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Christmas is not seen as a good time for anyone on a diet. It doesn’t matter if you are on a diet to lose weight, be healthy or deal with a disease, the range of food available at Christmas is intimidating for dieters.
However,
Christmas need not mean the end of your diet or a struggle through January to
compensate. There are ways to keep your diet healthy during the Christmas
season.
Moderation
Keeping
things in moderation is a major key to the Christmas overeating issue. It is
easy to say “eat and drink in moderation”, but not quiet so easy to carry out so
here are some ideas for moderating what you eat this festive season.
v Use a smaller plate ~ your mind will consider it a full plate regardless
of its size!
v Where there are choices, take a little of many things rather than lots
of one thing. This ensures you are getting a balanced meal and not overloading
on a fatty food.
v For every glass of alcohol or soft drink, have a glass of water. Water
fills you up, has no calories or side effects, is cheap and will help wash out
the excesses.
v Help clear the table as soon as everyone finished eating rather than
sitting and picking at leftovers.
v Make your own mixed drinks with real fruit juice instead of canned
drink.
v Don’t be afraid to take things home for later – especially fruit cake as
it will keep for ages!
v Only put out some of the available food so people don’t over serve
themselves. More can always come out as required.
Alternatives
Whenever you
have control over the food on offer, always look for the healthier alternative
to prepare and serve. Likewise, make suggestions to other people who will be
feeding you over the holiday period.
This is a
good opportunity to make Christmas a bit different this year ~ for instance,
try a picnic this year with lots of salads rather than huge roasts or do an
activity with friends instead of having a Christmas drinks night.
Some ways to
reduce the fat content and increase the nutritional value of Christmas foods
are listed below. Which ones apply will depend on the style of occasion you are
cooking for.
Vegetables
v Keep vegetables as close to raw as possible. Don’t overcook them.
v Consider a salad rather than baked-in-fat vegetables.
v Use spices and herbs to flavour vegetables, not butter or a creamy sauce
v Steam vegetables rather than boiling them – healthier and tastier!
v Consider a spicy potato salad instead of a mayonnaise based potato
salad.
v Avoid bacon crisps and salami in salads.
v Char grilled vegetables are delicious and a little exotic ~ a platter of
mixed grilled vegetables look great and can be done on the BBQ to save kitchen
space.
v Baked potatoes can be topped with yoghurt or low fat cream cheese or low
fat sour cream instead of butter.
v Salad dressings can liven up a salad without adding kilojoules. Try
lemon or lime juice, vinegar (many types!) and fresh herbs.
Meat
v Trim as much fat as possible from meat before cooking
v Serve some fresh fish or seafood instead of roast red meat.
v Baste meats with lemon juice (alone or mixed with garlic and herbs.)
v Where possible, BBQ or grill the meat instead of roasting it, or roast
it on a rack.
v If cooking roast pork, remove all rind and fat prior to cooking. Trimmed
of fat, the crackling can be cooked separately – although crackling isn’t
particularly good for you anyway!
Desserts
v Supply a fruit platter or fresh fruit salad ~ a hot Christmas day makes
this most appealing!
v Leave behind the crust of deserts such as cheesecake and flans.
v Have some fun with a sweet fondue sauce or a yoghurt dip with fresh
fruit.
v Fruit mixed with yoghurt and frozen is a
delicious treat. Drizzle it with chocolate and no one will know it’s healthy!
v Sorbets are a light finish to any meal or can
be served at Christmas drinks. Choose a recipe without much sugar in tit,
though.
v Make a cake with pureed fruit in place of some oil ~ yummy!
v Instead of one egg, try using two egg whites.
v Use fresh fruit to top pavlovas and cheesecakes rather than chocolate or meringue.
Odds and Ends
v Use wholegrain breads for stuffing.
v Cook stuffing separate to the meat so it doesn’t soak up fats during
cooking.
v Buy a low fat ready-made gravy to be healthier and reduce the number of
jobs to be done on the day!
v For a creamy texture without using sour cream, cream, buttermilk, eggs,
etc, try some pureed tofu. It takes up other flavours really well
but without the fat content. {Use the same amount of pureed tofu as any liquid
ingredient or 5 Tablespoons per egg. If baking look for the baking varieties of
soft tofu.}
v Instead of a bowl of lollies or chocolates for guests, why not have a bowl of
cherries or grapes?
v Bake some pita bread to use with dips instead of chips. Add vegetable
strips to the platter for variety.
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Dr Tango is Consultant Physician with facts and Figures Email-
caremed001@gmail.com Blackberry Pin - 74282d21
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