Food Item
Calorific Value
Nuts, almond butter, plain, with salt added
1582 Calories per cup
Nuts, almond butter, plain, without salt added
1582 Calories per cup
Oil, vegetable, almond
1927 Calories per cup
Raisins
306 Calories per 100 Gram
Bread, banana, prepared from recipe, made with margarine
186 Calories per individual loaf (include Keebler Elfin Loaves)
Banana Walnut Cake
421 Calories per Serving
Olives, ripe, canned (jumbo-super colossal)
7 Calories per jumbo
Wheat flour, white, all-purpose, enriched, bleached
455 Calories per cup
Sprouted Moong Salad
93 Calories per Small Bowl
Oil, corn and canola
1980 Calories per cup
http://www.lifemojo.com/health-guides/nutritional-value
Tag: calories
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Nutritional Value.
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How too much fruit can make you fat! Thought plenty of grapes or apples will keep you healthy? Think again..

Many of us believe that fruit can only be healthy and so make an effort to boost our intake – carrying apples in our bags, eating grapes or bananas at our desk and trying to stick to fruit salad for dessert.But it seems some people are actually eating too much fruit, leading to health problems such as obesity, and to tooth decay.
There’s no denying fruit’s health benefits – it’s packed with vitamins, fibre and antioxidants, which protect against disease.
It’s considered so beneficial that the government’s five-a-day guideline is a minimum recommendation for the amount of fruit and vegetables we should eat.
But while it is fine to exceed this amount if you are a healthy weight, if you are overweight or suffer from high cholesterol or diabetes, too much fruit could be trouble. It could also explain why, despite your healthy lifestyle, you’re piling on the pounds.
One of the problems is people forget that fruit – like all food – contains calories. And the calories in fruit can make you just as overweight as those in chocolate, explains Dr Carel Le Roux, consultant in metabolic medicine at Imperial College London.
Different people over-eat different things,’ he says. ‘But the people who eat fruit to excess are often weight-conscious. I’ve seen patients who can’t understand their obesity because they eat healthily, then it turns out they are eating way too much fruit or drinking fruit smoothies all day – glugging down 300 calories in a couple of minutes.’
And it’s not about lack of self-control. Fruit is packed with fructose (fruit sugar) and this doesn’t make you feel full.
When we eat sugar, our body releases the hormone insulin, which tells the brain we’ve had enough to eat, explains dietician Ursula Arens of the British Dietetic Association.
‘High insulin levels dampen the appetite, but fructose doesn’t trigger this insulin response, so the brain doesn’t get the message that you are full,’ she says.
Essentially, when we eat fruit we bypass this internal ‘stop button’, which could explain why some of us can absent-mindedly nibble away at slice after slice of melon or munch through a large bunch of grapes.
Weight gain isn’t the only health problem associated with too much fructose. It can increase levels of triglycerides, a type of blood fat known to be linked to heart disease.
Dr Le Roux says: ‘We tell patients with high cholesterol to be careful with fruit. Too much drives up triglycerides. Diabetics should also take care, as the high fructose content can raise blood glucose levels.
Then there’s the damage fruit can cause to teeth. Chewing fruit releases sugar in the mouth, where it attacks the teeth. Fruit juice or smoothies are even more of a problem, as the juicing or blending breaks down the fruit further, so more sugar is released in the mouth.
Teeth are particularly vulnerable to acidic citrus fruits, which can soften tooth enamel. Although the enamel will harden again after about 30 minutes, if you brushed your teeth immediately after drinking orange juice, you would brush away some enamel, raising the risk of dental erosion.
Dried fruit is another problem, because it’s not only high in sugar but is also very sticky.
Dr Anjali Shahi, a Cheshire-based dentist, says: ‘Little bits can stick to the teeth for a long time and dental cavities can result.’
She adds that raisins are as bad for the teeth as sweets. ‘This is a problem for children, who are often given raisins by health-conscious mums. I’ve noticed a rise in dental cavities now the healthy fruit message is so strong.’
Even those who don’t actually eat much fruit could be getting far more fructose than they realise – regular sugar that you add to your tea consists of 50 per cent glucose and 50 per cent fructose.
Fructose is often added to manufactured products, such as fizzy drinks, yoghurts and cereal bars in the form of glucose-fructose syrup. You can get as much as 30g of fructose from one fizzy drink.
So how much fruit is too much? Unlike salt and saturated fats, there is no recommended daily allowance for fructose. And this is unlikely to change soon.
As Ursula Arens, of the British
Dietetic Association, points out: ‘Too many nutritionists would jump up and down if the public picked up the message that eating an apple wasn’t good for them.’
Yet one possible guideline emerged after a recent study at Colorado University. Scientists looked at 4,500 people with no history of high blood pressure and discovered those who ate more than 74g of fructose a day increased their risk of the condition by up to 87 per cent.
Though this is the equivalent of ten apples or 30 oranges, you’d need only just over three large smoothies to top this figure (one smoothie contains around 23g of fructose).
It is worth noting, too, that bananas and some other fruits, such as strawberries, become richer in fructose as they ripen and some of the starch is converted to sugar.
The secret is to get your five a day with a mix of fruit and vegetables.
‘People who are obese or have heart conditions should limit their fruit to one portion a day, along with four portions of vegetables,’ says Dr Le Roux. ‘You’d still have plenty of antioxidants, but you’d bring your fructose levels and calories down.’
However,most people find fruit easier to eat and it should remain a key part of a healthy diet.
As Glenys Jones, a nutritionist at the Medical Research Council of Human Nutrition, says: ‘Everything in moderation. Just as you make a decision not to eat a packet of biscuits, you should think about portion control when it comes to fruit.’
She sticks to a banana and a glass of apple juice with her cereal, an orange mid-morning and an apple mid-afternoon. ‘And if I get the urge to eat chocolate at night, I’ll sometimes have raisins. Even so, I still limit how many raisins I eat.’
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1256509/Eating-fruit-make-fat.html -
Is Eating Sugar Really That Bad for Us?
Use of Palm Sugar negates the adverse effects of the present sugar we are using.
Story:
A lot of things being sold as foods have low or zero nutritional value aside from calories,” says Joel Kimmons, a nutritional epidemiologist with the CDC’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity. “From a health and culinary perspective, the foods that we feed our children, our families and ourselves need to have more than calories — they should include a wide variety of vitamins, minerals, protein, phytonutrients and fiber. The problem with sugar and other refined foods is that they dilute the nutritional content of your diet overall. It becomes more difficult to meet your nutritional requirements within your calorie limits every time you add sugar.”Yet we add so much. Those 22 teaspoons a day — which comprises all sweeteners put into foods during processing and preparation by the manufacturer and the consumer — amount to 156 pounds per person per year, according to the USDA. This figure is “shocking,” avows Anticancer author Servan-Schreiber, railing against what he calls “the sugar boom” and noting that in 1830, the average American ate only 11 pounds of sugar a year.
Right, but it’s everywhere. (Every four grams of sugar, as listed on food labels, equals about one teaspoonful.) And it goes by so many names. Maltodextrin, rice syrup, dextrose, galactose — to choose from two dozen. Especially ubiquitous, in a country whose government subsidizes corn production, is high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), a lower-cost alternative to cane sugar that was first developed in the 1950s, entered the processed-food scene bigtime during the late 1970s, and now represents between 40 and 50 pounds of our annual 156.
Many food activists, including Michael Pollan, point damning fingers at the fact that the industrialized world’s recent rise in obesity coincides with the mainstreaming of HFCS. For this, many blame HFCS’s high fructose content: 55 percent as compared to white sugar’s 50 percent. Several studies, such as one performed at the University of Texas in 2008, suggest that fructose metabolizes differently than glucose does and transforms into body fat much more rapidly than glucose does. Yet many, including a 2007 University of Maryland project, argue the opposite. “Based on the currently available evidence,” reads the Maryland report, “the expert panel concluded that HFCS does not appear to contribute to overweight and obesity any differently than do other energy sources.”
http://www.alternet.org/story/145367/is_eating_sugar_really_that_bad_for_us -
10 Easy ways to Cut Calories
1. Read labels before you buy
You’ll be astounded at how many calories some foods contain. Don’t just check out the amount per 1oz or per 100g but the amount the whole package contains and think about how much of it you would normally eat. Then decide whether to leave it on the shelves or take it home to add to your waistline.
2. Use low fat dairy foods
Choosing low fat does not always reduce calories. Many foods are pumped with sugar or thickeners to make up for the lack of fat. However, low fat dairy products do usually offer substantial calorie reduction over their full-fat counterparts and, with most, there is little difference in taste or texture. This was not always the case. If it’s a while since you tried low fat cheese for example you’ll find it much improved!
3. Eat more vegetables
Instead of making meat the main event in your meal pile your plate high with veggies or salad. In general you should be looking to fill at least half your plate with these. Add vegetables to soups and stews to increase bulk without adding much to the calorie count. Stir fries and curries are also great for making a little meat and a lot of vegetables into a delicious meal.
4. Watch your portion sizes
Take note of the serving size on packaging and follow the guidelines by measuring out your food. Take care especially with snack foods and baked goods. Take a serving size out of the packet and put the rest away. For home cooked meals, a piece of meat should be about the size of a standard deck of cards not half an ox and a meal (excluding any separate servings of vegetables or salad) should be about the size of two clenched fists. You can always have more veggies if that doesn’t fill you up5. Eat at home
Restaurants and fast food places make it their business to get you to eat more food than you really need. That’s how they make their money after all. Instead, eat fast simple food at home. You can control what you serve. You can control how you prepare it. You can control your portion sizes. When you eat at home you choose exactly what and how much you eat.
6. When you do go out
Choose restaurants which serve healthy food and choose the healthiest dishes you can find on the menu or ask for something healthy to be prepared for you. You can request a smaller portion or a kid’s size or eat a couple of starters instead of a massive main course. Choose dishes prepared under the grill and with tomato-based rather than cream-based sauces. If you must have something sweet after your meal have coffee and a chocolate or two in place of dessert.
7. Cut down on alcohol
There are a huge number empty calories in alcoholic drinks. If you drink a lot it can really pile on the pounds. And then as often as not you’ll end up snacking on peanuts or other high calorie nibbles along with your drink. A huge added danger with alcohol is that it lowers your inhibitions, mysteriously dissolving your willpower and making healthy eating the last thing on your mind.8. Choose your snacks with care
It makes sense to eat something about every three hours so that you don’t get too hungry and make poor food choices at meals, grabbing a hamburger and fries because you let yourself go too long without eating. But choose your snacks wisely because those calories can mount up. It’s best to snack on fruit or chopped vegetables if you can or maybe a cracker or two and not overload on calories with potato snacks and chocolate.
9. Cooking not baking
There’s nothing like a baking session for piling on the pounds is there? Because you never bake just for others or eat just one serving do you? Turn your culinary talents to serving up delicious healthy main meals instead. Take pride in your fantastic lunches and dinners and not in your double-choc chip cookie recipe.
10. Plan your food
Use low-calorie and healthy cookbooks to plan your food with care each week before you go shopping. You’ll be less tempted by food you don’t need in the shops if you have a list and as you’ll know exactly what’s for dinner each evening, you won’t ever have to send out for pizza!
Copyright 2005, Janice Elizabeth Small
About the Author
Janice Elizabeth is a weight loss coach and author of “The Diet Exit Plan”.
Request her FREE 15 page report “How to lose weight without dieting – 7 secrets the diet industry doesn’t want you to know” at
http://www.healthstatus.com/articles/10_Easy_ways_to_Cut_Calories.html -
8 Foods You Think Are Healthy … But Aren’t.
They may be lean and green, but they pack quite a salty punch.
When you think of high sodium foods, what do you see? I envision salt bombs like the Big Mac (1040 mg per serving) and Campbell’s Creamy Chicken Noodle Soup (890 mg per serving). But the shocking fact is that many “healthy,” organic and vegetarian foods are high in sodium, too.
The USDA estimates that 77% of the sodium in an average American’s diet comes from packaged and processed foods (while only 5-6% of sodium is added while cooking or eating), so if you’re into convenience – even the organic, natural kind – you might want to look a little closer at the label.
How do your favorite green convenience foods add up?
1. Amy’s Curried Lentil Soup sounds like a quick and tasty treat, but packs 680 mg sodium per serving.
2. Annie’s Organic Alfredo Shells and Cheddar is one of my all-time comfort foods, but with 670 mg sodium per serving I should reconsider my definition of comfort!
3. GardenBurger’s Flame Grilled Soy Burger, though vegan, contains 500 mg sodium per serving.
4. Yves Classic Veggie Brats pack a whopping 840 mg per weiner! And ask yourself, will you honestly eat just one?
5. Quorn Garlic & Herb Chik’n Cutlets may be meatless, high in fiber and made from pretty natural ingredients but they still contain 570 mg of sodium per serving.
6. Boca Meatless Italian Sausage has significantly less fat than its meaty cousin, but it is definitely not low on sodium: 650 mg per serving.
7. Annie’s Naturals Goddess Dressing is such a delicious, creamy delight on garden fresh greens, but with 390 mg of sodiumper serving, it makes for a pretty salty salad.
8. The profits from Newman’s Own Organic Marinana Sauce might go to help good a cause, but consider what it might do to your own body’s cause with 550 mg of sodium per serving.
The Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for sodium is 2400 mg, but for optimum health you should not exceed 1500-2000 mg per day, and the USDA standard for “healthy” food is that it must not contain more than 480 mg of sodium per serving.
What’s the real lesson here? Processed foods, even organic and vegetarian ones, don’t provide the optimal health for our bodies. Sure, you may grab “˜em once in awhile when you don’t have time to cook a meal from scratch. While these organic and vegetarian meals are better than stopping at the drive-thru, nothing beats creating your own meals from whole foods, which will always be the cornerstone of a truly healthy diet.
http://www.alternet.org/story/143344/8_foods_you_think_are_healthy_…_but_aren%27t?page=entire
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