Eat Your Carbs, They’re Good for You!
by Karen Cole-Peralta
zone3
You may think after all of the talk lately about carb reduction that
you need to avoid eating carbohydrates. But the exact opposite is the
case. The kinds of carbohydrates you get from fruits and vegetables are a
necessary basis of your daily diet. Instead of helping you “pack on the
pounds,” they actually help you to burn fat. They are also a major source
of fuel for your body, especially your muscles, brain and nervous
system.
You may think after all of the talk lately about carb reduction that
you need to avoid eating carbohydrates. But the exact opposite is the
case. The kinds of carbohydrates you get from fruits and vegetables are a
necessary basis of your daily diet. Instead of helping you “pack on the
pounds,” they actually help you to burn fat. They are also a major source
of fuel for your body, especially your muscles, brain and nervous
system.
Carbs occur in two types: simple and complex. They are broken down into
glucose, or blood sugar, which is metabolized by your body for energy.
Glucose not immediately used by you is stored in your muscles as glycogen,
but if your body has an excess of glycogen, it is converted into fat.
However, because carbs prime your metabolism, you need them in order to
burn fat. This is one of the major reasons you must not starve yourself
and eat too few carbs. You must eat a good intake of complex carbs, such
as those found in fruits and veggies.
Simple carbs, such as those found in candies and sweets, and also
fruit, are turned into glucose quickly. These are the kind which can add
to your weight problem. Complex carbs, such as those found in brown rice,
veggies, legumes (peas, beans and lentils), and whole grains breads and
cereals are digested and thus used at a much slower rate, giving your body
time to prime its metabolism.
There are four calories in each and every gram of carbohydrate.
Nutritionists say that 50% of your diet should consist of complex carbs.
Simple carbs are high in calories but low in vitamins and minerals. These
are the so-called “empty calories” that you find in sodas, deserts and
other such sweets, and to some extent in fruits -- especially fruit juices
and fruit juice drinks. You should be getting your major carb intake from
whole fruits, whole grains and vegetables.
Good high carb veggies are peas, peppers, pumpkin, radishes, spinach,
squash, succotash, sweet potatoes, tomatoes and turnips. Succotash, sweet
potatoes and green cooked peas are the highest in carbs. You need several
servings per day of complex carb foods such as these to maintain your
energy levels and keep you from getting those “sluggish” feelings that
make you feel sick and tired.
By eating five or more servings of fruits and vegetables every day, you
will be boosting your health through better carb consumption. The National
Cancer Institute recommends that you have fruit juice -- or better yet
fresh fruit – every day for breakfast. You should have a fresh fruit or
vegetable snack every day. You need to stock up on dried, frozen and
canned fruits and veggies. You must make these foods visible and easy to
access throughout your daily routine. And you have to “sample the
delicious spectrum” when it comes to the many different colors and
varieties of fruits and vegetables.
You will get your “five a day” if you eat one cup of dark, leafy
greens, one half cup of red tomatoes, one half cup of yellow peppers, six
ounces of orange juice and one half cup of blueberries. This is only one
example of how you can consume “five a day” of fruits and vegetables to
keep your complex carb ratio up. Please notice this includes only one
serving of fruit juice. Various nutrition experts state that you should
eat whole, fresh fruits more often than drinking fruit juice, which keeps
those simple sugars from adding to your weight problem.
This is because simple sugars are more concentrated in fruit juices
than in whole fruits. You should eat at least two cups of fruit a day, in
a variety of fresh choices, such as one small banana, one large orange and
one quarter cup of fresh or canned apricots or peaches. Also, eating fresh
fruit adds more fiber to your diet and helps flush toxins from your system
better than only drinking fruit juice does.
You should also eat plenty of dark, leafy green veggies, which are
among the best foods for you. Eat broccoli and kale, as well as mustard
greens and spinach. Also, you should eat “orange” veggies such as carrots,
sweet potatoes, pumpkin and winter squash. For peas and beans, among the
best are pinto beans, kidney beans, black beans, garbanzo beans, split
peas and lentils. Foods such as these are extremely healthy, low in fat,
and terrific for raising your energy levels.
Eating fruits and veggies will also greater lower your risk for cancer.
Researchers at the Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts
University have made “top ten” lists of the best antioxidant (anti-cancer)
fruits and vegetables. Here are some of the most antioxidant members of
the fruit and vegetable families of foods:
1) Fruits: prunes, raisins, blueberries,
blackberries, strawberries, raspberries, plums, oranges, red grapes and
cherries
2) Veggies: kale, spinach, Brussels sprouts,
alfalfa sprouts, broccoli, beets, red bell peppers, onions, corn and
eggplant
While the average American seldom gets as much as two servings of these
good foods per day, nutrition experts say that five to seven servings a
day need to become a staple of the ordinary American diet. You can easily
sneak these into your family’s eating patterns. Try serving raw veggies at
every meal, and take advantage of packaged, prepared veggies. Put veggies
into your breakfast and lunch, and start each family dinner with a mixed
green salad. Serve a salad entrée dish once per week, fill your spaghetti
sauce with vegetables, and begin ordering a weekly pizza – with an extra
serving of healthy vegetables.
If we were to eat more veggies and fewer processed foods, we as a
country would lose weight, clean out our clogged arteries ,
balance our blood sugar and shut down a large number of hospitals in the
process. This would roughly solve America’s growing health and obesity
problems – in a nutshell.
The information in this article was gleaned from a variety of
nutritious resources.
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