This article was written to answer many of the most frequently asked
questions on this topic. I hope you find information helpful. Unless we
really love cooking or plan and prepare ahead with our meals, we can
fall victim to the easy way out - fast food or junk food.
Here is
a story; could it be you? The weekend is here and you think you now
have a couple of days to relax. Saturday morning - you make the coffee
to start the day and then you're off shopping. You get back just before
lunch and discover that you have to get the kids to their hockey
practise. Too late for a healthy lunch, by the time they are organized
it will be time to go. So you pick up a hamburger on the way. Traffic is
a nightmare. By the time you put your feet up, you find it is time to
get the kids. It's almost supper time and you're really tired now and
you're in no mood to prepare a meal so you pick up pizzas from a
well-known fast food outlet. Sunday and time to prepare brunch and you
go downhill from there so you pick up some chicken with chips and some
salad...
So what is a good diet? One which contains the nutrients
your body needs in the correct amounts. That is the key to a healthy
lifestyle. The main things your body needs from food are proteins (for
growth and repair), carbohydrates (for energy), fats (gives a store of
energy and the fatty layer protects and insulates your body from impacts
and temperature loss), vitamins (for good health), minerals (for the
correct functioning of your body systems) fibre (aids digestion and
production of faeces) and water (70% or so of the body is water).
Does
the hamburger provide all the things your body needs? Does it supply
the nutrients you need? The answer is yes. The burger itself contains
some meat, so there is the protein, some minerals and fat, the burger
also contains fillers and those, plus the burger bun provides
carbohydrate. The salad that comes with the burger meal provides fibre,
water, vitamins and minerals. The fries provide more fat and
carbohydrate and the main bulk of the water comes from the drink. To our
surprise, the burger meals do provide all you need!
The problem
is with the quantities of these nutrients. There is usually way too much
fat and carbohydrate compared with the other nutrients. There is very
little fibre. The vitamin and mineral proportions are low, unless you
have a shake with the meal, which will increase the proportion of dairy
product based minerals such as calcium. Now you need to make sure your
next meal makes up for this out of balance meal. For your evening meal
you should eat a low fat, high fibre meal, plenty of vegetables cooked
lightly or eaten raw so as not to destroy the vitamins. If you must eat
between meals, snack on fruit or vegetables.
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