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Travel, On Vacation, In the Car

Let A Baseball Be Your Guide

October 21, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

It’s awfully hard to gauge how much food you’re putting on your plate – and even more difficult to figure out how much you’re popping into your mouth when you eat directly from a multi-serving bag of food.

Portion size is critical to managing your weight.  One helpful idea is to use commonplace 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 what, at least, 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 due to the food’s individual differences in food density and energy (calories).

Here are a few more 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 carrots
  • 1 large ear of corn

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Eating on the Job, Eating with Family and Friends, Entertaining, Buffets, Parties, Events, Manage Your Weight, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food, Shopping, Cooking, Baking, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: calorie tips, food facts, fruit, one cup portions, portion control, portion size, produce, vegetables, weight management

Do You Drink Soda?

October 13, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

If you do drink soda, you might want to take a good look at this graphic.

If you don’t drink soda you might want to take a good look at this graphic, too.  Then, you can congratulate yourself on the good habit of not drinking soda and perhaps suggest to soda drinking friends and family that they have a look.

Harmful Soda
Via: Term Life Insurance

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: food facts, food for fun and thought, soda, sugar, sugary drinks

Do You Eat Out As Much As The Average Person In The US?

October 4, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

The average adult in the US eats 4.8 meals in restaurants each week.

An online survey of 4000 consumers’ behavior found:

  • The most popular restaurant meal is lunch
  • 2.6 lunch meals are eaten out, on average, each week
  • The lunch meals are both take-out and restaurant dining
  • 1.4 sit down dinners each week are in restaurants
  • 0.8 brunch or breakfast meals are eaten out each week

How People Label Their “Eating Out” Preferences

  • Nearly 50% of the people responding to the survey call themselves “meat lovers”
  • 22% have a “sweet tooth”
  • 19% call themselves “fast food junkies”
  • 18% call themselves “health nuts”
  • 5% are self-described “vegetarians or vegans”
  • 35% describe themselves as “experimental eaters”
  • 25% call themselves “foodies”
  • 11% refer to themselves as “locavores,” or lovers of local food

Takeaways

It’s important to remember that this is a survey of 4000 people – done online — which makes it a survey of people who spend time online, who are willing to take a survey, and who eat out quite a bit.

That said – it seems that a lot of people are eating out a lot of the time.  If you are, too, consider building eating out into an overall eating plan so that you can continue to eat out, eat well and healthfully, and still manage your weight.

Filed Under: Eating on the Job, Entertaining, Buffets, Parties, Events, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: eat out eat well, eating out, restaurants, take-out food, weight management strategies

Will It Be Coleslaw Or French Fries With Your Sandwich?

September 23, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Everyone loves a “side” with their sandwich.  Here’s some approximate calories counts (portion sizes and contents always vary depending on who makes or serves them).  Which would you choose?

French fries (from frozen);10 pieces of 3½ to 4 inch deep fried strips: 249 calories; 13.38g fat; 29.27g carbs; 2.93g protein

French fries, deep fried; one medium fast food order:  427 calories; 22.8g fat; 50.25g carbs; 5.04g protein

Coleslaw with dressing; 1 cup:  269 calories; 23.64g fat; 14.08g carbs; 2.36g protein

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Eating on the Job, Manage Your Weight, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: calorie tips, calories, coleslaw, diet, eat out eat well, food choices, food facts, French fries, weight management

The “Power” Of Coffee

August 31, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Most of us recognize the energizing, wake-up character of coffee – but too often we forget its other “power.”

A Power Outage

Connecticut was hit very hard by hurricane Irene.  As I write this there are still half a million people without power and in an area like mine — a lot of homes have well water and no gas source — you may not have water, a working stove – or flushing toilets for that matter.  We have an abundance of trees and outside of my small town’s downtown area most of the power, phone, and cable lines are overhead making us especially vulnerable in any major wind, snow, or rain event.  We have no mass transit other than a Metro North spur line – which is still down for the count. In other words, it can feel like you’re disconnected from the world and functioning within your own little sphere.  Your lifelines become food, water, and your iphone or blackberry (if you can find a place to plug in your charger).

Coffee Shops Act As The Town’s “Water Cooler” And General Store

In my town of 20,000 we do have a Starbucks, a Dunkin’ Donuts and a handful of other coffee shops – and they have become the office water cooler, the town general store, the coffee klatch of times gone by, and the source of an electrical outlet and wifi.  Downtown has power so the coffee shops have power.

Thank goodness the post hurricane weather has been phenomenal.  So, what do you do – you get into your car where you can listen to the radio desperately hoping for an estimate for power restoration (which you don’t get) and go hang out in town at – where else – the coffee shops, or sidewalk benches, or restaurants (especially those with outdoor seating).

By far, the most popular places are the coffee shops.  Yes, the caffeine is a drawing card – but so is the conversation and sharing of war stories while you wait in the line that extends out the door onto the street.  Unshaven men and women without a stitch of make-up smile and converse.  Kids beg for donuts (and in most cases get them ‘cause their isn’t a whole lot of produce to be had  — and who could wash it and/or cook it, anyway).

The Golden Ticket

Our local Starbucks must be breaking all sales records.  It has the golden ticket.  Aside from coffee and bathrooms, it has outdoor space with tables, a lot of seating on chairs and retaining walls, and a major bonus:  wifi and for those in the know – outdoor electrical outlets built into the retaining walls. It is so crowded that you have to launch yourself in the direction of an empty space when someone vacates.

The amazing thing is that everyone is friendly and cooperative.  Tables are shared.  The Starbucks staff, overworked, has been as friendly as ever.  The coffee is flowing – but most importantly, the place itself has reverted to the general store of old – the downtown center – the water cooler in the office.  It is the place to share stories, to connect with humanity, to speculate, to rage at the power company and the cable provider.  It is the place to recharge your mind and to recharge – literally – your cellphone, iPad, and laptop!

So, for those in many towns and cities who sometimes protest the proliferation of coffee shops, or bodegas, or local bars or restaurants – think about what they offer.  It’s not only food and drink but the humanity and kinship that goes along with it – not only during crises but when you stop in everyday for your morning coffee – or your Sunday breakfast at the diner – or your burger and beer to watch the game.  For many of us, these places become part of out social structure – something that is heightened during times like power outages or critical events.

Time To Post

It’s time to get into my car, turn on the radio, drive into town hoping to spot a utility truck working on downed wires, go to Starbucks to get a cup of coffee and an update on power restoration (opinion, true or not), and stake a claim to a perch outside where I can grab on internet connection and post this online.

Filed Under: Eating on the Job, Eating with Family and Friends, Food for Fun and Thought, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: coffee, coffee shops, eat out eat well, food for fun and thought, hurricane Irene, morning coffee, power outage, water cooler, weight management strategies

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