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Food for Fun and Thought

Can You Save Calories Eating A Ham And Cheese Sandwich Instead Of A Salad?

May 14, 2013 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

calories-in-saladSomehow we’ve embraced the idea that salads are always a light and healthy choice.  Sometimes they are – but all too often they aren’t.

Listen to lunchtime orders and you hear salad, salad, salad – and an occasional sandwich. Sometimes the sandwich is the clear winner in terms of calories and fat.  For instance, a ham and cheese sandwich ranges from 350 to 450 calories depending upon how much ham and cheese there really is – and whether it comes with mustard or mayo (and, of course, not fries or chips). And sometimes the salad is a better choice — depending on what goes into it.  Check out the following nutritional facts for salads.

The Green Base

The green stuff that’s the base for most salads isn’t the problem.  Most greens are very low in calories and pretty nutritious.

  • 1 cup shredded Romaine: 8 calories, 1 gram fiber, 1 gram protein, 0 gram fat
  • 1 cup of Arugula:  6 calories, 1 gram fiber, 1 gram protein, 0 gram fat
  • 1 cup raw spinach:  7 calories, 1 gram of fiber, 1 gram protein
  • 1 cup chopped kale:  32 calories, 1 gram of fiber, 2 grams of protein, 0 gram fat

Where’s The Problem?

Answer:  Hidden in high calorie add-ons and dressings.

  • Generally, at least ¼ of a cup (frequently more) of dressing is added to a tossed salad. A ladle of creamy dressing has about 360 calories and 38g of fat (a cheeseburger’s worth).
  • Tuna, macaroni, and chicken salads, the holy grail of delis and salad bars, are loaded with mayonnaise, which is loaded with fat.  ½ cup of chicken salad has around 208 calories, 16g of fat; tuna salad has 192 calories, 9g fat; tuna pasta salad has 397 calories, 9g fat; macaroni salad has 170 calories, 9g fat. (Remember, ½ cup is pretty small.)
  • Then there’s cheese. A ¼ cup (a ¼ cup serving is really small) serving of shredded cheddar has 114 calories, 9g fat;  blue cheese has 80 calories, 6g fat;  feta has 75 calories, 6g fat.
  • Croutons and Crispy Noodles: ¼ cup of plain croutons has 31 calories, 0g fat; 1 serving of McDonald’s Butter Garlic Croutons has 60 calories, 1g fat; ¼ cup of crispy noodles has 74 calories, 4g fat
  • Dried cranberries: ¼ cup has 98 calories, 0g fat
  • Nuts and seeds: ¼ cup sunflower seeds: 210 calories, 19g fat; chopped walnuts:  193 calories, 18g fat
  • Avocado, ¼ cup: 58 calories, 5g fat
  • Bacon bits, 1 tablespoon: 25 calories, 2g fat
  • Bread (often used to sop up leftover dressing): 1 piece of French bread, 82 calories, 1g fat; 1 dinner roll, 78 calories, 2g fat. Dressing sopped up by the bread or roll:  lots of extra fat calories!

This tip is part of the “lose 5 pounds in 5 weeks” challenge.  Read more about the challenge here and post how you’re doing on Eat Out Eat Well’s Facebook page.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Lose 5 Pounds in 5 Weeks, Manage Your Weight, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food Tagged With: calories in salads, lose a pound a week, lose weight, salads, save calories

Want To Decrease Your Dinner Calories? Change The Size Of Your Plate

May 13, 2013 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN 1 Comment

12-inch-to-10-inch-dinner plateDoes the size of your plate make a difference other than for convenience?  You bet it does.Since 1960, the size of the average dinner plate has increased 36%. Today’s dinner plate measures 11 to 12 inches across — a few decades ago they were 7 to 9 inches. A European plate averages 9 inches and some restaurants use plates that are about 13 inches across.

We Feed Our Stomachs And Our Eyes

We eat most of what’s on our plate regardless of the size of the plate.

Six ounces of cooked rice with a little chili looks like a good-sized portion on an 8 inch plate. The same amount on a 12 inch plate would look paltry and most of us add more — increasing both the portion size and the calories.

When you switch to a smaller plate you eat a smaller serving. You eat, on average, 22% less when you switch from a 12 inch plate to a 10 inch plate.

Go Small – But Not Too Small

It sounds too good to be true, but using smaller dishes can also help you feel full even when you’re eating less. Studies show that people are more satisfied with less food when they’re served on 8 inch salad plates instead of on 12 inch dinner plates.

But — be careful not to go too small with your plate.  With too little food you might end up going back for seconds. A plate 2 inches smaller than the one you normally use is probably about right.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Eating with Family and Friends, Food for Fun and Thought, Lose 5 Pounds in 5 Weeks, Manage Your Weight Tagged With: decrease your calories, eat less, lose weight, manage your weight, portion size, size of dinner plate

Let A Baseball Be Your Guide For A One Cup Serving Of Food

May 12, 2013 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

baseball-equals-one-cupIt’s awfully hard to gauge how much food you’re putting on your plate – and even harder to figure out how much food you’re popping into your mouth when you eat directly from a multi-serving bag of food – like a big bag of chips.

Portion size is critical to managing your weight.  One helpful idea is to use familiar objects as visual guides to “guesstimate” portion sizes.

One Cup Is About The Size Of A Baseball

The suggested serving size for many food items, particularly produce, is a cup. The suggested portion size for many denser items, like pasta, rice, or ice cream is a half a cup, so two servings – which is, at minimum, what most of us eat, would equal a cup.

 A Baseball, Not A Softball

A cup is about the size of a baseball – a baseball, not a softball.  So a cup of cooked greens, a cup of yogurt, a cup of beans, or a cup of cantaloupe should all look like the size of a baseball – but with obviously different calorie counts.

Here are some of the CDC’s examples of one-cup servings:

  • 1 small apple
  • 1 medium grapefruit
  • 1 large orange
  • 1 medium pear
  • 8 large strawberries
  • 1 large bell pepper
  • 1 medium potato
  • 2 large stalks of celery
  • 12 baby carrots or 2 medium carrot
  • 1 large ear of corn

It’s easy to visualize a small apple or a medium potato as about the size of a baseball.  It’s more difficult with an ear of corn!  But, for most food products it is possible to think “baseball” and pour or cut or pick (as in the case of fruit) a similarly sized portion.

This is Tip #3 for Week 3 of the “lose 5 pounds in 5 weeks challenge.”  Let everyone know how you’re doing! Post your results and/or struggles and suggestions on Eat Out Eat Well’s page on Facebook.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Lose 5 Pounds in 5 Weeks, Manage Your Weight, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting Tagged With: a cup of food, baseball as a one cup visual cue, diet, lose weight, portion size, serving size, weight management

Traffic Light Food Choices: Red (Once In A While), Yellow (Maybe Yes, Maybe No), And Green (Probably Good)

May 8, 2013 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

red-yellow-green-food-choicesHere are some tips on recognizing menu descriptions to help you make the best caloric choices (of course, portion size plays a big role, too).

Any menu item will have tons of added calories if it is:

  • smothered in sauce
  • covered or layered with cheese
  • loaded with butter, oil, cream, mayonnaise, or dressing
  • “sugared-up” even if it doesn’t taste sweet
    • made from a fatty cut of meat
    • made with hidden sugar or flour and/or some type of fat for thickening
    • a huge portion size

Green Light (Probably A Good Choice) words or phrases:

  • Barbequed
  • Blanched
  • Boiled
  • Grilled/Broiled/Charbroiled
  • Fat free
  • Garden fresh
  • Poached
  • Primavera
  • Red sauce/ Marinara
  • Roasted
  • Seasoned
  • Steamed

Quick hint:  Words ending in the letter “d” are frequently on the okay list, for instance: poached, boiled, grilled, and steamed.  Some notable exceptions are:  fried, and the “b-d” words:  buttered, battered, and breaded.

Yellow Light “Caution” Foods (Maybe Yes, Maybe No)

Words frequently used on menus to describe “yellow light foods,” should be chosen cautiously because they may or may not be healthy choices.

Yellow Light words or phrases:

  • Baked
  • BastedStir-Fried/Sauteed
  • Vegetarian
  • Vinaigrette
  • High Fiber
  • Light/Lite
  • Reduced
  • Marinated
  • Stewed
  • Panini
  • Almandine/Almondine

Red Light (Once In A While) Foods

Really think hard before eating food described with these words and phrases:

  • Au gratin/Cheesy/Parmigiana
  • Aioli
  • Alfredo
  • Battered/Encrusted/Crusted
  • Bearnaise/Hollandaise
  • Bet you can’t finish it/ Bottomless/Value/Giant/Jumbo/Loaded
  • Bisque
  • Breaded
  • Buttery / Buttered
  • Carbonara
  • Casserole
  • Chicken fried/Pan fried
  • Covered/Smothered
  • Creamed/Creamy/White Sauce/Bechamel
  • Crispy/Crunchy
  • Deluxe
  • Escalloped/Scalloped
  • Fried/Deep fried
  • Pesto
  • Stroganoff
  • Stuffed
  • Twice baked

Quick hint:  Words ending in the letter “y” should usually send up red alerts, for instance:  cheesy, crispy, crunchy.

This post is part of the 500 calorie challenge:  lose 5 pounds in 5 weeks the healthy way.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Lose 5 Pounds in 5 Weeks, Manage Your Weight, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food Tagged With: controlling calories when eating out, healthy food choices, lose weight, menu choices, restaurant food choices, restaurant menu, weight management

Fast Food Calorie Savers

May 6, 2013 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

fast food calorie savers

Would you like to save a few calories when you eat at fast food (or fast casual) restaurants?

Here are some easy small changes you can make that don’t drastically change your meal (and they don’t include skipping dessert or having a cup of broth instead of a burger).

Here are some suggestions:

  • Pay very careful attention to sauce and dressings:  “Special” sauces that top burgers, mayo, sour cream, and salad dressing are all high in calories and fat. The amount you get on your sandwich or salad often depends on the “hand” of the person pouring it on. So ask for the sauce or dressing on the side and add it yourself or dip (not dunk) sparingly
  • Opt for chicken or fish as long as it’s not called crispy – which is just an alias for fried.  Order it grilled, roasted, or broiled.
  • Order your burger without bacon or cheese: One slice of bacon adds about 43 calories, but how many sandwiches come with only one slice? One slice of American cheese clocks in at 94 calories.
  • Do you really need to have fries or onion rings? Skip them or order salad, fruit, or a baked potato with dressing/sauce/toppings on the side instead. If you absolutely must have fries, order a small or a kid’s size. Large fries can tack on around 500 calories.
  • Avoid sweetened drinks: Soda isn’t the only sugary drink. Sweetened tea, sports drinks, non-diet flavored water, juice, flavored milk, and shakes fit the bill, too. A 12 ounce can of coke has 140 calories and 39 grams of sugar. Eight ounces of orange juice has 110 calories and 25 grams of carbs.
  • In general, order regular instead of large sizes: It may seem like a good “value” but there are lots of extra calories, fat, and sugar in beefed up sizes.
  • Avoid combo specials: they might have wallet appeal but you get, on average, 55% more calories for 17% more money.  What’s more important, your waistline or your wallet?

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Lose 5 Pounds in 5 Weeks, Manage Your Weight, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food Tagged With: calorie savers, fast food, fast food calorie savers, lose wei

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