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Grocery Shopping Guides for Heart Health

We all know it is healthier and more economical to buy groceries at the store and prepare your meals at home.  We also know the crazy food choices at the store can seem overwhelming. Here are some tips to help you be smart at the grocery store and choose good-for-you foods.

  • Be sure to buy and eat plenty of fresh or frozen fruits and vegetables. Fruits and vegetables that are deeply colored throughout – such as spinach, carrots, peaches and berries – tend to be higher in vitamins and minerals than others, such as potatoes and corn.
  • Frozen vegetables are great because they are low in cost and do not perish.  I always keep frozen spinach, artichokes and broccoli in my freezer.  I also have the mixed fruit in the freezer to have on hand for smoothies, protein shakes or to put in a container and keep my lunch cold.  Then in the afternoon, it has thawed and is perfect for my afternoon snack with a bit of FAGE yogurt.
Fruits and Vegetables
  • When fresh foods aren't available, choose frozen or canned vegetables and fruits in water without added sugars, saturated and transfat, or salt.  Frozen is best, but canned is a good choice as well.
  • Buy more fruits and vegetables that are good sources of fiber, including beans, peas, sweet potatoes, winter squashes, broccoli, brussels sprouts, oranges, bananas, strawberries and apples.
  • Stock up on raw vegetables for snacks such as carrot and celery sticks, broccoli, cherry tomatoes and cauliflower.  Enjoy these with hummus or another health protein for dipping.
  • For desserts, buy fresh, frozen or canned fruits in water without added sugars.   
  • Don’t buy lots of fruit juice. It doesn’t provide the fiber of whole fruit and is a source of high calories and sugar.

Milk Cheese and Dairy
  • Chose low fat dairy.  Avoid milk that contains added flavorings such as vanilla, chocolate or strawberry. They usually have added sugars and calories.
  • Choose low-fat cheeses.
  • Use additional egg whites to whole eggs to make a larger portion with little added calories. 
  • Remember ice cream and ice cream type of products (frozen yogurt) are TREATS and should not be an everyday food option.  Save these for special occasions and be sure to control your portions.  
  • Watch out for the partially hydrogenated fats hidden in casseroles, bakery goods, desserts and other foods. You have to READ THE INGREDIENT list to determine if partially hydrogenated fats are included. 
  • Read the Nutrition Facts label of foods you’re considering.

Meat Poultry Fish and Nuts
  • Strive to eat one serving of grilled or baked fish at least twice a week. (A serving is roughly the size of a checkbook.) Good examples of fish to buy include salmon, trout and herring.
  • Choose lemon juice and spices to eat with fish.
  • Choose cuts of red meat and pork labeled “loin” and “round” – they tend to be leaner cuts.
  •  Buy “choice” or “select” grades of beef rather than “prime,” and be sure to trim off the fat before cooking.
  • When buying or eating poultry, try the skinless version or remove the skin yourself.
  • Select more meat substitutes such as dried beans, peas, lentils or tofu (soybean curd) and use them as entrees or in salads and soups. A one-cup serving of cooked beans, peas, lentils or tofu can replace a two-ounce serving of meat, poultry or fish.
  • Nuts and seeds are good sources of protein and polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats.  They are high in calories so use portion control.
Breads and Grains
  • Choose whole-grain, high-fiber breads, such as those containing whole wheat, oats, oatmeal, whole rye, whole grain corn and buckwheat. Choose breads and other foods that list whole grains as the first item in the ingredient list.
  • Limit or better yet, completely eliminate the amount of bakery products you purchase, including doughnuts, pies, cakes and cookies.  Most store-baked goods are made with trans fats (remember to read the ingredient list). It is always to best to make your own baked goods.  You can use apple sauce instead of oils to make muffins and other baked goods.  If you make them yourself, you will not eat these treats as often and they will be much better tasting and better for you.

Oils, dressings and shortenings
  • Buy and use fats and oils in limited amounts.
  • When you must use oils for cooking, baking or in dressings or spreads, choose healthy fats.  Olive oil is great for salads and cooking at low temperatures.  Coconut oil is great when cooking at higher temperatures and very heart healthy.
  • Buy a nonstick pan or use nonstick vegetable spray when cooking.
– reference American heart association, Eat Right For Life, Dr. Ann Kulz

Healthy Snacking tips from Dr. Bill Sears

Good snacks should partner carbs with protein, fiber and healthy fats.  Below are some suggestions for your healthy snacking!

  • baby carrots and hummus

  • apple slices and peanut butter

  • whole grain cereal with yogurt

  • edamme

  • string cheese with a piece of fruit

  • cottage cheese and fruit

  • handful of raw nuts

  • blueberries in yogurt

  • cherry tomatoes with cheese or cottage cheese

  • hard boiled egg

  • any fruit


 

Get your Cave Man Groove ON!

I have been reading the book by Steven G. Aldana, PHD - called Stop Go - Grocery Guide. These concepts are very interesting. Basically, the premise is that we are still very much cavemen! At least our bodies think so. The world has changed rapidly, but our bodies are still the same as early humans. Our ancestors lived off the land. They were hunters and gatherers. Wild game, gathered fruits and nuts were the mainstay of the human diet. Our stomachs are designed to digest natural, whole foods. Cavemen did not eat Hostess Twinkies or Diet Dr. Pepper.

Most foods in the stores today are modern foods and did not exist 100 years ago. Modern food is abundant but not compatible with our bodies. Cheese, butter, sugar, refined flours were not around until recent years and bodies are not adapting these foods.  Along with these foods, the rates of type II diabetes, heart disease and obesity have risen. "Most chronic diseases that afflict the industrial world are caused by a diet and lifestyle that is inconsistent with the ancient bodies we inherited from our ancestors." Steven G Aldana.

The best science available calls the most unhealthy diet "The Western diet". People on a Westernized diet - like America - eat a lot of red meat, processed meats, refined flour, butter, high fat dairy products, with few fruits and fewer vegetables.  The dietary pattern that associated with good health is called the "Prudent diet". This includes mostly whole grains, plant oils, vegetables, fruits and legumes.

So - what does this mean for us? We should eat like a cave man or cave woman! Eat whole foods - foods close to their natural form. Produce is a whole food. Oats are good option. Avoid the processed foods. Processed food undergoes many changes before it ends up on your plate or even in your shopping buggy!

Don't be fooled by nutrition labeling. Many of the "healthy" stamps on foods have been created by the food manufacturers to better market their products. Pepsico started their own label called Smart Spot. General Mills, Kellogg and Draft have another one called Smart Choices. These are not always healthy options, so be sure to read the labels for ingredients and avoid products with hydrogenated oils of any kind.

The Stop and Go Grocery Guide is a great resource and codes many of the products in the store as green light or red light.
Rules to live by from this book - I LOVE THESE!!!
1 - Don't eat anything your great grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food. (this includes gogurt!)
2 - Avoid products containing ingredients that are a) unfamiliar, b) unpronounceable, c) more than five in number, or d) high-fructose corn syrup.
3. Avoid food products that make health claims.
4 - Shop the peripheries of the supermarket and stay out of the middle. All of the whole and fresh food is on the perimeter.
5 - Get out of the supermarket whenever possible - get to the farmers market.
Embrace your inner caveman!!