Posts Tagged ‘Junk’

Make Unhealthy Foods Healthy

November 23rd, 2009

Article from: My Family UK

It’s not uncommon for kids to have a penchant for junk food. Prying that burger out of their hands may not be an easy feat. Our advice is to stop trying.

Junk Food

Follow these home-made tips on ways to make typically unhealthy foods healthy. The kids will love it: they’ll seem the same. You’ll love it: they’ll be healthier and happier. It could be a lot simpler than the struggle, and will start your kids on the path to health.

1) Pizzas

At home, make a wholemeal base for a fibre boost, or cut a foccacia in half or use wholemeal pitta bread. Make a mixture of chopped tomatoes and tomato puree to go on the top and then, depending on your taste, top with a variety of vegetables, olives, tinned tuna or lean meats. Finish with grated cheese and cook for twenty minutes. Arrange on the table and watch as your flock grab and scatter to their hearts content.

2) Homemade burgers

Make your burger from the leanest beef you can find. Add onions, parmesan, breadcrumbs, salt and pepper and garlic and finally an egg to bind it all together. Grill instead of frying until golden brown and crispy. Garnish with lettuce, cucumber, salsa and cheese and serve with wholemeal rolls.

3) Popcorn

Keep the fun in family film night by cooking the popcorn in olive oil and adding a few sprinkles of cayenne pepper, or a slight scattering of sea salt.

4) Vegetable Crisps

Packets of crisps are often full of salt and saturated fats. Try thinly slicing your own potatoes and baking your own crisps in the oven instead. The thinner the crispier so you could use a peeler for this. Put them in bowl with some sunflower oil and a little sea salt, and toss to give them a good coating. Then lay them on a grease proof baking tray and pop in the oven for 30 minutes at a reasonably high heat. You can even try making vegetable crisps with carrots, parsnips and sweet potatoes. Before serving give them a light coating of honey for an extra flavour.

5) Chips

Instead of frying your chips, which uses far more fat, bake yours. Great alternatives to the common potato are parsnips, courgettes and sweet potatoes. Simply chop them into chip-like sticks and drizzle oversome olive oil. For extra taste, add a sprinkle of sea salt (nottable salt as the body is unable to process it), black and/or cayenne pepper, which is mild enough even for kids. Bake until crispy and chip-like.

6) Fry-ups

Make your Sunday fry up into a Sunday grill up and it’ll immediately become far healthier. Trim the fat off your bacon and grill alongwith tomatoes or chopped mushrooms. Poach your egg in a drop of vinegar for 4-5 minutes, and add a few tablespoons of baked beans which are bubbling over with iron and protein.

7) Ice lollies

Up your children’s vitamin C intake by several levels with natural ice lollies. Simply blend up their favourite fruits until smooth, add a squeeze of lemon as a natural preservative, pour into lolly orice-tray moulds and freeze. There’s absolutely no need for chemical-filled, shop-bought lollies when these are so delicious and simple to make.

8) Sweet things

Cookies, biscuits and brownies that aren’t sweet aren’t going to be eaten. But do they really need to be all that sweet? Substitute the sugar in your home-made cookies and cakes by adding healthier ingredients such as oats, nuts, raisins, dates, prunes and seeds. This is a great way to get those vital vitamins and minerals into your child’s diet.

9) Chicken Nuggets

This is a fabulously messy meal to make at home and so the kids will love it. Cut your lean chicken breast into small bite-sized pieces. Set up four bowls and depending on how many children you have, each child can be assigned to their own bowl.

10) Kebab

Simply buy some mince pork or lamb, mix together with garlic, coriander,salt, pepper, parsley, cumin and an egg, and grill. Share into pittas with houmous, salad, salsa, raw onions, roasted peppers and whatever else you can stuff in there and challenge your children to eat without anything falling out!

Further Information

For further information, and for more great ways to have fun with your family, log on to www.myfamilyuk.com. With a huge collection of articles covering everything from child safety to rainy day activities, you’ll find all the help, guidance and entertainment you need to be a great parent. Go to My Family UK now!

My Family UK is a brand new website that is turning the online focus back onto families. We’re dedicated to supporting you and your family live the life you choose to the full, with games, tips, offers and articles on all aspects of parenting. If your family means the world to you, check out www.myfamilyuk.com.

Sports Drinks: Safe Alternatives or Junk Food?

November 19th, 2009

Anti-obesity, health advocates are at it again. They have successfully won a battle on having sodas banned in elementary schools by the 2008-2009 school year. They are furthering their cause by trying to also ban sports drinks in schools such as ‘Gatorade’ and ‘Powerade’ and flavored waters. They are claiming that sports drinks contain as much as two-thirds of the sugars in sodas, and more than three times the sodium.
Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) has apparently agreed with this cause, enough, by introducing a bill in congress that would allow the government to decide what is best for the nation’s children, in setting nutritional standards for all foods, drinks, and flavored vitamin waters in schools. The hotly debated topic ensues in congress between nutritional health care advocates and the trade group that represents the bottlers of these drinks. Are they really ’safer alternatives’ or just ‘junk food’? It certainly is garnering some attention in congress, and for other interested bystanders as well.
The trade group representing the manufacturers of these drinks, of course, are adamantly opposing this bill. They proclaim these drinks are lower in sugar and calories than sodas, and are appropriate, even essential, to young high school athletes.
But, there is more evidence coming from the University of California at Berkeley, that adds fuel to the health care advocates cause, that warns about the possible weight gain associated with consuming to many of these drinks. They conclude that students who drink one 20- ounce of the drinks in question per day, for a year, without sufficient physical activity may experience a weight gain of up to 13 pounds.
Nutritionists, and health care advocates are not at all surprised with these findings. They say that looking at the ingredient label pretty much says it all. Read what the first three to four ingredients are in a recipe, they are listed in the order of their prevalence in the mixture. Most sports drinks and flavored waters consist mostly of water, many different types of sugar, acid flavor enhancers, and sodium.
Bucket loads of money is being spent by beverage manufacturers, on brainwashing advertisements, to get consumers to believe that these drinks are healthy, and essential. They claim they are needed to replenish those lost electrolytes, due to physical exertion. But, there is simply no real scientific evidence to support this theory. So, you can then begin to understand why the makers of these drinks do not want any official congressional sanctioning, of the notion, that sports drinks are linked to obesity.
Children who are involved in a long and physically demanding game, or any lengthy physical activity, and are drinking simple carbohydrates such as high fructose corn syrup (HFC), glucose, dextrose (the list can be quite lengthy), will experience a rise in normal insulin levels. Elevated insulin levels causes a short spike in energy levels followed by a sudden energy crash. This sluggishness can affect a child’s overall athletic performance.
Sports drinks also contain enough sugar, just like sodas, to corrode teeth. Physical exertion causes dry mouth conditions, as not enough saliva is present in the mouth to fight off the acidic effects that sugar can have on teeth.
Children, or adults, simply do not require a short-term energizing boost in heir insulin levels in, relation to the amount of mild physical activity they are expending most of the time. Walking the dog, washing the car, or a quick game of hoops does not qualify as a vigorous enough activity to warrant the use of a sports drink. And, many children, and adults, lead very sedentary lifestyles, that buying into advertising claims about the safety, or essential need for such a product can help add to an ongoing obesity problem.
The only situation where a sports drink might be helpful, is after an individual has truly engaged in a vigorous physical workout that lasted for at least an hour. If you are actually sweating profusely, or if hot and humid weather conditions combined with high physical exertion are present, you might treat yourself with a sports drink. Otherwise, there are healthier food options for energy, and water alone does a wonderful job of re-hydrating you. To replace lost minerals, give your body some pure unrefined salt.
There really is no getting around it, manufactured beverages the way they are currently being sweetened are not healthy hydrating fluids for your body. And, they should never be used in total replacement of pure water. If you think you must have a sports drink, try a watered down version instead. However, plant the seed of knowledge in your mind,right now, that nothing satisfies your body more efficiently than plain and simple water.

Brenda Skidmore has spent the last four plus years actively researching natural health care alternatives. It is her sincere desire to empower others by sharing this important information. To improve your health today visit
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