Healthy Living

Friday, July 3, 2009

6 Diet Busters: Healthy-Sounding Foods That Really Aren’t

My friend Henry, recently bought a huge box of Yogos, confident that these “yogurty-covered, fruit-flavored bits” were a healthy choice for his kids. No doubt Henry was deceived by the “health halo” effect. Words like “yogurt” and “fruit” positively glow with such halos, since we consider these foods healthy in their natural state. Don’t be fooled.

Although most foods can fit into a healthy diet if you know your limits, do a reality check and read labels first. Here are some of the worst offenders:

1. Energy bars

Energy bars usually contain protein and fiber—nutrients that help you feel full—but also may be loaded with calories. That’s fine if you occasionally make one a meal, but most of us eat them as snacks. You might as well enjoy a Snickers, which at 280 calories is in the same range as many energy bars.

Lesson learned: Look for a calorie-controlled bar with about 5 grams of protein or try EatingWell’s Low-Fat Granola Bars.

2. Granola

Granola sounds healthy. But it’s often high in fat, sugar and calories. Don’t be fooled by a seemingly reasonable calorie count; portion sizes are usually a skimpy 1/4 or 1/2 cup. Low-fat versions often just swap sugar for fat and pack as many calories as regular versions.

Lesson learned: Stick with recommended portion sizes and try EatingWell’s Cranberry Oat Granola.

3. Salads

Most of us could use more vegetables—so what’s not to love? Toppings. The pecans and Gorgonzola cheese on Panera Bread’s Fuji Apple Chicken Salad (580 calories, 30 grams fat, 7 grams saturated fat) propel it into double-cheeseburger territory. A McDonald’s double cheeseburger has 440 calories, 23 grams fat, 11 grams saturated fat.

Lesson learned: Before ordering a salad, check its nutrition information or try more than 20 EatingWell recipes for healthy salads and dressings.

4. Smoothies

Smoothies may seem like a tasty way to get your recommended fruit servings—but studies show that beverages are less filling per calorie than solid foods. Added sugars can make some the equivalent of drinking fruit pie filling: the smallest (16-ounce) serving of Jamba Juice’s Orange Dream Machine weighs in at 340 calories, with 69 grams of sugars that don’t all come from juice. You’re better off with fresh-squeezed juices; orange juice has 110 calories per cup.

Lesson learned: Look for smoothies made with whole fruit, low-fat yogurt and no added sugars. Check out EatingWell’s 15 healthy smoothie recipes for ideas.

5. Sushi rolls

There is a wide variety of sushi rolls and the fried tidbits and mayonnaise in some can really tuck in calories. Some 12-piece Dragon Rolls (eel, crunchy cucumbers, avocado and “special eel sauce”) have almost 500 calories and 16 grams of fat (4 grams saturated).

Lesson learned: Order something simple like a California roll (imitation crabmeat, avocado and cucumber) or a vegetarian roll which supplies around 350 calories and 6 or 7 grams of fat (mostly heart-healthy mono­unsaturated) or try EatingWell’s Brown Rice & Tofu Maki.

6. Yogurts

Some premium whole-milk yogurts can give you a hefty dose of saturated fat. Many low-fat versions are every bit as creamy. Enjoy a fruit-flavored low-fat yogurt, but understand that the “fruit” is really jam (i.e., mostly sugar). Or opt for low-fat plain and stir in fresh fruit or other sweetener to taste. My favorite, a tablespoon of Vermont maple syrup (52 calories), provides all the sweetness I need.

Lesson learned: Although they are still good sources of calcium, fat and added sugars make some yogurts closer to dessert than to a healthy snack.

By EatingWell’s Dr. Rachel Johnson

Rachel Johnson, EatingWell’s senior nutrition advisor, is dean of the University of Vermont College of Agriculture & Life Sciences.



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Comments 1-10 of 191
  • up too late's Avatar
    Posted by up too late Sun May 25, 2008 7:12pm PDT

    I think the main thing for eating healthy is balance. The rules have always been to eat healthy and exercise, and if you only care about taste and not nutritional value (like my dear husband) you are miserable to have an apple for a snack instead of cheetos. I don't think it's terribly hard to know what healthy, but it requires more discipline to eat what's healthy than people prefer.

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  • kellz1018's Avatar
    Posted by kellz1018 Mon May 26, 2008 12:09pm PDT

    I disagree with yogurt being a non healthy food. It may have a higher sugar content than wanted, but there are many other positives to yogurt including the added bacterial cutlures that can improve stomach and intestinal health. And you do not have to buy any special yogurt for this, it is in all of them.

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  • V.'s Avatar
    Posted by V. Tue May 27, 2008 8:30am PDT

    WoW! I've read all the comments and I think everyone has something to contribute towards being smater about what we put into our bodies. great blogs!!!

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  • matoro1989's Avatar
    Posted by matoro1989 Fri May 30, 2008 7:36pm PDT

    This sounds more like advertising for EatingWell's products than anything else.

    I always have said sinkers was the original protein bar.

    This article sounds like it's not aimed at the more athletic (which I must admit I'm not), but athletes need the high calorie diets and lots of protein they can find in some of these foods (mostly protein bars, granola, and yogurt).

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  • kryram's Avatar
    Posted by kryram Fri May 30, 2008 7:43pm PDT

    response to lao, advertise your tramp website somewhere else, such as a porn shop, your trivial comments have no use nor application to the health food article. if you have something important relevant to the article to say, then say it. or else, just keep your inappropriate comments to yourself namely.

    Report Abuse
  • scobra655's Avatar
    Posted by scobra655 Fri May 30, 2008 7:45pm PDT

    How can you compare the grease ridden carb laden double cheeseburger to a totally healthy salad?????The calories are of different nutritional origin!!!!!!Nuts,cheese,veggies,oil-all high caloric but fine for your body and 580 calories is Great for a meal!!!!Most people in this country eat in the thousands every meal!!!!!!

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  • kryram's Avatar
    Posted by kryram Fri May 30, 2008 7:50pm PDT

    totally agree with lesia. mcdonald's salads are among the cheeseburger no nos.

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  • greg_mcgee023's Avatar
    Posted by greg_mcgee023 Fri May 30, 2008 7:51pm PDT

    omg energy bars have calories?!?!?!? NO WAY!!! calories is a main source of energy for the body and a "energy" bar packs calories?? man these diet people are wack

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  • romain_89's Avatar
    Posted by romain_89 Fri May 30, 2008 7:51pm PDT

    Okay, the Orange Dream Machine at Jamba is not THAT bad. But it is still bad. It is clearly in the CREAMY INDULGANCE section. What do you expect? What she didn't mention is the 180 cal. drinks that they have or the 100% fruit smoothies they have....

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  • cheinz57's Avatar
    Posted by cheinz57 Fri May 30, 2008 7:52pm PDT

    Add Trail Mix to that list. Read the label on a bag sometime, loaded with calories

    Report Abuse
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