The key to a healthy diet is to:
- Eat the right amount of calories for how active you are, so that you balance the energy you consume with the energy you use. If you eat or drink too much, you'll put on weight. If you eat and drink too little, you'll lose weight.
- Eat a wide range of foods to ensure that you're getting a balanced diet and that your body is receiving all the nutrients it needs.
Base your meals
on starchy carbohydrates
Starchy
carbohydrates should make up just over one third of the food you
eat. They include potatoes, bread, rice, pasta and cereals.
Choose wholegrain varieties (or eat potatoes with their skins on)
when you can: they contain more fibre, and can help you feel full for longer.
Most of us should eat more starchy foods: try to include at least one
starchy food with each main meal. Some people think starchy foods are
fattening, but gram for gram the carbohydrate they contain provides fewer than
half the calories of fat.
Keep an eye on the fats you add when you're cooking or serving these
types of foods because that's what increases the calorie content, for example
oil on chips, butter on bread and creamy sauces on pasta.
Eat lots of fruit and vegetables
It's recommended that we eat at least five portions of a variety of fruit and veg every day. It's easier than it sounds.Why not chop a banana over your breakfast cereal, or swap your usual mid-morning snack for a piece of fresh fruit?
Unsweetened 100% fruit juice, vegetable juice and smoothies can only ever count as a maximum of one portion of your 5 A DAY. For example, if you have two glasses of fruit juice and a smoothie in one day, that still only counts as one portion.
Eat more fish –
including a portion of oily fish
Fish is a good source of protein and contains many vitamins and
minerals. Aim to eat at least two portions
of fish a week, including at least one portion of oily fish. Oily
fish contains omega-3 fats, which may help to prevent heart disease.
If you regularly eat a lot of fish, try to choose as wide a variety
as possible.
Cut down on
saturated fat and sugar
Saturated fat in our diet
We all need some fat in our diet, but it's important to pay attention to
the amount and type of fat we're eating. There are two main types of fat:
saturated and unsaturated. Too much saturated fat can increase the amount of
cholesterol in the blood, which increases your risk of developing heart
disease.
The average man should have no more than 30g saturated fat a day. The
average woman should have no more than 20g saturated fat a day, and children
should have less than adults.
Saturated fat is found in many foods, such as:
- hard cheese
- cakes
- biscuits
- sausages
- cream
- butter
- lard
- pies.
Sugar in our diet
Regularly consuming foods and drinks high in sugar increases
your risk of obesity and tooth decay.
Sugary foods and drinks, including alcoholic drinks, are often high
in energy (measured in kilojoules or calories), and if eaten too often,
can contribute to weight gain. They can also cause tooth decay, especially
if eaten between meals.
Many packaged foods and drinks contain surprisingly high amounts of free
sugars. Free sugars are any sugars added to foods or drinks, or found naturally
in honey, syrups and unsweetened fruit juices.
Cut down on:
- sugary fizzy drinks
- alcoholic drinks
- sugary breakfast cereals
- cakes
- biscuits
- pastries
These foods contain added sugars: this is the
kind of sugar we should be cutting down on, rather than sugars that are
found in things such as fruit and milk.
Food labels
can help: use them to check how much sugar foods contain. More than 22.5g of
total sugars per 100g means that the food is high in sugar, while 5g
of total sugars or less per 100g means that the food is low in sugar.
Credit: NHS choice
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