Christmas is nearly here. Many of us will soon be celebrating with friends and family and sitting down to big delicious meals on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Big meals usually involve a lot of prep work done in advance, organizing the kitchen to accommodate all the food and giant serving dishes, coordinating the oven schedule, thawing and reheating, and packing leftovers. This provides many opportunities for bacteria and other organisms to grow, travel & contaminate food and makes it an excellent time to talk about food safety. Don't be fooled though: Food safety should be practiced year-round, on a daily basis.
FoodSafety.gov provides a thorough, easy to read, and easy to navigate checklist of food safety tips broken down into four steps: clean, separate, cook & chill.
Here are the basics of food safety but please check out FoodSafety.gov!
We all do it. Whether we are working, studying, sad, bored, celebrating, wallowing, killing time or just plain hungry between meals, snacking is something most of us do at least on occasion.
Why not then choose a snack that packs a punch?: One that is not only delicious and satisfying but will also keep you full longer and on fewer calories than the salty, sugary, fatty fare that can be found in your office vending machine or at the corner store.
A well-rounded snack contains both protein and fiber (check out my earlier blog post, Did you know?: Fiber can help you control your weight - May 24, 2010). This "total package" snack is more likely to keep you satisfied until your next meal. Fiber slows stomach emptying and helps us to feel full longer, which may assist in weight maintenance or weight loss. Protein also promotes a feeling of fullness, promotes the growth and maintenance of lean muscle mass and may help us to feel more energized between meals and snacks.
A "total package" snack should be no more than about 200-250 calories. High-fiber foods tend to be lower in calories and choosing plant-based proteins or proteins from low-fat dairy can also help control the number of calories in your snack.
Use this definition of a snack to help you make mindful decisions about what to nibble on between meals. Chips, cookies and candies are "treats" and should be limited, whereas a snack can be a regular and beneficial part of a healthy diet.
Here then are 12 Total Package Snacks to keep you happy, full, strong & energized!
The holiday season is probably the biggest time of year for traditions. Just yesterday, my family and I gathered together for the traditional Christmas-time assembling of the pasteles (a Latin American dish typically comprised of a soft, savory green banana mixture wrapped around a meat filling). We make enough for all the households to split, store in our freezers and eat throughout the year.
Traditions can be very hard to resist. Once we get in the habit of doing something at the same special recurring moments, those habits come to represent the moment and we may come to view them as inseparable from the time. While long-held traditions play an important role in our histories, families & memories, my favorite kind are the new traditions. The ones we are inspired to create somewhere along the way, as we move through life.
Today I'm inspired to share a tip with you for making fitness easy and fun by harnessing the irresistible power of traditions. Traditions can be about anything. They can be made for any reason, at any time. So then, why not make a fitness tradition?
With the passing of Thanksgiving and the start of December, the Season of Giving has officially begun. This year, with the holiday season in full swing, in the wake of Hurricane Sandy and on my second year of cancer-versaries, I feel that Giving Feeling in the air, now more than ever.
Every year around this time we see, hear and read countless messages proclaiming the importance of giving back and urging us to give. This year, for example, the 92nd Street Y in New York launched its nationwide, social media-based, philanthropic movement, #GivingTuesday, in which more than 2,000 organizations participated. Lately it's gone a step further, with theories and research studies suggesting physical, mental & emotional health benefits of giving (as illustrated by this 2009 Forbes.com article).
Whether or not there are health benefits to giving is completely beside the point. Giving a little of your self every now and then may not necessarily make you a happier or healthier person overall but at the very least, it certainly helps the person or organization you are giving to and most likely will make you pause just long enough to put your own life and problems into perspective. Not to mention, giving can be contagious and inspiring or at least just make others smile (by now you must have seen the story of the police officer who bought the shoeless homeless man all-weather boots on a cold November night).
There are a number of ways you can give.