Beauty Tips
Health Tips
Fashion Tips
Weight Loss Tips
Fun Stuff
Resources
What to Eat
- Limit yourself to no more than two servings of red meat per week.
- Make sure that no more than a quarter of your calories comes from fat.
- Cook your own meals at home and avoid eating at restaurants as much as possible.
- Eat six to eleven servings of complex carbohydrates (fruits and whole grain breads, pasta and cereals), but avoid white flour when possible.
- Don't go crazy on the protein. Too much doesn't add muscle, contrary to popular belief. It just turns to
fat.
- Boycott mayonnaise and butter (or margarine). Get them out of your refrigerator. Learn to live without them.
- Don't be afraid to try low or reduced fat versions of your favorite foods. You may actually like them better when you don't feel guilty eating them.
- Stay away from energy bars, which imply that they will transform you into a fit person. Most of them are loaded with calories.
- Make your own smoothies. Those made commercially usually contain fattening syrups, but
your home-made smoothies (without the gunk) are very healthy.
- Use all the garlic, oregano, etc. that you want. Eating healthy doesn't mean you can't pack your food with flavor.
- Pack a sandwich made with whole-grain bread for lunch. Breads with high fibre make you feel fuller than white bread.
- Get at least 25 grams of fibre every day. Not only does it ward off disease, but it actually blocks the absorption of calories.
- Don't be fooled by "fat free" labels. Many of these
foods contain a lot of sugar, which eventually turns into fat anyway.
- Don't fall into the "it's okay to eat chicken" trap. The Crispy Chicken and Filet o' Fish sandwiches at McDonalds each contain more than twice the fat of a McDonald's hamburger. If you need whipped cream, whip up chilled evaporated skim milk - your creation will contain only half a gram of fat per cup.
- Use extra water in hot cereals to reduce the amount of milk and butter you use.
- Use seasoned rice vinegar on
salads and veggies. It tastes similar to oil and vinegar, but is is fat-free and has very few calories.
- Cook rice in a mixture of half water, half fruit juice to give it subtle flavor without butter and salt.
- Use freshly ground nutmeg or another seasoning instead of salt.
- Substitute pureed tofu for two thirds of the butter in cake and cookie recipes. This will cut out 43 grams of saturated fat.