Labels: How to enjoy hosting the Super Bowl or taking food to a Super Bowl party AND without including harmful foods and drinks, how to protect your Super Bowl watching from power or TV outages
Tuesday, February 02, 2016
Health OK
Super Bowl snacks 2016....
Today's
Post: Tuesday, 2-2-2016
This is an updated
edition of our post from this time last year, 2015 & going back to 2008.
Why are health OK
snacks so important?
It's not just at
the time the Super Bowl happens each year about now that people eat snacks.
Many people make
snacks as much as a quarter or a fifth of all their weekly food. Some go to a
full third of the calories they eat.
The other factor is
that the health damaging snack foods are some of the very worst foods people
eat while the health OK snack foods are actually good for you or at least not
that bad.
That means that
hosting or taking snacks pot luck style to a Super Bowl party is a chance to
try
out health OK
snacks yourself & introduce them to your friends & family.
Dips: (We list several health OK dips at the end
of this section. But first we say why to
be sure NOT to use virtually all store bought dips!)
First, let's
literally dispose of one category of what NOT to use. One year, my wife & I
were taking snacks to my parent's house. I knew that two things to use to dip
snacks into that are actually good for you & taste great are guacamole
& hummus. But my wife wanted to bring some traditional dips as well. I went
to an upscale grocery store in our area & went to that section.
Ouch !!
Even there, there
were no health OK choices at all.
Every one of the
commercially made up dips (except the guacamole) they stocked had partially
hydrogenated oils (which contain trans fats) or high fructose corn syrup with
some having both.
Those are both now
known to be heart attack starters! And,
the high fructose corn syrup also is a proven fattener!
(In case you don't
yet know, partially hydrogenated oils-- which contain trans fats -- & high
fructose corn syrup are avoidable health poisons that are not yet completely
outlawed & out of our foods.
Trans fats are
literally cardiovascular disease & heart attack starters. They have the
same kind of effect as using lighter fluid to start up charcoal for a BBQ. The
safe amount of those to eat is zero, absolutely none. (Trans fat causes your
LDL to become the tiny particles that go into the cracks in your artery walls,
build up, and then restrict or block blood flow!)
2013 New
information:
Manmade hydrogenated
oils and the trans fats connected with them are so hard for your body to clear,
you only clear half of what you eat within a couple of weeks or more as shown
by research.
Oops!!
Guess what that
means?
If you allow
yourself just a little bit of foods containing them but most days, after a
couple of weeks, there is enough of them in your system to cause heart disease
and cause your blood lipids like HDL and LDL cholesterol to show much worse readings.
It’s likely ten
times as protective to NOT eat any of this junk ever -- as it is to take statin
drugs AND that’s if you are one of few people in the genetic type they give
some protection to!
Do
NOT buy or eat such dips!
You and your
friends at your Super Bowl party will be far safer without eating hydrogenated
oils.
And, you’ll help
penalize the folks who put heart attack starter in their foods!
High fructose corn
syrup is not quite that bad -- we wrote before.
Oops! WRONG!
New information for
2013: High fructose corn syrup IS a
heart attack starter too!
New research shows
that high triglycerides are more likely to help cause heart attacks, strokes,
and deaths than high LDL cholesterol.
Guess what food
component makes triglycerides go up the most?
Yep, it’s high
fructose corn syrup! From the research
I’ve read it does this more than regular sugar AND so far, people still eat or
drink HUGE amounts of it.
So ingesting high
fructose corn syrup doesn’t just help cause 2 diabetes and we now know it’s the
most effective fattener known new research found this year* --
high fructose corn
syrup is a very effective heart attack starter too!
(Sugar lowers your
appetite so you may eat a bit less before the rebound hunger it causes kicks
in.
Brain scans show
that eating or drinking high fructose corn syrup does NOT register to lower
your appetite and may even boost it a bit and then you still get the rebound
hunger later too!)
2014: New research found that free fructose in high
fructose corn syrup and agave nectar does in fact cause you to eat more and not
turn down hunger as much as real sugar or food to do this.
(And there’s more,
about 30% of the high fructose corn syrup contains mercury, a nerve toxin that
can cause Alzheimer’s like symptoms!)
So, to be sure my
wife & I don't eat high fructose corn syrup in quantity or eat any that
contains mercury, we do not eat it all.
We also are doing
our part to boycott an unsafe food additive by doing that.
(As of 2008,
between 30 % and 55% of the products, including name brands, that contain high fructose corn syrup also contain mercury
because a mercury compound is use to make the high fructose corn syrup used in
those products. Also note, if high
fructose corn syrup is listed first or second on the ingredients list, it’s
more likely the product contains mercury.
2016 update: Since it has NOT been in the news that this
has been fixed, I seriously doubt that it has been fixed.
So we currently
recommend you completely avoid buying or ingesting high fructose corn syrup.)
So, for dips at
this writing, you have three health OK choices: buy guacamole; buy hummus: or
make your own dips.
Health OK
components to consider running through a blender or adding to after you run the
blender to make health OK dips are salsa, cooked pinto beans, cooked black-eyed
peas, regular baked beans, hummus, nonfat yogurt or Maple Hill full fat yogurt
from cows that are grass instead of grain fed, frozen chopped spinach, chopped
onion, extra virgin olive oil, chili powder, & chopped cilantro.
For some dips,
garlic cloves work or if you want to not have it that garlicky, use a bit of
garlic powder spice. Taste test this one before serving because too much raw
garlic can overpower the other flavor and has harsh taste. Garlic powder & roasted garlic add the
flavor without doing that/
You can also make a
somewhat healthier dip by substituting one of these for part of the sour cream
in sour cream based dip recipes. A half hummus, half sour cream recipe would have
half the omega 6 oils of a full sour cream recipe if from grain fed cows. But
it would taste richer than a hummus only version.
2008 addition: Real sour cream is not exactly a health food
due to its high saturated fat content.
2015 addition: The saturated fat is now thought not to be an
issue!
But if the sour
cream is from cows fed GMO grains high in omega 6 oils and complete with
herbicides and pesticide residue in the fat, eating less is a good idea!
So Maple Hill full
fat yogurt from cows that are grass instead of grain fed and a bit of apple
cider vinegar for half and hummus with no oil or with olive oil half and half
would be better than sour cream from grain fed cows used in this half and half
dip.
Almost anything
compared with dips with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil almost IS a health
food by comparison.
As an occasional
dip treat, we found that real sour cream with a good bit of a good quality,
multiple ingredient, curry powder makes a great dip. Again trying this with Maple Hill full fat
yogurt from cows that are grass instead of grain fed and a bit of apple cider
vinegar is even better. (Whole Foods
carries Maple Hill full fat yogurt from cows that are grass instead of grain
fed.)
We’ve taken to
bringing 3 dips when asked to provide them:
Hummus, guacamole, and this curried dip.
I particularly like having about 2 or 3 fresh veggies with each of the
three dips. That way, I get a lot of the
fresh veggies and two thirds of the dips are actually good for me to eat.
With the Maple Hill
full fat yogurt from cows that are grass instead of grain fed and a bit of
apple cider vinegar instead of sour cream, that now is all three dips!
Crunchy foods:
People often use
crackers for crunchy snack foods. This is an extremely bad idea.
Commercial crackers
today still tend to use partially hydrogenated oils (which contain trans fats).
Almost as bad, they usually are badly over-salted and are made only or mostly
from refined grains. About the only real food component they contain is calories.
So eating them tends to make you fat.
2015 addition: As bad as those are, the hybrid GMO wheat
that is turned into refined flour to make these is possibly even worse!
So pass on crackers
with ANY of these ingredients which is virtually all of them!
If for variety or
for guests who would feel deprived, you would like to serve some crackers,
there are two kinds that are almost OK.
Crostini makes an
absolutely delicious cracker that is not too salty & uses olive oil instead
of trans fats. They sell those at Whole Foods Market stores. They do use
refined grains. But they taste good & avoid the other health damaging
components.
Safeway & other
major grocery chains carry RyKrisp or Rye Krisp crackers. At least one of their
versions has no fat at all. These are almost a little too crunchy for my taste.
But that's because they have whole grains, which are better for you.
But be careful as
one or more of the available versions DO have partially hydrogenated oils
(which contain trans fats). Just check the label to see which kind is OK &
skip the other versions. The version that has NO fat at all is the health OK
one – or almost OK at least.
2013 Update. More recent information shows that wheat
tends to be fattening and more and more people are going to wheat free or
gluten free ways of eating.
Since I don’t eat
crackers and my wife still is OK with nonfat crackers, I’ve not shopped for
crackers that are gluten free yet. The
good news is that eating gluten free is now popular so there are gluten free
crackers and likely Whole Foods carries several kinds.
And, the even
better news is that because wheat has tons of gluten, every gluten free bread,
cracker, cookie, etc is wheat free too!
2014 update, while
it may be OK for onetime events like the Superbowl, both wheat AND gluten even
in those not supersensitive to it tends to be fattening, so it is best to leave
it out.
There are two ways
to do that and still have a base for snacks that are usually on wheat bread or
crackers.
You can peel and
slice yams or sweet potatoes or even a larger zucchini on the diagonal and not
too thick. Then gently sauté them in
extra virgin olive oil or fry them at low temperatures in coconut oil.
That works well to
replace wheat crackers.
Another new option
is to use a no wheat, high protein, high fiber bread called Paleo Bread.
Toasting this
gently and then using half slices or quarter slices for snacks instead of wheat
based crackers also works.
You can also do two
versions one with the sliced vegetables and one with the Paleo bread.
So you now have two
ways to do gluten free and relatively nonfattening snacks that used to take
wheat crackers.
Chips: Most potato chips and related snacks are
messy to clean up after.
People tend to
massively overeat them. And, this is
true to such an extent that they wind up being as fattening as soft drinks in
the people who eat them every week -- which is pretty bad!
They also are
heavily over-salted.
The real fans of
one or the other of the teams will likely ramp up their blood pressure pulling
for their team.
They could do
without super salty chips adding to the effect! So, the advice from here is to
leave potato chips out totally.
Nuts:
Because some people
are quite gravely & severely allergic to these, they are likely NOT a good
idea for larger groups of people you don't know well. This kind of allergy to
peanuts is so wide-spread now, we suggest you never serve peanuts or mixes
containing them to people you don't know.
Only serve other
tree nuts to family or friends you know can eat nuts OK.
However, for people
who can eat nuts safely, raw walnuts, raw pecans, & dry roasted almonds or
slivered almonds are delightfully good crunchy snack foods. Even better, they
have so many health benefits, that people who eat nuts regularly live several
years longer than people who don't.
(I've found the
best store for these to be Whole Foods Market stores. They carry these kinds of
nuts in bulk & in packages -- both at reasonable prices.)
(Unfortunately,
commercial nut mixes often do everything wrong.
We do NOT recommend those !!
They often include
peanuts because they are cheaper. They increase the shelf life by roasting them
in partially hydrogenated oils (which contain trans fats) or in polyunsaturated
oils like corn or soy oil that tend to break down at that temperature &
contain excessive omega 6 oils.
Then they usually
make them even less health OK by over-salting them. Yikes!)
Crunchy vegetables:
Raw Broccoli
Florets; Cauliflower Florets, Celery sticks, & Carrot sticks work really well
with dips.
If you can buy them
as organic vegetables they are much safer to eat. Whole Foods is great for this as they usually
have most of these vegetables as organic vegetables!
2013 addition:
(Carrots are a
superfood because they contain the most alpha carotene which we now know is one
of the most effective causes of good health known.
But make your
carrot sticks pretty thin -- about a fourth of an inch diameter or less. The fatter ones can hurt your guest’s teeth
if they bite into them too hard without chewing chunks off first.)
Radishes are also a
nice change of pace. They are too small to dip well. But they are both crunchy
& spicy.
Protein foods:
B & M Baked
Beans are decent simply heated up & served. If you want totally vegetarian,
Bushes makes a decent, pre-cooked Vegetarian baked beans. Both come canned at
major grocery stores.
2013 addition:
(Canned beans are a
bad idea for year round use due to BHA or worse kinds of trial replacements in the linings getting
into the food which is harmful and fattening.
You can cook beans
from scratch and make your own baked beans.
But if you haven’t time, at this writing I THINK using canned beans very
rarely for special occasions is OK.)
If you can afford
them, real crab meat, lobster meat, & shrimp with the tails removed are all
health OK choices.
(Just don't mix
these into dips as some people are allergic to them. Served alone though,
people can see what they are & avoid them if they are allergic.)
Cheeses are less
health OK because of their sky high amounts of saturated fat – and if from
grain fed cows, they are also too high in omega 6 oils. See the next note:
2015 note: The high saturated fat is now thought to be
OK as long as the cows the cheese is made from are grass fed only. Kerrygold Irish cheese is such a cheese; and
some other cheeses from Europe also are.
But for special
occasions only, they have no other health problems; they are easy to set out in
bite sized pieces; they are available almost everywhere; & they come in
many varieties with abundant flavor.
Other foods:
Another snack food
that works really well is stuffed olives. They are a little too salty to eat at
all often. But they are health OK otherwise. And many of the versions taste
great. Pitted olives come with (or you can make them up to contain) sun dried tomato,
blue cheese, feta cheese, garlic, blanched almonds, etc.)
Fresh strawberries
that have been washed & green leaves & stems removed are an absolutely
wonderful snack that is also really good for you to eat. Strawberries are best
used only if organic as the not organic ones are quite heavily sprayed.
Drinks:
For non alcoholic
drinks, Martinelli’s carbonated apple juice & carbonated apple cranberry
juice are decent choices for special occasions. And, some people like, grape
juice, orange juice, tomato juice, &/or V8 juice. You can also try 100 %
cranberry juice mixed half and half with Martinelli’s or club soda for a lower
glycemic and tarter but still festive drink.
(Drinking all kinds
of sodas & soft drinks is so harmful to the health of so many people, I
personally feel that they should never be bought or consumed even on special
occasions.
If you feel
differently though, drink as little of them as you can stand. And do your best NEVER to provide them.
Here's why:
1. They usually contain high fructose corn
syrup*, sugar, or artificial sweeteners, a preservative that has been
implicated as causing cancer and thyroid disease, artificial flavors, water
& nothing else besides the carbonation. Only the water is good for you.
Sugar is OK only in strict moderation. And the other junk tends to reliably
make people fat & cause health problems.
(See the previous
comments about high fructose corn syrup -- and the mercury in it!)
2.
Diet soft drinks
believe it or not are even more fattening and harmful to you than regular soft
drinks with high fructose corn syrup health direct research has found.
That sounds
impossible doesn’t it?
In addition to
possible harm from the artificial sweeteners for some people, it seems that
ingesting something that tastes really sweet with no sugar in it causes your
body to lower your blood sugar when it started out not high. You then have low blood sugar and begin to
strongly crave real sugar and the foods
it’s in.
This means that in
practice drinking diet soft drinks acts as a powerful drug to make you eat even
more sugar than you would have had you drunk a regular soft drink. And, you’ll eat a LOT more than if you drank
water or tea or coffee.
Would you take a
drug that was an appetite booster for sugar and sugary foods so strong it was
virtually irresistible?
NO. You likely would not if you didn’t want to
get fatter and more likely to get type 2 diabetes and heart disease.
If those are things
you too would like to avoid, do NOT drink diet soft drinks!
Of the alcoholic
beverages, red wine & dark beer -- actually have extra health benefits!
And, beer is a traditional drink for watching football. Even better, there are
a huge number of really good dark beers now available.
New last year: I just found out that beers like Michelob
Ultra and Molson Ultra taste as good as regular beer but with far lower sugar
and carbohydrate content. So if you want
a beer that’s OK if you are trying to lose fat even at a party, those can be
good choices.
Most alcoholic
beverages, in fact, tend to boost HDL cholesterol.
But make sure to
make the quantities small to moderate. Not only can people who drink too much
cause problems at your party or get into an avoidable car accidents driving
home, if they get into an accident where there is injury or significant
property damage, as the host who served them too much alcohol, you can be sued
in court.
For your own
drinking, drink one or two early in the party and if you drink another have it
be early in the second half. The longer
the time between when you drink and when you drive, the safer you are.
If you will drink
or do wind up drinking more than that, take a cab or have someone drive you
home
(I’ve found that
two pints of dark beer early and then drinking hot chocolates after that keeps
me feeling festive but hangover free the next day.)
I hope this post
gives you some ideas as to what snacks to avoid year round & some that are
either almost OK or are actually good for you to use instead.
2010 addition:
Some people serve
chili at Super Bowl parties. Here are
three alternatives.:
1. If you use exclusively beef from animals fed
only grass, any good chili recipe you find or like is good at least on special
occasions. (Grain fed beef has excessive
fat, omega 6 oils and tends to have pesticides and herbicides bioconcentrated
in its fat. Beef from cattle fed only
grass is a bit more intense in flavor and avoids these problems.)
And, you can make
up your own recipes. It’s not at all hard. Make one and taste it on Saturday;
and if you like it or find it decent, save some to reheat and have during the
Super Bowl.
2. Use any kind of cooked beef you like that
comes from cattle fed only grass. Use
hamburger, shredded cooked beef or chop cooked beef into quarter inch or a
touch bigger cubes.
Use any good tomato
sauce or pasta sauce with no oil added plus the amount and kind of mild extra
virgin olive oil you like. (Or you can
buy Muir Glenn pasta sauce at Whole Foods which, in its Four Cheese, Italian
Herb, & Roasted Garlic & some other varieties has some olive oil; &
it comes in glass bottles -- not canned where you have to worry about BPA.) I
use Muir Glenn and then add some extra, extra virgin olive oil for a richer
taste. (Avoid any kinds, if you can,
that use soy or canola oil. Those have
too much omega 6 oils.)
Then add a good
chili powder. Spice Islands and many
other companies make these. Add a bit
and taste. Then consider your likely
guests in deciding how much to add or whether to add a bit of red pepper also. The ideal is to make it spicy but not so
harsh or hot that some people won’t like it.
(You can add, mild
cooked green chilies, chopped onions sautéed in olive oil, mushrooms, etc.
And, you can set
out several kinds of add-ons, diced sharp cheddar cheese, diced raw onions,
mushrooms if you don’t include them in the chili, or diced, fresh, organic
tomatoes.)
Simply stir the
ingredients together over low to moderate heat until heated through and your
chili is done. (This presumes you cooked
the meat first. Or, you can put
everything into a crock pot and run it on low for several hours which both
cooks the meat without overheating it and melds the flavors together.)
Unless you have
guests coming you know hate garlic, it also adds a lot of taste and health
benefits to add it. Use two or three or
four cloves, depending how much chili you’re making,. Then peel, dice, and crush them and stir them
in after the chili is cooked and just before it’s served.
3. You can also make 100% vegetarian chili. You can substitute whole, cooked beans or
blenderized, cooked beans or canned black eyed peas or canned cooked lentils
for the grass fed beef. You can even
make it with hummus. If you add enough good tomato or pasta sauce, chili
powder, extra virgin olive oil, and other spices the flavor is just as good as
the grass fed beef version. (I like the
versions with the blenderized cooked beans as it’s smoother and easier to eat
than the whole cooked, bean versions.)
From 2011:
We do NOT recommend
sandwiches on refined grain bread or chicken wings fried with a breaded and
spicy sauce. (Refined grain breads both
fatten you and tend to harm your health.
They are nice for a kind of edible holder or temporary plate. Use paper napkin or fork or a real plate
instead!)
But skinless
chicken thighs with or without the bone or the smaller part of chicken wing in
the bone with the wing part removed before cooking where they are slow cooked
with a spicy sauce or marinade can be served with paper napkins or forks if
boneless and plates or small paper plates can work.
Cooking them
overnight in a crock pot works and blends in the flavor too. Olive oil with garlic powder and red pepper
to taste can work. Coconut milk with
diced garlic and diced, peeled ginger also works well.
You can also use
boneless, skinless chicken breasts and cut them after they are cooked into bite
sized pieces and serve on plates with a small fork.
Or you can cook
hamburger patties using grass fed beef and serve them Atkins style on plates
with a fork.
Using garlic powder
and a pinch of salt and adding a bit of olive oil to compensate for the grass
fed beef being lean and add some dried sour cherries and diced onion before the
patties are cooked and then cook them over moderate heat in a cast iron frying
pan.
2016 Annie’s Natural
Foods no longer makes a yellow mustard with no MSG since Kraft bought them,
unfortunately. But Whole Foods under its
own brand does make a Ketchup with no high fructose corn syrup.
Last point.:
Super Bowl parties
are a special event. So, people will be
watching the game. Plus, this is one of
the few times a year they watch the commercials. So, it is understandable that they will eat
while watching.
Our recommendation
is to not worry about this for the Super Bowl game. If the snacks are health OK, stop there and
let people enjoy the event.
But, one of the
surest ways to get fat the rest of the year is to eat while watching TV!
Watching TV is
fattening by itself, particularly if you watch over 15 hours a week.
And, snacking even
on health OK snacks tends to cause people to concentrate on the TV and just
keep eating even though they are no longer hungry.
People who do both
AND drink soft drinks and eat fattening snacks while watching LOTS of TV are
virtually all obese (very fat!)
So, THAT we do
suggest avoiding!
From an earlier
version of this post:
I read a good
idea.
a) Set up the table
where food is served in a different room than the TV.
That way people get
a bit of a break from sitting to get food and they’ll eat a bit less.
b) A related
non-food idea was if you have two TV’s and enough room,
have a TV in one
room for the serious fans! --
and a second one in
a room where people are there mostly to socialize.
c) Another good
idea is to tune a radio that has batteries & with an earphone to the game.
This time of year
your electricity might come out or the TV feed might stop but have the game
continue.
But, if you have
that radio, just pull the earphone and turn it up! That way people can still follow the game.
I once did that
since I liked the radio coverage better.
Then when the TV feed went out, we could all still hear the game!
Whether
you bring things to a party or host one, I hope you enjoy the game!
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