Category Archives: Food

Breakfast on the Run

I have a love/hate relationship with breakfast. I love many of the foods and flavors that often find their way into this meal. I hate the fact that it takes place during one of the most hectic times in my day. I’d love to savor something delicious with a hot cup of coffee in a sunlit kitchen, but my life doesn’t always line up that way. I’m not alone. Many people, especially women, skip breakfast altogether citing the fact that they are too busy to eat. Others grab a granola bar or a yogurt on their way out the door and eat it in the car or at their desk. The next time you’re out driving during breakfast hour (and really, who ISN’T out driving during breakfast hour between commuting and carpooling and gym runs) check out how many of your fellow motorists are eating or drinking in their car. It’s become a lifestyle.

While there are tremendous benefits to organizing your morning in a way that enables you to sit down in a chair and eat breakfast without any other distractions, the truth is that the practice is out of reach for many people. And the MOST important thing about breakfast is just to EAT it. After 8 or 10 or 12 hours without food, your body is begging you to break the fast you’ve been enduring and give it some nourishment. I usually coach my clients to have an “emergency breakfast” option always on hand to take with them on mornings when breakfast just didn’t happen. Something like a Kashi bar, a cheese stick, and an apple. Portable, relatively nonperishable, not too messy.

But there are days when even that solution falls by the wayside. And on those days, the only way breakfast is going to happen is by relying on restaurant food. While restaurant fare can often be laden with unwanted fat an calories, that doesn’t have to be the case.

Lucky for us, Health magazine recently worked with a number of nutrition experts to study the breakfast options at various chain restaurants. They compiled a list of the healthiest fast-food breakfasts. The options that made the list had to be:

<400 calories

low in saturated fat

good mix of protein, complex carbs and healthy fats

>3 g fiber

<700 mg sodium

 

Here are Health Magazine’s the Top 10, with a little commentary from me:

1. Cosi’s Spinach Florentine Breakfast Wrap

2. Starbucks: Protein Artisan Snack Plate (CMS: I’m also a fan of their oatmeal or Turkey Bacon & Egg White on English Muffin)

3. Jamba Juice Berry Topper Ideal Meal (CMS: Oh how I wish we had Jamba Juice in Cincinnati!)

4. Au Bon Pain Oatmeal

5. Denny’s Scrambled Egg Whites, Chicken Sausage & Fruit

6. McDonald’s Oatmeal (ex brown sugar) (CMS: I’m not opposed to a classic Egg McMuffin as an option here either)

7. IHOP’s Simple & Fit Veggie Omelet (CMS: Order this with a side of fruit)

8. Subway’s Western Egg White & Cheese Muffin Melt (CMS At 160 calories, this needs more substance. Consider ordering two…or better yet, adding a piece of fruit or two to make a complete meal)

9. Dunkin Donuts Egg White Turkey Sausage Wake Up Wrap (CMS: At only 150 calories, same comments as above)

10. Panera’s Breakfast Power Sandwich (CMS: Order without the ham to keep the sodium level down; it’s the only one on the list with >700 mg sodium)

So, the next time you find yourself out and about without having eaten breakfast, you can confidently fix that situation without totally derailing your healthful eating goals. And perhaps if you’re lucky, a little sunlight will find its way to the spot where you’ve chosen to break your fast. Bon appetit!

Naked Pizza

There are three reasons why what I’m about to tell you in this post is shocking.

1) Cincinnati is almost NEVER ahead of a trend. Seriously. Things become cool here YEARS after they’ve been fully adopted in hipper cities like NY and LA and Chicago.

2) Cincinnatians are extremely loyal to their favorite pizza. Long-standing local brands like LaRosa’s and Dewey’s dominate the city and most natives are very particular about their preferences. (It’s almost as bad as the chili wars we have around here but that’s another post altogether.)

3) Pizza is not often featured in a post by a health blogger (unless you count vegan pizza, but we all remember how that turned out.)

Well Cincinnati, there’s a new game in town. It’s trendy. It’s pizza. And – drumroll – it’s healthy!

Naked Pizza opened its first store in Ohio last Friday, just in time for the meatless Fridays of Lent. Cincinnati has a BIG Catholic population and thus meatless Fridays are a big deal around here. (In fact, the McDonalds Filet-O-Fish sandwich was invented by a Cincinnati-based franchisee in 1962 in a showdown with founder Ray Croc. Read that story here.)

So, consider Naked Pizza as an option for meatless Fridays or your weekly family pizza night, and a healthy option at that.

What’s so healthy about it?

From their own press release, “Naked Pizza’s recipe is based on the use of all-natural ingredients with no added sugar, high fructose corn syrup, trans-fat, hormones or preservatives. Its crust is made from an Ancestral Blend® of ten grains, prebiotic fiber from the agave plant and special heat resistant probiotics or “healthful” bacteria. The diversity of nutrients and fiber along with the added probiotics support digestive health. According to co-founder Jeff Leach, it’s a recipe based on a 200,000-year-old nutritional blueprint, and a taste that’s all pizza – saucy, cheesy, still round, still comes in a square box, and delivered fast to your door.”

All that delivers a cheese pizza with 161 calories and 7 grams of fat per slice (in a 14″ pie). They have the range of meat and vegetable toppings you’d expect, but theirs are all hormone and antibiotic free. Check out their website at nakedpizza.biz for more information, pizza varieties and full nutritional information.

We got Naked on Friday for lunch (giggle) and thought it was excellent. I tried the Greenhouse pizza with a skinny crust – delicious.

The Cincinnati location is located at 3646 Edwards Rd in Hyde Park. They offer takeout or deliver within a 9 mile radius.

NY, LA, and Chicago? We’re way out ahead of you on this one.


Restart Your Resolutions

Can you believe it’s almost March?! For Pete’s sake! I  know many of you made New Year’s Resolutions on January 1st – how are they going? It’s not uncommon to lose steam as life often gets in the way of our very best intentions.

In fact, I had the opportunity to speak with Amanda Greene, a reporter for Woman’s Day, this week about this very topic. Her article, “Eight Ways to Recommit to Your Health Resolutions” is included here if you need some inspiration to get yourself back on track! Amanda and I chatted about how Nourish helps clients make and stick with resolutions, and we talked about ideas for recommitting to those resolutions if your resolve begins to falter.

So, if your resolutions have fallen by the wayside, instead of beating yourself up, try to determine what caused you to get off track, and then simply recommit. 2011 will be here all year.

Here’s a link to the full article on the Woman’s Day website.  And here’s the article text, because Amanda is a far better writer than I…

8 Ways to Recommit to Your Health Resolutions

Find out how to get back into your wellness routine—and stick with it

By Amanda Greene Posted February 23, 2011 from WomansDay.com

You’ve probably heard of “January joiners”—those eager gym-goers who sign up to get in shape at the beginning of the year, only to fall off the wagon by February. There’s a reason it’s such a common phenomenon: Sticking to health resolutions is difficult, especially when your ambitions are too high or not measurable. So we spoke to the experts to find out about common goal-setting mistakes and how to recommit to more obtainable aims. Read on to learn eight ways to revisit your wellness resolutions––and make them stick this time around.

1. Shrink your goals.

One of the most common reasons people fail at keeping their resolutions is because they bite off more than they can chew. “I find that my clients make New Year’s resolutions that aren’t really realistic,” says Cristina Rivera, RD, president of Nutrition in Motion, PC. “They’re great for about a week, but people can’t keep them up forever.” For example, one of her clients made a goal to give up soda, her favorite beverage. She went cold turkey and lasted about two weeks, then caved when the cravings hit. Rivera coached her to minimize her portions—a mini-can of Diet Coke, not a Big Gulp––instead of cutting out the drink entirely. 

2. Make your resolutions concrete.

Not only will setting a goal that’s too big derail you, so will making a resolution that’s too vague. “Saying ‘I will eat more healthfully’ isn’t a concrete goal,” says Junelle Lupiani, RD, nutritionist at Miraval, a wellness spa outside Tucson, Arizona. “Instead, say something like, ‘I will replace my afternoon coffee and cookie snack with a piece of fruit, some nuts and green tea.’ Being sure that your resolutions are measurable can help you assess on a daily basis if you’re on track or not.” Other specific—and doable––health promises that Lupiani recommends are vowing to eat a large salad every day or committing to starting each day with a whole grain and some fresh fruit. 

3. Don’t wait to get motivated.

Many people assume they can’t tackle their goals without motivation. So they wait and wait for that push to get them to the gym, but it never comes. “We have the belief that motivation has to come before action—’I felt motivated so I went,'” says Simon Rego, PsyD, director of Psychology Training at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City, “when in fact motivation often follows action.” Take the gym, for example. Most people can attest to feeling extremely motivated after a sweaty workout, instead of before. To get yourself to exercise, Dr. Rego recommends giving yourself permission to leave the gym after five minutes if you want. Chances are, once you get moving on the treadmill, your motivation will have kicked in and you won’t want to stop. 

4. Get some sleep!

That’s right—the experts actually recommend hitting the hay in order to accomplish your goals. Why? Because a good night’s sleep can help you achieve virtually any goal on your New Year’s resolution list, says Pete Bils, vice president of Sleep Innovation and Clinical Research for Select Comfort. “Losing weight, exercising or learning a new skill are not human instincts; we have to work at them. You could call a sleepy brain a lazy brain—the human ability of resolve or willpower has been proven to be diminished without adequate sleep,” he says. But it’s not just about willpower; the amount of sleep you get affects bodily functions, too. As Bils explains, without enough sleep, ghrelin (the hormone responsible for regulating appetite) is elevated, while leptin (the hormone connected with satiety) is diminished. So, even if you consume enough calories, when you haven’t gotten enough zzz’s, your body will still send signals that it’s hungry, which will likely lead you to overeat.

5. Set yourself up for success.

Sure, it’s easy enough to resolve to eat more healthfully, but if you don’t implement the necessary lifestyle changes you won’t be able to succeed. “If you’re going to have oatmeal for breakfast instead of your usual doughnut, you have to give yourself five extra minutes to boil those oats on the stovetop each morning, plus more time to eat at home since it’s not a portable food,” says Cherylanne Skolnicki, wellness coach and owner of Nourish wellness consultants. “Resolutions are really about finding out how you’re going to integrate new behaviors into your life.” So don’t join a gym that you have to drive out of your way to get to—choose one that’s on your route to and from the office. Or if you’re trying to drink more water, invest in a reusable bottle so that you always have it on hand. 

6. Be patient.

“When you’re integrating a new exercise routine, your fitness levels will always change more quickly than your body composition. Fixate on how you feel and how you perform before you freak out about your weight and waistline,” says Andrew Wolf, exercise physiologist at Miraval. As Rivera notes, healthy weight loss is only between one and two pounds per week, so give yourself reasonable time to make progress instead of giving up. Finally, Wolf advises implementing ways to monitor your progress that don’t involve a scale or your skinny jeans. Keep track of how many crunches you can do or measure your heart rate while you’re on the elliptical machine to prove to yourself that you’re getting stronger and more fit.

7. Think outside the box.

Don’t throw in the towel on getting in shape just because you hate the gym. Losing weight doesn’t mean you have to join a fitness club. There are plenty of ways to exercise outdoors—find a hiking trail or take your bike out for a ride, for example. Rivera is a fan of alternative forms of exercise, like Zumba classes. “If you have an active job, wear a pedometer and see how many steps per day you can log; if you hit 10,000 steps in a day, that’s like walking four miles,” she says. “Knowing how much you’re walking could motivate you to push yourself even harder the next day.”

8. Find a buddy.

The easiest way to make yourself accountable? Enlist a friend to help keep you on track with your goals. “I’d rather see you walk every day with a partner than run every six days by yourself,” says Skolnicki. “If you can, find someone to meet you, whether it’s at the gym or outside your front door. People’s success rates go up dramatically [with a workout buddy].” Plus, she adds, working out in tandem is a great way for busy women to multitask: Not only will you get in a sweat session, but you’ll also have the time to catch up with a friend.