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Weight Watchers (16 Foods Losers Love)

16 Foods Losers Love
Article By: Robin Messer, MS, RD  

What foods keep you motivated and inspired to stick to your weight-loss plan? These picks made your hot list.

Tired of eating the same old stuff? Eager for something new and different to wake up your taste buds? We asked Community Users on the WeightWatchers.com Message Boards to tell us what Plan-friendly foods and drinks they just can’t live without.

Here are some of their best ideas. Whether you’ve got the mid-afternoon munchies or a late-night craving, none of these 16 favorites will cost you many PointsPlus® values.

1.”Quaker Oats Low-Fat Chewy Granola Bars. They’ve got the size and taste of a regular candy bar. Peanut butter and chocolate are the best!”

2.”Fat-Free Cool Whip with anything! I could kiss the person that invented it!”

3.”Pitas! I can’t live without them; they have so many uses. Make pita chips or slice them into two layers and toast them for two tostada shells!”

4.”Ground turkey breast! The meal possibilities are endless! Whether it’s sloppy joes, turkey tacos, spaghetti sauce, turkey loaf or turkey burgers, I can find a million ways to make it.”

5.”Hormel Turkey Pepperoni — great for making pita pizzas. This has kept me from calling Pizza Hut many nights.”

6.”Vegetable quesadillas. I eat them all the time with fat-free sour cream; they are so filling.”

7.”Gum! Chewing sugarless gum has saved me on many a day when I wanted to eat, eat, eat.”

8.”Folgers Cafe Latte Caramel Groove — it tastes so good.”

9.”Grape tomatoes — great for guilt-free snacking.”
10.”Tomato juice with horseradish and hot sauce — just like having a Bloody Mary. I like to drink it while making dinner.”

11.”A Boca Burger, Wonder Light Bun and Velveeta Light Cheese. They make a low-calorie cheeseburger I can’t live without!”

12.”Diet root beer. Add a scoop of light vanilla ice cream and have a root beer float.”

13.”Pirate’s Booty (snack food by Robert’s American Gourmet). I wish this goody wasn’t so popular because my supermarket constantly runs out of it.”

14.”Sweet potatoes sliced into strips and ‘fried’ in a pan with Pam nonstick cooking spray. Yum!”

15.”Splenda! I use it in coffee, desserts, cinnamon toast — anything! It’s wonderful.”

16.”Nonfat chocolate pudding with just a dollop of light or nonfat whipped cream — so creamy it should be illegal.”

17 Ways to Reward Yourself

17 Ways to Reward Yourself

17 Ways to Reward Yourself

  • Article By: Stephanie Osfield
 
Woman in Bath

Weight loss is hard! Reward yourself with these great treats (for as little as $5).When you were a kid, and you did something well, every now and then you got a reward. Motivating, right?

Weight loss is no different. Use that same logic to make your weight-loss journey more pleasant — and your goal more attainable. Set mini-goals, then reward yourself when you meet them.

“If you don’t celebrate small, everyday lifestyle changes,” says Karen Miller-Kovach, chief scientist at Weight Watchers International, “there will be times when your long-term weight-loss goal seems so far away that you’ll despair or be tempted to give up. Having little stops to celebrate along the way makes that journey more pleasant — and your goal more likely to be achieved.”

Come up with goals that are unique to you and the challenges you face with weight loss. Keep them realistic and varied, and track them closely. For example, you might make these three goals:

  • I will walk 30 minutes five days this week.
  • From now on, I will record everything I eat each day (regardless of my food intake).
  • I will clean up the kitchen tonight without picking the leftovers off the dinner plates.

Then, when you meet one of your mini-milestones, give yourself a reward! Just like your goals, your rewards should be varied and unique to you. And they don’t have to put a dent in your wallet (unless you want them to!).

For $5 or less, why not…

  • Sip on a cup of tea in a cozy café.
  • Finish the day with a long, soak in the tub with a glossy magazine. Everyone loves a good bubble bath once in a while.
  • Enjoy a leisurely Sunday morning — take the phone off the hook and spend the morning in your pajamas reading the newspaper, a book or poring over a few magazines.
  • Savor a celebratory glass of wine with dinner.

For $10 or less, why not…

  • Open a “pamper me” bank account: Deposit $10 for every week you’ve stuck to your weight-loss plan, or for every pound you’ve lost.
  • Pick up that new book you’ve had your eye on.
  • Download the latest album from your favorite band.
  • Buy a relaxation tape and use it daily.
  • Share dessert with your partner at a café, or do a little grocery shopping and make one of the delicious, healthy desserts from the WeightWatchers.com Food & Recipes section.

For $20 to $45, why not…

  • Pay your neighbor’s teenager to do your food shopping for you. Just make a list, then kick back.
  • Phone your distant friends. Choose a time when the phone company has low rates and you can spend hours catching up.
  • Get yourself a haircut or blowout, or a 30-minute massage.For over $50, why not…
  • Devote the entire day to a shopping spree for a new pair of shoes. Athletic shoes, that is, to help you earn Activity PointsPlus® values.
  • Splurge on a bottle of expensive Champagne — you deserve it.
  • Rent a sailboat with friends and spend the day soaking up ocean breezes — or, in colder areas, go skiing for the day.
  • Rent a convertible and head for the beach or the mountains for the day — or an off-road vehicle for a rugged winter drive.
  • Hire a maid for the day — to cook and clean while you lounge around.
Next Steps

Eating to Beat Stress and Depression

Eating to Beat Stress and Depression

 
 couple choosing nutsMacaroni and cheese, chocolate chip cookies, fried chicken, ice cream—these are some of the foods women turn to for comfort when we’re feeling emotionally strained, depleted or depressed.

These foods can make us feel better for a few minutes, until the negative mood swings back into action. That’s often a result of the way certain foods raise and lower blood sugar or disrupt our bodily systems in other ways. Eating too much of one type of food or not enough of a certain nutrient can have both short- and long-term effects on mood.

Yet there are terrific foods that bring real, long-lasting comfort when we are at risk of, or struggling with, stress or depression. Reaching for a banana topped with almond butter instead of a cookie can begin a simple, life-altering shift that may help you ward off mood problems as well as lessen the impact if they do occur.

“The choice you make at the plate absolutely influences how you’re going to feel,” says Kathie Swift, MS, RD, LDN, co-director of the Food as Medicine program of the Center for Mind-Body Medicine in Washington, DC. “Food is a very powerful modifier when it comes to depression and the brain.”

By selecting foods for meals and snacks that contain a balance of several beneficial nutritive elements, you can create what Swift calls a “depression defense portfolio” and strengthen your brain and body in ways that boost emotional health.

Magnesium for mood

Gail Platts of Gorham, Maine, discovered the power of using food to help with mood when she was in college and interested in natural ways to manage anxiety and depression. She started eating more sunflower seeds, fish and other magnesium-rich foods, because she read they could help. 

Swift concurs with that idea, explaining that magnesium helps improve mood and energy by producing and supporting the brain chemical serotonin. Women frequently have insufficient amounts of magnesium in their system, she adds.

Foods high in magnesium include almonds, avocados, spinach, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, peanuts, soybeans, black beans, salmon, halibut, oysters and grains such as buckwheat, quinoa, oats, brown rice and amaranth.

“Just being aware that some foods are better choices for stress and depression influences my food selection on a regular basis,” Platts says.

Friendly fats and carbohydrates

Avoiding fat seems like a nutritional commandment for good health, but it’s a concept that’s been woefully misunderstood. Plant-based fats are vital for brain health, in part because they keep cell membranes fluid, Swift says.

“The brain is very rich and we need to feed it the right type of fats,” she says. “You don’t want to shortchange it.” Good fat sources: avocados, a wide range of seeds and virgin olive oil.

Similarly, many women have shunned carbohydrates as a way to lose weight. Yet we often crave certain carbohydrate-rich foods (think sweets) when we’re depressed or stressed because carbohydrates produce serotonin, which floods us with good feelings and calmness. That blood sugar spike is followed quickly by a crash—often compounded by feelings of guilt about the enormous piece (or two) of cake we’ve just eaten.

You need to consume carbohydrates every day to fuel your brain properly, but that doesn’t mean eating more sweets, known as simple carbohydrates (or simple sugars) or enduring the related fast rise and swift plunge in blood sugar levels. Think complex carbohydrates (starches), such as whole-grain products, vegetables (sweet potatoes are a great choice) and beans. Complex carbs contain fiber, which helps slow blood sugar level changes and reduce negative effects on mood.

“Sugars break down easily. Complex carbohydrates are more difficult to break down. They have more of a smooth curve than a roller coaster,” says Bonnie Taub-Dix, MA, RD, CDN, a national spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association.

Arlene Lee sought to handle the stress of graduate school by changing her diet to incorporate complex carbs such as brown rice, millet, whole-grain bread, wheat pasta and legumes including azuki and mung beans. The New York City woman also ate four or five smaller meals spaced out through the day (followed by fruit or dessert two hours later), instead of three big meals. She made her own mixture of raw nuts, seeds and raisins, which she carried with her to maintain her food schedule.

Her food changes and eating plan were “great for the stress,” says Lee. “It gave me an even level of energy with a remarkable sense of calm.”

To get the most sustained energy, Taub-Dix recommends combining a complex carbohydrate with protein, another important nutritional depression fighter. Her suggestions for snacks to keep you going: low-fat cheese and whole grain crackers, turkey on whole-grain toast, or yogurt.

“Even a cup of skim milk has carbohydrate and protein at the same time,” says Taub-Dix. “It’s a great snack to squelch your hunger.”

Or even better, Swift suggests a cup of hemp seed beverage (found in some natural foods grocery aisles or stores) for a snack containing a combination of macronutrients.

Opt for omega-3 foods

You may have heard omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids touted as cures for a wide range of conditions. When it comes to depression, the scientific evidence agrees that increased dietary omega-3 consumption helps reduce depression. The association between low omega-3 levels and a higher incidence of depression is especially noticeable among women who are pregnant or nursing, which depletes their nutritional reserves.

Foods high in omega-3s include wild salmon, sardines, tuna, trout, walnuts and hemp and chia seeds. Choose fish that have the lowest levels of mercury and other toxins, especially if you’re pregnant.

More tips:

  • To achieve emotional balance, improve your nutritional balance. That means including fats, carbohydrates and proteins in your daily diet, along with other beneficial nutrients. And be sure to drink enough fluids.
  • Don’t skip meals. Indeed, have more—and smaller—meals. “I can’t stress enough the importance of not skipping meals, not going on fad diets and having balance with fruits and vegetables,” Taub-Dix says. “Sometimes women skip meals and don’t realize what a toll that takes on health and state of mind.”
  • If you’ve stopped eating junk food, increased fiber and added more whole foods, but mood problems have persisted, it may be time to try something new, says Swift, who is part of a team of nutrition experts at http://www.myfoodmyhealth.com, a Web site that offers meal planning guidance and recipes for various health conditions. “Something else may be going on,” she says, in which a food that is “physiologically offensive” to your system, such as wheat or dairy, may be disrupting things.

Water Wisdom

Water Wisdom

You’ve heard all the advice: Drink eight glasses of water a day. Stay properly hydrated while exercising. Sports drinks aren’t just for professional athletes.

Yet you’re still unsure whether you’re drinking the right amount for good health.
How much fluid should you really be taking in daily? Do you need to add extra when you’re physically active? And is too much water dangerous?woman with water

Everyone’s body needs water. We lose it by sweating, excretion, or simply not taking in enough through foods—like fruits and vegetables—and drinks. Mild dehydration (losing less than two percent of your body weight due to inadequate fluids) can cause health problems, including dizziness and headache.

To keep your body supplied with the fluid it needs, especially when exercising, follow these tips:

  • Get the basics. Most women need eight to nine cups of total fluids a day, including all beverages and the water in foods.
  • Increase according to the weather. High temperatures or humidity outside, heated indoor air and high altitudes all cause you to need more fluids.
  • Add when exercising. Drink one cup of fluids every 15 minutes during physical activity, advises Werner W.K. Hoeger, Ed.D., FACSM, professor of kinesiology and director of the Human Performance Laboratory at Boise State University. He recommends sports drinks over water when exercising because they contain electrolytes—important to provide the minerals necessary for proper cellular metabolism—which is disrupted during physical exertion. Electrolyte replacement also helps maintain proper muscle contraction and cardiac function.
  • Add more for big events. If you’re going to be in a race or charity walk, make sure you drink enough to be well-hydrated the day before, Hoeger adds. Also, drink a glass of fluids an hour before the event.
  • Drinking for two? Pregnant and nursing women need additional fluids. Talk with your health care professional about what’s best for you.
  • Still thirsty? If drinking fluids doesn’t relieve your thirst, you may have a health condition such as diabetes. See your health care professional right away.
  • Too much of a good thing. In very rare cases—chiefly among marathon runners—drinking too much fluid leads to a life-threatening illness, hyponatremia. This occurs when sodium levels in the blood fall too low. It happens chiefly to athletes who have run for more than four hours and gained a lot of weight during the race from drinking.http://www.healthywomen.org/content/article/water-wisdom?context=ages-and-stages/13&context_title=&context_description=

Lowering Hig Blood Pressure

Healthy Eating

healthy foodResearch has shown that following a healthy eating plan can both reduce the risk of developing high blood pressure and lower an already elevated blood pressure.

For an overall eating plan, consider the DASH eating plan. “DASH” stands for “Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension,” a clinical study that tested the effects of nutrients in food on blood pressure. Study results indicated that elevated blood pressures were reduced by an eating plan that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, and lowfat dairy foods and is low in saturated fat, total fat, and cholesterol. The DASH eating plan includes whole grains, poultry, fish, and nuts and has reduced amounts of fats, red meats, sweets, and sugared beverages.

A second clinical study, called “DASH-Sodium,” looked at the effect of a reduced dietary sodium intake on blood pressure as people followed either the DASH eating plan or a typical American diet. Results showed that reducing dietary sodium lowered blood pressure for both the DASH eating plan and the typical American diet. The biggest blood pressure-lowering benefits were for those eating the DASH eating plan at the lowest sodium level (1,500 milligrams per day).

The DASH-Sodium study shows the importance of lowering sodium intake whatever your diet. But for a true winning combination, follow the DASH eating plan and lower your intake of salt and sodium.

Healthy Eating

healthy foodResearch has shown that following a healthy eating plan can both reduce the risk of developing high blood pressure and lower an already elevated blood pressure.

For an overall eating plan, consider the DASH eating plan. “DASH” stands for “Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension,” a clinical study that tested the effects of nutrients in food on blood pressure. Study results indicated that elevated blood pressures were reduced by an eating plan that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, and lowfat dairy foods and is low in saturated fat, total fat, and cholesterol. The DASH eating plan includes whole grains, poultry, fish, and nuts and has reduced amounts of fats, red meats, sweets, and sugared beverages.

A second clinical study, called “DASH-Sodium,” looked at the effect of a reduced dietary sodium intake on blood pressure as people followed either the DASH eating plan or a typical American diet. Results showed that reducing dietary sodium lowered blood pressure for both the DASH eating plan and the typical American diet. The biggest blood pressure-lowering benefits were for those eating the DASH eating plan at the lowest sodium level (1,500 milligrams per day).

The DASH-Sodium study shows the importance of lowering sodium intake whatever your diet. But for a true winning combination, follow the DASH eating plan and lower your intake of salt and sodium.

Healthy Eating

healthy foodResearch has shown that following a healthy eating plan can both reduce the risk of developing high blood pressure and lower an already elevated blood pressure.

For an overall eating plan, consider the DASH eating plan. “DASH” stands for “Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension,” a clinical study that tested the effects of nutrients in food on blood pressure. Study results indicated that elevated blood pressures were reduced by an eating plan that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, and lowfat dairy foods and is low in saturated fat, total fat, and cholesterol. The DASH eating plan includes whole grains, poultry, fish, and nuts and has reduced amounts of fats, red meats, sweets, and sugared beverages.

A second clinical study, called “DASH-Sodium,” looked at the effect of a reduced dietary sodium intake on blood pressure as people followed either the DASH eating plan or a typical American diet. Results showed that reducing dietary sodium lowered blood pressure for both the DASH eating plan and the typical American diet. The biggest blood pressure-lowering benefits were for those eating the DASH eating plan at the lowest sodium level (1,500 milligrams per day).

The DASH-Sodium study shows the importance of lowering sodium intake whatever your diet. But for a true winning combination, follow the DASH eating plan and lower your intake of salt and sodium.Healthy EatingResearch has shown that following a healthy eating plan can both reduce the risk of developing high blood pressure and lower an already elevated blood pressure.For an overall eating plan, consider the DASH eating plan. “DASH” stands for “Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension,” a clinical study that tested the effects of nutrients in food on blood pressure. Study results indicated that elevated blood pressures were reduced by an eating plan that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, and lowfat dairy foods and is low in saturated fat, total fat, and cholesterol. The DASH eating plan includes whole grains, poultry, fish, and nuts and has reduced amounts of fats, red meats, sweets, and sugared beverages.A second clinical study, called “DASH-Sodium,” looked at the effect of a reduced dietary sodium intake on blood pressure as people followed either the DASH eating plan or a typical American diet. Results showed that reducing dietary sodium lowered blood pressure for both the DASH eating plan and the typical American diet. The biggest blood pressure-lowering benefits were for those eating the DASH eating plan at the lowest sodium level (1,500 milligrams per day).The DASH-Sodium study shows the importance of lowering sodium intake whatever your diet.http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/hbp/index.html

Super-Tough Fitness Workouts

Super-Tough Fitness Workouts

Download these 7 moves and you get two killer fitness workout routines

Home WorkoutDo It Our experts have taken seven moves and created two killer fitness workouts. Do the routines 2 to 3 days a week, alternating between the two versions, so you’re never doing the same routine on consecutive workout days. And choose a weight that lets you complete the set with perfect form.

When the moves are labeled with numbers, do them as an alternating set—or a “superset,” in trainer-speak. Example: For B1 and B2, do one set of B1 followed immediately by one set of B2, and then rest. Continue repeating until you’ve completed all the sets, then move on to exercise C.

Workout 1 (all 7 moves)
reps: 4
sets: 3 to 4
rest between sets: 90 seconds

Workout 2 (the same 7 moves)
reps: 8
sets: 2 to 3
rest between sets: 60 seconds

Do the workout for 4 to 6 weeks. Then up the reps to 6 for Workout 1, and to 12 for    http://www.womenshealthmag.com/health/exercise-for-women

Foods Rich in Antioxidants for Healthy Aging

Foods Rich in Antioxidants for Healthy Aging

foods for healthy agingAlthough magazine covers and “miracle” cosmetics packages all proclaim the anti-aging secrets they contain, as long as we wake up each morning, getting older is an unstoppable fact.

Perhaps a better and more attainable goal than “anti-aging” is “healthy aging”—giving our bodies and spirits what they need to reduce the risks of physical or mental decline as our 30s become our 40s, then into our 50s, 60s, and so on.

Instead of dreaming about turning back the clock, you can help keep your body strong by equipping it with the biological equivalent of fresh batteries. “Why do you have to fight against aging if you have healthy aging?” asks Barbara Shukitt-Hale, PhD, a research psychologist and behavioral neuroscientist at the USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University in Boston. That’s not just a theoretical question, no matter what your current age.

Reducing risk, one bite at a time

Oxidative stress is the cumulative, day-to-day assault our cells endure. The longer we live, the more oxidative stress our bodies experience. Dr. Shukitt-Hale and her colleagues have studied several foods that appear to repair the toll this stress takes and even protect against further damage. The foods studied also increase the number of brain cells we have and improve their functioning.

We can use such help. “As we age, our bodies are less able to deal with the oxidative stress we encounter,” Dr. Shukitt-Hale says. We also become more sensitive to inflammatory responses in our central nervous systems.

While some foods have been shown to support greater health, energy and mental strength in aging bodies, the biological mechanisms that produce those results aren’t fully understood yet. Many researchers believe the beneficial effects are created by the variety of nutritional components in real food, working in combination.

That means you should look in the produce aisles, not the drug aisles, to find what you need. “Very few disease processes or healthy outcomes are attained through taking vitamin supplements,” says Martha Clare Morris, ScD, director of the Center of Nutrition and Aging at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago. She cites bone loss and vitamin B12 deficiency as among the few conditions that current research shows can be improved with supplements.

By contrast, when vitamins and other compounds are obtained by eating certain foods, there are big benefits. “We think eating fresh fruit or vegetables, even frozen, is better than taking supplements, because supplements don’t have all the compounds,” Dr. Shukitt-Hale says. In her research lab, “we’ve broken down foods into families of compounds, and the individual families aren’t as effective” as when they function together.

Age-defying foods

You know that fruits, vegetables, whole grains and such are good for you, but some foods have been shown to be stand-outs for lowering problems linked to aging. You may want to include more of these on your shopping list:

Brainberries“: That’s the nickname Dr. Shukitt-Hale and coauthor James A. Joseph, PhD, gave to blueberries and their cousins—such as blackberries, cranberries and strawberries. Berry fruits are rich in antioxidant polyphenolic compounds that protect against the age-related deterioration of cognitive and motor functions. Eating about a cup of berries a day—fresh or frozen—reduces oxidative stress (hence the term “antioxidants”), lowers inflammation and improves brain cell signaling.

Blueberries top the list of beneficial berries, but if your tastes are a bit more eclectic—arctic bramble berries, anyone?—most berry fruits carry a lot of nutritional power for their size. You may want to read the label closely: A USDA study of blueberries grown in New Jersey showed that those cultivated organically for commercial sale had higher levels of phytonutrients (beneficial compounds) than did the berries grown under conventional methods.

Red peppers, oranges, pine nuts, roasted sunflower seeds, safflower oil: Vegetables and fruits that are high in vitamin C help prevent skin appearance changes related to aging. Nuts and oils with high amounts of linoleic acid provide similar defense. Regardless of age, sun exposure or other factors, women who eat more foods that are rich in vitamin C and linoleic acid have fewer wrinkles, less skin dryness and less atrophy—the gradual thinning of skin layers.

Cocoa: It’s not just for kids anymore! You may have switched to green tea for its antioxidant benefits, but cocoa is actually higher in the powerful phenolic phytochemicals that fight oxidative damage. Indeed, cocoa leads the list for antioxidant capacity—ahead of red wine, green tea and black tea. Make it with nonfat milk and you’ll help strengthen your bones as well.

Spinach, kale, collards: Here’s another reason to eat more vegetables: high vegetable consumption produces a slower rate of cognitive decline with age. Dr. Morris and her colleagues looked at more than 3,700 people aged 65 or older and found that those who ate about three to four daily servings of vegetables—particularly leafy greens—had much less decline in memory, recall and other mental functions than did those who ate less than one serving of veggies per day.

Walnuts: These popular nuts enabled aged rats to improve motor performance (such as walking on a plank) and thinking skills. Because of these results, researchers believe walnuts look very promising for strengthening cognition.

Fish: It’s been called “brain food” for decades, but now there’s evidence that fish helps keep your mental abilities strong while you age. Compared with people who ate less than one fish meal per week, those who ate fish once weekly or more often showed a slower rate of age-related cognitive decline.http://www.healthywomen.org/content/article/foods-rich-antioxidants-healthy-aging?context=ages-and-stages/13&context_title=&context_description=

5 Sneaky Eating Tips to Help You Lose Weight

5 Sneaky Eating Tips to Help You Lose Weight

woman eating breakfastDieting is out; smart eating for weight loss is in. That doesn’t mean deprivation. The best ways to cut excess weight include making changes you can live with forever.

Some of those changes are downright sneaky—you can slip them into your daily eating plan without any stress and they’ll help you lose pounds as well as keep the weight off.

1. Take out a ruler and measure your plate. The size of American dinner plates has grown in recent years. Many are now 12 or even 14 inches wide, great for loading up but not so good for encouraging healthy eating. Big plates result in big portions and weight gain, since most of us are conditioned to eat what’s on our plates. Instead, get out those old 9- or 10-inch “luncheon” plates you may have received as hand-me-downs or buy some inexpensive new ones. You’ll serve yourself less food with smaller plates, but still feel satisfied.

2. Make your second helping all veggies. You may have heard the advice to mentally divide your dinner plate in fourths and fill two of those sections with vegetables and/or salad, one with a starch and one with a meat or other protein. That works well as a guideline for smart eating, but if you’re still hungry and want more, commit to making your second helping all veggies. For seconds, start with one-fourth of the plate or less. Eating more cooked or salad vegetables increases your feeling of fullness without adding a lot of calories—so long as you don’t butter the vegetables and use only nonfat or low-fat salad dressings.

3. Serve from the stove, not at the table. Although the image of filled serving bowls on the family dinner table is associated with well-being, serving food directly from pots on a stove or counter is better for healthy weight, according to Brian Wansink, PhD, director of the Cornell University Food and Brand Lab and author of Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think. The reason this sneaky tip works for weight control is simple: When you sit and look at food, you take more and eat more. For a modified approach, reduce traffic jams at the stove and promote better food choices by keeping only the cooked vegetables and salad on the dining table.

4. Eat breakfast every day. More reason to wake up and smell the coffee: Eating breakfast improves weight loss efforts and helps keep weight off long-term. When you skip that starter meal of the day, hunger hits stronger, often well before lunchtime. To quiet hunger pangs quickly, you might reach for something calorie-loaded without much nutritional benefit, such as a doughnut (or two!), muffin or bagel. Whole-grain cereals, like oatmeal, will carry you through the morning. Other options: have nonfat yogurt, eggs or peanut butter for protein, with whole-grain toast.

5. Have a tall, thin one. Time to hide the wide glasses! Dr. Wansink and his research colleagues have shown that you’ll pour less and drink less (thus cutting calories)–yet still be satisfied—when you use tall, skinny glasses for serving beverages. You can still use your wide glasses for water and other calorie-free drinks.http://www.healthywomen.org/content/article/5-sneaky-eating-tips-help-you-lose-weight?context=ages-and-stages/13&context_title=&context_description=

Eating to Give Your Brain a Boost

Eating to Give Your Brain a Boost

berriesFoods aren’t just fuel for your body. True, they provide the energy you need, yet some have benefits that go well beyond simple nourishment.

Explore the recesses of your refrigerator and you may find foods that science is, increasingly, crediting with being especially supportive for brain health. These edibles may improve memory, clarify thinking, delay cognitive decline, and perhaps even ward off Alzheimer’s disease.

Recent research shows that you may want to include the following on your shopping list more often for brain-strengthening nourishment:

  • Apple juice and pomegranate juice
  • Red grapes, cherries, apples, blueberries and strawberries
  • Tea and cocoa
  • Salmon and light tuna
  • Soy foods
  • Sunflower seeds, walnuts
  • Vegetables, especially leafy greens
  • Olive oil
  • Dark chocolate

When buying processed or packaged foods containing these ingredients, be sure to read the nutrition labels carefully. Some of these “good” foods may be prepared with high amounts of sugar, fat or salt added to them, resulting in too many calories or too much sodium in your diet. For healthful eating, choose fresh versions of these foods most often, or prepare them with low-fat ingredients. Eat processed types in moderation.

For example, you can still get the benefits of pomegranate juice (which has sugar added to offset its tart flavor) by mixing one or two ounces into sparkling water as a spritzer. Cocoa made with nonfat milk or a milk alternative (such as almond or rice milks) gives your brain a boost without adding extra fat. And letting a small piece of dark chocolate melt slowly in your mouth prolongs your enjoyment while keeping your daily intake healthful (one ounce or less).

For brain health as well as overall health, be sure to avoid foods containing saturated fats or trans fats (check those nutrition labels!). Diets that are high in such fats are specifically related to declining brain capabilities.

http://www.healthywomen.org/content/article/eating-give-your-brain-boost?context=ages-and-stages/13&context_title=&context_description=