By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Healthy diets need not fall by the wayside simply
because Americans are eating out more today than ever
before. Dr.
Melissa Mixon, Mississippi State University extension
nutritionist, said it is possible to eat right while dining
out. "It is
not difficult to eat well while at a restaurant," Mixon
said. "It just requires the will power to make the healthy
selections on the menu. "Moderation
is the key. Every food can fit into a healthy diet, just
maybe not as often or in as great a quantity." The
National Restaurant Association recently released a study of
15,699 Americans age 18 and older. It found that in 1996,
Americans ate 4.1 meals away from home each week. In 1991,
the weekly average was 3.8 commercially-prepared
meals. Of the
meals eaten away from home, lunch -- at a rate of 2.2 a week
-- was the most popular. Dinner followed with 1.3 a week,
then breakfast with 0.7 commercially prepared
weekly. But
despite all the dining away from home, Americans can still
keep balanced diets. "Restaurants
have taken great strides in offering health-conscious menu
items," Mixon said. "Consumers are saying they want
healthier foods and the restaurant industry is
responding." Tips for
choosing healthy foods at restaurants include: - Choose
non-fried hors d'oeuvres. - Order
an appetizer as the main course, then add healthy sides.
This offers a smaller portion than typical main
dishes. - When
eating breakfast out, choose cereals or muffins. Most other
breakfast items are fried and high in fat
content. - Order
sauces and dressings on the side and add
sparingly. -
Instead of a basket of bread, ask for a slice. - Choose
steamed vegetables when possible. - When
you're full, ask that the food be taken away. If enough
remains, have it boxed for later. - Choose
fresh fruit for dessert, or on occasion, split a high
calorie, high fat dessert with several people. Mixon
said skipping a meal before dining out is not good. This
leaves the body hungrier with the tendency to eat more. She
also suggested eating slowly and spending more time
socializing. "If you
know you're going to eat a meal high in fat content, do
tradeoffs," Mixon said. "Look at the whole day and your
whole diet, and eat other low-fat meals to
compensate. "Normally-healthy
individuals can eat whatever they want as long as they
compensate for it somewhere else in their diet." Mixon
said that even though it is possible to eat well whether at
home or away, more Americans are obese today than ever
before. But generally, until people start eating fewer
calories and exercising more, they will continue to gain
weight, regardless of where and what they eat. Release:
Feb. 3, 1997
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
Maintain Diets
When Dining Out
Contact: Dr. Melissa Mixon, (601) 325-3080
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce97/970203mm.htm
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