By Jennifer Bucko Lamplough and Lara Rondinelli Hamilton
Around the new year, most of us vow to make drastic changes to our diet or lifestyle. For some that means adopting a strict (and joyless) diet or signing up for hardcore fitness classes that meet at 5:00 a.m. (despite the fact that you’re horribly out of shape). It’s no wonder these resolutions are often short-lived. When it comes to making lasting changes to your diet and lifestyle habits, slow and steady wins the race.
There’s no doubt that committing to eat healthier and get more exercise are great New Year’s resolutions. But unless your new practices are sustainable, any progress you make could be short-lived. Small diet and lifestyle changes over time that aren’t too disruptive stand a better shot at becoming permanent healthy habits. Whether you want to lose 30 pounds, get better control of your diabetes, or achieve a similar health goal, it’s best to make small but powerful changes. Eventually, you’ll see results.
If you’re ready to take some small yet mighty steps toward better health in 2019, give these tips a try.
Cut out sugary drinks immediately. Sugary drinks like regular soda, fruit drinks, energy drinks, and sweet tea raise your blood glucose and add empty calories to your daily intake. Even though it can be a hard habit to kick, do all you can to eliminate these drinks from your diet. Replace them with fresh water, low-fat milk, flavored calorie-free carbonated water, and unsweetened tea and coffee.
Purge the junk food. Cookies, chips, sweets, and other snacks are hard to resist when they are an arm’s length away. The best way to avoid them is by removing them from your home. But don’t worry. When you’re craving a snack, you can try a healthier whole food option, like slices of avocado, a handful of nuts, kale chips, a small serving of Greek yogurt, a piece of fruit, veggies with hummus or nut butter. These snacks are more satisfying and pack more nutrition than your processed favorites.
Do some research and identify an eating pattern you can life with. Studies show that there are many different eating patterns that can be helpful in managing diabetes. That means that if you’re trying to get your health in order, you don’t have to stick to a rigid plan that restricts many of your favorite foods. Some effective eating patterns include vegetarian or flexitarian, Mediterranean, low-carbohydrate, and low-glycemic.
Choose leaner cuts of meat. Saturated fat—the kind found in animal protein—raises blood cholesterol levels, which is a risk factor for heart disease. An easy way to reduce your saturated fat intake is by choosing lean cuts of meat. Avoid or reduce your intake of lard, fatback, and high-fat meats like regular ground beef, bologna, hot dogs, sausage, bacon, spareribs, and the skin from chicken and other poultry. Instead, choose skinless poultry; fish, turkey, and beef trimmed of fat, including round, sirloin, flank, and tenderloin; and lean cuts of pork, including center loin chop and tenderloin.
Plan your meal around veggies (instead of making them the afterthought). At mealtimes, try to fill at least half of your plate with nonstarchy vegetables like spinach, cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, bell peppers, Brussels sprouts, and eggplant. Veggies like cauliflower, broccoli, carrots, and Brussels sprouts are delicious when roasted in the oven, and sautéing cabbage, bell peppers, and eggplant brings out their natural flavors. Finally, start any meal with a simple salad of mixed greens to help you meet your veggie quota.
Try lettuce wraps instead of bread. Iceberg, green leaf, or butter lettuce make a surprisingly delicious bread substitute. Use them in place of bread for your next sandwich. Nestle burgers or grilled chicken inside a lettuce “cup” in place of hamburger buns, and carefully wrap deli meats and toppings into a low-carb lettuce sub sandwich and secure it with wax paper and a piece of tape. Then tear the paper away as you eat.
Eat veggie noodles in place of pasta. For a great pasta substitute, sample the veggie noodles trend. Veggie noodles are a delicious, lower-carb option that can be eaten in place of grain-based pastas. A kitchen tool called a “spiralizer” quickly and easily turns vegetables into “noodles,” or you can use a standard vegetable peeler for a similar result. For even more convenience, you can now find these spiralized veggies in the freezer or produce section of many grocery stores. Try noodles made from zucchini, sweet potato, carrot, or spaghetti squash. Top them with chili, Bolognese sauce, or use them to make a cold “pasta salad” or noodle dishes like Pad Thai. Hint: You can also try cauliflower, butternut, or broccoli “rice” in place of regular rice for a lower-carb option.
Schedule in exercise five days a week. What you write on your calendar and allot time for is more likely to get done. Your workouts don’t have to be extra rigorous to be effective. Just taking a brisk 30-minute walk each day—or at least five times a week—is a great way to get your heart rate up and kickstart weight loss and improved health. Of course, if you’d like to take up running or sign up for a cardio class, go for it! But if you are sedentary, it’s important to start slow and build up your endurance so you can maintain your new routine!
But don’t do ONLY cardio. Get in some strength training too (even if you’re watching TV at the same time). Strength or resistance training makes your body more sensitive to insulin and can lower blood glucose. It also helps to maintain and build strong muscles and bones. The American Diabetes Association recommends doing some type of strength training at least two times per week. Activities include using weight machines, free weights at the gym, or resistance bands; exercises that use your body weight to work your muscles like squats, lunges, planks, wall-sits, and push-ups; or activities that build and keep muscle like heavy gardening.
Do at least some of your exercise outdoors. There’s nothing wrong with going to the gym, but if you’re feeling unmotivated to do your normal indoor routine, take your workout outside. The fresh air is invigorating, and studies show that being in nature decreases stress and promotes positive emotions. So be sure to trade out some of your time on a treadmill for a walk or jog in a local park. Or do lunges, push-ups, and other strength training in your backyard for a change of scenery.
Shake up your sedentary workday every chance you get. Sitting at a desk all day can negatively impact your health. If the nature of your work causes you to be sedentary for eight hours a day, look for chances to build more movement into your day. For example, take a ten-minute walk after lunch, get up and move a little each hour (even if it’s just a walk to the water fountain or restroom), park farther away than you normally would, take the stairs instead of the elevator.
There’s no reason your New Year’s resolutions have to be painful, punishing, and ultimately unsustainable. Making more manageable changes—that you will actually enjoy—is a better game plan for success. Make 2019 the year you finally shift into a healthier lifestyle and start moving toward building a better you.
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Whole Roasted Cauliflower with Lemon Vinaigrette
Excerpted from The Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Recipes for Healthy
Living Powered by the Diabetes Food Hub (American Diabetes Association,
November 2018, ISBN: 978-1-580-40680-2, $24.95)
This dish is worth the cook time. It tastes as beautiful as it looks!
Prep time: 5 minutes
Cook time: 1 hour
Servings: 8
Serving size: 1/2 cup
Cauliflower
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 pounds whole cauliflower
Vinaigrette
Juice of 1/2 lemon
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 teaspoon dried parsley
1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper
Preheat oven to 425°F.
In a small bowl, mix together olive oil and salt.
Place cauliflower, cut side down, in a large baking dish. Pour olive oil evenly over cauliflower and use your hands to rub the oil and salt mixture into the cauliflower.
Place on the middle oven rack and roast 60 minutes (if cauliflower starts getting too
dark, then cover with aluminum foil).
While cauliflower is roasting, whisk together all the vinaigrette ingredients in a small bowl.
When cauliflower is finished roasting, pour vinaigrette evenly over entire head.
To serve, cut whole cauliflower in half, then cut each half into 4 pieces.
Choices/Exchanges
1 Nonstarchy Vegetable, 1 ½ Fat
Nutrition Facts
Calories 80
Calories from fat 60
Total fat 7.0 g
Saturated fat 1.0 g
Trans fat 0.0 g
Cholesterol 0 mg
Sodium 170 mg
Potassium 260 mg
Total carbohydrate 4 g
Dietary fiber 2 g
Sugars 2 g
Protein 2 g
Phosphorus 40 mg
Quinoa Greek Salad
Serves: 4, 1-½ cups per serving
Prep time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 20 minutes
5 cups coarsely chopped romaine lettuce
½ cup quinoa, cooked according to package directions, cooled
1 small cucumber, cut into ½-inch chunks
1 tomato, cut into ½-inch chunks
½ cup (½-inch chunks) red onion
¼ cup pitted Kalamata olives, drained
Greek Dressing
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons olive oil
¼ teaspoon dried oregano leaves
¼ teaspoon garlic powder
¼ teaspoon black pepper
¼ cup reduced-fat feta cheese crumbles
In a large bowl, combine lettuce, cooked quinoa, cucumber, tomato, onion, and
olives.
In a small bowl, whisk Greek dressing ingredients. Pour over salad, toss until evenly coated, and sprinkle with feta cheese.
Did You Know?
Although it looks like a grain, quinoa is actually a seed. And since it
contains all nine essential amino acids, it’s considered a complete protein,
which is great news for anyone who is a vegetarian.
Choices/Exchanges
1 Starch, 1 Nonstarchy Vegetable, 2 Fat
Nutrition Information
Calories 210
Calories from Fat 110
Total Fat 12.0 g
Saturated Fat 2.0 g
Trans Fat 0.0 g
Cholesterol 12 mg
Sodium 250 mg
Potassium 460 mg
Total Carbohydrate 23 g
Dietary Fiber 4 g
Sugars 5 g
Protein 6 g
Phosphorus 180 mg
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About the Authors:
Lara Rondinelli-Hamilton, RD, CDE, counsels a wide variety of people?from those wanting to lose weight to others trying to better control their diabetes or cholesterol. Her role is to educate people on the importance of a healthy lifestyle, but also to help them incorporate it into real life with healthy eating and cooking.
Jennifer Bucko Lamplough, MBA, and Chef, is working to help solve hunger by working with food pantries, soup kitchens, and meal programs in northern Illinois to not only distribute meals, but to provide nutrition education in those settings. She continues to work as a cooking demonstrator, teaching people how to cook healthy and showing that it can be delicious and easy!
As a team, Chef Jennifer Bucko Lamplough and Lara Rondinelli-Hamilton have written two previous books for the American Diabetes Association?The Healthy Carb Diabetes Cookbook and the best-selling Healthy Calendar Diabetic Cooking?and developed hundreds of recipes for the Association’s healthy eating programs, many of which are appearing here for the first time in print. For more information, please visit www.diabetesfoodhub.org or www.diabetes.org.
About the Book:
The Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Recipes for Healthy Living Powered by the Diabetes Food Hub (American Diabetes Association, November 2018, ISBN: 978-1-580-40680-2, $24.95) is available at bookstores nationwide and from major online booksellers.
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