Healthy Supermarket Shopping Guide for People with - TopicsExpress



          

Healthy Supermarket Shopping Guide for People with Diabetes Choices, decisions - confusion? Eating healthy at home starts with a plan - how to navigate the supermarket and buy the best healthy food you can afford. Use this guide on your next shopping trip. Vegetables and Fruit Choose a variety of fruits and vegetables - they are nutrient-rich, high in fiber, and low in calories than most prepared snack foods. Fresh, in season, is a great choice, but frozen versions are always handy. Vegetables: Canned vegetables have more sodium. Prepare vegetables raw, lightly steamed, roasted or grilled. Avoid adding lots of added butter, cheese or sauce. Except for the starchy vegetables, most have less calories and carbohydrate than fruit: - Broccoli (and other cruciferous vegetables-cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, cabbage) - Onions - Carrots - Spinach - Celery - Sweet potatoes - Potatoes (baked, not French fries or tater tots!) - Asparagus - Mushrooms - Peppers - Tomatoes - Cucumbers - Green beans - Greens - Beets - Garlic - Fresh lettuce mixes - dark greens Fruit: Fruits contains carbohydrates, fiber, vitamins, minerals, and anti-oxidants. The portions of fruit are important to a diabetic meal plan. Fresh fruit is best, but frozen or canned without sugar added is convenient and economical. If using fruit juices, be sure they are 100% juice, not fruit drinks, punches or sweetened soda. A 4 oz. serving of juice is equal to a medium piece of fruit, or 15 grams of carbohydrate: - Oranges, all citrus - Banana - Grapes - Berries - Apples - Peaches - Pineapple - Melons - Dried fruit - raisins, apricots (2 tblsp. is one serving) Grains and Starches These foods are generally considered “complex carbohydrates,” which are turned into glucose to give your body energy. Because of the complex chemical structure, as well as the benefit of fiber, these non-sweet carbohydrates are absorbed more slowly and are an important nutritional contribution to the diabetic diet: - Whole grain flours - Whole grain breads (>3 grams of fiber per slice) - Brown rice (more fiber than white rice) - Whole grain flour tortillas (whole wheat low fat wraps) - Corn tortillas - Whole grain couscous, nice change from rice - Whole wheat pasta (Dreamfields or Barilla Plus) - Cereals with whole grains and very little added sugar (< 3 grams of fat, < 6 grams of sugar, > 5 grams of fiber per serving) - Whole grain first ingredient - High fiber, low sugar cereal bars - Oatmeal, preferably 1-minute cooking, not instant (high in sodium) Legumes Legumes are very high in fiber, protein and carbohydrate and low in fat. Dried beans need to be soaked before cooking, and canned need to be rinsed of sodium before use. Blood glucose will rise slowly when consuming legumes. - Black beans - Garbanzo or chick peas - Cananelli, navy, pinto beans - Lima beans - Lentils - Soy beans and edamame Dairy Dairy foods are the best source of calcium and Vitamin D. Select the lowest fat versions to reduce intake of saturated fat: - Skim or 1% yogurt - Low fat or fat free yogurt without added sugar - Nonfat sour cream - Low sugar and low fat frozen desserts - Low fat cottage cheese, ricotta cheese - Low fat cheeses - processed cheese will have more sodium - Nonfat half and half ....... more... xfactor177.blogspot/2013/09/supermarket-guide-diabetes.html
Posted on: Thu, 05 Sep 2013 00:58:40 +0000

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