Eating Healthier -- Part II
Food preparation tip lists are another way to painlessly improve your patient's
diet. Below are a few examples:
Preparation Tips
- Grated cheese instead of sliced cheese (less cheese will go
further).
- Use oat or wheat bran as a sauce, soup, or stew thickener (an
easy way to increase soluble and insoluble dietary fiber).
- Add one part non-fat yogurt to one part avocado when making
guacamole (this results in a lower fat, higher protein dip).
- Use the 50/50 principle. If your patients can't tolerate the
change to lower fat, higher fiber, and less refined foods, suggest
to them that they blend healthier alternatives to the foods they
now consume. For example: (a) add one part non-fat yogurt for
each part of sour cream, (b) add one part non-fat milk to each part
low-fat milk, (c) add one part non-fat salad dressing to each part
regular salad dressing, or (d) one part unsweetened applesauce to
each part sweetened applesauce. You can be creative, and after
analyzing the foods your patients normally consume, you can give
them customized suggestions.
- For patients who eat canned or frozen foods, have them try to
add something fresh or a legume to their meal. For example, if
they eat canned chili, have them add a fresh bell pepper, onion or
tomato. If your patient eats frozen foods such as a pot pie, after
cooking stir in a can of rinsed, drained beans.
- For your patients who will not buy whole wheat or whole grain
pancake or cookie mixes, try having them just add a tablespoon of
wheat or oat bran to the batter. They will not taste it, but the
benefits are obvious. Imagine, just a teaspoon of fiber for each
cookie each American consumes, the health care savings from
intestinal disease would be staggering.
- When ordering sandwiches out ask for mustard instead of
mayonnaise, and vinegar instead of oil.
- Have your patients cover one-half of the holes on their salt
shaker at home. Instruct them not to use salt until after cooking,
and always taste their food before salting.
- Instead of butter, cheese, and sour cream, and for those who
don't like yogurt, try non-fat cottage cheese on baked potatoes --
it's great.
Tips for the Junk Food Patient
Even these people can painlessly improve their diet. For example,
instead of ordering a cheeseburger, large fries, and a large soda,
suggest they order a hamburger, salad, and juice or tea. When
dining out order salad dressing or potato toppings on the side:
when done this way people will tend to use less. For those
patients who hit the doughnut shop in the morning, suggest that
they order a muffin instead of a doughnut. Even though most
doughnut shop muffins are not low calorie foods, at least they are
not deep-fat fried in rancid oil.
For your "pizza" patients, suggest they order their pizzas with a
little less cheese. Suggest that if their pizzeria offers whole
wheat crusts they try it. This author orders double vegetable
pizzas with no cheese, and they taste great. Your hard core
"junkie" patients, however, will probably need some cheese on their
pizzas. The best types of pizza topping are vegetables, with the
exception of olives, which are high in fat. There will be some
patients who insist on meat toppings. For people in this
category, have them order ham or Canadian bacon instead of
pepperoni, sausage, or pork bacon.
Even the hot dog can be improved by using whole grain buns instead
of traditional white flour product.
Finally, most Americans do not drink enough pure water.
Furthermore, telling "junkies" to have eight glasses of water a day
is a joke; they just won't do it. However, there is a good chance
you can sell them on consuming one large 12 to 16 ounce glass of
pure water every morning as soon as they wake up. It doesn't sound
like much, but over time that extra 16 ounce of fresh water a day
will have a very positive effect on their health.
G. Douglas Andersen, D.C.
Brea, California
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