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Six ‘bad’ foods that deserve a place in your diet

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    Six ‘bad’ foods that deserve a place in your diet

    FROM THE LA TIMES

    We’re bombarded with diet advice. The internet, celebrities, friends and family are constantly telling us which foods to eat and which to avoid.

    Eggs raise your cholesterol, bananas spike your blood sugar, pasta makes you fat, frozen vegetables have fewer nutrients, and so on.

    The truth is, many foods often dismissed as unhealthy deliver serious nutritional benefits. By making them off-limits, you may be unknowingly undermining your diet.

    The following six often-maligned foods should be part of your regular diet. Here’s why.
    White potatoes

    Potatoes get a bad rap because they’re deemed as a starchy food with a low nutritional value. Not so.

    One medium baked russet potato, with skin, supplies twice as much potassium as a banana (952 mg, one-fifth of a day’s worth), along with fibre (4 g), protein (4.5 g), vitamin C, B vitamins, calcium and magnesium. All that for only 164 calories.

    Russet potatoes have a high glycemic index (GI) value, while red and new potatoes have moderate GI scores. When cooked potatoes are cooled, though, the glycemic index drops.

    Another reason to eat cooked potatoes cold (i.e., potato salad): resistant starch, carbohydrates that nourish your good gut bacteria.

    Bake, roast or steam potatoes to retain more nutrients during cooking.

    If you think you need to stay away from bananas because they’ve got way more sugar than all other fruits, think again. When it comes to natural sugars and calories, a medium-sized banana (105 calories, 27 g carbohydrate) is on par with a medium-sized pear or apple.

    Story continues below advertisement

    And contrary to popular belief, bananas score low on the glycemic index scale, meaning they cause your blood sugar to rise gradually, not quickly, after eating one.

    Besides their outstanding potassium content (422 mg per medium banana), a mineral that’s important for healthy blood pressure, bananas also provide a decent amount of fibre, folate, vitamin B6 and magnesium.

    Cashews are often regarded as being less healthy – having more calories, fewer nutrients – than other nuts. That’s not the case.

    One ounce of cashews (18 nuts) has 160 calories, the same amount found in an ounce of almonds or pistachios. Other types of nuts actually contain slightly more calories per ounce.

    One-half of the fat in cashews (55 per cent) is heart-healthy monounsaturated fat, the type found in olive oil and avocados. Cashews are also an excellent source of magnesium (83 mg), a mineral that helps regulate blood sugar and blood pressure.

    Including pasta in your diet doesn’t mean you’ll gain weight. In fact, research has found that eating pasta, as part of a Mediterranean-style diet, is associated with a lower body mass index and waist size.

    And surprisingly, white pasta made from semolina flour scores low on the glycemic index scale.

    Plus, a meal of pasta with marinara sauce is an exceptional source of lycopene, an antioxidant believed to guard against heart disease and certain cancers.

    To get more fibre, minerals and antioxidants from pasta, choose whole grain noodles more often. To keep portion size in check, serve pasta as a side dish with protein and vegetables.

    If you’ve replaced whole eggs with egg whites for fear of cholesterol, add them back to your menu.

    Yes, egg yolks do have a fair amount of cholesterol (190 mg per large egg). For most people, though, cholesterol in foods has little or no effect on the level of cholesterol in the blood******.

    Ditching the yolk means you’re also tossing out plenty of nutrients including protein (almost half the protein in an egg is on the yolk), B vitamins, vitamin A, selenium as well as good amount of brain-friendly choline.

    Another bonus: The fat in egg yolks enhances the body’s absorption of fat-soluble vitamins (E, D, K) and antioxidants such as beta-carotene, lutein and lycopene.
    Shrimp

    As is the case for egg yolks, most people don’t need to worry about the cholesterol in shrimp (161 mg per three ounces).

    Three ounces of shrimp delivers 20 g of protein, 1 g of fat, vitamin B12, calcium, magnesium, potassium and zinc and only 84 calories. (By comparison, three ounces of cooked chicken breast has 142 calories.)

    Shrimp also contains astaxanthin, an antioxidant thought to reduce inflammation.
    Beercules Beercules likes this.

    #2
    Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post
    FROM THE LA TIMES

    We’re bombarded with diet advice. The internet, celebrities, friends and family are constantly telling us which foods to eat and which to avoid.

    Eggs raise your cholesterol, bananas spike your blood sugar, pasta makes you fat, frozen vegetables have fewer nutrients, and so on.

    The truth is, many foods often dismissed as unhealthy deliver serious nutritional benefits. By making them off-limits, you may be unknowingly undermining your diet.

    The following six often-maligned foods should be part of your regular diet. Here’s why.
    White potatoes

    Potatoes get a bad rap because they’re deemed as a starchy food with a low nutritional value. Not so.

    One medium baked russet potato, with skin, supplies twice as much potassium as a banana (952 mg, one-fifth of a day’s worth), along with fibre (4 g), protein (4.5 g), vitamin C, B vitamins, calcium and magnesium. All that for only 164 calories.

    Russet potatoes have a high glycemic index (GI) value, while red and new potatoes have moderate GI scores. When cooked potatoes are cooled, though, the glycemic index drops.

    Another reason to eat cooked potatoes cold (i.e., potato salad): resistant starch, carbohydrates that nourish your good gut bacteria.

    Bake, roast or steam potatoes to retain more nutrients during cooking.

    If you think you need to stay away from bananas because they’ve got way more sugar than all other fruits, think again. When it comes to natural sugars and calories, a medium-sized banana (105 calories, 27 g carbohydrate) is on par with a medium-sized pear or apple.

    Story continues below advertisement

    And contrary to popular belief, bananas score low on the glycemic index scale, meaning they cause your blood sugar to rise gradually, not quickly, after eating one.

    Besides their outstanding potassium content (422 mg per medium banana), a mineral that’s important for healthy blood pressure, bananas also provide a decent amount of fibre, folate, vitamin B6 and magnesium.

    Cashews are often regarded as being less healthy – having more calories, fewer nutrients – than other nuts. That’s not the case.

    One ounce of cashews (18 nuts) has 160 calories, the same amount found in an ounce of almonds or pistachios. Other types of nuts actually contain slightly more calories per ounce.

    One-half of the fat in cashews (55 per cent) is heart-healthy monounsaturated fat, the type found in olive oil and avocados. Cashews are also an excellent source of magnesium (83 mg), a mineral that helps regulate blood sugar and blood pressure.

    Including pasta in your diet doesn’t mean you’ll gain weight. In fact, research has found that eating pasta, as part of a Mediterranean-style diet, is associated with a lower body mass index and waist size.

    And surprisingly, white pasta made from semolina flour scores low on the glycemic index scale.

    Plus, a meal of pasta with marinara sauce is an exceptional source of lycopene, an antioxidant believed to guard against heart disease and certain cancers.

    To get more fibre, minerals and antioxidants from pasta, choose whole grain noodles more often. To keep portion size in check, serve pasta as a side dish with protein and vegetables.

    If you’ve replaced whole eggs with egg whites for fear of cholesterol, add them back to your menu.

    Yes, egg yolks do have a fair amount of cholesterol (190 mg per large egg). For most people, though, cholesterol in foods has little or no effect on the level of cholesterol in the blood******.

    Ditching the yolk means you’re also tossing out plenty of nutrients including protein (almost half the protein in an egg is on the yolk), B vitamins, vitamin A, selenium as well as good amount of brain-friendly choline.

    Another bonus: The fat in egg yolks enhances the body’s absorption of fat-soluble vitamins (E, D, K) and antioxidants such as beta-carotene, lutein and lycopene.
    Shrimp

    As is the case for egg yolks, most people don’t need to worry about the cholesterol in shrimp (161 mg per three ounces).

    Three ounces of shrimp delivers 20 g of protein, 1 g of fat, vitamin B12, calcium, magnesium, potassium and zinc and only 84 calories. (By comparison, three ounces of cooked chicken breast has 142 calories.)

    Shrimp also contains astaxanthin, an antioxidant thought to reduce inflammation.
    ShoulderRoll

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by siablo14 View Post
      Shoulder likes the cashews?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post

        Shoulder likes the cashews?
        When he comes with his nutsy theories, I have to usher him out and tell him that the only nuts are want are cashews.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post
          FROM THE LA TIMES

          We’re bombarded with diet advice. The internet, celebrities, friends and family are constantly telling us which foods to eat and which to avoid.

          Eggs raise your cholesterol, bananas spike your blood sugar, pasta makes you fat, frozen vegetables have fewer nutrients, and so on.

          The truth is, many foods often dismissed as unhealthy deliver serious nutritional benefits. By making them off-limits, you may be unknowingly undermining your diet.

          The following six often-maligned foods should be part of your regular diet. Here’s why.
          White potatoes

          Potatoes get a bad rap because they’re deemed as a starchy food with a low nutritional value. Not so.

          One medium baked russet potato, with skin, supplies twice as much potassium as a banana (952 mg, one-fifth of a day’s worth), along with fibre (4 g), protein (4.5 g), vitamin C, B vitamins, calcium and magnesium. All that for only 164 calories.

          Russet potatoes have a high glycemic index (GI) value, while red and new potatoes have moderate GI scores. When cooked potatoes are cooled, though, the glycemic index drops.

          Another reason to eat cooked potatoes cold (i.e., potato salad): resistant starch, carbohydrates that nourish your good gut bacteria.

          Bake, roast or steam potatoes to retain more nutrients during cooking.

          If you think you need to stay away from bananas because they’ve got way more sugar than all other fruits, think again. When it comes to natural sugars and calories, a medium-sized banana (105 calories, 27 g carbohydrate) is on par with a medium-sized pear or apple.

          Story continues below advertisement

          And contrary to popular belief, bananas score low on the glycemic index scale, meaning they cause your blood sugar to rise gradually, not quickly, after eating one.

          Besides their outstanding potassium content (422 mg per medium banana), a mineral that’s important for healthy blood pressure, bananas also provide a decent amount of fibre, folate, vitamin B6 and magnesium.

          Cashews are often regarded as being less healthy – having more calories, fewer nutrients – than other nuts. That’s not the case.

          One ounce of cashews (18 nuts) has 160 calories, the same amount found in an ounce of almonds or pistachios. Other types of nuts actually contain slightly more calories per ounce.

          One-half of the fat in cashews (55 per cent) is heart-healthy monounsaturated fat, the type found in olive oil and avocados. Cashews are also an excellent source of magnesium (83 mg), a mineral that helps regulate blood sugar and blood pressure.

          Including pasta in your diet doesn’t mean you’ll gain weight. In fact, research has found that eating pasta, as part of a Mediterranean-style diet, is associated with a lower body mass index and waist size.

          And surprisingly, white pasta made from semolina flour scores low on the glycemic index scale.

          Plus, a meal of pasta with marinara sauce is an exceptional source of lycopene, an antioxidant believed to guard against heart disease and certain cancers.

          To get more fibre, minerals and antioxidants from pasta, choose whole grain noodles more often. To keep portion size in check, serve pasta as a side dish with protein and vegetables.

          If you’ve replaced whole eggs with egg whites for fear of cholesterol, add them back to your menu.

          Yes, egg yolks do have a fair amount of cholesterol (190 mg per large egg). For most people, though, cholesterol in foods has little or no effect on the level of cholesterol in the blood******.

          Ditching the yolk means you’re also tossing out plenty of nutrients including protein (almost half the protein in an egg is on the yolk), B vitamins, vitamin A, selenium as well as good amount of brain-friendly choline.

          Another bonus: The fat in egg yolks enhances the body’s absorption of fat-soluble vitamins (E, D, K) and antioxidants such as beta-carotene, lutein and lycopene.
          Shrimp

          As is the case for egg yolks, most people don’t need to worry about the cholesterol in shrimp (161 mg per three ounces).

          Three ounces of shrimp delivers 20 g of protein, 1 g of fat, vitamin B12, calcium, magnesium, potassium and zinc and only 84 calories. (By comparison, three ounces of cooked chicken breast has 142 calories.)

          Shrimp also contains astaxanthin, an antioxidant thought to reduce inflammation.
          I was hoping to see Pizza on this list...
          Beercules Beercules likes this.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Shadoww702 View Post

            I was hoping to see Pizza on this list...
            If you can trust the nutrition that’s posted on pizza it’s definitely not the worst or too bad, especially if you consider the enjoyment most get out of it. Lots of pizza is close to 1 to 1 protein ratio. Some have more protein than fat. A little Caesar’s classic pepperoni is lousy pizza but it has 75g protein, 63g fat, 182g carbs, 1590 calories according to its own site. The frozen pizza I like is dellisio stuffed crust ( has the best dough ) and they all have 80-90g protein, and a bit less fat than that, about 1600 calories. Course cheese isn’t for everyone. Pizza dough has a lot more protein in it than you think, in fact that’s where most of it comes from. The prices are usually pretty good on these pizzas at a big store or on sale. It’s not an everyday option but it’s a sensible one on a bigger calorie day. Most burgers have much more fat than protein. Read labels ( once again I’d love to see the princess with my own eyes to really believe anything to the decimal ) and it’s all right there. Not everyone tolerated certain foods the same. So sometimes what you can digest without feeling awful can be very important to overall well being.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post

              Shoulder likes the cashews?
              I'm not a big fan of cashews (or of Snitchablo always being on my nuts.)

              I much prefer almonds, pistachios, pecans, or peanuts.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by ShoulderRoll View Post

                I'm not a big fan of cashews (or of Snitchablo always being on my nuts.)

                I much prefer almonds, pistachios, pecans, or peanuts.
                Walnuts? My favorite during holidays.

                Don't worry, Siablo vs. Rockin coming soon!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by siablo14 View Post

                  When he comes with his nutsy theories, I have to usher him out and tell him that the only nuts are want are cashews.
                  Plus Shoulder is backing Rockin to do a Kambosos on you.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    No such thing as a "bad" food item, theirs bad proportions but an outright bad food item I doubt it. You have to find what you like that can give you the nutrients you need, supplement if need be but get your nutrients/vitamins/minerals in daily. Me personally I usually eat about teh same type of foods daily but I like it but theirs some people who dont like the style of eating and to them I say find your mix of meals your like or get something going for you that get you close as possible to hitting all your needs. The problem with watching what you eat is the same issue as if someone tells you "no you cant do that" is that now you kinda want to do "that" now and now that idea takes up more real estate in your mind than before had that notion of "NO, you cant" had never entered your mind to begin with. Alot of times when people watch what they eat they find themselves in a doom state where they can only think about what they rather be eating than what they are eating which obviously is a horrible way to live. Find meals you like that hit your goals and boom stick to them.

                    Almonds > Cashews.

                    Comment

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