ECA Stack: Ephedrine, Caffeine and Aspirin

Q: I've tried several diet medications over the years and nothing seems to work that well to suppress my appetite. By accident I've discovered that pseudoephedrine works really well for a while to suppress my appetite. Then my system builds up tolerance for it. Is there a way to slow down or suppress the tolerance? Or what other medications would you suggest trying for this effect?

A: To avoid increasing the ephedrine dose (if the recommended 20 mg do not work), dieters might want to consider adding the supplement amino acid L-tyrosine. The synergistic relationship of L- tyrosine with ephedrine has been researched in rats ( 6) and it is a textbook fact that L-tyrosine helps in the thyroid hormones production.

Read about more ways to fight the tolerance:

Ephedrine
One positive thing about ephedrine is that the body can adapt to its negative effects while continuing or even enhancing the fat-burning response ...


Caffeine and Aspirin

Caffeine is included in the ECA stack to prevent an inevitable decrease in metabolic rate that usually occurs as the body tries to slip back ...

Hope it helps,

Tanya Zilberter, PhD

Whey Protein - to lose weight or to gain?

Q: My mother has always been a health and fitness nut and she advised me to replace one or two meals a day with a Whey Protein drink. She said if I cut most of the carbs and replaced it with protein, I would lose weight. However, EVERYONE else who sees that I have Whey Protein powder in my kitchen says that it will make me gain weight. I exercise five days a week and lift weights twice a week now, so will the Whey protein help me lose weight or prevent me from losing it?


A: The protein intake question is just that - a question - when it comes to weight loss. For one thing, even if you cut most of the carbs, about 1/2 of the protein will convert into new carbohydrates. What you probably need, it a proper ratio of carb to protein to fat. Read more about it:

  1. The 'Carb:protein:fat' ratios and fat burning
  2. About Whey Protein
  3. Are protein supplements really better than protein foods?
  4. One strategy many bodybuilders use is to drink a protein shake or eat a protein only meal 30-60 minutes prior to the morning session

Tanya Zilberter, PhD


Sell My Business Online- Nonstopprofit.com where website sellers and buyers meet.

A diet for stress, depression, and appetite control?

Q: Hi Tanya,

You seem fairly knowledgeable and that you've helped people out. I am a 27 yo male, 5'4", 120-5 lbs. I have undergone some stressful situations and as a result, my appetite has been depressed. Not that I have ever eaten a lot anyway due to issues of depression. I have been researching online ways for me to gain my appetite healthily and found that what I am eating isn't helping any. It is actually depressing my appetite even more! (i.e. a lot of grains and acidic fruits) And it is making me even more depressed. .

I have been dealing with this same issue for the last 6 months and need some real guidance on where to go for an effective source that discusses nutrition, depression, and increasing appetite. If the source was made for the person on the go, that would help out too.

A: Hi Mike,

I currently participate in the project of the Mediterranean Institute of Neurobiology concerning neuroprotective effects of low carb dieting and my first task was to collect scientific evidence that low carb diets do indeed have those properties, how they work, and in what particular situation they are helpful.

Stress, lack of energy, and depression are on the list of clinical trials showing that decreasing carbohydrate consumption and eating more 'good' fats improves one's medical condition, along with Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ADHD, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, epilepsy, cancer, etc.

My own experience with one of such diets allows me to suggest that you try it (it's online and free) because the appetite becomes healthier: both unhealthily increased and decreased appetites normalize.

Please take a look at bantadiet.com and should you decide to give it a try, sign up for your daily plans at dietandbody.com

Good luck,

Tanya Zilberter, PhD

Vegeterian diet and immune system

Q: I've been on a vegeterian diet for approximately 15 years (actually, an ovo-lacto-pesce diet where I'll eat dairy products, eggs, and sometimes fish). In recent years, I've noticed that my body doesn't seem to be defending itself very well against illness. For instance, I can't just have a "normal" cold.....instead, they all seem to last forever until they progress into some kind of an infection that I need to be treated for. Conversely, friends & family tend to get the sniffles, and their body fights it off over the course of a few days. I've heard that a vegetarian diet lacks critical enzymes (only found in meat) that could likely compromise my immune system. Is that true?

A: From all I know about food/immune interactions, most critical substances are found in ovo-lacto-pesce diets. I failed finding any meat-specific enzymes affecting immune system. If your diary includes yogurs, kefirs, etc. with guaranteed live cultures of probiotics, you should be doing better than "mixed" eaters. If you didn't pay attention to probiotics, I would strongly advise you give it a try. Also, make it sure that enough of your vegetables are eaten raw.

However, there's one thing that you might want to discuss with your doctor - your hemoglobin numbers, it could explain your weakened immune response. Anemia is one of severe concerns for vegetarians, it weakens the body and can suppress immune reactions.

Suggested reading

Vegetarian Diet
A Word Of Warning
Living Vegetarian
THE VEGETARIAN ATHLETE
Protein, Iron, And Calcium For the Vegetarians


Tanya Zilberter, PhD

Top 10 Resolutions You Should Make


By Carolina Diaz-Bordon
eDiets Staff Writer

An
extraordinary occurrence seems to happen every year around this time as people talk about their New Year's Resolutions. The topic, apparently, triggers many individuals to experience a distinct sense of deja vu.

There is a reason that resolutions to "lose weight," "quit smoking," "start exercising," "pay off all debts" and "travel the world" cause this ever-so-familiar déj vu' feeling. They aren't new. They are the same resolves that have attempted year after year.

The health and fitness pros at eDiets can show you how to combine exercise and nutrition to get the best results. Visit eDiets to get started.

Still as the ball drops on another fresh New Year ahead, past failures are wiped clean and replaced with positive notions that this year will be different.

If you or somebody you know has been affected by the New Year's Resolution Deja vu Syndrome, don't worry. There is an easy way to put a stop to it for good.

The best way to make turn resolutions into reality is by transforming them into your habits. Once you alter your behavior and attitude the process of change will ignite. These top 10 resolutions will help keep you focused and motivated so that your healthy resolutions will stay fresh in your mind all year round.

1. Start every day by reading an inspiring quote or saying. These are great motivation boosters. They will help kick off your day in the right direction.

2. Read at least one article a day about your goal. Whether it's about nutrition, fitness, a destination you'd like to visit or the effects of smoking, vow to take a few minutes to read about it every single day. This will help keep the subject and your objective fresh in your mind.

3. Change your New Year's Resolutions into New Day Resolutions. Instead of saying, "I'm going to pay off all my debts," say, "The first bill I am going to pay off will be this, and I'm going to start by setting aside $10 today."

4. Vow to compliment one person every single day and never put down any compliments you receive. When you take the time to notice your surroundings and the distinct beauty in things, it will automatically help you appreciate your own individual and remarkable characteristics.

5. Declare to take the word "can't" out of your vocabulary. Become aware of your words and use only constructive language. Instead of saying "I can't," ask yourself how you can. Rather than saying "I'm no good at this," ask yourself how you can get better.

6. Turn off your cell phone every time you sit down to eat. Something as simple as turning off your phone can make a tremendous impact on your day. Even if you only have a few minutes to eat, turn it off. Try to rid yourself of all distractions and enjoy your food and the company you are sitting with at all times. This will help make you eat slower, think about what you're eating and enjoy the rewards of good conversation.

7. Do one thing that slightly scares you every single day. Whether it's throwing away all the junk food stored up in your house, trying out a new workout class, submitting a poem you wrote in a contest or asking someone you're interested in out on a date, a little nerve a day will help keep you feeling alive, alert and inspired.

8. Pat yourself on the back every day. Take credit for the good things that you accomplish. You told yourself you were going to join the gym today and you did, you parked your car at the farthest parking lot instead of the closest, you brought your healthy lunch to work, you stayed away from the soda machine, you kept your cool after your boss yelled at you -- all these little actions deserve to be acknowledged. Every night before you go to sleep, write down one of your daily accomplishments. After you've written down seven reward yourself in some way.

9. Mail a card every week to somebody in your life and tell them how much you appreciate them. If you don't want to deal with buying stamps, e-mail them. This will remind you of the many good things and people in your life, and the positive energy you send out will come back to you two-fold. You will feel better about yourself and be more likely to accomplish your daily goals.

10. Vow to stop shrugging your shoulders and keep your head high at all times. Good posture will help you not only look slimmer, but also develop more confidence. You're body language speaks worlds about how you feel. Straighten up the way you look on the outside and your inside self-confidence will soon follow.

Fitness Resolutions for 2008

Fitness resolutions

Resolve to Get Fit


Make 2008 your best year ever by finally getting in shape.

Here we go -- ready to storm into 2008 with great fitness resolutions.

Is your resolution to get fit? Lose weight? Feel more energetic?

In my 15-plus years of personal training experience, nothing sets a person up for failure as much as an open-ended, generic fitness resolution.

Resolving to lose weight is sort of like asking you what your career aspirations are and you answering "to become famous" or "to do well at my job." There isn't an action plan or any real goal you can sink your teeth into.

I'm not a big fan of lots of resolutions and goals. If you have one to three resolutions, you're on the right track. Focusing on a few fitness goals will bring greater results than a list of 10 that make you feel overwhelmed.

Limiting the resolutions, being focused and maintaining consistency is the key.

I'm going to help you by providing 10 resolutions. All you have to do is fill in the blanks where necessary or modify the resolution based on your fitness experience.

Remember, don't choose all of them. Just one to three resolutions is all it takes.

Let's start with a contract. Yes, that's right; you have to make a written commitment.

I (place your name here) hereby resolve to implement the following fitness resolutions:

1. I will lose 4 pounds per month for a total of ______ pounds by (place the date here).

2. I will workout three times per week for a minimum of 30 minutes for the months of January to March. If my schedule allows, I will add a fourth day in April. (If twice per week is more realistic, than go with that. The key is consistency and what's realistic based on your lifestyle).

3. I will increase my endurance by two minutes per week so that I can powerwalk an additional 16 minutes per workout session by March 1, 2008. (You can choose any form of cardio, but there must be a realistic time increase and a time frame goal).

4. I will perform resistance exercise twice per week for 20 minutes using a whole body workout routine.

5. I will find a video tape that I find fun and will do it twice per week for the month of January and February. (This resolution is for those who dislike working out. It provides a fun element and a short-term goal. I'm positive you'll want to continue after February, but the short term goal takes some pressure off).

6. I will find a group exercise class such as spinning, aerobic dance, jazzercise, etc.; sign up for the class and commit to two days per week for 30 days.

7. I will increase my flexibility by stretching three days per week for seven to 10 minutes (flexibility is important and it doesn't take all that much to improve upon it).

8. I will go for two 15 minute walks per day from Monday through Friday. One walk will be at lunch time and one walk will be after dinner. (This fitness resolution is for those who are so busy they can't make it to the gym).

9. On January 2, 2008, I will hire a personal trainer for two sessions per week for a total of 20 sessions. (This resolution is for those who need a good push and some teaching and motivation to go along with it).

10. On Monday, January 1, I will join eDiets and sign up for the fitness and exercise program (then choose two additional goals above).

As always, please check with your doctor before beginning any exercise program.

Looking for more information? Join eDiets and visit Raphael's support group (Fitness For You) for interactive support! We all know fitness is a vital part of living a healthy lifestyle -- let Raphael and eDiets help you on your way!

A drug-free competitive bodybuilder and 2005 winner of the prestigious WNBF (World Natural Bodybuilding Federation) Pro Card, Raphael Calzadilla is a veteran of the health-and-fitness industry. He specializes in a holistic approach to body transformation, nutrition programs and personal training. He earned his B.A. in communications from Southern Connecticut State University and is certified as a personal trainer with ACE and APEX. In addition, he successfully completed the RTS1 program based on biomechanics.

Season's Eatings Healthy Holiday Recipes

candycane1sm.jpg
7 yummy yuletide treats that won't stuff your stockings. Diet-Friendly Recipes

Don't
go anywhere for holiday recipes…just stay right here, close to home and hearth. After all, eDiets' team of nutritionists are both trained in the science of good nutrition, and they're good cooks, too!

The art of healthy cooking takes practice and experimentation, but you'd never know that eDiets tasty recipes are designed to fit into a weight-loss plan. Members continue to enjoy the meal plans and recipes long after they've reached their goal, and many continue their subscription, switching to the eDiets Healthy Living maintenance plan. They stick to their goal weight, and stay active in the Community.

eDiets has great ways for you to eat healthy and lose weight. To get started, click here and fill out a free diet profile.

The true meaning of 'good cooking'?

To me, good cooking means a lot of flavor but not a lot of extra fat and sugar. Break away from the old way of thinking about food -- it's sure to keep the pounds on.

The old way of thinking about food is "Oh, how sinfully rich and full of butter and sugar -- that makes it good." The new way is, "Oh, it's got lots of flavor, even though it's low in fat and sugar -- that makes it better."

Take a look at your traditional recipes. Find the high-fat and high-calorie ingredients that can be modified or even eliminated. For example, reduce the amount of nuts in cookies; replace with dried cranberries or raisins. Most recipes can be modified successfully.

Healthy Holiday Recipes

1. Healthy Harvest Bread Pudding
The old cholesterol-laden version used whole eggs, full-fat whipping cream and half-and-half, and about 276 calories, 15 grams of fat, 9 grams of saturated fat and 184 milligrams of cholesterol in just one serving. Modified, this tangy dessert has only one-tenth of the fat and 100 calories fewer than the original. Use egg substitutes, replace the cream with low-fat buttermilk and use 1-percent milk in place of the half-and-half. Reducing sugar and upping the raisins from 2 tablespoons to a half-cup adds fiber without sacrificing sweetness. Use whole wheat bread instead of white for added fiber and flavor.

Serves 12.

Ingredients:
2 cups 1-percent milk
1 cup of low-fat buttermilk
2 cups egg substitute
1 cup sugar
1/4 tsp. vanilla
4 1/2 slices whole wheat bread
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. sugar
1/2 cup raisins

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Combine milk, buttermilk, egg substitute, one cup sugar and vanilla. Mix well. Arrange bread on the bottom of 10"x12" baking pan. Pour mixture over bread. Mix cinnamon with one teaspoon sugar, sprinkle over everything, and distribute raisins evenly on top. Cover with foil and place pan in a larger pan; fill with hot water halfway up sides of smaller pan. Bake 75-90 minutes, or until set. Remove to counter. Serve warm or refrigerate if you're serving later.

Nutrition per serving: 170 calories, 1.5g fat (0.5g sat.), 2.4mg cholesterol, 1.5g fiber.

2. My Favorite Stuffing

Fresh, bottled, canned or frozen, chestnuts, unlike other tree nuts, are low in fat, but high in starch and fiber. They add unique flavor and texture to recipes, without a lot of calories. By substituting 1-percent milk for the cream, egg substitute for the whole egg, apple juice for the broth and a splash of olive oil to replace the butter, your stuffing is lower in fat and total calories, yet retains its distinctive flavor, thanks to the chestnuts and seasonings. The revamped recipe has a more palatable 206 calories and 3 grams of fat per serving. Makes approximately eight one-cup servings.

Holiday Chestnut Stuffing

Ingredients:
3 cups of canned, bottled or frozen (peeled) chestnuts
3 stalks of celery
2 small or 1 medium yellow onion
1 clove of garlic
1 medium carrot
1 tsp. sage
1/2 tsp. thyme
1 tsp. dried or 3 Tbsp. fresh chopped parsley
1/4 tsp. pepper
1 Tbsp. olive oil
6 cups of whole-wheat bread cubes
1/2 cup graham cracker crumbs
1 cup of raisins
1/4 cup 1-percent milk
1/4 cup apple juice
1/4 cup of egg substitute

Lightly coat a 9"x13" nonstick baking pan with cooking spray and set aside. If using bottled or canned chestnuts, drain and coarsely chop along with celery, onion and carrot. Mince garlic. Heat oil in a nonstick skillet over medium heat. Saute garlic, onions, celery and parsley until soft (about 5 minutes).

Let cool a few minutes, then add to large bowl and combine with remaining ingredients and mix well. Add to baking pan, cover with foil and bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes. Uncover and bake for another five to 10 minutes.

3. Greens with Creamy Berry Dressing
Stephanie Norris, registered dietitian with Florida's Dairy Council, likes to serve up this favorite from Southern Living's Cooking Light magazine.

Serves six (serving size: 1 1/2 cups).

Ingredients:
1/3 cup sweetened dried cranberries (such as Craisins)
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup light mayonnaise
1 Tbsp. Dijon mustard
1 Tbsp. water
1/2 tsp. sugar
1/4 tsp. black pepper
2 garlic cloves, crushed, or 1 tsp. bottled minced garlic
6 cups torn romaine lettuce
1 cup seedless red grapes, halved
1 cup thinly sliced cucumber
1 cup fat-free plain or seasoned croutons
1/2 cup thinly sliced red onion, separated into rings

Combine cranberries and vinegar in a small bowl. Cover and let stand 30 minutes. Add the mayonnaise and the next five ingredients (mayonnaise through garlic); stir well with a whisk. Cover and chill. Combine lettuce and remaining ingredients in a large bowl; add dressing, tossing gently to coat. Serve immediately.

Nutrition per serving: 115 calories, 3.1g fat (0.5g sat.), 3mg cholesterol, 295mg sodium and 1.7g fiber.

4. Nonfat Sour Cream Cake Bread
Members of eDiets Recipe Club are invited to submit their favorites. This recipe received a five stars…out of a possible five! Julia O. submitted this "bread" that's more like a cake, and uses egg whites, nonfat milk and fat-free sour cream to lower the fat and calories, but is still satisfyingly flavorful. Makes 12 servings.

Ingredients:
3/4 cup fat-free sour cream
1/2 tsp. salt
3 Tbsp. light brown sugar
2 egg whites
1/2 cup nonfat milk
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract
3 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
2 1/4 tsp. active dry yeast

Combine sour cream, sugar, egg whites, milk, vanilla, salt, and yeast in medium bowl. Mix until smooth. Pile the flour in a large flat pan and make a well in the center. Pour the sour cream mixture into the center and draw in the flour until a soft dough is formed. Gradually work in a little flour until the dough is pliant and soft but not sticky. Knead until smooth but add a minimum of flour to keep the dough from sticking.

Place in a pan and leave to rise until doubled in bulk. Beat down, knead briefly, then place in a lightly sprayed 9 inch Bundt cake pan. Leave to rise until doubled in bulk. Bake bread in a preheated 425 degrees oven for 25 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees and bake until golden brown on top. If necessary, cover with foil to keep from darkening. Immediately remove from cake pan and place on rack to cool.

Nutrition per serving: 166 calories, 0.4g fat (0g sat.), 3mg cholesterol, 127mg sodium and 1.1g fiber.

5. Creamy Italian White Bean Soup
Colleen R. submitted this quick soup recipe to the eDiets Recipe Club. Using canned white kidney beans, chicken broth and fresh spinach, garnish with shredded Parmesan cheese. Makes four servings.

Ingredients:
1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1 onion, chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
2 (16 ounce) cans white kidney beans, rinsed and drained
1 (14 ounce) can chicken broth
1/4 tsp. ground black pepper
1/8 tsp. dried thyme
2 cups water
1 bunch fresh spinach, rinsed and thinly sliced
1 Tbsp. lemon juice

In a large saucepan, heat oil. Cook onion and celery in oil for 5 to 8 minutes, or until tender. Add garlic, and cook for 30 seconds, continually stirring. Stir in beans, chicken broth, pepper, thyme and 2 cups water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and then simmer for 15 minutes.

With slotted spoon, remove 2 cups of the bean and vegetable mixture from soup and set aside. In blender at low speed, blend remaining soup in small batches until smooth, (it helps to remove the center piece of the blender lid to allow steam to escape.) Once blended pour soup back into stock pot and stir in reserved beans. Bring to a boil, occasionally stirring. Stir in spinach and cook 1 minute or until spinach is wilted. Stir in lemon juice and remove from heat and serve with fresh grated Parmesan cheese on top.

Nutrition per serving: 248 calories, 5.5g fat (1g sat.), 0mg cholesterol, 957mg sodium and 11.7g fiber.

6. Broccoli-Cauliflower Casserole
Nicole Bengtson, from eDiets nutrition services team, said about this holiday favorite, "I don't normally add sauces and butter to my veggies, but at holidays, I treat myself! I've modified this recipe to make it healthier by using reduced fat, reduced sodium products, cutting back on the amount of fat (butter, mayonnaise) and cheese, and using one whole egg plus one egg white instead of two whole eggs. I've cut the calories in half, taken out a third of the fat and cut the sodium in half."

Serves 12

Ingredients:
1 16 oz. pkg. frozen broccoli cuts
1 16 oz pkg. frozen cauliflower florets
1 whole egg
1 egg white
1/3 cup mayonnaise, low fat
1 can cream of chicken soup, low fat, low sodium
3/4 cup shredded cheddar cheese, low fat

Topping:
1/4 cup butter, melted
1 sleeve of reduced-fat Ritz Crackers, crushed

Thaw and drain the frozen vegetables. Mix all ingredients together and place in a 9x13 baking dish prepared with cooking spray. Mix together and sprinkle topping over casserole. Bake casserole at 350 degrees for 20 to 30 minutes until topping is browned.

Nutritional value: 136 calories, 8g fat (3g sat.), 32mg cholesterol, 210 sodium and 1g fiber.

7. Sweet Potato Casserole
Julia Cruz, of eDiets' nutrition services team, loves to make this exquisite sweet potato dish all year long, but especially during the "winter" holiday season. There's just something about sweet potatoes that make meals feel festive. Serves eight.

Ingredients:
3 lbs. sweet potatoes, scrubbed and pricked
1 cup pineapple tidbits, canned in juice and drained
2 Tbsp. brown sugar
2 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. ground ginger

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Bake potatoes in a foil-lined shallow baking pan in lower third of oven until very tender, about 1 hour. Remove potatoes and lower oven temperature to 325 degrees. When cool enough to handle, halve lengthwise and scoop out warm flesh into a large bowl. Mash potatoes with a potato masher or fork.

In a separate bowl, mix the pineapple tidbits with the brown sugar, cinnamon and ginger. Mix until blended pineapple mixture and mashed sweet potatoes until well blended. Smooth into Pyrex baking pan lightly coated with cooking spray and bake, uncovered, for about 25 minutes.

Nutrition per serving: 204 calories, 0g sat. fat, 0g cholesterol, 60mg sodium and 6g fiber.

Yes, holidays and celebrations may be challenging, but you're up to it. Make this a healthy holiday season and change your traditional fatty favorites into delicious, healthy ones. Santa is roly-poly for a reason—traditional Christmas recipes are like stocking stuffers, so rich that they make the sock bulge bigger! It doesn't have to be so. "Living large" is not my New Year's resolution, living lean is. Don't be a Scrooge with taste, but be frugal with calories.

Top Tips for making your holiday recipes healthy ones.

  • Low-fat cooking techniques make all recipes healthier. Bake, broil, grill…poach and sauté foods in a very little bit of fat in a nonstick pan.
  • Use nonstick pans: for baking, grilling, for breads and cookies, for sauteing and even for soup. Nonstick is one of life's little pleasures…you need to just lightly spray with cooking oil.
  • Reduce the fat in the recipes: one of the simplest methods of making all your recipes healthier is reducing the amount of fat in a recipe. If the recipe calls for ½ cup of oil, use 1/4 cup, plus 1/4-cup fruit puree or unsweetened applesauce. This is good for any quick bread, cookie, or cake: yeast breads and piecrusts need a precise balance of ingredients…but experiment to see if you get acceptable results.
  • Don't add fat to your food…especially unhealthy, saturated fats. Most stores carry margarines without trans fat if you want to put a spread on the table. Instead of basting the turkey with butter, try flavorful vegetable broth, white wine or orange juice (my personal favorite).
  • Buy low-fat and nonfat varieties of milk, sour cream, yogurt and cheese to lower the fat and calories effortlessly. I use low fat buttermilk in baking; substitute for milk in any recipe.
  • Substitute 3 tablespoons of cocoa plus 1 tablespoon of canola oil for 1 ounce of baking chocolate, and lower the saturated fat.
  • Substitute two egg whites equal one whole egg, depending on the size; all the fat, cholesterol and most of the calories from eggs are in the yolk.
  • Substitute crunchy cereal for bread crumbs…I like to use crushed corn flakes or nuggets like Grape Nuts.
  • Cut servings smaller…how simple but effective! Make that cake serve 12 instead of eight.
  • Buy the leanest cuts of meat, and substitute 1/3 ground turkey breast; don't buy "ground turkey" because it also contains skin and dark meat, making it just as caloric as ground meat…or more.

    Don't forget; the holidays are not an excuse for "cheating" on your meal plan. Going out or staying in, your choices determine how much you gain…or if you maintain your weight over the holidays.

    Don't skip meals, keep exercising (in fact, make it your business to get the whole crowd out for a walk after your big meal!), and remember…there are no "good" or "bad" foods, just fatty and high in calories, or healthier because they're not full of sugar and saturated or trans fat. Just plan for a small portion of something that's especially traditional if you like, and balance with a healthy meal.

  • Nutritionist Susan L. Burke is a registered and licensed dietitian and a certified diabetes educator who specializes in both general and diabetes-related weight management.