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Pesticide In Your Food – Or Not

June 17, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

What has happened to the iconic apple?  According to the Environmental Working Group (EWG), the apple is the produce item with the greatest amount of pesticide residue.

EWG’s 2011 Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce lists the Dirty Dozen, or the produce with the most pesticide residue (which they suggest buying organic), and the Clean Fifteen, the produce with the least residue.

Dirty Dozen 

  1. Apples
  2. Celery
  3. Strawberries
  4. Peaches
  5. Spinach
  6. Imported Nectarines
  7. Imported Grapes
  8. Sweet Bell Peppers
  9. Potatoes
  10. Domestic Blueberries
  11. Lettuce
  12. Kale/Collard Greens 

Clean Fifteen

  1. Onions
  2. Sweet Corn
  3. Pineapples
  4. Avocado
  5. Asparagus
  6. Sweet Peas
  7. Mangoes
  8. Eggplant
  9. Domestic Cantaloupe
  10. Kiwi
  11. Cabbage
  12. Watermelon
  13. Sweet Potatoes
  14. Grapefruit
  15. Mushrooms

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: Clean Fifteen, Dirty Dozen, food, food facts, fruit, organic, organic produce, pesticide, vegetables

Food As Love, Joy, And Energy

June 16, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

The other night I went to a talk and book signing by Lisa Oz (married to Dr. Oz), for her new book, US:  Transforming Ourselves and the Relationships That Matter Most.  During the course of the evening there was a lot of discussion about the healing power of energy.

As a nurse I began to think about how nurses use the power of touch – the “laying on of the hands” – to help their patients.  I believe that this is also true for any parent who uses a gentle touch or a hug to convey energy and healing to a child – or for other healers who appropriately and with discipline use the power of touch and energy transfer for healing purposes.

As a nutritional counselor I started to think about the energy we gain from both food and the act of eating.

We Get Energy From Food And From Eating, Cooking, And Sharing

Food supplies calories and a calorie is a quantifiable, measurable unit of energy.

But food – and the act of eating and sharing – supplies energy in another unquantifiable way, too. Think about the energy you can get from sitting around the kitchen table hashing out issues – over food —  or the great feeling to be had after sharing a phenomenal meal with someone special. What about that very special jolt of love and energy you get when you cook or share something as special as a homemade cookie with your child?

As Craig Claiborne, restaurant critic,  food writer, and former New York Times food editor said in Craig Claiborne’s Kitchen Primer: “Cooking is at once child’s play and adult joy. And cooking done with care is an act of love.”

 

 

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought Tagged With: celebrations, cooking, eating plan, energy, food, food as love, food for fun and thought, healing energy, laying on of the hands

Fast Food Facts For Kids And Their Parents

June 14, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

After sugar sweetened beverages, fast food is the most unhealthy food product marketed to children. Fast food companies speak to children early, often, and when parents aren’t looking. Fast food is aggressively marketed toward children as young as two.

In 2009 the fast food industry spent more than $4.2 billion on TV advertising and other media. Preschoolers saw 21% more fast food ads on TV then in 2003; children saw 34% more; and teenagers 39% more.

According to Yale’s Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, a comprehensive study looked at the marketing of the twelve largest fast food chains and at the calories, fat, sugar, and sodium in over 3,000 kids’ meal combinations and 2,781 menu items.

 

What The Study Found

  • 13-17 year olds buy 800-1,100 calories in an average fast food meal – about half of their recommended total daily calories.
  • At least 30% of the calories in menu items purchased by children and teenagers are from sugar and saturated fat.
  • A single meal contains at least half of the daily recommended sodium for young people in most fast food restaurants.
  • Although most fast food restaurants kids’ meals have at least one healthy side and beverage option, they are rarely offered as the default.
  • McDonald’s and Burger King show only healthy sides and beverages in child-targeted advertising but automatically serve french fries with kids’ meals at least 86% of the time and soft drinks at least 55% of the time.
  • Faced with pressure about portion sizes companies rename, not eliminate, their largest sides and drinks.  For example, Burger King’s 42-ounce “King” drink is now the “large” option; the previous  32-ounce “large” is now a “medium”; the  “medium” 21-ounce drink is now a “small”; and the 16-ounce “small” is now the “value” choice.
  • Kid’s food choices are affected by exposure to food and beverage ads targeted to adults. More than 60% of fast food ads seen by children are not for kids’ meals and older children (6-11) are more likely to order something from the dollar menu or a combo meal (27%) than to order a kids’ meal (21%).
  • Snacks and dessert choices had as many as 1,500 calories — five times more than the ADA’s recommended 200 to 300 calorie snack for active teens.
  • During non-meal times in the evening and after school, teens ordered more fast food than any other age group.
  • Of 3,039 possible kids’ meal combinations only twelve met preschool nutrition criteria; 15 met nutrition criteria for older kids and only 17% of regular menu items qualified as healthy choices.

 

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Eating with Family and Friends, Restaurants, Diners, Fast Food, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food, Travel, On Vacation, In the Car Tagged With: eat out eat well, fast food, food, food advertising, food facts, kids' food, snacks, weight management strategies

Why Are Americans Getting Fat???

June 10, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

The reasons why Americans are getting fat at an alarming rate might surprise you…

An infographic courtesy of Healthy Meal Experts.

 

fat americans
Learn more about Healthy Meals

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Manage Your Weight Tagged With: fast food, food consumption, food facts, high fructose corn syrup, portion size, portions, snacks, weight, weight management strategies

Ouch, I Cut Myself: 5 Knife Safety Tips

June 9, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Do your hands look like they’ve been holding onto barbed wire after a weekend filled with some heavy-duty cooking?  From Chow and Jeffrey Elliot, coauthor of the Complete Book of Knife Skills, here are five knife safety tips to help your hands ready for a hand lotion commercial rather than one for antiseptic and bandaids.

Five Tips:

  1. Don’t wear jewelry in the kitchen – your knife can get caught on a ring or its handle hung up in a bracelet.
  2. Make sure your knife is visible – how many times have you tossed it into the sink where it gets covered up by dirty dishes and pots and pans?  You don’t know who is going to reach into the sink — stick a hand in and whoops!!!
  3. Don’t walk around your kitchen with a knife in your hand.  If you do — don’t hold it in your dominant hand because if you slip and start to fall the tendency is to reach out to grab onto something or to break your fall with that hand.  Bad news if you have a sharp knife in it.  Hold it in your less dominant hand with the point down and the blade facing backwards.
  4. When you hand a knife to someone it should be presented with the handle facing him or her so the handle can be grabbed.  The best way to hand off a knife is to put it down with the handle facing toward the other person. If you can’t put the knife down, still offer it to the other person with the handle of the knife, not the blade, facing him or her.
  5. Make sure your knife is sharp.  A dull knife is a dangerous knife because your have to force it through food.  A sharp knife cuts cleanly and safely.

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: food for fun and thought, kitchen, kitchen safety, kitchen utensils, knife

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