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Archive for November, 2009

Tips (And Recipes) For a Healthy Thanksgiving

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving

With Thanksgiving just around the corner, you might think it is impossible to stick to a healthy eating plan-right? Wrong! Although high calorie foods and holidays go hand in hand, it is 100% possible to stay on track! Do not let the cornucopia of food options weigh you down; it is time to kick off the holiday season right. Follow these tips to ensure you have a happy AND healthy season!

Top 10 Thanksgiving Survival Tips

1. Eat a well-balanced breakfast and lunch before your Thanksgiving extravaganza to prevent hunger and the overeating that often results from it!

2. Bring a low calorie dish or dessert to your Thanksgiving dinner (even if you aren’t asked) to ensure you have healthy options available.

3. On the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving, make sure you maintain a healthy lifestyle every day. Choose to eat well and exercise often to prevent any unnecessary weight gain.

4. Drink plenty of water on Thanksgiving! It helps fill you up without any extra calories.

5. Aim for just one helping from each food group! Enjoy a balance of protein (white meat turkey), vegetables, and one type of starch, such as corn or potatoes, to fill you up!

6. If you must, save a red light food to have an extra helping of potatoes or a dessert!

7. Enjoy special holiday foods! Don’t waste calories on foods you can eat everyday; instead, choose smaller portions of holiday favorites like Pumpkin Pie or Sweet Potato Pie.

8. Avoid noshing on small appetizers because they can add extra calories to your meal without making you feel full.

9. Fortunately, white meat turkey, vegetables, and sweet potatoes are healthy options found at most Thanksgiving dinners! Just be aware of how they are prepared; avoid fried foods, heavy sauces and foods made with a lot of butter or oil.

10. Nix leftovers! Give your guests “doggie bags” or donate leftover food to a homeless shelter in your area.

Thanksgiving is a day to focus on family and friends and to give thanks for all the blessings in your life! You may want to even start a new Thanksgiving tradition in order to celebrate. Instead of focusing solely on the food being served, get the whole family moving with a friendly game of touch-football or basketball. Don’t forget to give thanks for your ability to maintain a healthy lifestyle during the holiday season!

Healthy and Hearty Thanksgiving Staples

Pumpkin Spiced Squash Pie

Prep Time: 40 minutes

Cook Time: 50 minutes

Ready Time: 90 minutes

Ingredients:

· 1 cup cooked mashed butternut squash

· 3/4 cup fat-free milk

· 2 eggs

· 1/2 cup dark brown sugar

· 1 tsp pumpkin pie spice

· 1 tsp cinnamon

· 1/8 tsp salt

· 1 store-bought graham cracker crust

Preparation:

1. Preheat oven to 350 F.

2. blender, purée squash, milk, eggs, brown sugar, pumpkin pie spice, cinnamon and salt until completely mixed.

3. Pour into graham cracker crust and bake for 45 to 55 minutes or until the pie is set in the center.

4. Let pie cool on the counter and then refrigerate.

Makes 8 servings

1 slice (1/8 pie): Yellow

Nutty Bean Salad

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes

Ready Time: 25 minutes

Ingredients:

· 8 cup small green beans, ends trimmed

· 2 cup sliced green onions

· 1/3 cup chopped walnuts or almonds

· 1 1/2 Tbsp chopped fresh rosemary

· ¼ cup fresh lemon juice

· 1 1/2 Tbsp grated lemon rind

Preparation:

1. Arrange green beans in a steamer basket over boiling water. Cover and steam 8 to 12 minutes or until crisp-tender. Place beans into cold water to stop the cooking process; drain.

2. Spray a sauté pan with cooking spray. Over medium-high heat, add green onions and sauté until tender. Add green beans, walnuts, rosemary, and lemon juice.

3. Cook, stirring constantly, until thoroughly heated. Sprinkle with lemon rind and serve.

Makes 8 servings

1 cup: Green

Cranberried Sweet Potatoes

Prep Time: 12 minutes

Cook Time: 50 minutes

Ready Time: 65 minutes

Ingredients:

· 2 medium sweet potatoes

· 2 Tbsp cranberry juice

· 1 Tbsp brown sugar

· 1 Tbsp butter, melted

· 1/8 tsp ground ginger

· 4 tbsp craisins

Preparation:

1. Preheat oven to 400 F.

2. Scrub potatoes and cut in half lengthwise; do not peel.

3. Spray a baking pan with nonstick cooking spray. Place the potatoes in pan, cut-side down. Bake in the preheated oven 30 to 40 minutes or until almost tender.

4. Stir together the cranberry juice, brown sugar, butter, and ginger. Turn potatoes cut-side up and brush with cranberry mixture. Bake 5 to 10 minutes or until tender. Sprinkle each half with 1 tbsp of craisins. Serve immediately.

Makes 4 servings

½ potato per serving: Yellow

HAVE A HAPPY AND SAFE THANKSGIVING!

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Airbrushing Babies’ Fat Rolls Away: The Latest Magazine Trend

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Society’s craze with thinness has found a new target: our babies.  It is no longer just women and teens who have to be thin to be considered attractive; our babies must as well.  According to a new BBC documentary, My Supermodel Baby, many magazines airbrush their baby models to “put them across in the best light”.  The airbrushing ranges from removing spittle to erasing creases of fat.  Erasing fat creases from babies?  Isn’t that what makes them adorable?  Isn’t that how babies are supposed to look? Is nothing sacred anymore?

Daniella Delaney, the editor of the magazine Practical Parenting and Pregnancy said, “Babies are not like adults.  You can’t stop them from dribbling, so you might remove that bit of dribble from the chin. Or if the baby has just been crying, and their eyes are red, we might lighten the eyes. Or if they have just woken up because they have had a nap on the way in and we photograph them, we might remove a little bit of sleep.”  She said she was not aware of a policy regarding erasing fat creases but the casting director for her magazine’s photo shoot, which was covered in the BBC documentary, admitted that many changes were made to the baby model.  ”We lightened his eyes and his general skin tone, smoothed out any blotches and the creases on his arms,” he said. “But we want it to look natural.”

Yes, a naturally perfect-looking baby.  I don’t think so!

Jo Swinson, the Liberal Democrat MP for East Dunbartonshire, who has campaigned against the use of airbrushing in magazines, said: “People will be appalled that a magazine would not think images of beautiful healthy babies are alright as they are and instead have to conform to some standard. The idea that babies must look more perfect – that they can’t have creases in their skin – shows the obsession with a particular ideal. Where does this end?”

I couldn’t agree more!  What kind of message are we sending to our children?  We are telling them that anything less than “perfection” is not okay.  I am not worried that the baby models are lying in their cribs worrying that they didn’t look good enough in the photo shoot.  But what will this baby’s parents say to her when she grows up and looks back on those pictures.  “Look at this picture of you.  Isn’t it adorable?  Of course, you didn’t really look like that back then.  We had to airbrush your thighs because they were just huge!”

And even if the conversation doesn’t actually go like that, this baby model will grow up to wonder why her other baby pictures look different from the ones that everybody fawns over.  Eventually, she will realize that even as a baby, she wasn’t good enough as she was.

When I received my four year-old daughter’s school picture last year, I must admit that I was slightly disappointed that she was making a goofy face.  She was looking at the camera but her eyes were kind of droopy.  But not for a moment did I consider airbrushing her “imperfection” away.  I want to look at pictures of my daughter, not some idealized version.  And truthfully, I find her ideal regardless of how she looks.

In the fourth grade, I had a huge space between my front teeth and braces.  I was pretty awkward looking- and I knew it.  I can’t imagine how wounded I would have felt if my parents had airbrushed that space, or even my braces.  Now, I laugh when I look at that picture.  And I am glad to have it to show my daughter that everybody goes through awkward phases- and that is okay!  Plus, that picture got a pretty big laugh when it flashed across the screen at my wedding rehearsal dinner.

Airbrushing our children’s imperfections sends the message that our kids are not good enough as they are.  We are demonstrating that there is an ideal way to look and that we should all strive to look that way.  And who wants to teach that to their children?  I, for sure, do not.  I will take my daughter’s goofy-faced picture and hang it on my wall with pride.  Nothing could make her any more perfect in my eyes.

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New Study: Obesity Causes Cancer!

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Many parents view their children’s excess weight as an aesthetic issue.  They worry their kids won’t be liked in school, won’t be picked in gym, and won’t be pursued by members of the opposite sex.  According to the American Institute of Cancer Research, parents have a lot more than looks to be concerned about.  New research shows that about 100,500 new cases of cancer are caused by obesity each year.

Obesity is known to cause many deleterious health effects but this study is one of the first to conclusively link specific cancers to excess body fat.  And as the number of obese people increases in the population, so does the number of cancer patients!  According to the study, 49% of endometrial cancer (about 20,700 cases per year), 35% of esophageal cancer (5,800 cases per year), 28% of pancreatic cancer (11,900 cases per year), 24% of kidney cancer (13,900 cases per year), 21% of gallbladder cancer (2,000) cases per year, 17% of breast cancer (33,000 cases per year), and 9% of colorectal cancer (13,200 cases per year) are due to obesity.

How does being overweight increase your risk of cancer?  That depends on the type cancer.  Experts believe that the increased estrogen found in overweight women leads to endometrial and breast cancer.  Post-menopausal obese women have 1.5 times the risk of breast cancer than normal weight post-menopausal women.  Before menopause, the ovaries are the primary source of estrogen.  Fat tissue, however, also makes estrogen.  Post-menopausal women, whose ovaries no longer make estrogen, tend to have lower estrogen levels.  Obese women have estrogen levels that are 50-100% higher than normal weight women.  It is believed that this increased level of estrogen causes rapid growth of estrogen-responsive breast tumors.

Obese women are not only more likely to get breast cancer, but they are more likely to die from it.  Breast cancer is harder to detect in an obese woman and is usually diagnosed at a much later stage, leading to lower survival rates.  Weight gain during adulthood is the most consistent and strongest predictor of breast cancer risk.

It is not clear why obese people have a higher risk of colon cancer than normal weight people.  It may be that the high levels of insulin or insulin-related growth factors in the obese promote tumor development.

Gastro-esophageal acid disease (GERD), common in the obese, is the likely cause of the increased risk of esophageal cancer.

The reason for the link between other cancers and obesity is not known.  The obese tend to have higher levels of many different hormones and growth factors that likely increase the risk of cancer.

What should we take from this study?  The importance of preventing weight gain in the first place!  Parents need to teach their children proper eating habits from the very beginning.  Half of overweight school-age children and three quarters of overweight teens will become obese adults.  So start promoting a healthy lifestyle now!

Teach your children the value of eating a healthy diet and maintaining an active lifestyle and you need not worry about the increasingly-evident link between obesity and cancer.

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