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7 Simple Tips to Help Reduce the Fat Content in Your Favorite Meals

By Saeed Sikiru 


It's easier to keep track of the amount of fats you eat if you understand which foods are naturally high in fat. It's also easier to figure out pleasant and acceptable changes in your eating habits when you know something about how fats function in your favorite foods.

Below is some background information that will help you in planning meals and adapting your favorite recipes so they have a lower fat content.

Your ultimate aim is to balance your intake of higher-fat foods with those that are lower in fat. Creamy soups, meat, and dessert can still be part of your life. You'll just learn how to trade off a high-fat food for a low-fat one.

1. Fats in cooking - Fats give food flavor and texture, and are especially important in baked products. Eating would be depressing without fats, but they can be reduced; it only takes some experimentation.

Start by reducing the amount called for in a recipe by one third; if that works, you might want to consider cutting down further and see if the result is still acceptable, and so on. Use non-stick pans wherever possible.

2. Meats - One of the good sources of fat is meat. Even after all visible fat is trimmed from the meat you eat, a substantial portion still remains, running through the flesh.
If you crave beef, consider some of the leanest cuts like "select" grade eye of round, top round, the tenderloin, and sirloin.

However, remember that even closely trimmed meat is a high-fat item. And if it's not well trimmed and you eat it 3-4 times a week, you simply cannot manage a low-fat diet!
It's manageable if you eat meat once or twice a week and you change the nature of the meat you eat.

3. Poultry - This, along with fish, is the lowest in fat of our usual main-course foods. Chicken, though relatively high in cholesterol, is relatively low in the amount of fat calories it contains - 18-20 percent in a skinless breast, 47 percent in dark meat.

The skin doubles the fat content, because most of the fat is in and just under the skin. Don't eat it. Some people even remove it before cooking, since a good deal of the fat is absorbed through the flesh as it cooks.

4. Fish and Shellfish - Most fish and shellfish are relatively low in both fat and cholesterol, in comparison with meat. The cholesterol content of most shellfish is lower than that of canned tuna or broiled chicken breast.

While you should monitor the quantities of fatty fin food like mackerel and sword fish, you should also make a combined effort to include them in your diet because of the protective omega-3s they supply.

Try to plan at least two fish or shellfish meals a week. Shrimp, especially, modifies itself to delightful low-fat preparation methods. Watch amount and keep track of the cholesterol content; 300 milligrams daily is the recommended limit.

5. Eggs - These are second only to meat as a cholesterol source, and most dietary guidelines limit them to two or three a week. Eggs still need to be limited and traded off, especially since they are such a necessary in cooking; more of them are hidden in foods that you don't realize.

Egg yolks work to stabilize, bind, and moisturize, and in certain recipes it's hard to cook without them. Cutting out egg yolks can make some baked goods and other dishes dry and tasteless. In recipes calling for more than one egg, try using one whole egg and two whites for two eggs.

6. Dairy products - These and cheese are another major source of fat in our diet. Since they are considered an important source of calcium, however, when cutting down, you will still want to use them in low-fat versions.

7. Fats and oils - All fats and oils used in cooking, regardless of source, contain the same number of fat grams. Thus a tablespoon of butter has exactly the same number of fat grams as one of margarine. The difference is the degree of saturation.

All fat, saturated or not, provide 9 calories per gram of fat. Every time you use 1 tablespoon of any oil you use 13.6 grams of fat, the equivalent of 120 calories.

Finally, remember that adding or subtracting one food element does not "fix" all the problems implied in high-fat intake and, often disguises the problem by giving you the idea of "I'm doing something healthy". It's far better to make a fat gram allowance for yourself and "spend" it in a healthful way that satisfies you.


About the Author:
Saeed Sikiru is a fitness enthusiast, a full time blogger and freelance writer. He owns a blog where he writes regularly about Fitness and Health. You can also hire him for your writing projects at affordable cost.

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