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Quote of the Day

"A baby is born with a need to be loved - and never outgrows it."

Frank A. Clark



 


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Featured Diets Articles

Focus on Trans Fat
There's no doubt--carbohydrates have taken center stage in public discourse about dietary practices. You can't turn on the TV, open a newspaper or walk past the office water cooler these days without hearing a debate about this nutrient du jour. ...

My Introduction to Tahitian Noni Juice
Holy Crow! I am still awake. Amazing. It didn't always used to be like this. I could never get out of bed in High School. I could never stay awake in class, either. I never had any energy and I was depressed all the time. In my thirties my doctor said I ...

Where Diets Go Wrong
When we discover that we are heavier than we want to be, we have a natural invlination to eat less food. We may skip lunch or eat only a tiny amount of our dinner in the hope that if we eat less our body will burn off some of its fat. But that is not ...





10 Tips for Dining Out
 
There is no doubt about it; Americans are eating in restaurants more often than ever before. In 1970 Americans spent just 26% of their food dollars on restaurant meals. Today we spend 46% of food dollars on eating out. This is likely the result of a fast paced lifestyle and more convenience of restaurants. What have also grown are restaurant portion sizes. The average restaurant portion size is large enough to feed three adults! Furthermore, studies have found a direct association between eating out and higher caloric intakes and higher body weights. This is important to know since obesity rates have doubled in the past 20 years and currently 65% of adults are obese.

This doesn't mean you have to forego eating in restaurants. This may not be realistic for many people's lifestyles. Instead, become more aware of what you are ordering and how much is on your plate. Here are 10 tips for dining out.

1.At lunch, opt for a deli sandwich with vegetable soup or side salad instead of a burger and fries. You can find these items in your local deli or supermarket.

2.Avoid specialty breads on sandwiches such as foccacia, baguettes or rolls, and choose whole grain bread instead.

3.Avoid anything mixed with heavy sauces or mayonnaise. (a tuna or egg salad sandwich in a restaurant may have more mayonnaise than you would add at home).

4.Get your salad dressings, sauces, and gravies on the side.

5.Eat half or even a quarter of the regular entrée or split the meal with a friend. Remember, most restaurant portions can feed 3 adults.

6.Share one dessert.

7.Skip the extra cheese on anything you order.

8.Choose lean meats such as chicken, turkey, or fish. A turkey sandwich in place of a roast beef sandwich can save you 100 calories and 10 grams of saturated fat.

9.Go easy on stuffed entrees- they're often loaded in fat and calories.

10.Avoid "super-sizing" combo meals. They may be an economic value but they can add up to 2000 calories for one meal!

The average American adult is gaining 2-3 pounds a year. That amounts to eating just 20 - 30 extra calories than your body needs each day. It really is the "little things" that put on excess weight. Where can you save a few calories?



About the Author
Meri Raffetto is a Registered Dietitian and a recognized professional in the area of nutrition and wellness. She has developed online weight management programs to help people get off of diets and get into way of life. For more information or to sign up for our free newsletter, visit www.reallivingnutrition.com.

Diets News



High-fiber diet may not protect against diverticulosis, study finds
Washington Post (blog)
By David Brown You know everything you've heard about how constipation and a low-fiber, high-fat and meat-rich diet raises a person's risk of developing diverticulosis? It may be all wrong, according a new study. In diverticulosis, out-pouchings form ...

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Sugar, cheese and other dietary demons
Washington Post (blog)
They don't spell out precisely how much sugar is too much; nor do the current Dietary Guidelines for Americans set a limit on how much added sugar (as opposed to the natural sugar inherent in fruits, for instance) we can have.
Columnist Blasts Reports That Dictate Consumer Eating HabitsNACS Online

all 2 news articles »

Nutrition: Low-Protein Diet May Cost Lean Body Mass
New York Times
People consuming excess calories on a low-protein diet may gain less weight than others, a new study reports, but they do so at a cost: the loss of lean body mass. In a controlled experiment published in the Jan. 4 issue of The Journal of the American ...

and more »

Government Sodium Guidelines: Are They Possible To Follow?
Huffington Post
When the new guidelines came out, it was clear that we all had a lot of work to do in overhauling our diets: the DGAs recommended eating fewer calories overall, with more fresh produce and whole grains and less added sugar, saturated fat and salt.

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Kellogg's® Boosts America's Fiber Intake with Cereals That Offer Fiber and ...
MarketWatch (press release)
Kellogg's helped American families improve their diets by 12+ billion good servings of fiber and 8+ billion servings of whole grains. Fiber is important to weight management, yet, as obesity continues to climb, most US adults and children don't get ...

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