Healthy Living

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

7 things the Brits can teach American women about eating

My friend and fellow journalist Jennifer Howze, an (American) editor working for The Times of London, one of the UK's top newspapers, and co-founder of their popular blog alphamummy is guest blogging for SELF today. I asked her to tell us what habits we could steal to be healthier and slimmer.

By Jennifer Howze, alphamummy.com

Deep-fried Mars bars, blood sausage, kidney pudding...the full extent of the weird and unpalatable nuances of English food only fully reveal themselves once you relocate to the United Kingdom . Yet living here for seven years has also attuned me to the benefits of the British way of eating. UK dining habits can teach Americans a thing or two about healthy eating practices. Dig in:

  1. Take time for tea - The British do drink loads of tea - several times a day Polly really does put the kettle on. In the home guests are automatically offered a "cuppa." Workers do a "tea run" with their colleagues twice a day. Workmen take a break with a cup of "builders"--normal breakfast tea, brewed strong and drunk with milk and sugar. A regular tea break--beyond giving you a stretch and a short mental respite from work --serves up a cup of polyphenols, which have antioxidants and cholesterol-reducing properties. Drink up.
See our tips: 20 superfoods for weight loss!

  1. Enjoy a "pub" lifestyle - For Brits, the local pub isn't just a place to throw back the booze. It's a community meeting point, where people in the neighbourhood drop in for an after-work drink, a Sunday lunch or even organized game nights. People bring their children or their dogs, and there's no pressure to drink alcohol. You're just as likely to find regulars ordering a mix of OJ and "lemonade" (what us Yanks call 7-Up or Sprite), or sparkling water flavored with lime as a mixed drink. Pub-goers also drink beer by the half-pint or order "lager top"--beer topped off with their style of lemonade for a refreshing alternative. The philosophy: You don't have to pound cocktails to hang out with your friends. Enjoy your favorite restaurants and still lose weight with our insider's guide to dining out.
  1. Eat Sunday lunch - The traditional Sunday lunch sounds indulgent: a big sit-down meal in the middle of the afternoon. But the reality tends to be a filling, balanced meal: a roast piece of meat accompanied by two or three vegetables. And what vegetables! Forget boring old corn. Traditional veggies run the color spectrum: stewed red cabbage (with phytochemicals), cauliflower (full of vitamin C, folate and glucosinolates which help stamp out carcinogens), parsnips (B and C vitamins), carrots (beta-carotene and antioxideants), swede (it's from the pumpkin family) and peas. Go easy on the gravy and you've got a satisfying, diverse plate providing a rainbow of vitamins and minerals. (Plus, home-cooked meat joint provides fodder for great sandwiches all week, meaning no processed preservative-filled cold cuts.)
  1. Take a hike - Or more aptly, a walk. After Sunday lunch, the British love to tie on their boots and go for a ramble. In the country, that means heading off across fields to take in the scenery. In the city, it means walking to a local park or doing some window shopping on the main street (aka the High Street). On holidays, this can translate into an entire afternoon outing or a jaunt en masse down to the local pub. Young and old go along for fresh air and exercise, instead of flopping on the sofa to watch TV. Walking workout: Walk your way slim
  2. Make time for "elevenses" - What high tea is to the afternoon, elevenses is to the morning. When their energy is flagging but lunch still hours away, Brits shore themselves up with a cup of tea and a cookie or a small slice of cake. This isn't the calorie-orgy of a double mocha latte and a giant muffin. Instead, it's a small treat that keeps you from becoming too hungry and overeating at lunchtime. Eating small meals throughout the day curbs hunger, increases metabolism and avoids the ravenous dash for the cookie jar or bag of chips. Winnie the Pooh has elevenses, Paddington Bear does, and so should you.
  3. Forget the doggy bag - Taking home leftovers from restaurants sounds good in theory. But in practice it promotes the idea of ordering mountains of food because "you can always take it home." But once it's on your plate, you're that much more likely to overeat. A typical restaurant meal has 60% more calories than the average home-cooked version, which is bad news for waistlines. In the UK , the doggy bag is a scarce beast. Rather, restaurants serve smaller portions and diners regard uneaten portions as wasteful --something that just ends up in the kitchen trash can. Resist restaurant super size portions and ask for half portions or order starters as your main dish so your meal matches your appetite.
Check out these 11 ways to change your weight fate!

7. Tuck in to seasonal desserts - Like people across the world, more and more Brits are eating locally and seasonally. But their classic desserts have always featured fresh British fruit: summer pudding (made with raspberries, blackcurrants, and blackberries); rhubarb crumble; the Wimbledon staple of strawberries and cream. These dishes end up being real "treats" because of their seasonality, and all that fruit isn't bad for you either.

OK, ladies what can WE teach the Brits? What good old-fashioned U.S. of A. habits can we export to our tea-drinking sisters across the Atlantic?

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    Comments 11-20 of 21
    • Eunice Gyamfuah's Avatar
      Posted by Eunice Gyamfuah Mon Jul 13, 2009 6:08am PDT

      lwant more details about the weight loss issue

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    • Katie B's Avatar
      Posted by Katie B Mon Jul 13, 2009 7:31am PDT

      I lived in the Netherlands when I was a child (dad was in the military) and one of my closest friends there, her family never kept leftovers (they passed them on to us, which was a great way of eating like the locals) and they had a refrigerator that wasn't much bigger than a dorm sized refrigerator, they went grocery shopping everyday for the things they needed. They also walked and rode their bikes nearly everywhere. But we also had our fair share of kipling (which was a kind of fried fish nuggets and a mayo like based sauce) and french fries with either a mayo like sause or a peanut sauce not to mention the pasteries and candy that one could buy at anytime.

      Doktor, good point... I think though if it were someone of Asian descent writing this article it would be about how Asians eat. But that is just how I see it.

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    • Jett's Avatar
      Posted by Jett Mon Jul 13, 2009 8:03am PDT

      Well, an obvious answer would be to think of food as "fuel," because that IS the whole point of food, after all. I find that helps when I'm trying to eat healthier. Is a double cheeseburger going to be adequate fuel for your body? Can you imagine nutrients surging through your system after eating that? Or is it more likely you'll feel more "satisfied" from fruits, vegetables, and grilled chicken? If we thought more about food as fueling our bodies, I think we would all eat much more intelligently.

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    • Yes its Me's Avatar
      Posted by Yes its Me Mon Jul 13, 2009 8:06am PDT

      I've had British Food many times, and a few things... 1. all the chip shops, chiese ect is not healthy the portion sizes are smaller but the quality of food is lessar then in the US 2. You should never have one meal and stuff your self on a sunday dinner eating once a day slows down your metabolism 3. Too many canned/frozen items are used in every day life... eating butty sandwhich (french fries btwn 2 slices of white buttered bread) not good for you. The best thing they can show us is the portion size.

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    • Jett's Avatar
      Posted by Jett Mon Jul 13, 2009 8:22am PDT

      Doktor Eavol: I agree. The Mediterranean Diet has been big for years, promoting olive oil in our meals and long nightly strolls after eating. Yes Americans are obsessed with eating; we're also obsessed with Europe, but the real problem is that we don't know how to eat correctly and we refuse to accept that all it takes to be healthy is what we have learned our whole lives: eat vegetables, foods with good fats, and very few desserts, and exercise. It's sooooooo easy, but it's not fun, and Americans have to be having fun all the time. We have to live like we're always partying, like every day is a special occasion. So we eat cinnamon buns for breakfast, we have a mocha for a mid-morning snack, we have pizza for lunch, we have a brownie for an afternoon snack, we have a Coke to keep us awake into the evening, we have a margarita and tacos for dinner, and then we stay up late watching late night television or going out dancing, because it's no fun to go to bed early. Then we wonder why we're fat and tired all the time. We refuse to give up our lifestyle, so we keep doing all the same stuff and eating the same stuff, only we make it all "low-cal" and "fat-free." We have the cinnabun with Splenda, the mocha with sugar-free chocolate and skim milk and no whip, the pizza with thin-crust and 2 percent cheese, the brownie from Snack Wells, the Coke as Coke Zero the margarita in a 4-oz shooter, and the tacos from Lean Cuisine. Then we take a diet pill, because we don't want to exercise, all the while having consumed only about one vegetable all day long, and more salt than we need in a week, and no fruit (because fruit has SO MUCH SUGAR!!!)

      We're always looking for quick-fixes — eat fish like the Eskimos do so you'll be healthy, use olive oil like the Italians, drink tea instead of coffee like the British. Well, yeah, sure. That's a start. But fish oil, olive oil, and tea are not going to sustain us. Americans (me included) are just going to finally have to "suck it up" and realize that eating sensibly and exercising are the only answers. Quick fixes will not make us healthy.

      Honestly, I just get so sick of people's attitudes toward food.

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    • Frantastic's Avatar
      Posted by Frantastic Mon Jul 13, 2009 1:11pm PDT

      I agree with Doktor Eavol, Jett 4.

      The food thing gets out of hand. I used to call some of these practices the Big Mac and diet coke theory. No doubt about it we are going to have to move. I have found that some of this stuff we just can't eat anymore. For me anyway. Your body is no longer able to digest it. Why wait to get the dreaded blood work back and phone call from doc telling you if you don't change your eating habits, your gonna have a heart attack. Or maybe you've already had the heart attack.

      Bottom line, make healthier choices.

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    • Billy Z's Avatar
      Posted by Billy Z Mon Jul 13, 2009 2:26pm PDT

      I would teach those girls to eat more pineapple and papaya...and to not live is such a cold and dreary place...

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    • Billy Z's Avatar
      Posted by Billy Z Mon Jul 13, 2009 2:29pm PDT

      ...drinking too much black tea can cause anemia...did you know that? Unless you have too many red blood cells, you should drink black tea with some caution, especially as a woman..

      Hey, don't be a dufus "journalist". Be a researcher, like some of us have been....then, 1) you won't p!ss us off, and 2) you won't appear to be an unstudied idiot...

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    • Lilian M's Avatar
      Posted by Lilian M Tue Jul 14, 2009 5:12am PDT

      i grew up in u.k. , my mother cooked homemade meals every day for us with lots of veggies . the only time we would have fish and chips was when my mum had gone out with my aunties to town and came home late which was once a week .i was a skinny kid . i came to u.s. a with my husband and children and i loved all the food here , now it shows on me lol , i am trying hard to go back to the way my mum cooked , i am a widow now , but i need to shake twenty pounds ,

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    Comments 11-20 of 21

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