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Wednesday 7 December 2011

Give It Up: Top 10 Worst Foods

There’s No Saving These Frankenfoods



Why do we crave creamy, crunchy, fried dishes that cause bulging waistlines, higher cholesterol and rising blood pressure? Because they taste good! Read on for the 10 worst foods you’re eating and the healthy substitutes to reach for when you just have to indulge. Chances are, you'll feel more satisfied, eat less, and boost your overall health. It's just a matter of retraining your taste buds. Plus, what’s your diet downfall? Take our quiz to find out...
More than half of all Americans say they're in good or excellent health, according to a survey by Cigna HealthCare, a Philadelphia-based health care company.

The other half thinks they need to lose only about 10 pounds.

Yet, two-thirds of American adults are overweight or obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The bottom line: Americans eat too much and exercise too little. And the calories we consume usually aren’t from nutritious, low-cal, high-fiber foods such as fruits and vegetables, or whole grains, or from healthy proteins such as lean meat and low-fat dairy foods.         

  Instead, we reach for artery-cloggers: processed cheese that squirts from a can, frosted pastries filled with sugary jam, snack bags of cookies or crackers and anything deep-fried.

But you don’t have to say no to them – that’ll only derail your healthy efforts. Instead, get to know the worst choices and their savory substitutes:

1. Chips
One ounce of potato chips has 152 calories and 10 grams of fat (three grams saturated).

If you eat just three ounces a week, in one year you'll have consumed 23,400 calories and added about seven pounds to your waistline. And that’s from just a couple handfuls – which barely constitutes a full and satisfying snack for most of us.

Substitute
:
Rice and popcorn cakes are no longer Styrofoam-like snacks.

Now they’re available in many flavors, so you can satisfy a salty craving without hitting the chips.

Try Quaker’s Quakes Rice Snacks or Orville Redenbacher’s Popcorn Cakes instead – both have less than 100 calories per serving.

For a more exotic crunch, try dry roasted edamame, which are usually lightly salted and have a satisfying crunch. Thirty grams of the Trader Joe’s brand provides 14 grams of protein and 20% of your daily iron in only 140 calories.                                                           

2. Non-Dairy Toppings
As luscious as they are, Cool Whip and its kin are mostly corn syrup and hydrogenated vegetable oil − stuff you don’t want floating in your arteries.

One tablespoon is 32 calories, but who stops at just one?

Substitute:

Top desserts with low-fat vanilla yogurt. The same amount has half the calories, plus a healthy dose of calcium.

3. Doughnuts
White flour, vegetable shortening, white sugar… and deep-fried to boot.

One glazed Krispy Kreme packs 200 calories and 12 grams of fat, including heart-stopping saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol.

An old-fashioned cake doughnut has 300 calories, 28 grams of carbohydrates and a whopping 19 grams of fat, including 5 grams of saturated fat and 4 grams of trans fat.

Only 30% of our calories should come from fat, says the American Heart Association. That’s about 65 grams in a 2,000-calorie daily diet.

Nosh on a couple doughnuts with your coffee, and you’ve reached your daily fat quota.

Substitute:

Keep down the carbs with whole-grain bagels. Half a Pepperidge Farm multi-grain bagel has 125 calories, just 3 grams of fat and less than 4 grams of cholesterol-lowering fiber.                                   

4. Fettuccine Alfredo
Strips of pasta drenched with butter, cream and parmesan cheese – what’s not to love?

How about its fat and calories! A 3-ounce serving (about the size of your fist) has 543 calories and 33 grams of fat (19 of which are saturated).

Substitute:

Request whole-wheat fettuccine with marinara sauce. One cup of whole-wheat pasta has 197 calories and almost 4 grams of fiber. And half a cup of marinara sauce has just 92 calories.

If whole-wheat pasta isn’t available, ask for spinach pasta instead – it's popular and nutrition-rich.

Click here for 10 healthy pasta recipes.

5. Sausages
Whether you fry them for breakfast or boil 'em in beer, sausages are a health hazard.

A single pork link packs 217 calories and 19.5 grams of fat.

Substitute:
Chicken or turkey sausage. Five links of Aidell’s chicken apple sausage have only 100 calories and 8 grams of fat (2.5 saturated).

Or go vegetarian: Boca Italian sausage made from soy protein contains 130 calories in each 2.5-ounce serving, plus 6 grams of fat and 13 grams of lean protein.                                   

6. Fried Chicken
A fried chicken breast has nearly 400 calories and 22 grams of fat. The Colonel wouldn’t be happy to hear this, but those platters of fried fowl have to go.

What do you expect when you batter and fry chicken, skins and all?

Substitute:

Grilled, skinless chicken breasts are finger-lickin’ good. Rub them with a fiery spice rub – try a green chile-lime seasoning – throw them on the barbecue, and you have great flavor for 189 calories per 4-ounce breast.

7. Imitation Cheese in a Can
Some people love this stuff.

But they ignore their protesting hearts: Two tablespoons – about the amount you’d put on two crackers – packs 276 calories and 21 grams of fat, 13 grams of which are saturated.

Substitute:
Go for the real thing. Soft cheeses like brie have about 100 calories an ounce.

Goat cheese is even better: One ounce has 76 calories and 5 grams of protein.  

8. French Fries
One large order (6 ounces) of fast-food fries from a typical commercial restaurant contains roughly 570 calories, half of which are from fat. (That's probably why we love them, and usually polish off the serving!)

If your restaurant order includes a large hamburger (such as Burger King’s Whopper), tack on 670 calories and 39 grams of fat.

Substitute:

Order kid-size fries instead, which have only 230 calories and 13 grams of fat.
At home, try sautéed tempeh, a fermented rice and soy mixture found in the refrigerated health-food section of your grocery store.

Just slice the tempeh, sprinkle with soy sauce, and sauté in a little olive oil until brown. A half cup – about three or four half-inch slices – contains only 197 calories.

And, unlike the starch-and-fat content of fries, tempeh is loaded with protein and offers a good source of iron, magnesium, zinc and vitamin B6.

9. Soft White Bread
You may as well have a candy bar.

A slice of white bread offers little more than 65 calories of white flour, a simple and rapidly digested carbohydrate that causes your blood sugar to rise and crash, like any simple sugar.


And, because it has so few nutrients, white bread leaves you feeling hungry for the fiber and vitamins your body needs.

Substitute:
For the same number of calories, a slice of whole-wheat bread offers nutty flavor, 2 grams of heart-healthy fiber, protein and nutrients like selenium, magnesium and potassium.

You can also substitute whole grain bagels, English muffins, scones, and muffins.

It's the fiber that fills up your stomach so you eat less of it, too.  

                                
10. Fried Wontons
These delicate triangles, often filled with meat, shrimp or cream cheese, are deep-fried to a crispy crunch.

Often served as appetizers, these bite-size morsels seem harmless, but pop a few too many in your mouth and they’ve added up to a whole meal.

Unfortunately, just four crab and cream cheese-filled wontons have 311 calories and 19 grams of fat - too greasy a treat for anyone trying to stay fit.

Substitute:

For a little crunch, try brown-rice sesame crackers. Five have just 140 calories and 6 grams of fat, 1 gram of fiber and a hefty dose of calcium.

They’ll also satisfy that salty snack craving.

Just don’t eat the whole bag.                                   

What's Your Diet Downfall?

You already know if you're a junk food junkie or a sucker for bread and butter. You know if you've got a sweet tooth or a salty incisor. So what else is there to know about why your diet isn't working? Find out if you're unwittingly sabotaging your weight-loss plan and adding inches to your waistline with this diet quiz.

Check out Health Bistro for more healthy food for thought. See what Lifescript editors are talking about and get the skinny on latest news. Share it with your friends (it’s free to sign up!), and bookmark it so you don’t miss a single juicy post!

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