Cool tips for people who likes cooking like me :).
- Use herbs, vinegar, tomatoes, onions and/or fat-free or
low-fat sauces or salad dressings for better health, especially if you
have high blood pressure or high cholesterol.
- Use your time and your freezer wisely. When you cook
once, make it last longer by preparing enough for several other meals.
Freeze it and have a ready-made healthy treat for the next time you are
simply too tired to bother.
- A smoothie can cover a multitude of needs. Throw a
banana (you can keep them in the freezer for weeks) into your blender
along with frozen berries, kiwi or whatever fruit is around, some orange
or other 100% juice, some fat-free or low-fat yogurt. You can get 4–5
servings of fruit in one glass of yummy shake. Try getting your loved one
to sip on a smoothie. It’s easy, cool, refreshing and healthy.
- Prepared seasonings can have high salt content and
increase your risk for high blood pressure. Replace
salt with herbs and spices or some of the salt-free seasoning mixes. Use
lemon juice, citrus zest or hot chilies to add flavor.
- Prepare muffins and quick breads with less saturated
fat and fewer calories. Use three ripe, very well-mashed bananas, instead
of 1/2 cup butter, lard, shortening or oil or substitute one cup of
applesauce per one cup of these fats.
- Choose whole grain for part of your
ingredients instead of highly refined products. Use whole-wheat flour,
oatmeal and whole cornmeal. Whole-wheat flour can be substituted for up to
half of all-purpose flour. For example, if a recipe calls for 2 cups of
flour, try 1 cup all-purpose flour and 1 cup minus 1 tablespoon whole-wheat
flour.
- In baking, use plain fat-free or low-fat yogurt or
fat-free or low-fat sour cream.
- Another way to decrease the amount of fat and calories
in your recipes is to use fat-free milk or 1% milk instead of whole or
reduced-fat (2%) milk. For extra richness, try fat-free half-and-half or
evaporated skim milk.
Cooking is my favorite hobby :)
ReplyDeleteMe too Alia ^^
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