Archive for the ‘Family meal’ Category

WHAT DO YOU DO WITH LEFTOVERS?

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

WHAT DO YOU DO WITH LEFTOVERS?

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What ever you do with leftovers, don’t throw them away. Be creative! Thing of a new look for them at another upcoming meal. Your family will thing you are a great cook. Well you really are a great cook. You just need to spend sometime thinking of different things you have created in the past. Perhaps something that you have tasted at a meal out at a restaurant, a friends house, your mother or mother-in-laws favorite meal.

“Leftovers” needn’t be a dirty word! If you have a food processor, use it to puree leftover vegetables, meats, and gravies, and then save it to add to the stock the next time you make soup. You’ll be surprised just how tasty this stew or soup will be.

Speaking of soup . . . almost any leftover can be added to soup. You’ll be surprised just how tasty this “mulligan” stew of leftover can be!

If your cheese dries out, don’t throw it away. Just because it’s dry doesn’t mean it’s spoiled. Simply grate and use as an “au gratin” topping.

Leftover chicken? Of course, you can always make chicken salad. But, have you thought of chicken crepes, pureed chicken spread, or saving the bones, skin and fat for chicken soup?

Here’s a great tip for leftover vegetables. Just put the veggies from last night’s meal into a frozen pie crust along with any pre-cooked meats, gravies, or left-over potatoes and you’ll have a delectable shepherd’s pie that the kids will always want seconds of.

Leftovers make a great filler. Just use them in an omelet or crepe, and no one will know. This is an especially good idea for leftover cheese, tomatoes, green veggies and any kind of red meat. Seafood makes an especially tempting filler.

The many lives of meat loaf. Try using a variety of left-over meats to make a meat loaf. Your family will love it, and you’ll love this money-saving tip.

When “recycling” those leftovers, be clever. Meat can easily dry out. Try making a simple sauce to keep them juicy and able to perk the taste-buds of your finicky family.

Old bananas? Don’t pitch them! Why not make banana bread with the over-ripened fruit? And while you’re at it, the skins can be used to polish your silver.

Why buy expensive coatings for chicken or fish? Make them yourself. Save and old flour bag, add a little salt, pepper, flour and other spices to taste. Just drop in the fish or poultry and shake.

An old, mis-matched fork can be a help. Keep it close to you favorite houseplants and use it to rake their soil.

Make your own cookie cutters. Simply cut up old frozen food containers, the aluminum ones, into the shapes you want, keeping the sharp edge down.

Here’s a great tip for old fruit. Instead of throwing away fruit when it gets a little too ripe. (and your family turns its nose up at it) try this. Cut off all the bad spots and peel the fruit. Use it to top ice-cream, or to bake breads, or bet of all to make an old-fashioned cobbler with it.

If none of these ideas thrill you, here’s a really inventive one: again, you cut and clean the fruit. Drop the chunks into a large covered jar with a half can of pineapple juice in it. Let the mixture set, in the refrigerator for a few days, adding leftover fruit. (If you don’t use that much fruit, Place the fruit in the freezer in a container.) (Soon in a couple of days, you have a great dessert topping and crowd pleaser for you next party.)

FOOD STORAGE PLANNING AND USE THEREOF

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

FOOD STORAGE PLANNING AND USE THEREOF

I am so happy to be able to walk in to my food storage room and find a two year supply of food for a family of four (4).

My husband studies the food storage that I have and determines what is missing and/or needed to complete your home food storage in a way that we can enjoy or meals, and have plenty to eat for several years to come. We use commercially prepared freeze dried products and home stored products. We garden, home can and dehydrate many foods. Others we purchase commercially in bulk, which will enhance and improve out quantity and quality of food on hand. It is never necessary for me to run to the market to purchase last minute items, when unexpected company arrives or we need a change in diet because of an illness in the family.

I suggest that you look at the following websites for ideas to help you in planning your personal family food storage plan. BePrepared.com will help you determine what foods you would enjoy having on hand for your family. BePrepared.com/shelflife this site will help you determine how long your Freeze dried and dehydrated for will keep on your shelf and maintain it nutritional value. Some Freeze dried food will be life sustaining for up to 30 years in ideal conditions. BePrepared.com/recipes
Learn how to rotate your food storage. Rotation is key to a successful food storage program. Several reasons make rotation an important habit in maintaining your preparedness.

• To minimize the loss of nutrition value and food quality.
• To make the most of your food storage investment.
• To learn how to use your stored food so when the time comes you’ll be even
better prepared to use it.
• Enjoy the food you’ve stored while it tastes best. Then replace those foods
you use them.

SALAD DRESSINGS

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

SALAD DRESSINGS

The other evening we were planning a salad for our dinner. I opened the refrigerator and found no Mayonnaise. Mayonnaise is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture as a “clean, sound, semisolid emulsion of edible vegetable oil and egg yolk or whole egg, with vinegar and (or) lemon juice, and with one or more of the following: salt, spice, sugar. The finished product contains not less than 50 percent of edible vegetable oil and the sum of the percentage of oil and egg yolk is not less than 78%.
It is easy to make Mayonnaise. I said Oh! We don’t have any Mayonnaise left. Too late to go to the store and get some. I will need to make some. My husband said: “Do you have all the ingredients.” Our grandson said: Can you make it?
If we are to have and use food storage we need to learn how to us it. There is nothing quicker or easier to make for your family than salads.

There are three types of salad dressing in common use: Cooked or boiled salad dressing, mayonnaise, and French. Each of these has innumerable variations such as Roquefort, Thousand Island, Russian, etc.

Here is an easy way to make it.

Homemade Mayonnaise1 ¼ cups oil
2 tablespoons lemon juice, or cider vinegar, chilled
1 tablespoon mustard
½ teaspoon salt
1 egg

Directions:
In blender container, combine ¼ cup of the oil, lemon juice, mustard, salt and egg: blend until smooth.

With blender running at medium-high speed, slowly add remaining 1 cup oil in thin stream, scraping down sides of container as needed. Store in tightly covered container, in refrigerator.

Homemade mayonnaise is fast and easy to make in a blender or food processor. Flavored variations are also included.

Prep Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients:
• 1 large egg
• 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground white pepper
• 1-1/2 teaspoons white wine vinegar
• 1 cup oil, peanut or corn
• 1 to 2 Tablespoons lemon juice

Preparation:
Place everything but the oil and lemon juice in the blender or processor container. Process 5 seconds in the blender; 15 seconds in the processor. With the motor running, add the oil, first in a drizzle, then in a thin, steady stream. When all the oil has been added, stop the motor and taste. Add lemon juice to your taste. If the sauce is too thick, thin with hot water or lemon juice. If too thin, process a little longer.

Yield: 1-1/4 cups

Mayonnaise Variations
(Except for Remoulade, each starts with one cup.)

Aioli: Add 4 cloves garlic mashed with 1/8 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon lemon juice. Add 1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil, enough to make a soft consistency. Good with fish soups, fish, poached or boiled eggs, vegetables.

Creamy: Stir in as much as an equal amount of sour cream or unflavored yogurt. For salad dressing, use cream or buttermilk.

Green Goddess: Add 1 small clove garlic, chopped, 2 to 3 chopped anchovy fillets, 3 tablespoons chopped parsley, 6 tablespoons sour cream and lemon juice to taste. Serve on salad or with fish and shellfish.

Herb: Puree 2 tablespoons chopped fresh herbs with an equal part lemon juice. Press out liquid, stir into mayonnaise. Nice with fish, poached or boiled eggs, vegetables.

Horseradish: Add horseradish to taste. Serve with ham, beef, corned beef.

Remoulade: Add to 1-1/2 cups mayonnaise 1 finely chopped hard-cooked egg, 1 tablespoon chopped capers, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Classic accompaniment to cold poached or boiled eggs, fried fish, cold vegetables, cold meats.

Scandinavian Mustard: Add 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard, 4 teaspoons brown sugar, 2 tablespoons fresh dill. Sweet and luscious with smoked or fresh salmon, ham, cold meats.

Tartar Sauce: Add 1 tablespoon minced pickles, 1/2 tablespoon minced onion, 2 teaspoons parsley, 1 teaspoon lemon juice. A little dried tarragon is optional. Serve with fish and shellfish.

Thousand Island or Russian: Stir in 1/4 cup chili sauce, 2 tablespoons chopped gherkins, 1 chopped shallot or green onion, 1 teaspoon grated horseradish. Serve with boiled eggs, fish, shellfish, cold meats, cold vegetables, green salad or a Reuben sandwich.

PLANNING MEALS FOR THE FAMILY

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

PLANNING MEALS FOR THE FAMILY

PLANNING for anything is thinking ahead and deciding what to do about a situation. To plan meals, then, is to think ahead and decide what to have for them. In most homes the homemaker serves here meals a day, or twenty-one meal a week. It involves a great deal of money, time, and effort to produce these twenty-one meals to the enjoyment and satisfaction of everyone. With so much at stake, it seems only sensible to think ahead and plan meals for several days, or preferably for a week, in advance rather than to leave the choice to a last last-minute decision to be made three times every day in the week.

The homemaker who does not plan meals beforehand finds herself at a great disadvantage. She becomes tense and fatigued as she keeps wondering what to have for the next meal. Then confusion results because she starts meal preparation only to find that there is too little time to prepare the food, that there is too much to do at one time, or that some essential food item is lacking. Perhaps she may rush to the market and then buy impulsively an unwisely, selecting food that is quick and easy to prepare without regard to its cost or appropriateness to the other meals of the day. She is apt to neglect to include those foods that are so necessary to the health of her family. She may resort to the preparation of some foods so often that her meals become monotonous. She is often wasteful because she ignores or forgets to make use of food left from a previous meal, which, with planning, could be made into an appetizing dish.

Advantages of Planning

The homemaker who plans her meals ahead of time has these advantages over the one who does not make plans:

1. She can take into consideration her family’s nutritional needs.

2. She can consider her family’s food likes and prejudices.

3. She can make her meals varied and attractive.

4. She can save time and effort in buying, preparing, and serving meals.

5. She can save money.

6. She will experience less tension.

How to Plan

There are many things a homemaker must know if she is to profit from all the advantages of planning meals ahead. She must have some knowledge of the right foods to select for her family’s health and of the reasons why these foods are important. She must know how to distribute these foods among the three meals of the day so her family will be satisfied with both the amounts and kinds of foods and with the amounts and kinds of foods and with the appetizing quality of each meal. She must know what foods are available in the markets and their approximate cost. As she plans, she must have some knowledge also of ways to organize her work so her plans can be carried out efficiently later on. An experienced homemaker thinks of all these points more or less at the same time, but for someone less experienced it is a good idea to consider each point separately.

• If you plan menus for several days or for a week in advance, meal preparation will go more smoothly and family needs and preferences can be considered.

Follow Planning Guides

Two kinds of guides are helpful in planning meals: (1) a daily food guide based on the nutritive contribution of foods to the diet, and (2) meal patters based on courses in a meal. There are a number of daily food guides an meal patterns. The ones followed are a matter of personal choice. Meals planned with these guides, adjusted to family preferences for foods, are sure to be nutritious and pleasing.

The Daily Food Guide – The guide followed in this text gives information on the nutritive value of foods by classifying different foods into groups according to their nutritive content. For good health, the body needs substances called “nutrients” – carbohydrates, proteins, fats, minerals, vitamins, and water. Nutrients are present in foods, but no one food contains all of them. Moreover, these nutrients are present in different amounts in different kinds of foods – fruits, vegetables, and meats, for example – and are this fact on which the classification of foods in the Daily Food Guide is based. The guide lists four groups of foods: the Milk Group, the Meat Group, the Vegetable-Fruit Group, and the Bread-Cereal Group. In addition, it gives for each group (1) some representative foods, (2) the special nutrient contribution of foods in this group, and (3) recommendations for the amounts of these foods that should be eaten every day.

Meal-pattern guides. These guides are helpful because the Daily Food Guide does not include information on planning the three individual meals of the day among which the needed foods are distributed. A meal pattern is something like an outline, for it lists the parts of a meal. These parts are called “courses.” A meal pattern also suggests the kinds of foods that make up each course. There are a number of possible patterns for each meal. Meal patterns for any one of the three daily meals differ from one another in the number or kind of courses served. Which pattern is selected will depend on such things as types of activity and ages of family members, time available for preparation of meals, how family meals are served, and the amount of money which can be spent for food.

Examples of patterns for breakfast, lunch, and dinner are given at the left. A breakfast planned according to pattern 1 is nutritionally adequate, provided, the servings are ample. In fact, it is considered to be a “minimum adequate breakfast.” However, a breakfast following either Patterns 2 or 3 would be more satisfying, especially to active and rapidly growing teen-agers. These breakfasts would go further toward meeting their nutritional needs than the breakfast in Pattern 1. A lunch such as the one in Pattern 1 is a light lunch, and it may not include foods from as many of the groups in the Daily Food guide as is desirable. The other lunch patterns are more adequate because they give an opportunity to use foods from more of the groups in the Daily Food Guide. Dinners following Patterns 1 and 2 are light meals, and those following Patterns 3 and 4 are more elaborate and more suitable for a hearty dinner.

Make Menus
A menu is a list of specific foods, or “dishes” as they are sometimes called, to fit the meal pattern selected, If, in planning menus, you use for each day and combination of meal patters for breakfast, lunch, and dinner and include in your menus foods from all the groups as recommended in the Daily Food Guide, you will have good, healthful meals.

Consideration in Planning Meals
Consider the advertisements in newspapers.
Consider the nutritional needs of your family.
Consider the foods on hand. This includes your food storage. Your food storage needs to be rotated also.
Consider the time needed.
Consider the members of the family.
Consider the amount of money available.
Consider the best form of food.
Consider the method of preparation.

FAMILY FOOD MANAGEMENT

Saturday, March 12th, 2011

FAMILY FOOD MANAGEMENT

You and Your Family’s Food

Are you one of this country’s homemakers — and trying to do a blue-ribbon job of feeding your family well? If so, you know that your task is vital to family health and important to happiness, and it isn’t easy. You have a 4-point food program:
To serve enjoyable meals.
To keep your family well nourished.
To practice thrift when need be.
To save time and energy where you can.

Nutrition up to date – up to you

Nutrition is the science that deals with food at work – food on the job for you.

Modern knowledge of food at work brings a new kind of mastery over life.
When you—and your family—eat the right food, it does far more than just keep you alive and going.

The right food helps you to be at your best in health and vitality. It can even help you to stay young longer, postponing old age. An individual well fed from babyhood is more likely to enjoy a long prime of life. But at any age, you are better off when you are better fed.

Food’s three big jobs

1. Food provides materials for the body’s building and repair. Protein and minerals (and water) are what tissue and bone are chiefly made of. Children must have these food materials to grow on; and all lifelong the body continues to require supplies for upkeep.

2. Food provides regulators that enable the body to use other materials and to run smoothly. Vitamins do important work in this line, and minerals and protein, too.

3. Food provides fuel for the body’s energy and warmth. There is some fuel in every food.

Food’s needs, A to Z

From vitamin A to the mineral zinc, a list of nutrients – chemical substances that the body is known to require from food – would total more than 40. And there may be some not yet detected.

You can put nutrition knowledge to use without being introduced to all of the body’s A-to-Z needs. When daily meals provide sufficiently for the following key nutrients, you can be reasonably sure of getting the rest.

Protein

Protein was named from a Greek word meaning “first.” Nearly a hundred years ago, it was recognized as the main substance in all of the body’s muscles and organs, skin, hair, and other tissues. No simple substance could build and renew such different tissues, and protein has proved to be complex and varied.

Protein in different foods is made up of varying combinations of 22 simpler materials called amino acids. If need be, the body can make its own supply of more than half of these amino acids. But the remaining amino acids must come readymade from food. And to get the best use form these special ones, the body needs them all together, either in one food or in some combination of foods.

The best quality proteins have all of these especially important amino acids, and worthwhile amount of each.

You get top-rating proteins in foods from animal sources, as in meat, poultry, fish, eggs, milk, and cheese. Some of these protein foods are needed each day; and it is an advantage to include some in each meal.

Next best for proteins are soybeans, nuts and dry beans and peas. When these are featured in main dishes, try to combine them with a little top-rating protein food.

Cereals, bread, vegetables, and fruits also provide some protein, but of lower quality. The protein value of these foods can be increased by combining them with foods from animal sources. Many an American—style dishes such as meat-and-vegetable stew, egg sandwiches, macaroni and cheese, cereal and milk, are highly nutritious combinations. For in the body’s remarkable chemistry the high-grade proteins team with the less complete proteins in many companion foods and make the latter more useful than if eaten alone.

Calcium

Calcium is one of the chief mineral materials in bones and teeth. About 99 percent of all the calcium in the body is used for framework. Small but important, the other 1 percent remains in body fluids. Such as the blood. Without this calcium, muscles can’t contract and relax and nerves can’t carry their messages.

For calcium to be used properly, other substances are needed in right quantities—vitamin D and phosphorus, for example

Many people go through life with bones that are calcium-poor. If a child gets to little calcium in his food or if his bones fail to deposit the calcium properly, then the bones will be smaller than they should be, or malformed as when legs are bent in rickets. Older people who are calcium-poor may have brittle bones that break easily and mend slowly. Whether you are young or old, it’s a good thing to have a calcium-rich diet.

The outstanding food for calcium, without using milk in some form. You can hardly get enough calcium without using milk in some form. Next best foods for calcium are some of the leafy green vegetables—notably turnip tops, mustard greens and kale.

Iron

One of the essential materials for red blood cells is iron. Without its iron supply, the blood could not carry oxygen from the lungs to each body cell.

When meals are varied, you get some iron from many different foods. Liver is an outstanding source for iron. And one good reason for eating dark-green vegetables is their iron content.

Some of the other foods that add iron are egg yolks, meats in general, peas and beans of all kinds, dried fruits, molasses, bread and other cereal foods made from the whole grain or from enriched flour.

Iodine

Your body must have small but steady amounts of iodine to help the thyroid gland work properly. The most familiar bad effect of getting too little iodine is a swelling of the gland, called goiter.

Along the seas coast, and in some other parts of the United States, iodine is contained in the drinking water and in vegetables and fruits grown in local soil. But too little iodine in water and soil is the cause of a wide “goiter belt” across the country, particularly around the Great Lakes and in northwestern States.

It is well to plan for iodine, particularly if you live inland. Eating salt-water fish or other food from the sea at least one a week will help. But the best line of defense is to use iodized table salt regularly.

One point of warning must be added. Using iodized salt regularly can prevent simple goiter, but the cure of goiter is a medical problem. All persons with goiter should be under medical supervision.

Vitamins in general

Nearly 20 vitamins that are known or believed to be important to human well-being have thus far been discovered. A few more vitamins are known to be important to such creatures as fish, chickens, or insects, but not to people.

When you at a variety of food you are pretty sure of getting a well-rounded assortment of the vitamins you need – except perhaps vitamin D. And you may also be getting other vitamins still undetected in food, but serving you just; the same. Separate doses of one or more selected vitamins are best taken under doctor’s orders.

The following vitamins are of practical importance in planning family meals.

Vitamin A

Vitamin A is important to the young for growth. And at all ages it is important for normal vision, especially in dim light.

In one way or another, many vitamins help protect the body against infection, and vitamin A’s guard duty is to help keep the skin and the linings of nose, mouth, and inner organs in good condition. If these surfaces are weakened, bacteria can invade more easily.

You can get vitamin A from some animal foods. Good sources are liver, egg yolks, butter, whole milk and cream, and cheese made from whole milk or cream. Fish-liver oils, which children take for vitamin D, are rich in vitamin A besides.

From many vegetable foods you can get carotenes, which are yellow-orange substances that the body converts into vitamin A. Dark-green and deep-yellow vegetables are especially good sources. Margarine, a vegetable fat, is now fortified with vitamin A or carotene.
Some vitamin A can be stored in the body. A savings account of vitamin A savings account of vitamin A in your system may be drawn upon, if in any emergency this vitamin is wanting in the diet.

The B-vitamin family

Thiamine, riboflavin, and niacin are the most generally known and best understood of the B-vitamins. Getting enough of these in food helps with steady nerves, normal appetite, good digestion, good morale, and healthy skin.

When these B’s are seriously wanting in diet, ills such as beriberi and pellagra follow. But far more common in this country are borderline cases. The chronic grouch, the lazy bones, the nervous man, the housewife with vague complaints, may be showing effect of food providing too little of these important B’s.

Other B-vitamins are folic acid and vitamin B12, booth important for healthy state of the blood. They are being used medically with success in treating two hard-to-cure diseases—pernicious anemia and sprue.

Few foods contain a real wealth of B-vitamin, but in a varied diet many foods contribute some and so build an adequate supply.

One way to make sure of raising your B level is to use regularly bread and flour made from whole grain or enriched so as to restore important B-vitamins.

Getting ample milk in the diet is important for B’s, too—for riboflavin in particular.

B-vitamins play a part in converting fuel in foods into energy. It follows that anyone who eats large quantities of starches and sugars also requires more food containing B-vitamins.

Vitamin C

The first vitamin separated from food was vitamin c, also called ascorbic acid. Tissues throughout the body can’t keep in good condition without vitamin C.

When diet is very low in this vitamin, gums are tender and bleed easily, joints swell and hurt, and muscles weaken. In advanced stages of vitamin C deficiency, the disease called scurvy results. This misery used to attack sailors on long voyages when they got no fresh food. In time, they found they could fight scurvy with lemon, lime or orange juice added to rations. Much later, vitamin C, the scurvy-fighter itself, was discovered.

Scurvy is rare now in this country. But many people do not get as much vitamin C as they need for best health.

You need some food rich in vitamin C daily because the body can’t store much of this vitamin.

All of the familiar citrus fruits are bountiful sources of vitamin C. Half a glass (4 Ounces) of orange or grapefruit juice, fresh, frozen, or canned, goes far toward meeting a day’s needs. The same is true of half a grapefruit, a whole orange, or a couple of tangerines or lemons.

Other worthwhile sources of vitamin C include tomatoes and tomato juice, canned or fresh; fresh strawberries and cantaloupe; also raw cabbage and some green vegetables such as broccoli, green pepper, brussels sprouts, kale, spinach; potatoes and sweet potatoes.

Vitamin D

Vitamin D is especially important to the young, because it works with mineral to form straight, strong bones, and sound teeth. An individual should get some of this vitamin regularly, at least through the growing stage. It is also important for pregnant women and nursing mothers.

We get vitamin D from sunshine and from certain foods. The sun’s rays striking the skin change certain substances in the skin into vitamin D. Valuable food sources of vitamin D are egg yolk, butter, salmon, tuna, sardines, milk to which vitamin D has been added.

We get vitamin D from sunshine and from certain foods. The sun’s rays striking the skin change certain substances in the skin into vitamin D. Valuable food sources of vitamin D are egg yolk, salmon, tuna, sardines, milk to which vitamin D has been added.

From baby days on, children can make good use of sunshine. But they should be protected well against sunburn or sunstroke. They can’t get much vitamin D from the sun when they wear heavy clothes for cold weather, or when sunlight is cut off by clouds, smoke, fog, dust or ordinary window glass.

Young children sometimes need a supplement to the vitamin D they get from sunshine and food. This supplement may be a special vitamin D preparation or one of the fish-liver oils prescribed by their physician.

Fats

Fats play several roles in the body. They are a primary source of energy. Certain kinds furnish vitamin A or D, and some—fish-liver oils, for example—provide both. Moreover fats help the body make use of these vitamins. Several fats and oils, especially those from plant sources, furnish essential fatty acids.

Some fat is needed daily, but the total mount should be moderate. Vegetable oils may well be part of the total. Keep in mind that you get a good deal of fat from such foods as meat, whole milk and its products, and egg yolk, which contain fat naturally, and from many of the popular snack foods.

Fuel

For the body’s energy in work and plan, fuel must come from food. The value of foods for this purpose is figured in calories. Main sources are fats, starches, and sugars, but all foods furnish calories—some many, some few, in a given-size portion.

Your needs for food as fuels depend mainly on two things the size of your body and how active you are. An average-size middle-aged man who is a desk worker and is only moderately active outside the office needs about 2,700 calories from daily food. A fast-growing, lively teenager, boy or girl, may need more calories than this grown man.

If your body weight stays about right for your height and build, it’s a sign that fuel intake from food matches your needs. The calories are taking care of themselves.

But suppose you are overweight . . . . . . what then?

When the body gets more food energy than it can use, it stores up the excess as fat. Accumulation of too much fat is sometimes termed the most frequent malnutrition problem in this country. To put it more plainly, many people eat too much.

Controlling weight

If you are under 20 years of age, or are 15 to 20 percent over normal weight, don’t try to reduce except under a physician’s guidance. This is also advisable if you are a young mother, or have anything wrong with your heart or other organs. If you are not in these groups, and need to reduce, take it slowly. A loss of a pound or two a week is plenty.

To reduce calories without starving your body of its other needs:

Eat three balanced meals, including foods from each of the following basic groups every day—
Milk and cheese. — Fluid or dry skim milk and buttermilk and cheese made from skim milk are lower in calories than other types of milk and cheese.

Meat, poultry, fish, eggs. — Prepare and serve them without added fat or rich gravies and sauces. Trim fat from meats.

Vegetables and fruits. — Eat a variety — yes potatoes, too. But take them straight—vegetables without cream sauce or fat, fruit without sugar and cream.

Bread and cereals — Choose whole-grain, enriched, and restored kinds. Although these are no lower in calories than other kinds, they are more nutritious.

Avoid high-calorie foods like the fat on meat, cooking fat, salad oil, fried foods, gravies and rich sauces, nuts, pastries, cakes, cookies, rich desserts, candies, jellies, jams, and alcoholic and sugar-sweetened beverage.

Watch the amount of foods you eat . . . small servings mean fewer calories. If hungry between meals, have a piece of fruit or crisp vegetable or perhaps milk or a simple dessert saved from mealtime. This way you’re less likely to be tempted by high-calorie foods.

Choose a variety of foods for daily meals. If you do, there’s a better chance of supplying body needs than if you limit yourself to only a few.

If underweight you need three balanced meals, as overweight’s do. But to these meals you can freely add the extras shunned by the weight reducers—such as rich gravies and desserts, salad dressing and jams. And you can well take large servings and seconds at meals and some extra food as between-meal snacks.

Finding out what’s in foods

Taking foods apart chemically, scientists are learning more exactly, nutrient by nutrient, what each familiar food can provide for the body’s needs.

Up to you

To get all the nutrients needed, it’s wise to choose a variety of foods—but a well-planned variety. You will be off to a good start nutritionally if you use a food plan, such as the one given on pages 14 to 15, as a guide in choosing the kinds and amounts of food to include in a week’s meals. This plan, worked out by nutritionists, shows one way to be sure of getting needed quantities of protein, mineral, and other nutrients form food.

You are following through effectively when you cook by up-to-date methods that keep delicate vitamins and minerals from being lost.

And you can round out a family nutrition program by making mealtime interesting and food associations pleasant. For, after all, foods must be eaten to count for good nutrition. You can, for example …

• Make a collection of nutritious recipes that the whole family enjoys, and use them reasonable often. When re-using one of these favorites, vary the other foods that make up the meal.

• If an inexpensive dish seems dull, vary flavor with seasonings, or combine with other foods in different ways.

• Use contrast in food colors, flavors, textures. Some bright-colored food and something crisp, for example, can heighten the eye appeal and appetite appeal of a meal.

• Introduce a new food to a young child in sample tastes, and at the start of a meal when he is hungry . . . and if he doesn’t like it at first, try another day.