|
36 Potent
Foods
To
Lose
Weight and
Live Healthy

By James Williams
|
First
Edition.
Copyright ©
2008
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Table of Contents
-
Fat Burning Basics
-
Fat Burning Foods
-
Potent Foods
Fat Burning Basics
If you’re overweight,
you are not a bad
person. You’re simply
overweight. But it’s
important to lose the
extra pounds so you’ll
look good, feel
healthier and develop a
sense of pride and
self-esteem. Once you’ve
lost the fat, you’ll
need to maintain your
weight.
In this booklet, you’ll
discover how to lose 10
pounds a month – a nice,
safe loss of about two
or two-and-a-half pounds
a week – painlessly.
You’ll feel satisfied
and more energetic than
in the past without
feeling deprived.
Most Americans pack on
those extra pounds by
eating the wrong things.
Changing these poor
eating habits is the key
to long-term success.
Knowledge – along with
the right food – is the
key.
When humans lived in
caves, they didn’t know
anything about
preserving and storing
food. They spent all
their waking time and
energy hunting and
gathering food. When
they had it, they
gobbled it down fast.
Instead of storing food
in pantries or
cupboards, they stored
energy in their bodies
in the form of fat to
burn during periods when
there was little or
nothing to eat.
Each year, it was
absolutely vital for
them to put on a good
layer of fat during the
warm sprint and summer
months. That was the
only way they could
guarantee their survival
during the lean and mean
winter months.
And since women bore the
young, they needed more
energy to sustain
themselves and their
babies, and that meant
they were usually
heavier.
Even though we no longer
live in caves, we have
inherited and maintained
this basic mechanism for
fat storage from our
hunting and gathering
ancestors.
Each one of us is born
with a certain number of
fat cells. How many of
these fat cells you
possess depends on
genetics. If you have a
lot of fat cells, maybe
your ancestors were the
biggest people in the
tribe, which was a good
thing because they had
the best chances of
survival.
You can never get rid of
fat cells, but –
unfortunately – you can
add to them. Depending
upon what you eat, your
body will manufacture
new far cells. And like
those you were born
with, they never go
away.
That doesn’t mean you’re
doomed to be fat once
you put on extra pounds.
It is possible to shrink
fat cells. That’s what
happens when you lose
weight. You burn up the
fat stored in those big
fat cells. Think of them
as balloons. Burning off
the fat inside them has
the save effect as
letting the air out of a
balloon.
A good weight loss
program requires a
certain amount of intake
restriction – the
consumption of fewer
calories. You burn off
the fat by eating less
fat and becoming more
active.
To guarantee a lifetime
of weight-control
success, you have to
change the type of foods
you eat, so that you
ingest less fat and
still get the vitamins,
minerals, trace
elements, protein, fat
and carbohydrates your
body needs to thrive.
Extremely low-calorie
diets may help you shed
pounds quickly, but
they’ll lead to failure
in the long run.
That’s because humans
are genetically
protected against
starvation. During food
shortages, our bodies
slow down our
metabolisms and burn
less energy so we can
stay alive.
A part of our brain
called the hypothalamus
keeps us on an even
weight keep by creating
a “set point.” That’s
the weight where we feel
comfortable. The
hypothalamus determines
this point based on the
level of consumption
it’s used to. It seeks
to keep our weight
constant, even if that
point is over what it
should be.
When we drastically cut
back our food intake,
the brain thinks the
body is starving, and in
an effort to preserve
life, it slows the
metabolism. Soon the
pounds stop coming off.
Consequently, we grow
hungry and uncomfortable
and then eat more. And
then the diet fails.
How can you compensate
for this metabolic
slow-down? The answer is
that you have to change
the nutritional
composition of the foods
you eat. You will have
to cut down on total
calories – that’s
absolutely basic to
weight loss. More
important, however, is
reducing the percentage
of total calories you
are getting from fat.
That’s how you’ll avoid
starvation panic in your
system. At the same
time, you reduce the
amount of fat in your
food, replacing it with
safe, low calorie,
nutrient-rich plant
foods. This will
convince your brain that
your body is getting all
the nutrition it needs.
In fact, you’ll be able
to eat more food and
feel more satisfied
while consuming fewer
calories and fats.
Plant foods break down
slowly in your stomach,
making you feel full
longer, and they are
rich in vitamins,
minerals, trace
elements, carbohydrates
and protein for energy
and muscle-building.
This allows your body to
burn off its excess
stored fat.
Fat Burning Foods
Each one of the
following foods is
clinically proven to
promote weight loss.
These foods go a step
beyond simply adding no
fat to your system –
they possess special
properties that add zip
to your system and help
your body melt away
unhealthy pounds. These
incredible foods can
suppress your appetite
for junk food and keep
your body running
smoothly with clean fuel
and efficient energy.
You can include these
foods in any sensible
weight-loss plan. They
give your body the extra
metabolic kick that it
needs to shave off
weight quickly.
A sensible weight loss
plan calls for no fewer
that 1,200 calories per
day. But Dr. Charles
Klein recommends
consuming more that
that, if you can believe
it – 1,500 to 1,800
calories per day. He
says you will still lose
weight quite effectively
at that intake level
without endangering your
health.
Hunger is satisfied more
completely by filling
the stomach. Ounce for
ounce, the foods listed
below accomplish that
better than any others.
At the same time,
they’re rich in
nutrients and possess
special fat-melting
talents.
Apples
These marvels of nature
deserve their reputation
for keeping the doctor
away when you eat one a
day. And now, it seems,
they can help you melt
the fat away, too.
First of all, they
elevate your blood
glucose (sugar) levels
in a safe, gentle manner
and keep them up longer
than most foods. The
practical effect of this
is to leave you feeling
satisfied longer, say
researchers.
Secondly, they’re one of
the richest sources of
soluble fiber in the
supermarket. This type
of fiber prevents hunger
pangs by guarding
against dangerous swings
or drops in your blood
sugar level, says Dr.
James Anderson of the
University of Kentucky’s
School of Medicine.
An average size apple
provides only 81
calories and has no
sodium, saturated fat or
cholesterol. You’ll also
get the added health
benefits of lowering the
level of cholesterol
already in your blood as
well as lowering your
blood pressure.
Whole Grain Bread
You needn’t dread bread.
It’s the butter,
margarine or cream
cheese you put on it
that’s fattening, not
the bread itself. We’ll
say this as often as
needed – fat is
fattening. If you don’t
believe that, ponder
this – a gram of
carbohydrate has four
calories, a gram of
protein four, and a gram
of fat nine. So which of
these is really
fattening?
Bread, a natural source
of fiber and complex
carbohydrates, is okay
for dieting. Norwegian
scientist Dr. Bjarne
Jacobsen found that
people who eat less than
two slices of bread
daily weigh about 11
pounds more that those
who eat a lot of bread.
Studies at Michigan
State University show
some breads actually
reduce the appetite.
Researchers compared
white bread to dark,
high-fiber bread and
found that students who
ate 12 slices a day of
the dark, high-fiber
bread felt less hunger
on a daily basis and
lost five pounds in two
months. Others who ate
white bread were
hungrier, ate more
fattening foods and lost
no weight during this
time.
So the key is eating
dark, rich, high-fiber
breads such as
pumpernickel, whole
wheat, mixed grain,
oatmeal and others. The
average slice of whole
grain bread contains
only 60 to 70 calories,
is rich in complex
carbohydrates – the
best, steadiest fuel you
can give your body – and
delivers
surprising amount of
protein.
Coffee
Easy does it is the
password here. We’ve all
heard about potential
dangers of caffeine –
including anxiety and
insomnia – so moderation
is the key.
The caffeine in coffee
can speed up the
metabolism. In
nutritional circles,
it’s known as a
metabolic enhancer,
according to Dr. Judith
Stern of the University
of California at Davis.
This makes sense, since
caffeine is a stimulant.
Studies show it can help
you burn more calories
than normal, perhaps up
to 10 percent more. For
safety’s sake, it’s best
to limit your intake to
a single cup in the
morning and one in the
afternoon. Add only skim
milk to tit and try
doing without sugar –
many people learn to
love it that way.
Grapefruit
There’s good reason for
this traditional diet
food to be a regular
part of your diet. It
helps dissolve fat and
cholesterol, according
to Dr. James Cerd of the
University of Florida.
An average sized
grapefruit has 74
calories, delivers a
whopping 15 grams of
pectin (the special
fiber linked to lowering
cholesterol and fat), is
high in vitamin C and
potassium and is free of
fat and sodium.
It’s rich in natural
galacturonic acid, which
adds to its potency as a
fat and cholesterol
fighter. The additional
benefit here is
assistance in the battle
against atherosclerosis
(hardening of the
arteries) and the
development of heart
disease. Try sprinkling
it with cinnamon rather
than sugar to take away
some of the tart taste.
Mustard
Try the hot, spicy kind
you find in Asian import
stores, specialty shops
and exotic groceries.
Dr. Jaya Henry of Oxford
Polytechnic Institute in
England, found that the
amount of hot mustard
normally called for in
Mexican, Indian and
Asian recipes, about one
teaspoon, temporarily
speeds up the
metabolism, just as
caffeine and the drug
ephedrine do.
“But mustard is natural
and totally safe,” Henry
says. “It can be used
every day, and it really
works. I was shocked to
discover it can speed up
the metabolism by as
much as 20 to 25 percent
for several hours.” This
can result in the body
burning an extra 45
calories for every 700
consumed, Dr. Henry
says.
Peppers
Hot, spicy chili peppers
fall into the same
category as hot mustard,
Henry says. He studied
them under the same
circumstances as the
mustard and they worked
just as well. A mere
three grams of chili
peppers were added to a
meal consisting of 766
total calories. The
peppers’
metabolism-raising
properties worked like a
charm, leading to what
Henry calls a
diet-induced thermic
effect. It doesn’t take
much to create the
effect. Most salsa
recipes call for four to
eight chilies – that’s
not a lot.
Peppers are
astonishingly rich in
vitamins A and C,
abundant in calcium,
phosphorus, iron and
magnesium, high in
fiber, free of fat, low
in sodium and have just
24 calories per cup.
Potatoes
We’ve got to be kidding,
right? Wrong. Potatoes
have developed the same
“fattening” rap as
bread, and it’s unfair.
Dr. John McDougal,
director of the
nutritional medicine
clinic at St. Helena
Hospital in Deer Park,
California, says, “An
excellent food with
which to achieve rapid
weight loss is the
potato, at 0.6 calories
per gram or about 85
calories per potato.” A
great source of fiber
and potassium, they
lower cholesterol and
protect against strokes
and heart disease.
Preparation and toppings
are crucial. Steer clear
of butter, milk and sour
cream, or you’ll blow
it. Opt for yogurt
instead.
Rice
An entire weight-loss
plan, simple called the
Rice Diet, was developed
by Dr. William Kempner
at Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina.
The diet, dating to the
1930’s, makes rice the
staple of your food
intake. Later on, you
gradually mix in various
fruits and vegetables.
It produces stunning
weight loss and medical
results. The diet has
been shown to reverse
and cure kidney ailments
and high blood
pressure.
A cup of cooked rice
(150 grams) contains
about 178 calories –
approximately one-third
the number of calories
found in an equivalent
amount of beef or
cheese. And remember,
whole grain rice is much
better for you than
white rice.
Soups
Soup is good for you!
Maybe not the canned
varieties from the store
– but old-fashioned,
homemade soup promotes
weight loss. A study by
Dr. John Foreyt of
Baylor College of
Medicine in Houston,
Texas, found that
dieters who ate a bowl
of soup before lunch and
dinner lost more weight
than dieters who didn’t.
In fact, the more soup
they ate, the more
weight they lost. And
soup eaters tend to keep
the weight off longer.
Naturally, the type of
soup you eat makes a
difference. Cream soups
or those made of beef or
pork are not your best
bets. But here’s a great
recipe:
Slice three large
onions, three carrots,
four stalks of celery,
one zucchini and one
yellow squash. Place in
a kettle. Add three cans
crushed tomatoes, two
packets low-sodium
chicken bouillon, three
cans water and one cup
white wine (optional).
Add tarragon, basil,
oregano, thyme and
garlic powder. Boil,
then simmer for an hour.
Serves six.
Spinach
Popeye really knew what
he was talking about,
according to Dr. Richard
Shekelle, an
epidemiologist at the
University of Texas.
Spinach has the ability
to lower cholesterol,
rev up the metabolism
and burn away fat. Rich
in iron, beta carotene
and vitamins C and E, it
supplies most of the
nutrients you need.
Tofu
You just can’t say
enough about this health
food from Asia. Also
called soybean curd,
it’s basically
tasteless, so any spice
or flavoring you add
blends with it nicely. A
2½ ” square has 86
calories and nine grams
of protein. (Experts
suggest an intake of
about 40 grams per day.)
Tofu contains calcium
and iron, almost no
sodium and not a bit of
saturated fat. It makes
your metabolism run on
high and even lowers
cholesterol. With
different varieties
available, the firmer
tofus are goof for
stir-frying or adding to
soups and sauces while
the softer ones are good
for mashing, chopping
and adding to salads.
Potent Foods
It would be unrealistic
to think you could
successfully lose weight
and enjoy what you’re
eating with a mere
handful of foods, no
matter how delicious,
nutritious and
satisfying they may be.
So we’re going to add an
extra roster of
fat-fighting foods you
can eat along with the
great foods mentioned in
the last section.
They’ll lend different
tastes and textures to
every meal and provide a
wide range of vitamins,
minerals, proteins and
other vital nutrients.
Naturally, each one is
high in fiber, low in
fat and safe when it
comes to sodium content,
too.
Many have crunchiness
and flavor we’ve come to
desire in snack and
nibbling foods. If
you’re like most of us,
you may have a real junk
food snacking habit – a
habit you’re going to
have to change in order
to slim down. Many of
the foods in this
section may be worthy
substitutes.
Barley
This filling grain
stacks up favorably to
rice and potatoes. It
has 170 calories per
cooked cup, respectable
levels of protein and
fiber and relatively low
fat. Roman gladiators
ate this grain regularly
for strength and
actually complained when
they had to eat meat.
Studies at the
University of Wisconsin
show that barley
effectively lowers
cholesterol by up to 15
percent and has powerful
anti-cancer agents.
Israeli scientists say
it cures constipation
better than laxatives -
and that can promote
weight loss, too.
Use it as a substitute
for rice in salads,
pilaf or stuffing, or
add to soups and stews.
You can also mix it with
rice for an interesting
texture. Ground into
flour, it makes
excellent breads and
muffins.
Beans
Beans are one of the
best sources of plant
protein. Peas, beans and
chickpeas are
collectively known as
legumes. Most common
beans have 215 calories
per cooked cup (lima
beans go up to 260).
They have the most
protein with the least
fat of any food, and
they’re high in
potassium but low in
sodium.
Plant protein is
incomplete, which means
that you need to add
something to make it
complete. Combine beans
with a whole grain –
rice, barley, wheat,
corn – to provide the
amino acids necessary to
form a complete protein.
Then you get the same
top-quality protein as
in meat with just a
fraction of the fat.
Studies at the
University of Kentucky
and in the Netherlands
show that eating beans
regularly can lower
cholesterol levels.
The most common
complaint about beans is
that they cause gas.
Here’s how to contain
that problem, according
to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA):
Before cooking, rinse
the beans and remove
foreign particles, put
in a kettle and cover
with boiling water, soak
for four hours or
longer, remove any beans
that float to the top,
then cook the beans in
fresh water.
Berries
This is the perfect
weight-loss food.
Berries have natural
fructose sugar that
satisfies your longing
for sweets and enough
fiber so you absorb
fewer calories that you
eat. British researchers
found that the high
content of insoluble
fiber in fruits,
vegetables and whole
grains reduces the
absorption of calories
from foods enough to
promote width loss
without hampering
nutrition.
Berries are a great
source of potassium that
can assist you in blood
pressure control.
Blackberries have 74
calories per cup,
blueberries 81,
raspberries 60 and
strawberries 45. So use
your imagination and
enjoy the berry of your
choice.
Broccoli
Broccoli is America’s
favorite vegetable,
according to a recent
poll. No wonder. A cup
of cooked broccoli has a
mere 44 calories. It
delivers a staggering
nutritional payload and
is considered the number
one cancer-fighting
vegetable. It has no
fat, loads of fiber,
cancer fighting
chemicals called indoles,
carotene, 21 times the
RDA of vitamin C and
calcium.
When you’re buying
broccoli, pay attention
to the color. The tiny
florets should be rich
green and free of
yellowing. Stems should
be firm.
Buckwheat
It’s great for pancakes,
breads, cereal, soups or
alone as a grain dish
commonly called kasha.
It has 155 calories per
cooked cup. Research at
the All India Institute
of Medical Sciences
shows diets including
buckwheat lead to
excellent blood sugar
regulation, resistance
to diabetes and lowered
cholesterol levels. You
cook buckwheat the same
way you would rice or
barley. Bring two to
three cups of water to a
boil, add the grain,
cover the pan, turn down
the heat and simmer for
20 minutes or until the
water is absorbed.
Cabbage
This Eastern Europe
staple is a true wonder
food. There are only 33
calories in a cup of
cooked shredded cabbage,
and it retains all its
nutritional goodness no
matter how long you cook
it. Eating cabbage raw
(18 calories per
shredded cup), cooked,
as sauerkraut (27
calories per drained
cup) or coleslaw
(calories depend on
dressing) only once a
week is enough to
protect against colon
cancer. And it may be a
longevity-enhancing
food. Surveys in the
United States, Greece
and Japan show that
people who eat a lot of
it have the least colon
cancer and the lowest
death rates overall.
Carrots
What list of
health-promoting,
fat-fighting foods would
be complete without Bugs
Bunny’s favorite? A
medium-sized carrot
carries about 55
calories and is a
nutritional powerhouse.
The orange color comes
from beta carotene, a
powerful
cancer-preventing
nutrient (provitamin
A).
Chop and toss them with
pasta, grate them into
rice or add them to a
stir-fry. Combine them
with parsnips, oranges,
raisins, lemon juice,
chicken, potatoes,
broccoli or lamb to
create flavorful dishes.
Spice them with
tarragon, dill, cinnamon
or nutmeg. Add finely
chopped carrots to soups
and spaghetti sauce –
they impart a natural
sweetness without adding
sugar.
Chicken
White meat contains 245
calories per four ounce
serving and dark meat,
285. It’s an excellent
source of protein, iron,
niacin and zinc. Skinned
chicken is healthiest,
but most experts
recommend waiting until
after cooking to remove
it because the skin
keeps the meat moist
during cooking.
Corn
It’s really a grain –
not a vegetable – and is
another food that’s
gotten a bum rap. People
think it has little to
offer nutritionally and
that just isn’t so.
There are 178 calories
in a cup of cooked
kernels. It contains
good amounts of iron,
zinc and potassium, and
University of Nebraska
researchers say it
delivers a high-quality
of protein, too.
The Tarahumara Indians
of Mexico eat corn,
beans and hardly
anything else. Virgil
Brown, M.D., of Mount
Sinai School of Medicine
in New York, points out
that high blood
cholesterol and
cardiovascular heart
disease are almost
nonexistent among them.
Cottage Cheese
As long as we’re talking
about losing weight and
fat-fighting foods, we
had to mention cottage
cheese.
Low-fat (2%) cottage
cheese has 205 calories
per cup and is admirably
low in fat, while
providing respectable
amounts of calcium and
the B vitamin
riboflavin. Season with
spices such a dill, or
garden fresh vegetable
such a scallions and
chives for extra zip.
To make it sweeter, add
raisins or one of the
fruit spreads with no
sugar added. You can
also use cottage cheese
in cooking, baking,
fillings and dips where
you would otherwise use
sour cream or cream
cheese.
Figs
Fiber-rich figs are low
in calories at 37 per
medium (2.25” diameter)
raw fig and 48 per dried
fig. A recent study by
the USDA demonstrated
that they contribute to
a feeling of fullness
and prevent overeating.
Subjects actually
complained of being
asked to eat too much
food when fed a diet
containing more figs
than a similar diet with
an identical number of
calories.
Serve them with other
fruits and cheeses. Or
poach them in fruit
juice and serve them
warm or cold. You can
stuff them with mild
white cheese or puree
them to use as a filling
for cookies and
low-calorie pastries.
Fish
The health benefits of
fish are greater than
experts imagined – and
they’ve always
considered it a health
food.
The calorie count in the
average four-ounce
serving of a deep-sea
fish runs from a low of
90 calories in abalone
to a high of 236 in
herring. Water-packed
tuna, for example, has
154 calories. It’s hard
to gain weight eating
seafood.
As far back as 1985,
articles in the New
England Journal of
Medicine showed a clear
link between eating fish
regularly and lower
rates of heart disease.
The reason is that oils
in fish thin the blood,
reduce blood pressure
and lower cholesterol.
Dr. Joel Kremer, at
Albany Medical College
in New York, discovered
that daily supplements
of fish oil brought
dramatic relief to the
inflammation and stiff
joints of rheumatoid
arthritis.
Greens
We’re talking collard,
chicory, beet, kale,
mustard, Swiss chard and
turnip greens. They all
belong to the same
family as spinach, and
that’s one of the
super-stars. No matter
how hard you try, you
can’t load a cup of
plain cooked greens with
any more than 50
calories.
They’re full of fiber,
loaded with vitamins A
and C, and free of fat.
You can use them in
salads, soups,
casseroles or any dish
where you would normally
use spinach.
Kiwi
This New Zealand native
is a sweet treat at only
46 calories per fruit.
Chinese public health
officials praise the
tasty fruit for its high
vitamin C content and
potassium. It stores
easily in the
refrigerator for up to a
month. Most people like
it peeled, but the fuzzy
skin is also edible.
Leeks
These members of the
onion family look like
giant scallions, and are
every bit as healthful
and flavorful as their
better-known cousins.
They come as close to
calorie-free as it gets
at a mere 32 calories
per cooked cup.
You can poach or broil
halved leeks and then
marinate them in
vinaigrette or season
with Romano cheese, fine
mustard or herbs. They
also make a good soup.
Lettuce
People think lettuce is
nutritionally worthless,
but nothing could be
farther from the truth.
You can’t leave it out
of your weight-loss
plans, not at 10
calories per cup of raw
romaine. It provides a
lot of filling bulk for
so few calories. And
it’s full of vitamin C,
too. Go beyond iceberg
lettuce with Boston,
bibb and cos varieties
or try watercress,
arugula, radicchio,
dandelion greens,
purslane and even
parsley to liven up your
salads.
Melons
Now, here’s great taste
and great nutrition in a
low-calorie package! One
cup of cantaloupe balls
has 62 calories, on cup
of casaba balls has 44
calories, one cup of
honeydew balls has 62
calories and one cup of
watermelon balls has 49
calories. They have some
of the highest fiber
content of any food and
are delicious. Throw in
handsome quantities of
vitamins A and C plus a
whopping 547 mgs of
potassium in that cup of
cantaloupe, and you have
a fat-burning health
food beyond compare.
Oats
A cup of oatmeal or oat
bran has only 110
calories. And oats help
you lose weight.
Subjects in Dr. James
Anderson’s landmark
12-year study at the
University of Kentucky
lost three pounds in two
months simply by adding
100 grams (3.5 ounces)
of oat bran to their
daily food intake and
nothing else. Just don’t
expect oats alone to
perform miracles – you
have to eat a balanced
diet for total health.
Onions
Flavorful, aromatic,
inexpensive and low in
calories, onions deserve
a regular place in your
diet. One cup of chopped
raw onions has only 60
calories, and one raw
medium onion (2.15”
diameter) has just 42.
They control
cholesterol, thin the
blood, protect against
cholesterol and may have
some value in
counteracting allergic
reactions. Most of all,
onions taste good and
they’re good for you.
Partially boil, peel and
bake, basting with olive
oil and lemon juice. Or
sauté them in white wine
and basil, then spread
over pizza. Or roast
them in sherry and serve
over paste.
Pasta
The Italians had it
right all along. A cup
of cooked paste (without
a heavy sauce) has only
155 calories and fits
the description of a
perfect starch-centered
staple. Analysis at the
American Institute of
Baking shows pasta is
rich in six minerals,
including manganese,
iron, phosphorus,
copper, magnesium and
zinc. Also be sure to
consider whole wheat
pastas, which are even
healthier.
Sweet Potatoes
You can make a meal out
of them and not worry
about gaining a pound –
and you sure won’t walk
away from the table
feeling hungry. Each
sweet potato has about
103 calories. Their
creamy orange flesh is
one of the best sources
of vitamin A you can
consume.
You can bake, steam or
microwave them. Or add
them to casseroles,
soups and many other
dishes. Flavor with
lemon juice or vegetable
broth instead of butter.
Tomatoes
A medium tomato (2.5”
diameter) has only about
25 calories. These
garden delights are low
in fat and sodium, high
in potassium and rich in
fiber.
A survey at Harvard
Medical School found
that the chances of
dying of cancer are
lowest among people who
eat tomatoes (or
strawberries) every
week.
And don’t overlook
canned crushed, peeled,
whole or stewed
tomatoes. They make
sauces, casseroles and
soups taste great while
retaining their
nutritional goodness and
low-calorie status. Even
plain old spaghetti
sauce is a fat-burning
bargain when served over
pasta, so think about
introducing tomatoes
into your diet
Turkey
Give thanks to those
pilgrims for starting
the wonderful tradition
of Thanksgiving turkey.
It just so happens that
this health food
disguised as meat is
good year-round for
weight control.
A four-ounce serving of
roasted white meat
turkey has 177 calories
and dark meat has 211.
Sadly, many folks are
still unaware of the
versatility and flavor
of ground turkey.
Anything hamburger can
do, ground turkey can do
at least as well, from
conventional burgers to
spaghetti sauce to meat
loaf.
Some ground turkey
contains skin which
slightly increases the
fat content. If you want
to keep it really lean,
opt for ground breast
meat. But since this has
no added fat, you’ll
need to add filler to
make burgers or meat
loaf hold together.
Four ounces of ground
turkey has approximately
170 calories and nine
grams of fat – about
what you’d find in 2.5
teaspoons of butter or
margarine. Incredibly,
the same amount of
regular ground beef (21%
fat) has 298 calories
and 23 grams of fat.
Buying turkey has become
easy. It’s no longer
necessary to buy a whole
bird unless you want to.
Ground turkey is
available fresh or
frozen, as are
individual parts of the
bird, including
drumsticks, thighs,
breasts and cutlets.
Yogurt
The non-fat variety of
plain yogurt has 120
calories per cup and
low-fat, 144. It
delivers a lot of
protein and , like any
dairy food, is rich in
calcium and contains
zinc and riboflavin.
Yogurt is handy as a
breakfast food – cut a
banana into it and add
the cereal of your
choice.
You can find ways to use
it in other types of
cooking, to – sauces,
soups, dips, toppings,
stuffings and spreads.
Many kitchen gadget
departments even sell a
simple funnel for making
yogurt cheese.
Yogurt can replace heavy
creams and whole milk in
a wide range of dishes,
saving scads of fat and
calories.
You can substitute half
or all of the higher fat
ingredients. Be
creative. For example,
combine yogurt, garlic
powder, lemon juice, a
dash of pepper and
Worcestershire sauce and
use it to top a baked
potato instead of piling
on fat-laden sour
cream.
Supermarkets and health
food stores sell a
variety of yogurts, many
with added fruit and
sugar. To control
calories and fat
content, buy plain
non-fat yogurt and add
fruit yourself. Apple
butter or fruit spreads
with little or no added
sugar are an excellent
way to turn plain yogurt
into a delectable sweet
treat.
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About the
author
James
Williams is
a retired
bricks and
mortar
retail
executive
who now runs
his own home
based
Internet
business,
publishing
and
marketing
how-to
business
information.
Website:
www.DigitalDollars101.com
Email:
jim2000bizinfo@aol.com
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