Build a Better Salad

*Do the endless options at the salad bar have you stumped? Lettuce show you
the way with this detailed guide*

Salad Starter: Lettuce The darker the leaf, the more vitamins it contains.
Look for spinach, romaine, arugula, and chicory to get the most folate and
beta-carotene — an antioxidant that helps rid your body of disease-causing
chemicals in addition to protecting your eyes and skin. Love your iceberg?
"Mix dark greens with lighter ones to tone down their bitter taste," says
Jackie Newgent, R.D., a nutritionist and culinary instructor at the
Institute of Culinary Education in New York City.
Produce Junction: Fruits and Vegetables The more colorful your mix of
vegetables, the more nutrients you'll consume. Fill your plate with these
nutritional superstars first — theyoffer the most vitamins and minerals per
bite. Cherry tomatoes are rich in lycopene and may help ward off
cardiovascular disease in women. Broccoli boasts vitamin C, beta-carotene,
fiber, and calcium.
When you face a rainbow selection of peppers, green means stop: Red and
yellow peppers contain more than twice the amount of vitamin C than the
green ones, which are really just unripe versions of the more colorful
varieties. You can never go wrong with carrots, one of the best sources of
beta-carotene.
Even though they may look like decoration, alfalfa sprouts are loaded with
vitamins and minerals and cost you very few calories. To avoid the risk of
foodborne illnesses like salmonella and E. coli, choose cooked sprouts —
they'll look less green and less crisp.
Some vegetables you should limit: Corn, artichoke hearts, beets, and
sun-dried tomatoes are popular salad bar staples, but their high sugar and
starch content means calories add upquickly without providing much of a
nutritional benefit. For instance, sun-dried tomatoes have 139 calories per
cup and beets weigh in at 75 for the same portion — compared with the 44
calories found in 1 cup of broccoli.
All fruit is not created equal. With no water to take up space, dried fruit
packs a high caloric punch, especially if you're using a big serving spoon.
Avoid large portions of dried cranberries (108 calories for 1/4 cup) and
raisins (92 calories for the same size portion).
Stick with fresh fruit like berries, pears, or orange slices. These treats
will sweeten your salad without too many calories (oranges have 22 calories
for 1/4 cup), and their high water content will help keep you full.
A Meaty Issue: Protein Protein is a must-have, since the nutrient keeps you
satisfied and prevents cravings. Think lean: Opt for tuna, salmon, tofu,
beans, chickpeas, or skinless chicken or turkey, and keep portions
small.Three ounces — the size of a deck of cards or a computer mouse — is a
reasonable amount. Beware anything two-toned; the extra skin means extra
calories and fat.

Fat Facts: The Extras Add Up Limit yourself to one healthy, monounsaturated
fat per salad (aside from the dressing), such as nuts, seeds, olives, or
avocado. Ten olives or 1/4 cup of nuts (the size of a golf ball) are
surprisingly satisfying.
Cheese is high in saturated fat and sodium and is not the best source of
calcium for the calories, says Lisa Young, Ph.D., R.D., an adjunct professor
of nutrition at New York University and author of The Portion Teller. If you
can't lose the cheese, limit it to 1 ounce (about four dice worth) and go
for lower-fat versions like goat or mozzarella instead of cheddar or blue.
Or mix half low-fat with half regular cheese. "In our study, women didn't
taste any difference when we combinedlow-fat cheese with regular," even
though the calorie count was cut almost in half, says Barbara Rolls, Ph.D.,
professor of nutritional sciences at Pennsylvania State University and
author of The Volumetrics Eating Plan.
Craving carbs? Crush three or four crackers or baked chips onto your salad.
Don't sabotage a healthy meal with croutons. They're nutritional minefields,
made with enriched wheat flour and drenched in oil.
Dress to Impress: Salad Dressings Watch the serving size when you hit the
dressing: Even honey-mustard dressing weighs in at more than 200 calories
per 1/4 cup. One ladle (about 1/4 cup) of full-fat ranch or Caesar packs 300
calories. Two ladles are the equivalent of two hot-fudge sundaes. "Ideally,
you want to go for 1 tablespoon of dressing, which is what would fill half a
shot glass," Dr. Young says. If you choose low-fat dressing, you can double
that. A plastic takeout dressing container holds about 2 tablespoons, sofill
accordingly.
Walk right past that fat-free French. A recent study found that people who
ate salads with fat-free dressing absorbed fewer essential nutrients than
those with fat in their salads, and that reduced-fat dressing boosted
absorption of good-for-you nutrients like beta-carotene and lycopene
compared with fat-free. A little fat is necessary to help your body process
vitamins.
We all know that oil and vinegar is better than creamy dressing — it's lower
in fat and calories, and the fat you take in from the olive oil is the
heart-healthy kind — but do some maneuvering to save calories. "Typically,
regular vinaigrettes, like a balsamic, are three parts oil to one part
vinegar. So when trying to lose weight, do the reverse: three parts vinegar
to one part oil," Newgent says.


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