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How Much Halloween Candy Will You End Up Eating?

October 25, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Is it almost a foregone conclusion that there’s Halloween candy in your future?  It’s pretty hard to escape because it’s everywhere —  on desks, in restaurants, even in my veterinarian’s office in a nice purple bowl with a dog bone painted on the side.

Halloween and the week afterward accounts for about 5% of all candy consumed for the year. The most popular types, in order, are:  chocolate, chewy candies and hard candy.

What’s In Your Kid’s Trick or Treat Bag?

If you’ve ever swiped candy from your kid’s trick or treat bag, you’re certainly not alone. According to the National Confectioners Association, 90% of parents confess they occasionally dip into their kid’s stash. I know I sure did.

Parents invade big time — they eat one candy bar out of every two a child brings home.  Their favorite targets are snack-sized chocolate bars (70%), candy-coated chocolate pieces (40%), caramels (37%) and gum (26%).

In Case You Want To Pick The Least Caloric Candy . . .

Here are the calories in some popular Halloween candy – just in case you might want to minimize the caloric damage (no, that’s not a joke, candy has a big calorie and fat gram range):

  • Hershey’s Milk Chocolate: snack size .49-ounce bar; 67 calories; 4g fat
  • Snickers: Fun size; 80 calories; 4g fat
  • Tootsie Rolls: 6 midgee pieces; 140 calories; 3g fat
  • Skittles Original Bite Size Candies: Fun size bag; 60 calories; 0.7 g fat
  • M&Ms: Fun size bag; 73 calories; 3g fat
  • Butterfinger: Fun size; 85 calories; 3.5g fat
  • Tootsie Roll Pop
: 60 calories; 0g fat
  • Starburst Original Fruit Chews: 2 pieces; 40 calories: 40; 0.8g fat
  • Brach’s Candy Corn: 20 pieces; 150 calories; 0g fat
  • Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup:  Fun size; 80 calories, 4.5g fat
  • Peppermint Pattie:  Fun size; 47 calories; 1g fat
  • Kit Kat:  Fun size; 73 calories; 3.7g fat

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Holidays, Manage Your Weight, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting, Takeout, Prepared Food, Junk Food Tagged With: calorie tips, calories in candy, candy, fat in candy, food facts, Halloween, holidays, trick or treat

Has Your Perfect Pumpkin Ever Caved In?

October 18, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN 1 Comment

Manhattan Fruit Exchange, Chelsea Market, NYC

Mine has and I finally found out why.

Although lots of us buy pumpkins to cook the pumpkin flesh or toast the seeds (pumpkins have more beta carotene per serving than any other fruit or vegetable), many of us never buy pumpkins except to use as jack-o’-lanterns or for decoration.

Many commercially available “Halloween” pumpkins are specifically grown to be oversized, thin-walled, with a huge seed pocket and a relatively small proportion of flesh.

Smaller sugar pumpkins have more fleshy pumpkin meat for cooking and often have better flavor and texture.

Will Your Jack-o’-Lantern Be Spooky, Happy, Or Creepy?

Pumpkins come in many sizes, shapes, and colors so pick whatever yanks your chain. Sometimes that’s not so easy because if you go with your family everyone often has his or her own vision of what’s appropriately spooky or decorative.

I bought a really great white pumpkin this year — along with an oddly shaped orange one.  I’m not going to carve the white one. It’s sitting on a rock peering out through some sword-leaved yuccas.  Looks great – some members of my family think it’s weird.

What To Look For When You Pick Your Pumpkin

  •  Pick a pumpkin with no cuts, bruises, or soft spots. The flesh should feel hard and not give easily.   According to one of the pumpkin growers at my local farmers’ market, organisms can easily get inside any cut in the flesh – even a small nick — and cause rot.  Your perfect pumpkin will be great one day and the next day it can totally cave-in on itself.
  • My farmers’ market source told me that pumpkins can heal  — if you see a cut in the flesh, expose the cut to air and keep it dry.
  • There’s some chance that if your pumpkin is greenish in color you can leave it in a cool dry spot – not refrigerated – and it will ripen and turn orange.

  • A pumpkin’s stem should be attached.  Don’t pick up a pumpkin by its stem. Stems break off easily and can leave potential entry spots for organisms to invade and cause the dreaded pumpkin cave-in.

  • Gently tap your pumpkin and listen for how hollow it sounds. Lift the pumpkin to get an idea of how dense it is. The heavier a pumpkin is, the thicker its walls. For a jack-o’-lantern, thick walls will block the candlelight and no one will be able to see your fantastic (or maybe not so fantastic) carving.
  • Tall, oblong-shaped pumpkins are often stringier inside — which makes it difficult to make precise cuts.
  • Store your pumpkin carefully, especially if you pick it off the vine. You can toughen-up, or cure, a fresh-picked pumpkin by keeping it in a dry place without handling or disturbing it. Curing toughens the rind and makes it less prone to rot.  Pumpkins can keep for months in a cool (50 degrees Fto 65 degrees F) dry, low humidity environment.

After The Carving . . .

A carved pumpkin starts to dry and shrivel up as soon as it’s cut and exposed to air.

To keep your jack-o’-lantern fresh longer:

  • Keep it cool and out of direct sunlight
  • Spray it with an anti-transpirant (like Wilt-Pruf and other brands)
  • If you’re having a party or just want a big “reveal,” drape your pumpkin with a damp towel until showtime
  • Protect your masterpiece from animals who might find it appealing
  • Don’t leave your jack-o’-lantern outside if there’s a threat of frost.


Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Holidays Tagged With: food facts, Halloween, holidays, jack-o'-lantern, pumpkin

A Dozen Reasons We Eat When We’re Not Hungry

July 7, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Eating when you’re not hungry, or when you’re bored, angry, tired, procrastinating, or celebrating can push your calorie intake way up.  The biggest problem is that we often don’t realize that we’re shoving food into our mouths – either because we’re distracted, we don’t want to know, or we just plain old don’t care.

Here are a dozen reasons and triggers for “mindless” eating:

  1. “Cheap” calories – the kind you find at all you can eat restaurants, those freebie tastes in markets, “value meals,” and three courses for the price of two.
  2. Bread and extras like butter, olive oil, and olives on the table or peanuts or pretzels at a bar.  Way too tempting to pass up – especially if you’re hungry or you’ve walked in with the attitude that you “deserve” it because you’ve had a rotten day.
  3. Opening your cabinet or refrigerator door and having your favorite snacks staring you in the face.
  4. Procrastinating or avoiding doing what you have to do by having a snack.
  5. Family gatherings that serve traditional and/or highly caloric foods that you wouldn’t normally eat – and a whole bunch of angst that causes you to eat.
  6. Watching TV with a bag of chips or a bowl of candy on your lap.
  7. Parties and events — especially when you drink — causing you to lose count and control of what you’re grabbing to eat.
  8. Sitting near a vending machine or the snack room at work – and the candy bowls on a lot of desks.
  9. Buffets – anywhere and everywhere .  Oh, the heaps and piles of good looking food. Enough said.
  10. Feeling tired, bored, angry, or “out-of-sorts” and looking for food as a “pick-me-up.”
  11. Having a stressful – or boring –meeting especially when there’s a table full of food nearby.
  12. Getting home, having no plan for dinner, and just picking and nibbling a ton of calories all evening.

What are your reasons?

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Manage Your Weight, Shopping, Cooking, Baking, Snacking, Noshing, Tasting Tagged With: calories, eating triggers, emotional eating, holidays, hunger, mindless eating, overeating, weight management strategies

Happy 125th Birthday Statue of Liberty!

July 1, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

125 years ago the Statue of Liberty was given to the people of the United States by the people of France in recognition of the friendship they formed during the American Revolution. The Statue of Liberty’s symbolism represents freedom and democracy along with international friendship.

The Statue was a joint effort between America and France.  Americans  built the pedestal and the French people were responsible for the Statue’s design and manufacture and for its assembly in the United States.

Happy 125th Birthday Lady Liberty and Happy 235th Birthday America

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Holidays Tagged With: 4th of July, American holidays, food for fun and thought, holidays, Statue of Liberty

Ready For A Summertime Holiday Weekend?

May 27, 2011 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

One Stop Shopping:

Food, drinks, flowers, ice cream, disposable plates, paper towels, propane, fireworks, even the grill!!!

You can probably find sun screen and beach towels.  I know you can buy a picnic table — even one that’s kid sized. There’s a petting zoo, too.

Memorial Day

Please take a moment to remember that Memorial Day,  originally called Decoration Day, honors men and women who died while serving in the American military. Started after the Civil War to honor Union and Confederate soldiers, it became a federal holiday in 1971. Unofficially, it marks the beginning of summer.

Filed Under: Food for Fun and Thought, Holidays, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: American holidays, barbecues, food for fun and thought, holidays, Memorial Day, summer

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