Healthy Holiday Eating Tips
Holiday dinners and other times of celebrating with family, friends and food can bring specific challenges for maintaining a health-conscious lifestyle.
Remembering that food high in fat can taste good going down, but it is not worth the long-term impacts over-indulgence can cause is helpful when planning
holiday meals. Here are tips to save calories, fat grams, and cholesterol, while enjoying a healthy holiday season.
Cooking
- Plan your meals, drinks, and snacks, and choose healthy alternatives.
- Cook low fat and watch serving portions.
Appetizers
- Choose appetizers that help you get your "5 A Day" fruits and vegetables from a fresh vegetable platter or fruit kabobs.
- Substitute low-fat or non-fat sour cream or yogurt for your dips
Soups
- Make cream soups using nonfat evaporated milk rather than cream.
- Chill soups, stews and chili and then skim solid fat off top and discard.
Salad
- Salads are a great way to add fruits and vegetables into your menu. Choose low-fat salad dressings and mayonnaise.
- Add pear, orange segments or dried fruit.
Meat/Poultry/Fish
- Choose plain over self-basting. Baste with low sodium broth or fruit juice, or place foil tent over as it cooks to avoid drying out.
- Roast on rack to allow fat to drip into pan.
- Remove any skin before cooking or before eating.
Gravy/Condiments
- Use fat separator or zip-lock bag to obtain pan juices but eliminate fat layer (clip small whole in bottom of bag and allow only juices to flow-out discard
fat layer and bag).
- Freeze pan drippings so you can remove hardened fat.
Side Dishes
- For mashed potatoes, use skim milk, garlic powders a little parmesan cheese, and just a small amount of low-calorie margarine.
- For stuffing, use whole grain bread or wild or brown rice.
Dessert
- Try baked apples, fresh fruits or fruit tarts.
- Try decreasing sugar in recipes by ¼ to 1/3; increase sweet spices or double vanilla or almond extract or add citrus zest for more flavor.
- Try fat-free sorbet (lemon, or strawberry).
- When making holiday cookies, use small cookie cutters or cut bars into smaller pieces.
- Top cakes with powdered sugar, cinnamon or cocoa instead of thick frosting.
- For pumpkin pie, use nonfat evaporated milk for filling and eliminate crust and serve soufflé style.
- For fruitcake, add nontraditional fruits such as dried apricots, cherries, prunes and cranberries.
What's Cooking?
Low Fat Eggnog (Serves 4 )
From Top 10 Low Fat Christmas Recipes
INGREDIENTS:
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/4 tsp cinnamon
- 1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
- 1 egg
- 4 egg whites
- 1 1/2 cups fat free milk
- 1 1/2 cups fat free half-and-half
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/4 cup rum or brandy (optional)
- freshly grated nutmeg to garnish
PREPARATION:
- Combine sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg in a large bowl. Add egg and egg whites, and beat with a mixer for 3-4 minutes.
- Gently heat fat free milk in a large saucepan. Gradually stir egg mixture into the hot milk.
- Heat, stirring constantly, until mixture is slightly thickened. Stir in vanilla extract and remove from heat.
- Let the milk and egg mixture cool a little before blending with fat-free half-and-half milk. Cover and chill in the refrigerator. Before serving,
sprinkle with freshly grated nutmeg on top.
Contact: DeShoin York Friendship, assistant nutrition specialist, (225) 771-2242 ext. 318, or ,
Fatemeh Malekian, Ph.D., associate professor, food science and nutrition, (225) 771-2242 ext. 265
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