Nutrition 101

Post on 18-Mar-2016

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Nutrition 101. You want me to eat THAT much?. GRAINS (6-8 servings) ½ bagel = hockey puck ½ cup rice = mini Glad ¾ cup hot cereal = fist 30 g cold cereal = varies. MILK PRODUCTS (2-4 servings) 1 cup = small carton of milk ¾ cup = single serve yogurt container - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Nutrition 101

Grain Products Vegetables and Fruit Milk Products Meat and Alternatives

Choose whole grain and enriched products more often.

Choose dark green and orange vegetables and orange fruit more often.

Choose lower-fat milk products more often.

Choose leaner meats, poultry and fish as well as dried peas, peas and lentils more often.

You want me to eat THAT much?

Let’s talk portions…

GRAINS(6-8 servings)

½ bagel = hockey puck½ cup rice = mini Glad¾ cup hot cereal = fist30 g cold cereal =

varies

MILK PRODUCTS(2-4 servings)

1 cup = small carton of milk¾ cup = single serve yogurt

container50 g cheese = 2 processed

cheese slices

VEGETABLES & FRUIT(7-10 servings)

Medium fruit = tennis ball½ cup fresh/frozen = mini Glad1 cup raw greens = small bowl

MEAT & ALTERNATIVES

(2-3 servings)

50-100g meat, poultry, fish= deck of cards½-1 cup lentils or beans= small fist2 tbsp. peanut butter= ping pong ball

Today’s Topics• Wholegrain vs. Fortified• Fibre• Fats• Sodium• Fresh vs. Processed Foods• Glycemic Index

What is the difference?

• Wholegrain – grain milled in its entirety

• Refined – coarse parts removed (outer layer removed; therefore, no B vitamins or fibre)

• Enriched – B vitamins added to refined grains

• Fortified – Food to which nutrients have been added (e.g. Vitamin D added to milk)

Fibre – Two Types

• Soluble Fibre Lowers blood cholesterol– fruit/vegetables– oat bran – barley – beans – lentils – soy products

• Insoluble Fibre Speeds passage through GI system – wheat bran – corn bran – skin of fruit – wholegrain foods

Important Tips!• Increase intake gradually • Spread your intake throughout the day • Drink plenty of fluids• Eat the skin of fruits and vegetables • Sprinkle bran into recipes – you won’t

even notice!

FatsHDL = The “Good” CholesterolLDL = The “Bad” CholesterolTrans = The “Ugly”

Saturated Fat Trans Fats

↑ LDL ↓ HDL

Polyunsaturated Fat

↓ LDL ↓ HDL

Monounsaturated Fat

↓ LDL ↔ HDL

In order to ↑ HDL your best option is to exercise!

Sodium• Need – 200 to 500 mg/day

(to maintain adequate body stores)

• Safe Daily Range – 1100 to 3300 mg/day

• Average Consumed – 4000 to 6000 mg/day (2-3 tsp salt)

• Recommendation – < 2000 mg/day (1 tsp salt)

• 1 tsp sodium = 2300 mg of sodium

Sodium – the hidden ingredient

Hearty Vegetable Soup vs. Toasted Turkey Club 1060 mg vs. 1070 mg

Cranberry Fruit Muffin vs. Strawberry Vanilla Donut 490 mg vs. 220 mg

Yogurt and Berries vs. Honey Dip Timbit 50 mg vs. 50 mg

Tim Horton’s is not the only culprit!!!

You also need to watch for:

•Canned Foods•Microwave Dinners•Processed Meats

Snacks add up beyond the waist line!

Snack Foods• Pretzels - $2• Tortilla Chips - $3• Salsa - $3• Ice Cream - $5• Chocolate Bar - $1

Healthier Snack Foods• Apples - $0.50• Almonds - $6/lb.• Yogurt - $0.80• Celery - $1.50• Carrots - $1.50

TIP: Buy ice cream while you’re out! Wouldn’t you like this much choice?

How To Ward Off Hunger!Glycemic Index• Scale of how much a food raises blood

sugar levels relative to a piece of white bread

We want to keep our blood sugar constant in order to avoid unhealthy cravings

Snack Ideas• Yogurt• Fruit with peanut butter or 10 almonds• Caffe Misto/Latte with skim or 1% milk• Veggies and dip (use dips made with oil and/or

flavoured vinegar)• ONE small cookie and glass of milk• Fruit smoothie

Final TIPS• Shop Often• Go to the market• Use your freezer for FRESH food!• Get to know your grocery store• Buy what is in season• Shop the perimeter

Make your fridge look like this!