Thursday, January 19, 2012

Tips For Building A Colorful Healthy Plate (www.choosemyplate.gov)


Choose a Colorful Variety of Fruits, Vegetables, Whole Grains, Proteins, and Dairy to Build your Healthy Plate
USDA My Plate 
**I found this to be a humorous depiction of the American diet but it should be noted without a doubt there are distorted portion sizes and a busy American mentality that encourages fast food.**
Note: The information below correlates with suggestions based on the new USDA My Plate Guidelines.  I personally find these standards challenging to understand BUT the information provided is still helpful for visualizing portion sizes. A My Plate 2000 calorie diet example includes 6oz grains, 2.5C vegetables, 2C fruits, 3 C dairy, 5.5oz protein, 6tsp oil.  Once again, personal opinion, I think it is VERY HARD to understand a dietary breakdown like this, but, I wanted to give an example anyways.  The main purpose of this information is to give a VISUAL for portions.

Fruit: Any fruit or 100% fruit juice. Fruits can be canned, fresh, frozen, or dried.
    TIP: Avoid items in heavy syrup.  Look for “packaged  
    fresh, flash frozen, or canned in 100% juice."

USDA Serving Size Guide: 1C fresh or 100% juice, 1/2C dried fruit. 

Vegetables: Any vegetable or 100% 
vegetable juice.  Vegetables can be fresh, raw, frozen, canned, dehydrated, or cooked.
    TIP: Avoid vegetables in cream and cheese sauces  
    and check food labels for sodium content. Daily salt   
   recommendations from the 2010 Dietary Guidelines  
   have dropped to 1500mg/day for the general   
   public.  The 2005 recommendations had this amount for  
   those with high blood pressure and heart disease but 
   studies found over 85% of Americans consumed WAY 
   more than 2300mg/day and it was then decided to  
  decrease this number to 1500mg/day (2010 Dietary  
  Guidelines From USDA and HHS - Janet Kim, MPH 
  USDA Serving Size Guide: 1C Fresh or 100% juice, 
  2C Leafy Greens.

Grains: Any food made from rice, barley, wheat, oats 

                or cornmeal

    EX: Bread, pasta, tortilla, oatmeal,  
    bulgur, grits, cereal
    TIP: Look for labels that include the  
    terms bulgur, buckwheat, oatmeal,   
    WHOLE rye, WHOLE wheat, brown 
    rice, wild rice etc.
   
        Whole Grain: Contain the entire grain kernel (endosperm, bran, germ) FYI: Most products that state bran, 100% wheat, stone ground etc. are not actually 100% whole grain.  Look for the terms stated above.

        Refined Grain:  Milled and processed
  grains give a more fine texture. This often
  removes significant amounts of fiber, iron, and B vitamins.
  USDA Serving Size Guide: 1oz in general    
   is similar to 1 slice of bread, 1/2C of cooked 
   hot cereal, cooked rice, cooked pasta, 1C of cold ready-
   to-eat cereal.

Protein: Meat, poultry, seafood, beans, nuts, peas, seeds, eggs, processed soy
    TIP: Look for low fat and lean options (sirloin, chicken 
    breast, egg whites)
    USDA Serving Size Guide: 1oz 
    meat/poultry/fish, 1/4C cooked beans, 1 
    egg, 1 tablespoon peanut butter, 1/2oz 
    nuts or seeds.
www.healthyeating.webmd.com
**A deck of cards is compared to a 3oz portion of meat/poultry/fish - for additional helpful visual comparisons look at the interactive tools below**


Dairy: All fluid milk products and anything made from milk
    TIP: Look for low fat or no fat cheeses, milks, yogurt
    USDA Serving Size Guide: 1C of milk, yogurt, or 
     soymilk, 1 1/2oz natural cheese, 2oz processed cheese.

Oil: **Oils are not a food group** Some foods with high oil content can cross over into the oil category such as avocados and nuts but are actually a part of another group.  Mayo and salad dressings are considered an oil and not in a "food" group.
USDA Serving Size Guide: 1 teaspoon 
**The numbers on this chart are in teaspoons.  This amount includes EVERYTHING in ALL foods throughout the day.  Examples: nuts, fish, cooking oils, dressings.  The fats suggested include monounsaturated and polyunsaturated not saturated or trans fats.**


**Portion Size- A portion is the size of food YOU choose to eat. 
**Serving Size- The United States Department of Agriculture (choosemyplate.gov) has developed and defined a standardized specific amount for the five food groups + oil.  These standards are to be considered as a recommended PORTION for ONE sitting. NOTE: This does not mean that the servings indicated on a food label reflect the USDA standards.  Food labels are individual product specifications with their own sizes and nutritional information. 

Fun Serving Size Interactive Tools and Resources
  1. WebMD Interactive Portion Size Plate **This is a phenomenal resource and fun to play around with**
  2. WebMD Portion Size Guide PDF Print Out **Print this guide out as a helpful reference for portion size ideas**
  3. The Mayo Clinic Guide To Portion Control For Weight Loss


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