fiber,
super nutritious, low calorie veggies will leave you feeling
full longer so whether you're cooking from scratch or
dining out, double up on the veggies and eat them first.
- Eat
a rainbow. A diet rich in fruits and vegetables can
help reduce risk of heart disease, stroke and some cancers.
Baby spinach and garden lettuces, strawberries, grapes,
grated carrots, red and yellow bell pepper is almost a
day's worth of fruits and veggies.
- Trade
up. Upgrade
the quality of protein you consume. Lean cuts of chicken
and fish go a lot further towards good health than high
fat cuts of beef, sausage and bacon, which are higher
in cholesterol and ounce for ounce more calorie-dense.
- Jump!
Jump start healthy weight loss by working in as many
soup and salad meals as you can. Piping hot soups loaded
with vegetables and legumes take a longer time to consume,
giving your brain plenty of time to register the food
you're consuming.
Work
In Work Outs
Make exercise non-negotiable. Do it for yourself, do it
for your family. Lead by example. One of the greatest gifts
you can give those you love is to instill in them, good
eating and good exercise habits. As little as a 5% reduction
in body weight can help reduce some of the risk factors
associated with obesity and can help improve some of the
symptoms linked to diabetes, high cholesterol and diabetes.
- Think
out of the box. If you support a charity, chances
are they sponsor a fun walk or fun run every year. Sign
up and train for the event. Make it a family affair.
- Walk
and talk. Every time you answer the phone let it trigger
a brisk walk or at least pacing. Ten five-minute standing-up
phone calls a day and you'll burn 100 calories.
- Take
ten. Think you can't accomplish much in ten minutes?
Think again. Park your car an extra ten minutes away from
work and you can burn 43 calories before you clock in.
Add another 43 for the trip back to your car, do that
5 days a week for a year and you can kiss 6 pounds good
bye. Walk up the stairwells for ten minutes during your
lunch hour and ten minutes back down and you'll burn 125
calories a trip. Do that 5 days a week for a year and
you could lose 9 pounds.
- Link
your exercise to your passion. If you loved ice-skating
as a child, you'll probably enjoy it again as an adult.
If you sign up for scuba lessons, go early and swim a
few laps before each class.
Good,
Better, Best Habits
It's no secret that bad eating and exercise habits can lead
to weight gain and poor health. Challenge yourself to upgrade
bad habits to better ones, better ones to excellent ones.
- Car
calories count. Eating in the car can be disastrous
to your health. If you truly need to eat on the run, keep
a cooler packed with the healthiest foods you can. Always
pack fruit, and pack a bottle of water and one to spare.
- DIY
Fast Food diet. You don't have to cook from scratch
24-7 to win the weight you want. Microwave fish, microwave
veggies and pre-washed baby spinach tossed with light
dressing is dinner in a minute (or 2). A nutrition-packed
tuna salad sandwich with white albacore tuna, celery,
carrots, cucumbers and tomatoes tossed with low-fat mayonnaise
mixed with mustard and relish on whole grain bread is
a fabulous lunch on the fly. Keep a rolodex of easy meals
you can make in 5 and keep all of the ingredients on hand
at all times so you never need to call for carry
out.
- Power
snacks power you. To
sustain energy, every meal and snack needs to contain
lean protein and a smart carb. Oatmeal and fruit, peanut
butter and apple wedges, a Medjool date and a couple of
walnuts, and when you need something a little more substantialkeep
it leana half of a whole-grain English muffin topped
with creamy chicken salad made with low-fat mayonnaise
dressing, spinach leaves and a tomato slice will satisfy
you straight through the afternoon.
- Stock
your pantry for good health.
If you can only reach for good stuff, you'll only eat
good stuff. Your environment is set up to ensure success
or to bring on failure. You hold all the cards. Controlling
the quality, variety and quantity of foods you consume
is the only way to know what and how much you're truly
consuming in a day. No one will ever care as much about
your family's good health as you do.
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