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Tag Archives: Nutrition

An “EGG”cellent start to your day

Posted on May 2, 2017 by Danielle Reid Posted in Urban Suburban Mommy .

Are your mornings a crazy rush trying to get all your kids and self out the door on time?

(Of course you are. You’re a mom.)

Do you often skip breakfast in that  mad rush?

(Of course you do, because kids.)

 

What if I told you I could give you a healthy solution to fit that crazy schedule?

3 minutes. Yes, I’m serious. And even less on most days!! This is what can be ready and waiting for you.

      

Busy moms can have a good breakfast – and feed the family one too – with a little planning ahead. So how do you get a delicious egg breakfast ready in under 3 minutes? It’s all in the video:

Before you cringe – and I see you doing it – the microwave is perfectly safe, and an “EGG”cellent way to cook your eggs. With the right tools they are fluffy and soft, not runny and rubbery.

The secret is the cooking tool. Your tools must be either stone or ceramic.

3 Steps to Getting and “EGG”cellent start

Purchase a microwave Egg Cooker – best to be either ceramic or stone

   

Decide how you’d like your eggs

  1. Poached
  2. Scrambled
  3. Omelette

Add eggs & other ingredients – Check

Cook

Enjoy!

Why eggs?

A single large boiled egg contains:

  • Vitamin A
  • Folate
  • Vitamin B5
  • Vitamin B12
  • Vitamin B2
  • Phosphorus
  • Selenium

Eggs also contain decent amounts of:

  • Vitamin D
  • Vitamin E
  • Vitamin K
  • Vitamin B6
  • Calcium
  • Zinc

One egg has approximately 75 calories

One egg has 7 g of high quality protein

Eggs will keep you full longer and are perfect for breakfast, but make a nice change for lunch and dinner options too.

MYTH: Eggs cause Heart Disease

FACT: Eggs have 213 mg of Cholesterol. It was once thought this high level of Cholesterol contributed Heart Disease, however, this not the thought anymore.  SO EAT EGGS!

Want more breakfast ideas? CLICK HERE to join a 7 Day Breakfast Challenge that includes all types of meals(Oatmeal, Waffles, etc), a shopping list, and lots of great information!

For More information on how to get either of these products into your kitchen, please CONTACT ME at thepamperedchefbydanielle@gmail.com

Have an egg-cellent day


Danielle’s Pampered Kitchen..Healthy Meals in Minutes

Subscribe to my newsletter HERE

 

 

Tags: breakfast, egg-cellent pampered chef, eggs, fast, meal, Nutrition, three minutes .

The Hunger Games: How my three year old survives on yogurt and air

Posted on March 31, 2016 by Alexis Nicols Posted in The Struggle is Real .

Several months ago, my son comes home and asks me, “What’s for dinner?”

“Well,” I replied, “We’re eating roasted chicken, grilled rapini and mashed potatoes.”

“Sounds yummy!” he declared, wandering into the living room.

Translation: “I will be eating none of that, but as long as you have goldfish crackers, we’ll get along just fine.”

photo: Quinn Dombrowski

photo: Quinn Dombrowski

My son is such a picky eater that at one point I considered buying groceries and then just throwing them out. Among the things I’ve tried in the past:

  • Food songs
  • Food games
  • A giant toy kitchen with a bin full of plastic food and cooking utensils
  • Praying
  • Crying
  • Googling “nutrition through osmosis”

My son appreciates food in the abstract. He knows which foods are healthy and make you strong. Once, he licked a pea and said “Look how strong I am!” as he flexed his tiny biceps. He understands the notion of food, just not the consumption of it.

Hand in hand with his limited palate is the particularity with certain foods and how they must be prepared. Highlights include:

  • Raisin toast, so long as there are absolutely NO raisins in it
  • Peanut butter on toast, cut into SQUARES, NOT strips
  • Toast that is not brown
  • WHOLE bananas (I once had to pretend to surgically fuse two halves of a banana back together) that may or may not be pre-peeled, depending on the day of the week and whether or not Venus is in retrograde.
photo: Visa Kopu

photo: Visa Kopu

I am NOT a food expert. I’m not a registered dietician or a child psychologist. I’m just a mom. I’m just “The Help.” I did a lot of observing, paired with even more trial and error. While I will forever be on the outs with Pinterest (curse you and your Bento-Box lunches (see The Bento Bitch) and cookie-cutter sandwiches with strawberry floral arrangements and pint-sized Kombucha tea drinks!!) I have come up with a strategy of sorts. It won’t work for everyone, but it has worked for us so far:

  1. Grazing: While we still encourage him to sit at the table for longer than a bug’s breath, we also acknowledge that right now, he’s not a sit-down-and-eat-an-entire-meal kinda guy. Going to a restaurant is a bicentennial event. I compromised by giving him a selection of the healthiest foods I know he will eat, in small bite-sized pieces on a compartmentalized dish. We call it “smorgasbord” dinner. Most of the time, he’s totally game (apple slices, banana, cheese cubes, crackers with hummus or peanut butter – whatever he’ll eat that doesn’t come from a package with a cartoon on it.)
  1. Drinking his food: Confession. I buy the drinkable yogurts (cue collective gasp from the Judgey McJudgesteins). Since it’s one of the preferred food delivery systems, I mix it up by occasionally offering blended fruit smoothies. I can stick whatever I want in there, and more often than not, he loves them.
  1. Helping: The theory is, if he helps prepare the food, he’ll be more likely to eat his own creations. We’re not quite there yet, but I figure if I can keep him involved in the doing, he’ll make the connection to eating what he makes.
  1. Relaxing: Me, not him. I come from a long line of “Thou shalt not waste food” – Depression-era survivors on one family side and WW2 survivors on the other. Throwing food in the garbage gives me the sweats. I had to redirect my focus on what he was eating and give him smaller portions, replenishing when he finished what was on his plate.

After a lot (a LOT) of reading, I realized that toddlers are naturally picky eaters. Just because they watch you buy their favourite foods and then announce they will no longer eat any of them, doesn’t mean they’ll hate them forever. I cling to the hope that one day, he’ll return to a much wider variety of food, one bite at a time.

alexis-head-shotAlexis Nicols is a marketing specialist, actor and freelance writer. She lives in urban Toronto with her husband and two sons, but is definitely suburban at heart. She regularly dodges the slings and arrows of parenting boys, considers herself a connoisseur of stretchy pants and hopes that the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t a train.

For more musings from a mom who wonders when everything below the neck went National Geographic, visit her blog: stopstopcomehere.ca

Tags: dinner ideas toddlers, featuredxx, food, grazing, Nutrition, picky eater, picky toddler, toddler foods .

A lesson in food with Registered Dietitian Abbey Sharp

Posted on February 26, 2016 by urbansuburbanmommy Posted in Domestic Goodness, Fame & Fam .

Food writer, blogger and Registered Dietitian, we caught up with the ever-so-chic Abbey Sharp to ask her the questions you know you want to know about what we really should be eating.

What are super foods? 

I think they’re foods that some marketer or self professed “nutrition expert” decided instantly makes a dish healthy.

It’s a buzz word. It’s a health halo. It’s unfortunately not real.

No one food has the ability to promote good health, or bad health. And even these so-called super foods can appear in dishes that aren’t otherwise well balanced. Wild blueberry donuts are still deep fried sugar bombs. I think we need to stop labeling foods in general, but the term super food is one you won’t generally hear me use.

What 5 foods should every household have as nutritious staples?

I don’t think there are 5 universal foods for everyone, because we all have different likes, cultural practices and dietary needs. But some of my go to staples are : canned or dried beans and legumes, balsamic (or another flavourful) vinegar, plain Greek yogurt, oats, eggs.

STUDIO-13

Abbey Sharp

 So many women – especially moms – struggle with losing weight. Any advice on what to do and what not to do?

My first suggestion is to look at your motivation. Why do you want to lose weight? Most people would suggest that they want to live longer, be stronger, reduce the risk of disease and live a healthier life.

Well, you can do all of that without the scale ever budging.

Healthy eating and activity can promote health at any size. You may lose weight if you start to be more active, or if you start to eat a little more fresh produce, but the key to long term success is to change the goal to health, not weight loss.

Research also tells us that dieting doesn’t work. When we restrict our intake, we tend to feel so deprived that the moment we have access to some sort of “forbidden” food, we binge, we feel guilty, then we start the restriction cycle all over again – but even more stringently. The key is to just not get started down that path in the first place. Rather than focusing on restricting, I recommend a technique called mindful eating. It involves listening to your body and nourishing it as it needs. ABBEY-10There’s no depriving, there’s no moral weight assigned to foods – or you for eating those foods. You just eat what you want, start when you’re hungry and stop when you’re full.

If the thought of letting go of the control scares you and you’re convinced you’ll just go crazy and gain a bunch of weight, keep in mind that as soon as you give yourself permission to eat without guilt or fear of future denial, the desire to go overboard on any food will disappear and you will just focus on eating to feel strong, nourished and satisfied. Research tells us, mindful eating and having a healthy relationship with food is the secret to long term success.

When a mom is shopping at the grocery store, what ingredients should she be concerned about when buying food for her family?

When reading nutrition labels and comparing like products, I would aim to choose those with higher amounts of protein and fibre, and lower amounts of salt and sugar. Also, don’t be lured in by claims on the front of packages – they are technically true, but there are a lot of tricks that marketers use to make their product seem healthier than it may be. The back of the package has the facts, so always reference that.

As for ingredients, I would stay away from hydrogenated oils altogether, and try to limit an excess of added sugars, which can be identified by the suffix “ose” (sucrose, fructose, maltose etc.). Ideally, look for products with relatively short ingredient lists. For example, I would rather buy plain yogurt where the only ingredients are milk, and maybe some probiotics and added nutrients and where I had the option to add my own fruit or sugar, than a flavoured yogurt that has sugar, colours and other stabilizers. There are exceptions, and there is no question that some added ingredients can make getting dinner on the table easier and more likely, but when time permits, go simple and build from there.

What is your favourite part about being a Registered Dietician?

Well, I’m definitely a different breed of RD. I work only in media, so I do a lot of TV and writing, which I love. My favourite part of my job is definitely communicating nutrition to the masses in my YouTube channel and on TV, trying to make it fun, and hopefully debunking the myths out there perpetuated by unqualified “nutrition experts”. Healthy eating doesn’t have to be as complicated as the media tries to make it. Listen to your body, move your body, nourish your body and do what feels good.

ABBEY-STUDIO-1

Abbey Sharp is a Registered Dietitian (RD), avid food writer and blogger, TV and radio personality, food brand spokesperson, recipe developer, YouTuber, and the founder of Abbey’s Kitchen Inc. Abbey believes that a pleasurable relationship with food is inherently essential for good health and shares this unique philosophy through her regular contributions to The Marilyn Denis Show (CTV), Best Health Magazine, and countless other media outlets and publications. Abbey has worked as a celebrity Brand Ambassador and Spokesperson for dozens of popular food, health and lifestyle brands such as Electrolux, Frigidaire, Almond Board of California, Jamieson Vitamins, Labatt, Sunkist Citrus, and Panasonic. She is also often touted as the go-to personality for hosting popular food activations including Toronto’s Food & Wine and Taste of Toronto. Today you can catch Abbey’s cheeky approach to food and nutrition on her popular food blog, and Tastemade YouTube channel, Abbey’s Kitchen.

twitter@AbbeysKitchen

Tags: Abbey Sharp, Abbey's Kitchen, Diet, featuredxx, food, health, ingredients, Nutrition, Super foods, Weight Loss .

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