How to make eating healthy more fun/taste better?
After years and years of eating all the wrong things, my mother now has to diet and eat only healthy foods due to health problems. Tired of hearing her complain how horrible and tasteless it all is. Is there anything I can do to make it more fun/taste better for her? I’m not a health food eater myself, so I don’t know what to do. I’m afraid she’ll sneak junk foods behind my back at this rate. Are there any good healthy snacks for example?
Healthy living Information recommends taking a look at http://healthylivinginformation.net/HUK for a sense of the foods, snacks and menu ideas for eating for a healthy heart
Tagged with: diet • health food • Health Problems • healthy foods • healthy snacks • junk foods
Filed under: Eating Healthy
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I commend you for getting on board with your mom about these diet changes. To do it right, getting and keeping the bad stuff out of the house is very important.
You should be more specific about what kind of health food requirements for your mom… less sugar? less fat? less sodium? It makes a big difference in the way to change a recipe.
Small changes at first are important with a diet change. Think of this change as retraining your tastebuds. For example, cutting out fast food and soda seem difficult to some people, but it’s really not if the substitute food is decent. Browsing cookbooks at a bookstore or library is a fun way to think about a big, special meal. My favorite to start with is How to Cook Everything. It’s just great and the ingredients are pure, for the most part. The author educates the reader about techniques and strange veggies and stuff.
Here are some ideas to get you started:
*Change to whole wheat or whole grain everything. This means no enriched flour. If it doesn’t say "whole" it isn’t whole.
*Stock up on veggies and fruits. I threw much of the fresh stuff away at first because it rotted. I was stubborn about choosing those as snacks over, say, toast and peanut butter. Frozen or canned veggies are super convenient and the shelf life is better. Eventually fresh stuff is easy to keep on hand in the appropriate amounts, once you learn what you should and actually will eat.
*Pure sugar and oils are better when necessary to cook with them. Stay away from syrups (i.e. corn syrup) and processed oils. Pressed oil is better (i.e. extra virgin olive oil).
*Use broth to cook meats or anything on the stovetop. Real broth is best, but canned is fine if sodium isn’t an issue. This helps reduce the amount of oil/fats in cooking.
*Spices, spices, spices are key. Learn how to cook with them. Think of cooking as learning about cultures… Italian cooking uses parsley, basil, garlic and onion… Mexican food has cumin, cilantro, peppers, lime, garlic and onion… Thai food includes cilantro, vinegar, ginger and peanuts… etc. Pick up a cookbook and try a few, without worrying too much about the health value. It will greatly improve your fluency in the kitchen.
*Buy a crockpot and let the meat/veggies cook slowly in healthy spices. One of the easiest things to cook in the crockpot is a lean roast (pork or beef) or chicken, and vegetables. The veggies will break down, mix with the juices of the roast/chicken, making a tasty sauce. (I always put a tablespoon of vinegar with the roast to make it more tender.) I make salsa from scratch (no salt) and dump a couple of cups of it with chicken breast. It cooks for a few hours and it super yummy! If you want to make the broth into a sauce after it’s all cooked, shake a little flour with milk, then stir it into the broth to thicken it. OR you can save the broth for cooking something later. It freezes for a couple of weeks.
Expect to spend some money stocking your cabinets with the right things. It will save you money in the long run, believe me. Nothing beats a home cooked, healthy meal! Happy cooking!
Oops – forgot to add something about snacks. Until your mom can rely on a piece of fruit as a snack, she really needs to fill up at healthy meals and skip snacks (unless she needs them for a health reason). This particular issue relies solely on will power. Perhaps you can let her slide for awhile as she gets excited about changing what’s in the kitchen and how she’s cooking. Also, drinking fluids can be like a snack since it does bring about a full feeling. When all else fails, nuts can be a good choice, in moderation. Watch out for sodium and fat intake with these snacks. Instead, find recipes that have semi-sweet chocolate and oats, roll in some flax or other good option, and bring in some cashews into the snack. It can be like a trail mix. (Warning: dried fruit has much more sugar than fresh fruit.)
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