-
Healthy, Heart-Warming Cereal
Looking for something quick, healthy and warm for breakfast on chilly mornings? Cereal manufacturers now provide you with quick, easy to prepare cereals that also pack a nutrition punch! Cereals are sweetened – or not, fortified or not, flavored with added fruit or not and packed for single servings or not. The best news of all: most hot cereals are good for you. They are typically whole-grain, low in fat and a great source of fiber.
Separate the Good from the Bad
Look for cereals with no added sugars. Instead, toss in some fruit in its natural state for sweetness and nutrition. Suggested fruits: Blueberries, bananas, raisins, strawberries, raspberries or even apples if you like it that way! Be wary of brands that state “fruit added” as most will add fruit powder rather than the real thing. To appropriately check the sugar content of a cereal, do not use the label because that amount includes naturally occurring sugars. Instead, check the ingredient list. Sugar, dextrose, maple sugar and/or can sugar all fall into the sugar category – avoid cereals that list these in their ingredients.Okay, are you one who really dislikes a cereal with no sugar and are groaning right now? If so, take heart – you can indulge somewhat. Just watch for cereals with limited sugars, or a lightly sweetened cereal. Due to variations in serving sizes we will use a percentage – try to watch for less than 30 percent of the calories from sugar. Health Valley is a good example of a lightly sweetened cereal. They have a line of cereal cups containing roughly half as much sugar as Quaker instant cereals. “Banana Gone Nuts” has real chunks of both and the entire line has added soy protein, which gives your cup of cereal as much protein as a glass of milk. They also add the U.S. recommended Daily Allowance for vitamin E and a half-day supply of selenium. For variety, try the “Amazing Apple” or the “Terrific 10 Grain”. One flavor did have too much sugar; that was the “Maple Madness”.
Check the fiber content in your cereal. Any whole grain is a good grain but extra fiber aids in the prevention of constipation and may help lower the risk of heart disease either by lowering cholesterol (if the fiber comes from oats) or by some other means (if it comes from whole-wheat). Whole grains have more fiber than refined grains; some more than others. Oat bran is at the high end of fiber with six or seven grams per serving. Whole wheat and multigrain mixtures are in the middle with five grams. Oatmeal has four grams and brown rice, two or three. Note, these numbers only apply to unsweetened cereals. A packet of Quaker Instant Oatmeal typically has only three grams of fiber, because sugar (and perhaps some fruit) replaces some of the oatmeal.
Written by Just Jeni of Fitness and Freebies
http://www.fitnessandfreebies.com
Newsletter Subscribe E-mail: 61952-subscribe@zinester.com
Free Ebooks! Recipes and health info!http://www.fitnessandfreebies.com/ebookfreebies.html
Written By: Jennifer Reisinger
Related Posts
Leave a Reply
Recommended
Tags
America
American Heart Association
angina
arthritis
atherosclerosis
breast cancer
bypass surgery
Canada
cancer
cancers
cardiomyopathy
cardiovascular disease
chest pain
congestive heart failure
coronary artery disease
coronary heart disease
depression
diabetes
energy
Europe
folic acid
food
heart attack
heart attacks
heart disease
heart diseases
heart failure
high blood pressure
home remedies
hypertension
inflammation
low fat diet
Mediterranean
nausea
obesity
oil
osteoporosis
pain
physician
rheumatoid arthritis
shortness of breath
stroke
Surgery
Swimming
United States
Archives
- November 2008
- July 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
Alexa Rank
Categories
- Health Minute: calcium pill and heart attacks, questions raised - Examiner.com
- Health Policy Research - Kaiser Health News
- 'The earliest possible date' - Politico (blog)
- JR CHILD HEART OP INQUIRY: What the parents say - Witney Gazette