Eating Well with Canada`s Food Guide
Transcription
Eating Well with Canada`s Food Guide
Eating Well with Canada’s Food Guide Canada’s Food Guide Defines and Promotes Healthy Eating for Canadians • It translates the science of nutrition and health into a a healthy eating pattern • It emphasizes the importance of combining healthy eating and physical activity 2 This Presentation will Give You Information on: • What amount of food you need: • Servings per day • What is a serving • What type of food to choose, and • The importance of physical activity 3 Eating Well with Canada’s Food Guide • Rainbow • Background image 4 Having the Amount and Type of Food Recommended and Following the Tips in Canada’s Food Guide will help: • Meet your needs for vitamins, minerals and other nutrients • Reduce your risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, certain types of cancer and osteoporosis • Contribute to your overall health and vitality 5 The Information Inside the Food Guide 6 What Amount of Food do You Need? 7 What is one Food Guide Serving? • A reference amount • Not necessarily what you would eat in one sitting • A number of ways are used to illustrate a “Food Guide Serving” 8 One Food Guide Serving of Vegetables and Fruit is: 125 mL (½ cup) fresh, frozen or canned vegetable or fruit or 100% juice 250 mL (1 cup) leafy raw vegetables or salad 1 fruit 9 One Food Guide Serving of Grain Products is: 1 slice (35 g) bread or ½ bagel (45 g) ½ pita (35 g) or ½ tortilla (35 g) 125 mL (½ cup) cooked rice, pasta, or couscous 30 g cold cereal 175 mL (¾ cup) hot cereal 10 One Food Guide Serving of Milk and Alternatives is: 250 mL (1 cup) milk or fortified soy beverage 175 g (¾ cup) yogurt 50 g (1 ½ oz.) cheese 11 One Food Guide Serving of Meat and Alternatives is: 75 g (2 ½ oz.) or 125 mL (½ cup) cooked fish, shellfish, poultry or lean meat 175 mL (¾ cup) cooked beans 2 eggs 30 mL (2 Tbsp) peanut butter 12 Handy Ways to Estimate Portions A small fist = about 1 cup A small palm = 3 ounce serving of meat, fish or poultry A thumb-tip = 1 teaspoon of fat 2 thumbs = 1 ounce cheese 13 A Balanced Meal: The Plate Model Milk Products 1/4 plate Meat & Alternatives Fruit 1/2 plate Vegetables 14 Remember: The type of food that you eat is as important as the amount that you eat! 15 Vegetables and Fruit - Major sources of: soluble fibre, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, phytochemicals - Key is variety of colours: 1 green & 1 orange per day - Enjoy those in season - Limit juice to 1 glass per day - Enjoy with no added fat, sugar or salt - Enjoy fresh, frozen, canned, dried - Have more vegetables than fruit 16 Grain Products - Are CHO: main source of energy for body (55 %) - High in insoluble fibre (bulk) and low kcal - Beware of what you put on them! - Attempt whole grains - Enjoy a variety & low fat/Na - Pick fortified products: vitamins, minerals, omega 3 fatty acids 17 Milk and Alternatives - Major source of calcium and vit D - Over 50 years of age will need daily Vit D supplement 10 µg (400 IU) in addition to servings on food guide - Pick low fat options: Yogurt (2% M.F. [milk fat] or less), Cheese (15% to 20% M.F. or less) - Pick fortified alternative products 18 Meat and Alternatives - Are protein: most people overeat on these! - Should provide 15 % of total daily energy - Include more non animal sources e.g. nuts, pulses, lentils, beans, tofu - Pick lean options - Include 2-3 servings fish per week (2 fatty sources) 19 Foods to be Limited: High calorie, salt, fat and sugar foods: • Cakes, pastries, muffins, donuts • Cookies, biscuits • Chocolate • Chips, salted nachos • French fries • Hamburgers, hot dogs, bacon, hash browns, salami, pepperoni, bologna • Foods in batter e.g. fish, veggies • Deep fried foods in general 20 Key word: MODERATION Healthy eating = enjoy foods, include all food groups, have a variety of foods within food groups, have occasional treats in small quantities, control food portions! 21 Counting Food Guide Servings in a Meal 22 Remember: Don’t skip meals as eating regular meals and snacks may help you to: - Control your appetite and avoid overeating - Keep your energy level high - Get all of the nutrients you need for good health - Manage weight by keeping your metabolic rate at its optimum level Find out what meal pattern works best for you: 3 small meals and 3 small snacks per day or simply 3 small meals! Don’t snack if not hungry! Carry healthy snacks around with you: in your car or in your bag! 23 For More Information Visit: www.healthcanada.gc.ca/foodguide 24