Source - http://news.yahoo.com/
By - Alexandra Sifferlin
Category - Holiday In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Alexandra Sifferlin
Category - Holiday In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Holiday In Miami |
Keeping track of what you’re supposed to eat to stay healthy can already be overwhelming, but it turns out that when you eat what can also be important for keeping your weight in control and for warding off chronic disease.
It turns out Mom was right: you should eat breakfast. And if you
don’t believe Mom, a growing body of studies shows that a good meal in
the morning can help your body prepare for the day to come, and lower
your risk of heart disease, diabetes and obesity. But what about the rest of the day’s meals? Here’s what nutrition experts say about the best times to eat and why.
Morning
Don’t skip breakfast. Reporting in the American Heart Association journal Circulation, Harvard
School of Public Health researchers studied the health outcomes
of 26,902 male health professionals ages 45 to 82 over a 16-year period.
They discovered that the men who skipped breakfast had a 27% higher
risk of heart attack or death from heart disease than those who honored
the morning meal. According to the scientists, skipping breakfast may
make you hungrier and more likely to eat larger meals, which leads to a
surge in blood sugar. Such spikes can pave the way for diabetes, high
blood pressure and high cholesterol levels, all risk factors that can
snowball into a heart attack.
Pass on the pastry. Eating in the morning — and what
you eat — is important for setting your blood-sugar pattern for the
rest of the day. “If you eat something that is whole grain, and has some
fat and protein to it, your blood sugar is going to rise slowly and go
down slowly. If you eat something refined, like an overly sweet cinnamon
roll, that’s the worse thing you can eat,” says Judy Caplan, a
registered dietitian nutritionist for the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics. “You get an insulin [spike] and [then] your blood sugar drops
too low so you get hungry again. That’s why people get into a cycle of
overeating junk.”
To ease your body into a more consistent blood-sugar pattern, try
some oatmeal, whole-wheat toast with almond butter, or an omelette with
spinach and avocado. Caplan’s favorite breakfast is a baked sweet potato
with a little bit of cinnamon and a small bit of butter. Who says you
have to eat just cereal in the morning?
Afternoon
Fuel up at the right time. In the 1960s,
nutritionist Adelle Davis popularized the mantra: “Eat breakfast like a
king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a pauper.” Why? Fueling up
makes sense earlier in the day, when your body needs the most calories
for energy. That’s why in many European countries, the largest meal of
the day occurs in the afternoon. “Ideally, you want to give yourself
fuel before you do harder labor,” says Caplan.
If you’re used to eating a smaller meal for lunch and a larger meal
later, you can still fill up with a hearty meal that
has significantly fewer calories. “A fairly large meal [that] is full of
salad and vegetables [is] big in volume, but light in calories,” says
Caplan.
Evening
Don’t overdo it. Calories get burned up no matter when
you eat them, so theoretically it’s O.K. to eat after dark. But if you
eat a heavy dinner, you’re not as likely to get rid of those calories
before you turn in. “What you don’t burn off is more likely to be stored
as fat, as you become less active toward the end of the day,” says
Tracy Lockwood, a registered dietitian at F-Factor Nutrition. “Eating
too close to bedtime increases your blood sugar and insulin, which
causes you to have a hard time falling asleep. Therefore, your last meal
should be the lightest of the day and should be eaten at least three
hours before you go to sleep.”
There’s another reason that late-night eating, after dinner, isn’t a
good idea. In most cases, those visits to the fridge involve sweet
treats such as ice cream and other desserts that can send blood sugar
soaring right before bed. That can lower levels of the hormone
melatonin, which is supposed to help you feel tired and relaxed, so
waning levels can make it harder to fall asleep. “A boost of energy
coming from your dinner, which may have consisted of pasta, rice or
bread, can act as a short-lived stimulant, causing you to feel more
awake immediately after a meal,” says Lockwood. “Also, it is not
recommended to lie down immediately after a meal, especially a big one,
since it increases your chance for acid reflux.”
Keep it light. “If you go to Europe and places where
there is not as much obesity as the rest of the world, people eat very
late and they’re not necessarily overweight. That’s because they are
walking everywhere and they are typically not eating a huge and heavy
meal,” says Caplan. “Instead, it may be avocado and toast with a side of
soup.”
There’s clearly no formula for healthy eating that applies to
everyone for maintaining a healthy weight and avoiding illness, but
paying attention to both what and when you eat might be a good place to
start.

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