Tuesday, 22 November 2011

What Thanksgiving Dinner Does to Your Health

What Thanksgiving Dinner Does to Your Health

What Thanksgiving Dinner Does to Your Health, Alternatives to calorie-laden dishes. Along with Thanksgiving dinner comes our ability to consume inhuman amounts of food at a single meal (check out the staggering Thanksgiving Day calorie consumption). While gluttony is certainly in season, you can make the meal a little healthier with a few tweaks to the menu. Here are a few tips to help keep your Turkey Day consumption in check.

Turkey
The star attraction of the day is actually one of the healthier items on your plate (why it’s good for you), so don’t be shy about taking an extra helping. If you stick with white meat without the skin, a serving only has about 150 calories and less than a gram of fat. As for all the T-Day talk about tryptophan, don’t fall for it.

“It’s the sheer quantity of food that people eat on Thanksgiving that puts them in that sleepy food coma, not the little bit of tryptophan you’re getting in the turkey,” notes Tara Gidus, RD, a nutritionist in Orlando.
Gravy
The good news is that this turkey, mashed potato and stuffing accompaniment isn’t all that bad for you. While it can be a bit greasy, it’s mostly just juices from the bird plus a little flour or cornstarch for thickening. It will, however, be pretty high in sodium (check out sodium content per serving), so don’t add any extra salt (and if you’re watching your sodium intake, you might have to skimp on gravy).

Mashed potatoes
Although the white variety sometimes gets a bad rap, potatoes aren’t really the problem here (check out the healthy benefits of potatoes). With mashed potatoes, the unhealthy culprits are all the high-fat, high-calorie stuff you add to the basic spuds. Mix in a stick of butter, whole milk (or even heavy cream in some recipes!), and you’ve got a side dish that can deliver in the neighborhood of 10 grams of fat per serving-spoon-full.
Sweet potato casserole
While it’s hard to quantify the total damage without seeing your secret family recipe for this Thanksgiving concoction, it’s pretty safe to assume that this dish is packing quite a whollop. The sweet potatoes themselves are innocent participants (check out the multitude of health benefits in these spuds), but once they meet up with a couple of cups of brown sugar, some butter, and a bag of mini marshmallows, those potatoes are now super high in calories, fat and sugar.
Stuffing
Again, the real issue here isn’t the basic ingredient (in this case, bread) but what else you add to it (check out options to bread as key ingredient).

“In order to make it moist, people add things that are high in fat—like oil or butter,” says Gidus. Add that’s before they toss in the other really high-fat extras like sausage. The better approach is to skip the high-cal, high-fat add-ins and opt for ones that are lower in both fat and calories, provide a little extra nutrition, and spread out the bread a bit so that the overall dish is lower in calories.
Dinner rolls
With all the yummy stuff on the table, you need to include this filler of a dish on your menu? Really? But if it’s tradition to have a basket of rolls (check out these holiday varieties) on your Thanksgiving table—and you can’t mess with tradition on this sacred holiday—then at least look for a better option than crescents that are packed with extra butter (read: extra fat).
Cranberry relish
With just 50 calories and zero fat (other health benefits) per serving, this zesty side dish is a relatively safe way to indulge your sweet tooth. But beware that you really are feeding your sweet tooth — all the added sugars can total about 13 grams per serving. “Cranberries are incredibly tart, so you don’t have much choice but to add a bunch of sugar to them,” says Gidus. Her advice: Use it as a compliment to add some refreshing sweetness to your plate of savories, but don’t overindulge.

Green bean casserole
It’s great that there is some small amount of green veggies showing up at your Thanksgiving feast, but if you drown those poor little green beans in a fat-laden sauce (made with cream of mushroom soup and sour cream), top them with fried onions and then bake the life out of them, you’re kind of missing the point. “Having a green vegetable (read why these are so nutritious) adds important antioxidants to your meal and they can be a low-calorie addition to an otherwise highly caloric occasion,” says Gidus.
Pumpkin Pie
No self-respecting Thanksgiving celebration could possibly end without the requisite slice (or two or three) of pumpkin pie. But know that that indulgence is adding at least another 300 calories and 14 grams of fat per slice to an already over-the-top meal. Pumpkin on its own is actually really good for you (what makes it so healthy?) but once you blend in enough sugar to make it a sweet treat and stuff it into a crust made with butter (or worse yet, shortening), all that goodness is pretty much cancelled out.

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