Researchers find that eating a homecooked meal up to
five times a week could add years to your life.
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In fact, according to the findings, subjects who cooked at home about five times a week were 47 percent more likely to still be alive after 10 years.
"It has become clear that cooking is a healthy behavior," said lead author Professor Mark Wahlqvist in a statement. "It deserves a place in life-long education, public health policy, urban planning, and household economics."
The research team, made up of Taiwanese and Australian researchers, published their work last week in Public Health Nutrition, a Cambridge University journal.
The 10-year study involved 1,888 men and women over age 65 who had lived in Taiwan. At the start of the study, they interviewed each participant about several lifestyle factors, including cooking habits, shopping habits, diet, education, transportation, and smoking.
Other keys besides cooking that added longevity? Grocery shopping, taking public transportation, not smoking, and being a woman.
Research shows that children who have regular meals with their parents do better in school and have healthier relationships. In addition, research finds they are 42 percent less likely to drink, 50 percent less likely to smoke, and 66 percent less like to smoke marijuana, as cited by Mark Hyman, physician and New York Times best-selling author, for The Huffington Post.
Hyman also advises that you start your eat-at-home plan by reclaiming your kitchen: filling your pantry and refrigerator with fresh local foods and toss foods with high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated fats or sugar as the first or second ingredient on the label, he writes.
Also make a set dinnertime and switch off phones and televisions during dinners. And make cleaning up a group activity. Read more tips from Hyman: http://drhyman.com/blog/2011/01/07/how-eating-at-home-can-save-your-life
http://lifestyle.malaysia.msn.com/Wellbeing/HealthyEating/article.aspx?cp-documentid=250168519