Heart Healthy Diet Tips
Eating
to Prevent Heart Disease and Boost Heart Health
Weight control and regular exercise
are critical for keeping your heart in shape—but the food you eat may matter
just as much. A heart-healthy diet can reduce your risk of heart disease or
stroke by 80%. By understanding which foods and methods of cooking are
healthiest for your heart, you may be able to prevent or manage heart disease
and high blood pressure, and take greater control over the quality and length
of your life.
In
This Article:
- You can prevent heart disease
- Cut out saturated and trans fasts
- Choose foods that lower cholesterol
- Steer clear of salt and processed foods
- Rekindle home cooking
- Focus on high-fiber foods
- Control portion size – and your weight
Heart disease may be the leading
killer of men and women, but that doesn’t mean you can’t protect yourself. In
addition to exercise, being careful about what you eat—and what you don’t
eat—can help you lower cholesterol, control blood pressure and blood sugar
levels, and maintain a healthy weight. If you’ve already been diagnosed with
heart disease or have high cholesterol or blood pressure, a heart-smart diet
can help you better manage these conditions, lowering your risk for heart
attack.
Improving your diet is an important
step toward preventing heart disease, but you may feel unsure where to begin.
Take a look at the big picture: your overall eating patterns are more important
than obsessing over individual foods. No single food can make you magically
healthy, so your goal can be to incorporate a variety of healthy foods cooked
in healthy ways into your diet, and make these habits your new lifestyle.
Eat More
|
Eat Less
|
Healthy fats: raw nuts, olive oil, fish oils, flax seeds, or avocados
|
Trans fats from partially
hydrogenated or deep-fried foods; saturated fats from whole-fat dairy or red
meat
|
Nutrients: colorful fruits and vegetables—fresh or frozen, prepared
without butter
|
Packaged foods of any kind,
especially those high in sodium
|
Fiber: cereals, breads, and pasta made from whole grains or
legumes
|
White or egg breads, granola-type
cereals, refined pastas or rice
|
Omega 3 and protein: fish and shellfish, poultry
|
Red meat, bacon, sausage, fried
chicken
|
Calcium and protein: Egg whites, egg substitutes, skim or 1% milk, low-fat or
nonfat cheeses or yogurt
|
Egg yolks, whole or 2 percent
milk, whole milk products like cheese or yogurt
|
Of all the possible improvements you
can make to your diet, limiting saturated fats and cutting out trans fats
entirely is perhaps the most important. Both types of fat raise your LDL, or
“bad” cholesterol level, which can increase your risk for heart attack and
stroke. Luckily, there are many ways to control how much saturated and trans
fats you take in. Keep these culprits in mind as you cook and make food
choices—and learn how to avoid them.
- Limit solid fat.
Reduce the amount of solid fats like butter, margarine, or shortening you
add to food when cooking or serving. Instead of cooking with butter, for
example, flavor your dishes with herbs or lemon juice. You can also limit
solid fat by trimming fat off your meat or choosing leaner proteins.
- Substitute.
Swap out high-fat foods for their lower-fat counterparts. Top your baked
potato, for example, with salsa or low-fat yogurt rather than butter, or
use low-sugar fruit spread on your toast instead of margarine. When
cooking, use liquid oils like canola, olive, safflower, or sunflower, and
substitute two egg whites for one whole egg in a recipe.
- Be label-savvy.
Check food labels on any prepared foods. Many snacks, even those labeled
"reduced fat,” may be made with oils containing trans fats. One clue
that a food has some trans fat is the phrase "partially
hydrogenated.” And look for hidden fat; refried beans may contain lard, or
breakfast cereals may have significant amounts of fat.
- Change your habits.
The best way to avoid saturated or trans fats is to change your lifestyle
practices. Instead of chips, snack on fruit or vegetables. Challenge
yourself to cook with a limited amount of butter. At restaurants, ask that
sauces or dressings be put on the side—or left off altogether.
Not all fats are bad for your heart
While saturated and trans fats are
roadblocks to a healthy heart, unsaturated fats are essential for good
health. You just have to know the difference. “Good” fats include:
- Omega 3 Fatty Acids. Fatty
fish like salmon, trout, or herring and flax seed, canola oil, and walnuts
all contain polyunsaturated fats that are vital for the body.
- Omega 6 Fatty Acids. Vegetable
oils, soy nuts, and many types of seeds all contain healthy fats.
- Monounsaturated fats. Almonds, cashews, peanuts, pecans, and butters made
from these nuts, as well as avocados, are all great sources of “good”
fat.
Unhealthy cholesterol levels
increase your risk for heart disease, so keeping yours low is key to a
healthier heart. Your diet is central to controlling your cholesterol. Some
foods can actually lower your cholesterol, while others only make matters
worse.
- Avoid saturated or trans fats. Foods containing high levels of saturated fats or
trans fats—such as potato chips and packaged cookies—can increase your
cholesterol levels much more significantly than cholesterol- containing
foods such as eggs. Saturated fat and trans fat both increase LDL (“bad”)
cholesterol. Trans fat lowers your levels of HDL (“good”) cholesterol, which
can put you at increased cardiovascular risk.
- Make smart choices.
Choose foods rich in unsaturated fats, fiber, and protein. Fruits,
vegetables, fish, beans, nuts, and seeds are all great cholesterol
regulators. The best foods for lowering cholesterol are oatmeal, fish,
walnuts (and other nuts), olive oil, and foods fortified with sterols or
stanols—substances found in plants that help block the absorption of
cholesterol.
- Remember that labels can be deceiving. Navigating food labels can often be complicated since
packaged foods with labels like “cholesterol free” or “low cholesterol”
aren’t necessarily heart-healthy; they might even contain cholesterol
that’s heart-risky. Stick to basics whenever possible: fruit, veggies, nuts,
and lean proteins.
Lowering your cholesterol with fish or fish oil supplements
By adding fish like salmon or
herring to your diet twice a week, you can significantly lower your
cholesterol, and thus your risk for heart attack. Fish contain omega-3 fatty
acids, which work like superheroes, doing good deeds for your heart—and your
whole body.
Eating a lot of salt can contribute
to high blood pressure, which is a major risk factor for cardiovascular
disease. Reducing the salt in your food is a big part of a heart-healthy diet.
The American Heart Association recommends no more than about a teaspoon of salt
a day for an adult. That may sound alarmingly small, but there are actually
many painless—even delicious—ways to reduce your sodium intake.
- Reduce canned or processed foods. Much of the salt you eat comes from canned or
processed foods like soups or frozen dinners—even poultry or other meats
often have salt added during processing. Eating fresh foods, looking for
unsalted meats, and making your own soups or stews can dramatically reduce
your sodium intake.
- Cook at home, using spices for flavor. Cooking for yourself enables you to have more
control over your salt intake. Make use of the many delicious alternatives
to salt. Try fresh herbs like basil, thyme, or chives. In the dried spices
aisle, you can find alternatives such as allspice, bay leaves, or cumin to
flavor your meal without sodium.
- Substitute reduced sodium versions, or salt substitutes.
Choose your condiments and
packaged foods carefully, looking for foods labeled sodium free, low
sodium, or unsalted. Better yet, use fresh ingredients and cook without
salt.
The DASH diet for lowering blood pressure
The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension,
or DASH diet, is a specially designed eating plan to help you lower your blood
pressure, which is a major cause of hypertension and stroke. To learn more,
download the booklet from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute found
in the Resources and References section below.
It’s very difficult to eat right for
your heart when you’re eating out a lot, ordering in, or eating microwave
dinners and other processed foods. The good news is that you can learn to make
quick, heart healthy meals at home. It’s easier and less time-consuming than
you may think.
Heart-healthy grocery shopping and stocking
Creating a heart-friendly diet
starts with stocking your fridge with healthy and accessible foods. Prepare a
list before you head to the store or farmer’s market, and leave a little time
after your trip to set yourself up for success during the week.
- Make healthy substitutions. Choose substitutions like 1% or skimmed milk instead of
whole milk, soft margarine for butter, and lean meats like chicken and
fish in place of ribs or ground meat. These substitutions can save you an
entire day’s worth of saturated fat.
- Make foods ready-to-eat. When you make healthy food easy to grab during your
busy week, you’re more likely to stay heart-healthy. When you come home
from grocery shopping, cut up vegetables and fruits and store them in the
fridge, ready for the next meal or when you are looking for a ready-to-eat
snack.
- Use your freezer.
Make healthy eating easier by freezing heart-healthy foods in individual portions.
Freeze fruits such as bananas, grapes, and orange slices to make them more
fun to eat for children. Be careful with portion sizes: the recommended
serving of cooked meat is about the size of a deck of cards, while a
serving of pasta should be about the size of a baseball.
Heart-healthy cooking tips
When you prepare and cook meals at
home, you have better control over the nutritional content and the overall
healthfulness of the foods you eat. An added bonus: you can also save
money.
- Create a library of heart-healthy recipes. Stock up on heart-healthy cookbooks and recipes for
cooking ideas. The internet is full of food blogs and websites devoted to
healthy cooking methods and recipes, and a local library can be a great
source for cookbooks as well.
- Use heart-healthy cooking methods. Just as important as picking healthy foods at the
grocery store is how you cook those foods into healthy meals. Use low-fat
methods: you can bake, broil, microwave, roast, steam, poach, lightly stir
fry, or sauté—using a small amount of vegetable or olive oil, reduced
sodium broth, and spices.
- Cook just twice a week and make food for the whole
week. When you’re cooking healthful
meals, make extra helpings. Store as meals in reusable containers—or
directly on plates—for easy reheating and ready-to-eat food the rest of
the week. Cooking healthy food ahead this way is perhaps the most
time-saving, money-saving, and heart-saving strategy available.
A diet high in fiber can lower “bad”
cholesterol and provide nutrients that can help protect against heart disease.
By filling up on whole grains, vegetables, and fruits, you can get most of the
fiber you'll need, which means you'll also be lowering your risk of heart
disease.
Go
for whole grains
Refined or processed foods are lower
in fiber content, so make whole grains an integral part of your diet. There are
many simple ways to add whole grains to your meals.
- Breakfast better. For
breakfast choose a high-fiber breakfast cereal—one with five or more grams
of fiber per serving. Or add a few tablespoons of unprocessed wheat bran
to your favorite cereal.
- Try a new grain. Experiment
with brown rice, wild rice, barley, whole-wheat pasta, and bulgur. These
alternatives are higher in fiber than their more mainstream
counterparts—and you may find you love their tastes.
- Bulk up your baking. When
baking at home, substitute whole-grain flour for half or all of the white
flour, since whole-grain flour is heavier than white flour. In yeast
breads, use a bit more yeast or let the dough rise longer. Try adding
crushed bran cereal or unprocessed wheat bran to muffins, cakes, and cookies.
- Add flaxseed. Flaxseeds
are small brown seeds that are high in fiber and omega-3 fatty acids,
which can lower your total blood cholesterol. You can grind the seeds in a
coffee grinder or food processor and stir a teaspoon of them into yogurt,
applesauce, or hot cereal.
Eat a variety of fruits and vegetables
Most fruits and vegetables are low
in calories and high in fiber, making them heart healthy. You can use some of
the following strategies to make eating fruits and veggies part of your diet
every day.
- Keep fruit and vegetables at your fingertips. Wash and cut fruit and veggies and put them in your
refrigerator for quick and healthy snacks. Choose recipes that feature
these high-fiber ingredients, like veggie stir-fries or fruit salad.
- Incorporate veggies into your cooking. Add pre-cut fresh or frozen vegetables to soups and
sauces. For example, mix chopped frozen broccoli into prepared spaghetti
sauce or toss fresh baby carrots into stews.
- Don’t leave out the legumes. Legumes are fiber-rich, too. Eat more
beans, peas, and lentils. Add kidney beans to canned soup or a green
salad.
- Make snacks count. Fresh
and dried fruit, raw vegetables, and whole-grain crackers are all good
ways to add fiber at snack time. An occasional handful of nuts is also a
healthy, high-fiber snack.
Gaining or carrying excess weight
means that your heart must work harder, and this often leads to high blood
pressure—a major cause of heart disease. Achieving a healthy body weight is key
to reducing your risk of heart disease. Reducing portion sizes is a crucial
step toward losing or maintaining a healthy weight. Try the following tactics
to control your portion sizes:
- Understand serving sizes. A serving size is a specific amount of food, defined by
common measurements such as cups, ounces, or pieces—and a healthy serving
size may be a lot smaller than you’re used to. The recommended serving
size for pasta is ½ cup, while a serving of meat, fish, or chicken is 2 to
3 ounces (57-85 grams). Judging serving size is a learned skill, so you
may need to use measuring cups, spoons, and a food scale to help.
- Eyeball it. Once
you have a better idea of what a serving should be, you can estimate your
portion. You can use common objects for reference; for example, a serving
of pasta should be about the size of a baseball (slightly smaller than a
cricket ball), while a serving of meat, fish, or chicken is about the size
and thickness of a deck of cards.
- Beware of restaurant portions. Portions served in restaurants are often more than
anyone needs. Split an entrée with your dining companion, or take half
your meal home for tomorrow’s lunch.
No comments:
Post a Comment