Get The Clutter Out Of Your Eating Habits (Day 3-Week Of Sweets)
Wednesday, November 21st, 2007• SODA: The average American drinks 55 gallons of sweetned soda each year. That’s nearly one 20-ounce bottle of soda and 250 calories from sugar every day. Simply cutting out soda would drop an average of 1,750 claories and a ahlf pound each week.
• CORN SYRUP: Corn syrup and its eveil twin, hihg-fructose corn syrup, are cheap sweetners used in thousands of products, from colas to condiments to most commercial baked goods, including some whole-wheat breads. Not only is high fructose corn syrup a concentrated source of empty calories, but it also might convert more easily to body fat than other types of simple sugar, such as those derived from cane or beets. During exercise, simple sugars can be quite beneficial to preformance, energy bars and gels are filled with them. But beware of them as an empty calorie source in your regular diet. Check food labels to avoid products with corn syrup and high fructose corn syrup, and instead look for cereal, juices, pasta sauce, salad dressing, and so on that house no added sugar.
• TRANS FAT: Man-made trans fat is a product of the food industry, which, to increase shelf life and reduce cost, takes heart-healthy unsaturated fats and chemically corrupts them into molecules that are more harmful to your health than the saturated fat dripping off the greasy bacon in a back-alley dinner. For years, partially hydrogenated oils, which contain trans fat, have been used in commercial backed goods, chips and fast food. Trans far not only increases LDL cholesterol levels, but also lowers blood levels of beneficial HDL cholesterol, the kind that helps strip plaque off your artery walls, and can also contribute to the stiffening of arteries. The FDA noe requires all manufacturers to list trans fat separately on nutrition labels, and because of bad publicity many food companies have eliminated trans fat from their products. Still, beware, the law allows a label to say zero grams per serving if the food contains0.5 grams or leff of trans fat. Your best bet is to look for “partially hydrogenated” anything in a food’s ingredient list and, if you find it, put the package back on the shelf.
• ALCOHOL: People don’t realize the calorie content of alcohol, seven useless calories lurk in every gram, or about 98 in each 1.5-ounce shot of spirits such as vodka or whiskey. Liqueurs and cocktails have even more calories per shot because of added sugar. And beer and wine aren’t much better. Besides being a source of empty calories, alcoholic beverages are a diuretic and contribute to dehydration, even it you have only one or two. Hangover syptoms, the pounding in your head, lethargy and cottonmouth are all due to dehydration. You don’t have to quite alcohol cold turkey though, but just limit yourself to no more than four drinks per week.
• FANCY COFFEE DRINKS: Caffeine improves physical and mental performance, including short-term memory. Coffee itself has virtually no calories. But in America, having a coffee means it’s possible to drink 700 to 1,000 calories in a single giant cup, thanks to the milk, cream and sugar dumped in. Skip the fancy coffee drinks and get a boost with just plain unaltered coffee like an espresso or a small, fat-fee cappuccino.
(Source: Bicycling 2007)
**Wii has some pretty cool new games out for their console. One being Star Trek: Conquest. Over at Wii Rally, Lynn Little has posted a list of the new games to try for your Wii. Read the list here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe: Day 3-Week Of Sweets
Granita
Serves: Two
2 ounces espresso or strong coffee
3 ounces low-fat milk
1 ounce half and half
2 cups standard size ice cubes
1 ounce chocolate syrup or cocoa powder (optional)
Mix all ingredients in a blender for 25 seconds or until smooth. Serve immediately.
Iced Coffee
Serves: Makes 12 servings
1/2 pound very coarsely ground medium-dark roast coffee
1 one-foot-square piece of cheesecloth
3 quarts cold water
Optional additions: Simple syrup (1 cup water, 1 cup sugar, bring to a boil and stir till sugar is dissolved. Cool, bottle, and it will keep for three months.); milk; chocolate syrup.
Place coffee in cheesecloth, tied at the end, and submerge in a container filled with the cold water. Let stand overnight in the refrigerator. Remove the coffee frilled cheese cloth and pour the liquid into eight ounce glasses filled with ice. Add any of the optional additions if desired.
Happy Eating!
