Search

Simple healthy food swaps: How to cut calories from fall favorites

As we head into fall and the nights get colder, many of us have the urge to fill up on hearty meals that warm us from the inside.

It’s time to break out the Crock-Pots, bake those freshly-picked apples, and start roasting those pumpkin seeds. But not all of these heartier dishes have to be diet-breakers.

New York-based dietician Tanya Zuckerbrot, founder of The F-Factor Diet, shares her favorite seasonal tips. From using seasonal fall flavors like cinnamon and nutmeg, to making root vegetables the hero ingredient on our plates, here’s how you can incorporate all the great things about fall, without dropping or destroying your diet.

Closed Captioning
apply | reset x
font

Pumpkin spice lattes, apple cider donuts: How to cut calories from fall favorites

Play Video - 4:41

Pumpkin spice lattes, apple cider donuts: How to cut calories from fall favorites

Play Video - 4:41

Cream of broccoli soup: Broccoli is known to pack a major nutritional punch, but when combined with heavy cream and cheese, its health benefits can drown. To get the nutrition of broccoli and the texture of a creamy soup, use unsweetened almond milk as a healthier alternative. Using a hand blender, mix onion, broccoli, vegetable broth, salt, and pepper with the almond milk to make a light-yet-tasty bowl of broccoli-based goodness. You can even sprinkle Parmesan cheese on top, and this tweaked version will still save you 200 calories per serving.

Pumpkin spice latte: Nothing says fall quite like one of these lattes, but before taking your first sweet sip, consider this: a nonfat medium PSL has close to 52 grams of carbs and 50 grams of sugar. That’s more carbohydrates than 3 slices of white bread! To enjoy the least caloric version of this fall-flavored treat, stick with the smallest size and forgo the whipped cream topping. If you want to slash calories even more, go with the iced version, which clocks in at 30 calories and 5 grams sugar less than its hot counterpart.

Spiked apple cider An apple a day may keep the doctor away, but ordering a spiked apple cider drink doesn't exactly have the same effect. Essentially apple juice with some spices and rum, spiked cider is often loaded with excess sugar. Ordering this drink in a restaurant can mean an additional 7 teaspoons of sugar stirred into your calorie intake.

For a warm fall-flavored cocktail that won’t put you into sugar-shock, try mulled wine. Simply start with a dry red wine and simmer with orange slices, cloves, cinnamon, and star anise for 15 minutes —the smell alone will warm your core, and the taste will leave you wanting more!

Maple glazed carrots: Any recipe with "maple" automatically brings fall to mind. While this great side dish is packed with nutrients like vitamin A and beta carotene from the carrots, the maple glaze often negates the root vegetable’s health benefits. With butter, maple syrup, and/or brown sugar, a 52-calorie cup of chopped carrots looks more like 250 calories! To add fall flavor to carrots without heaps of fat and sugar, roast them with a teaspoon of olive oil, salt, pepper, and seasonal spices like cinnamon and nutmeg instead.

Sweet potato casserole: People often consider sweet potatoes to be the healthier choice when compared to white potatoes, and they’re not wrong. Boasting vitamin A, vitamin C, potassium, fiber, and B vitamins, sweet potatoes are a nutritional powerhouse. Unfortunately, sweet potato casseroles are the opposite.

Traditional sweet potato casserole is made with ingredients like butter, brown sugar and miniature marshmallows — all of which tack on extra fat, sugar and calories. Casseroles are often made using canned sweet potatoes saturated in syrup, adding to the already high sugar content of this sweet side. The raw potatoes are naturally sweet, so they don’t need much to embellish their flavor. To get a fall-tasting sweet potato fix, just simply roast them in the oven with a touch of cinnamon.

Let's block ads! (Why?)

https://www.today.com/food/simple-healthy-food-swaps-cut-calories-fall-favorites-t117640

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "Simple healthy food swaps: How to cut calories from fall favorites"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.