Labels: how to avoid fat gain at Thanksgiving, how to stay healthier at Thanksgiving even if some of the foods aren't, How to stay healthy on Thanksgiving
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
How to stay
healthy on Thanksgiving, 2015….
Today's Post:
Wednesday, 11-25-2015
There
are two ways to a healthier Thanksgiving Dinner.
Yesterdays
post was about ways to prepare a healthier Thanksgiving Dinner.
This
post today is mostly on how to stay healthier eating a Thanksgiving Dinner no
matter how it's fixed.
There's
no perfect way to do either.
The
focus at Thanksgiving & at Thanksgiving Dinner must be on enjoying the
day. Enjoy the food. Enjoy the company. And, enjoy the time off work!
My
Brother in Law once said at Thanksgiving Dinner that he did NOT want to hear
anything about what he shouldn't eat for Thanksgiving Dinner just in case I had
any ideas of doing so.
I
didn't then; & I won't this year. I
agree with him. I believe as he does
that the focus at Thanksgiving & at Thanksgiving Dinner must be on enjoying
the day. Enjoy the food. Enjoy the company. And, do nothing to distract from that
focus. If anything, help make it happen
instead!
That
said, here are some ways to stay a bit healthier and leaner and still enjoy the
food.
1. Focus on the people. Find out what people have been doing and
catch up with what's been happening with them.
Enjoy the people you enjoy; and be mellow, courteous, gracious, and if
necessary, a bit forgiving with the rest.
2. Practice the strategic sandwich method. Before and after Thanksgiving, eat a bit less
food and make virtually all of it be the healthiest you know how - and, keep up
your exercise routine to the very best of your ability at least two weeks
before and particularly for the two weeks AFTER Thanksgiving.
If
necessary, do some kind of workout in your room if you are away from home or
cut the intensity a bit; but do your very best to exercise several days a week
the two weeks before & after
Thanksgiving (& before Thanksgiving next year.).
This
method works. Once when I was getting
the amount of exercise each week that I should be before and after Thanksgiving
and eating right otherwise, I ate very well at Thanksgiving to the point of
being very slightly stuffed. And, I
gained ZERO pounds for November and December both.
A couple of years ago, blogger Vera Tweed came
up with a delightful strategy for thinking about this that I read.
Her
idea was to think of the Holiday Season the way an athlete trains for a
competition. Focus on eating right and
exercising as if you are in training during the Holiday Season. Every meal that isn't a holiday dinner or
other event, at all your other meals, eat right and only eat right. And, make sure to exercise during this time.
Her
idea that I liked best is to start NOW to do this instead of waiting until
January when all you can do is catch up and repair the damage of the holiday
season as many people do!
3.
During your Thanksgiving dinner, eat strategically. Eat well from the healthiest foods; eat a
small portion for one serving only of the less healthy foods that you enjoy;
but have them and enjoy them; and do your best to edit out the worst for you
foods.
a)
The turkey and the vegetables are the best for you. So eat well and generous-sized but not very
large portions. (You need to not overdo
those so there's enough to go around and YOU have room for at least some of the
other foods.)
Cranberry
sauce may have sugar and even some kinds have high fructose corn syrup; but the
cranberries are a superfood you likely don't eat often; and they add a festive
air and are a great pair with turkey or gravy and mashed potatoes, flavor-wise.
Cranberries
are, along with organic wild blueberries the most health enhancing berries on
the planet. (You can also ask to bring a
version you make at home with thawed diced organic cranberries from the frozen
food section at Whole Foods with zest from organic oranges and diced organic
raisins. That will have some sweetness
and extra flavor with no added sugar or HFCS to worry about!)
Many
people rarely have green beans or Brussels Sprouts or yams or sweet potatoes or
cooked onions; but they are often served at Thanksgiving. They are all good for you. And, they fill you up so it's much easier for
you to eat smaller portions of less health OK foods than you otherwise would. If they aren't your favorites, try pairing
them with a good tasting food. Eat some
green beans and then immediately eat a bit of stuffing with gravy and cranberry
sauce for example.
A
recent article even found evidence that the alpha carotenes in carrots, squash,
yams, sweet potatoes, darker greens, and broccoli may be as effective or more in
turning off cancers as raw broccoli or cauliflower do with their cruciferous
vegetable phyto-nutrients. Alpha
carotene was found to be connected to a 39% lower risk of dying from any cause
the study reported. Even better, when
cooked and eaten with fats or oils, the carotenes of all kinds in food become
more bioavailable and likely to benefit you.
Believe
it or not, that specifically means that the filling in pumpkin pie is good for
you!
For
this nutrient, carotenes, cooked broccoli works in fact. Yams or sweet potatoes or the filling in a
sweet potato pie are also good for you.
Last
year I tried making a dairy free pumpkin coconut oil pie filling. I used two 15 ounce cans of pumpkin puree,
the free flowing 9 ounces from a 13 ounce plus can of coconut milk. I used about half a tablespoon each of
allspice, powdered ginger, and cinnamon.
I added about a tablespoon of dark molasses and 2/3 cup of dark brown
sugar. I stirred those together until
smooth over low heat in a cast iron frying pan large enough. I then whisked together 3 extra large raw
eggs in a separate container. Then I
poured that into the rest and using the whisk, I stirred it in for several
minutes until it was thoroughly cooked.
I
then let it cool enough to be OK putting into the refrigerator in a glass
container large enough.
When
I tasted it the next morning it was delightful.
I'll serve it with a bit of pumpkin pie spice to sprinkle on top for
people who want that traditional flavor.
But, just as I fixed it, it had more flavor and tasted far better than
95% of the pumpkin pie fillings I've ever had.
You
can also add whipped cream or pecan meal or almond flour or a combination you
like.
Maple
Hill Yogurt that is whole fat and from grass fed cows is now available at Whole
Foods. So you can even use that instead
of cream as a topping.
Serving
it by itself this way makes it gluten free and grain free as well.
My
wife found out that nonfat Greek yogurt plus dark molasses also work in a
pumpkin pie filling as a substitute for evaporated milk. Now it’s available, Maple Hill Yogurt that is
whole fat and from grass fed cows for this.
In fact, you could add some real maple syrup too!
If
raw vegetables are available in a relish tray, the cruciferous ones and the
ones with carotenes are the best for you.
Broccoli florets, radishes, carrots, and cherry tomatoes are
particularly good.
Have
very little dip unless you know what's in it.
Some dips have hydrogenated oils.
One year my wife wanted to just buy a dip and all of them but one had
hydrogenated oils!
My
wife and I bring the relish tray. One
year we were bringing sour cream with nothing added and hummus with the
container showing the ingredients for dips.
Hummus
is good for you but avoid overdoing it to leave room for the dinner.
Recently
I discovered that commercial hummus all has high omega 6 canola oil. So, be
even more sparing of how much you eat of dips based on it.
(
I hope real hummus with olive oil makes a comeback or someone begins to sell
nonfat hummus.)
If
you have a Vitamix, they include a recipe for hummus. You can now use that with no oil or with
coconut oil or with extra virgin olive oil.
I found out the hard way NOT to use more raw garlic than the recipe
calls for because the taste becomes too harsh. But if you gently roast a few
cloves of garlic or sauté them in mild extra virgin olive oil first, you can
add those for a richer flavor.)
Sour
cream is OK in small amounts occasionally; but don't overdo it. We were bringing guacamole; but no one but me
ate any before, so I no longer do that.
But if your family likes it, do bring some. It's actually a good for you dip.
b) Stuffing, particularly if it was cooked
inside the turkey; gravy; mashed potatoes; the filling in the pies, and many
other dishes have great flavor but include less than healthful
ingredients.
If
you are exercising and eating right otherwise and have no serious health
problems to be very careful of, the strategy I use is to have some of them; but
hold myself to one small serving.
That
way I enjoy them but avoid overdosing my system with their less OK
ingredients. And, having had turkey and
vegetables first I don't have room left to eat a large amount anyway.
c) Soft drinks, rolls, biscuits, pie crusts,
most commercial jam currently, and candied marshmallow topping for sweet
potatoes are the worst foods and drinks for you in a traditional Thanksgiving
dinner.
Simply
don't eat many of those or to the best of your ability pass on them totally. Or, if you do eat some, have tiny, quarter of
normal sized portions.
And,
only eat the ones that you most enjoy.
Don’t waste your tummy capacity on harmful things you don’t even enjoy a
lot!
If
you've already eaten well from the healthier foods, that's much easier to
do.
Here's
personal example of that. I've always
loved pie, including the pie crusts.
But
I've found out since that many, if not most, of the pies I'm likely to get at
Thanksgiving have crust made with refined grain flour and Crisco, which is
basically massive amounts of Trans fats (aka as partially hydrogenated oils). Partially hydrogenated oils are such high
impact heart attack starters and build up in your system that it’s really
important to never eat them voluntarily.
What
I do now is take small servings of my favorite pie or pies & only eat the
fillings. So I can enjoy cherry or
blueberry pie filling, pumpkin pie filling, and/or candied pecan filling; but I
leave the crust.
The
only exception I might make is to have one single bite of a browned bit of
crust since it has the most flavor. Once,
I didn't even do that as I no longer had room for it.
Also,
if you bake at home, it’s possible to make pies with a gluten free flour you
have pre-tested to work to make decent pie crusts AND you can use Kerry Gold
Irish butter from grass fed cows now available at Whole Foods.
Butter
tastes about three for four times better than Crisco in a pie crust. And though
you want to avoid eating too much butter too often, hydrogenated oils are such
a potent heart attack starter, butter is about ten times better for you!
4. A relish tray with the best for you
vegetables and good tasting dips that have no hydrogenated oils and pies with
crusts that have no gluten and use real butter from grass fed cows, illustrate
another method.
Arrange
to bring foods that you know are good for you or less harmful and which others
will also like. That way you for sure
have foods at the dinner you can fill up on or eat at all when you otherwise
might not.
5. Limit your alcoholic drinks to one or two or
at most three if you drink.
And,
drink when you first arrive or at the start of the Dinner. That way, if you need to drive afterwards,
the effect will have mostly worn off plus it will be buffered by the torrent of
dinner.
Recently,
I found out this also makes it much easier to drink less. By starting out with it, at the point you
might have been tempted to drink too much later, you can much more easily pass
because you will be feeling mellow from what you already drank.
I
found out the hard way once that if you drink a lot more than that, it prevents
you from enjoying the people you really wanted to talk with. That year I only really got to have the first
half of Thanksgiving and lost the rest.
(Some
people are better off not having any alcohol.
They may be unable to stop at 3 if they have 3 or have to drive soon
after the dinner and late at night and/or not metabolize alcohol well.)
I love the flavors in a Bloody Mary. So I also recommend the Virgin Mary drink as
it has almost the same flavor. (Unfortunately, most Virgin Mary mixes have high
fructose corn syrup and are not very good either. So, only get a Virgin Mary if a real bar
tender is making it or you make it from an online recipe you've tried and
liked.)
Red
wine is a bit better for you and goes with the dinner.
And,
if you do have more than 3 drinks, leave later or stay overnight -- or to be
safest, have someone else drive. That way
you can enjoy Thanksgiving next year too!
Do the best you can with these strategies. Enjoy the day and the people.
Have a happy Thanksgiving!
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