Slowing Down School Lunches

September 7, 2009 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Food, Health News 

Organization plans potlucks to raise awareness.

Food plays a central role in our lives. I can recall what was on the menu from dinners years ago, and I’m sure I’m not alone in associating good times with good food. But on the flip side of those fond memories is the queasy feeling I get when I walk down the frozen food aisle and glance at a package of fish sticks. The horror of school lunches immediately comes back to me. School lunches are in the spotlight every five years when the Child Nutrition Act comes up for reauthorization. The current act, which governs the National School Lunch Program that feeds more than 30 million children every school day, expires on Sept. 30.  Read more

New Report Targets Added Sugars

September 7, 2009 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Health News, advice on diet 

Sugar has been making headlines recently, and the news is anything but sweet for a nation addicted to its soft drinks and candy bars. Earlier this month, some of the U.S.’s largest food companies wrote a letter to Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack lobbying for more lenient import restrictions on sugar and claiming that unless policy changes are made “our nation will virtually run out of sugar.”

Well, according to a new scientific report from the American Heart Association, the U.S. could stand to do with less sugar in its diet. The association has released recommendations on the consumption of added sugars, which are sugars and syrups added during the processing of food and also at the table. These sugars differ from those that naturally occur, and a high intake of them, according to the statement’s lead author, Rachel K. Johnson, is implicated in a laundry list of health problems, from obesity and high blood pressure to heart disease and stroke. Read more

Don’t Fear Soy Foods

September 3, 2009 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Food, Vitamin 

It’s no wonder that men who have read the recent stories circulating about soy are confused. Some stories claim that soy foods, such as tofu and soy milk, can lead to breast growth or reduce testosterone levels. Other stories tout the benefits of soy, suggesting soy may help protect against prostate cancer. Women have wondered for years whether phytoestrogens affect their health, from menopausal hot flashes to breast cancer. Now men are left to wonder about possible unwanted effects of soy foods.

Soy contains compounds called isoflavones that are known as phytoestrogens, which are weak plant versions of the hormone estrogen. Fears that the amount of phytoestrogens in moderate amounts of soy foods could stimulate men’s breast tissue or reduce their testosterone are not Read more

More Fruits and Vegetables

September 3, 2009 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Food, advice on diet 

If all the pre-cut vegetables and fruits in the grocery store and news stories about the importance of produce for health has led you to believe that you’re the only one not eating many vegetables and fruits, relax. Once again, a study shows that most Americans aren’t, even though relatively minor changes in increasing fruits and vegetable consumption could pay off big in good health.

The latest study suggesting we’re still more talk than action when it comes to eating fruits and vegetables compares findings over the last 20 years from NHANES, a large federal diet and health survey. Nutrition experts urged us to aim higher when results from the 1988 to 1994 NHANES showed that among Americans ages 40 to 74, only 42 percent met the minimum recommendation of at least five servings of vegetables and fruits daily. Instead of increasing, the Read more

Where America’s biggest fast-food addicts live

September 3, 2009 by Admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Food, advice on diet 

While the state meat of Texas could be steak, the residents of Arlington apparently prefer their beef ground and round—with fries. And if they can’t find a burger (unlikely, given the density of drive-thrus), they’re just as happy to speed-eat a burrito. Even though authentic Mexican is everywhere, Arlingtonians keep seven Taco Bells in business.

We started our search for America’s fast-food addicts by tallying the number of Read more