About Sally Squires

Sally Squires, MS, is an award-winning medical journalist, who spent 24 years at the Washington Post. There, she created the multimedia, nationally syndicated Lean Plate Club (LPC) column. Journalism has changed, of course. So in 2008, Sally joined Powell Tate, the Washington, DC division of Weber Shandwick, where she is fortunate to have found another group of smart, interesting and creative colleagues. By day, she uses her graduate degree from Columbia University’s Institute of Human Nutrition and her communications expertise to provide strategic counsel to clients, who range from nonprofits to major corporations. By night, she translates the latest scientific results into simple, actionable information for readers. This blog is her newest writing adventure. In it, you will find news and commentary about the latest developments in nutrition, exercise and wellness. There are tips, tools, resources and inspiring stories of people who have changed their habits with significant results. Also look for a dash of food history, because it helps explain what's on our plates today. Here’s the promise to you, dear readers: The information included will be science based. Where possible, there will be simple, actionable steps to implement these new findings. And all the views expressed here are those solely of Sally Squires and not of her employer or its clients. The hope is to share the goals of eating smart, one meal at a time, and moving more daily as a way to stay as healthy as possible--for life.

More Ice Water, Please!

What if there was an easy way to eat less and burn more a few more calories? Turns out there is, if you’re willing to get serious about sipping water.

Emerging research shows the value of water in controlling calories and weight. PHOTO: Sally Squires Copyright The Wilhelm Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

There’s long been debate about this most basic of all beverages and the role it may—or may not—play in weight loss. Now, a growing number of studies point to the value of water in losing weight and keeping it off.

Welcome to week two of the Lean Plate Club ™ Holiday Challenge. If you’ve just discovered the Holiday Challenge, it’s not too late to join. I’m delighted that Everyday Health is a partner in this challenge.

The goal is simple: Maintain your weight from now until Jan. 1, 2012. If you do that, you’ll be a step ahead for 2012.

The reason: The holidays fuel weight gain, especially for overweight and obese people, who now account for two of every three adults in the U.S. Research shows that such hefty people gain on average about five pounds over the holidays. Worse, they don’t shed those added pounds over the coming year. (It’s a different story for healthy weight people, who gain about a pound and lose it by spring/early summer.) That’s why the Holiday Challenge is designed to simply help you maintain your weight from now until we ring in the New Year.

Here’s where drinking more water could help. Not only does it quench thirst without any calories, drinking water appears to help control appetite, particularly when it is consumed just before a meal or with food. Plus, studies suggest that water consumption has diminished over time. Water has gradually been replaced by other beverages that are often higher in calories.

How much water do you need? The National Academy of Sciences has set the adequate daily intake of water from all beverages at about 9 cups for women and about 13 cups of water for men.

Just make the water cold. Israeli researchers report that drinking ice water significantly raises the number calories burned at rest in adults and children. So even when you’re just sitting, you may burn some added calories. How many? In studies of children, it was as much as 25 percent more.

So in addition to eating more fruit and vegetables, sip ice water throughout the day. Look for water filled foods to eat, including soups and stews. They will help you feel full on fewer calories.

The goals this week are to:
• Keep eating fruit and vegetables as you did last week
• Stay hydrated with plenty of ice water
• Find ways to add just 10 more minutes daily to whatever exercise you now do.
What are you doing to hold the line on holiday weight gain? Tell us your strategies here. Check for more updates throughout the week and find additional tips on Twitter @sallysquires

Week 1: More (Delicious) Vegetables

Dinner last night proved to be a great opportunity to put the Lean Plate Club Holiday Challenge into practice.

If you’re new to the Holiday Challenge, the overall goal is simple: Maintain your weight from now until Jan. 1. Everyday Health is a partner in this year’s challenge (How cool is that?), which will be our eighth. (Find more here and below about the Challenge.) .

The week 1 food goal is to eat more fruit and vegetables–two food groups where most people fall short, according to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines expert committee. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that just about a third of Americans eat the recommended amount of fruit daily, while only about one in four get enough veggies.

Last night, our ‘fridge was still well stocked from my weekend shopping: Beautiful cherry tomatoes, spaghetti squash, shallots, garlic and a fresh bunch of cilantro were in the crisper. Voila! The makings a quick vegetable pasta sauce that was served over whole wheat pasta.

Here’s what I whipped up in about 20 minutes–while also watching the nightly news and feeding our canine companion. It was easy. I added some low fat chicken sausage, grated parmesan, and olive oil on the side to give more options to family members. A tossed salad or a side dish of sautéed broccolini, string beans or other favorite vegetable goes well with this. So does a slice of hot, whole grain bread.

Quick Pasta Sauce for the Lean Plate Club Holiday Challenge PHOTO by Sally Squires

Recipe is as follows:

2 cups of cherry tomatoes, halved

1 medium spaghetti squash

1 shallot, peeled and diced

2 cloves garlic, peeled and diced

1 bunch fresh cilantro, chopped

1-2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

Olives for garnish

1 package whole wheat pasta (any type)

1. Cut the spaghetti squash in half. Place one half face down in a casserole with 1/4 to 1/2 inch water. Cook for 10 minutes on high until tender. (Repeat for second half.)

2. Cook pasta in boiling water. Drain.

3. Sautee shallots and garlic in 1 tablespoon olive oil in a nonstick frying pan until golden brown.

4. Add cherry tomatoes and cilantro. Cook until tender.

5. Add spaghetti squash and season to taste with salt and pepper as well as hot pepper flakes.

Serve pasta sauce over whole wheat pasta. Add olives for garnish. Makes three servings

Estimated nutrition information: 370 calories per serving (1 cup pasta with 1 cup sauce); protein 11 grams; carbohydrates: 60 grams; fat 14 grams, including 2 grams saturated fat; fiber 9 grams

Optional: Slice and cook low-fat chicken, turkey or vegetarian sausage or other meat substitute. Canned beans could also be used.

How are you adding fruit and vegetables? Tell us your tips here or join us at Everyday Health. (Registration is required, but it only takes a minute.)

The Holiday Challenge Returns!

With Thanksgiving just days away, it’s a perfect time to revive the LEAN PLATE CLUB Holiday Challenge. Designed to help participants maintain their weight from Thanksgiving to New Year’s, the Holiday Challenge began in 2001 in the Washington Post Health section, where it ran annually for seven years. After a three-year hiatus, I’m delighted to announce that the Holiday Challenge returns this year in partnership with Everyday Health.

If you’re new to the Holiday Challenge, this isn’t a diet. The goal is simply to maintain your weight from now until New Year’s day.

Here’s why that’s important: A decade ago, researchers from the federal government’s National Institutes of Health published a study on holiday weight gain in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine. The results showed that people at a healthy weight gained about a pound during the holidays. Most shed that weight by Spring. No big deal.

It was a different story when they examined overweight and obese participants. These people gained an average of five pounds between Thanksgiving and New Year’s. Nearly a year later, they hadn’t shed that holiday weight, which led the researchers to conclude that “the winter holiday season may present special risks for those who are already overweight or obese,” and to suggest “that such persons may benefit from seasonal efforts to prevent weight gain.”

That’s why I invite you to join me and Everyday Health in this year’s Holiday Challenge. Between now and Jan. 1, you will find one new food goal and one new activity goal per week. Look for more tips on Twitter using the hashtag #LPC.

How do you start the Holiday Challenge? Begin today by weighing yourself. That habit has helped several thousand “successful losers,” in the National Weight Control Registry maintain their weight. If getting on the scale seems daunting, remember that the goal is not to worry about what you weigh today. It’s simply to maintain your weight from now until New Year’s Day.

It’s also important to find your caloric balance. That means the calories consume daily should equal the calories burned daily with exercise and other activities. Not sure how many calories you need daily? Calculate them here. The best way to maintain caloric balance is to measure and record what you eat throughout the day.

As for goals, make fruit and vegetables half your plate at every meal and snack–also a goal of the 2010 Dietary Guidelines and of the new icon, MyPlate. The reasons are simple: Fruit and vegetables are loaded flavor, contain water and fiber. They come loaded with vitamins and phytonutrients. Plus, there are so many different varieties of fruit and vegetables that there’s something to appeal to every palate. So unless fruit and vegetables are deep-fat fried or laden with added sugar, they can help you feel full on fewer calories.

For activity, just add five minutes a day to whatever exercise you do now. I am taking the stairs whenever possible and have added a few minutes to my daily walk with our canine companion. The fall has been glorious in Washington, DC. I’ve taken my camera with me and have loved capturing photos of the changing Fall colors.

Add just five minutes a day to your usual activity--and see what you can explore--Photo by SALLY SQUIRES (TM) 2011 copyright The Wilhelm Group

So how do you plan to get through the holidays unburdened by extra weight? I’d love to hear your tips and strategies. At the end of this year’s Holiday Challenge, I’ll also give a signed copy of Secrets of the Lean Plate Club to a participant. Details to come. 

You can post comments here, join the group at Everyday Health (registration required, but it’s free) or e-mail me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Training For A Virtual 5K Walk

Neither rain, nor cold, kept us from a 4.2K training walk

The calendar says that it’s still October, but there’s cold rain and yes, a little snow today  in the nation’s capital. My canine coach, a Portuguese Water Dog named Cutter, doesn’t care. He insisted that we go for a constitutional. His motivation also helped with my plans to do a SparkPeople virtual 5K walk this week.

Virtual walk, you say? Yes, SparkPeople has both 5K and 10K options. It’s a great way to set new goals for physical activity without having to get to a real starting line or part with cash to register. Plus, you get an on-line cheering section drawn from the millions SparkPeople members. You also decide where, when and with whom you want to conduct your race.

If you’re not familiar with SparkPeople, it’s worth a look. This free, on-line community began as a paid, goal setting site in 2001–the same year that the Lean Plate Club launched. By 2005, it had transformed into a free, online community with the goal of helping participants instill healthy habits to reach a healthier weight. You can keep your information private, share it with a select few or with the entire SparkPeople community.

There’s also a place to keep daily notes. Tracking what you do is something that the National Weight Control Registry has shown is key to achieve and maintain weight loss. So I often keep short notes on the walks that Cutter and I take together.

Pets of all kinds have long been shown to have beneficial effects for their two-legged companions. Now a growing number of studies suggest that having a dog is also linked with increased physical activity for owners. Earlier this year, San Diego State scientists reported that having a dog increases the odds of meeting the recommendations for daily physical activity set by the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association. Or to play off an old-saying: if you want a friend in Washington, DC–and to get active–get a dog!

What’s your take? Does setting new goals help keep you on track for healthy habits? Does your canine companion keep you motivated to be physically active? Share your thoughts here or e-mail me and send photos of you and dog walking, running or playing at sally@sallysquires.com. I’ll post them from time to time.

 

Just One Front-of-Pack Icon

Institute of Medicine expert committee calls for one, simple nutrition icon

If the array of nutrition icons and rating systems leaves you confused about which foods and beverages to choose, there may soon be assistance: An Institute of Medicine (IOM) panel yesteday advised moving to one simple, front-of-package system to guide us to the healthiest choices.

Here’s how it would work:

Every food and beverage, from the produce aisle to the freezer compartment, would show calories per serving on the front of the package. (Fresh produce will likely have this information on shelves.) No one will need a calculator since the servings would only be listed in simple household measures, like cups, that we already use daily.

This new system would also have a simple, three-point rating to show which products are lowest in unhealthy saturated and trans fat, sodium and added sugars. The panel picked those ingredients because they are most linked with preventable illnesses from heart disease to type 2 diabetes.

Products with “3″ rank best. (Evaluation would be based on existing criteria set by the Food and Drug Administration.) The front-of-package system will also link to the well-known Nutrition Facts Panel, which is getting a make-over and is found on the back of products.

The panel’s recommendations are not binding, so it will be up to the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to decide to implement this new system. If they move forward, it would mean that all the other systems now used will be eliminated. That would be a big change in grocery aisles. Or, as the panel’s chair, Ellen Wartella of Northwestern University, put it, “a fundamental shift” in how consumers are guided to healthier fare.

The hope is that this one, simple system will help consumers make wiser choices and encourage food and beverage makers to continue to reformulate and innovate. The goal: healthier–yet tasty–products for all of us.

To learn more, read the full report. What’s your take on front-of-package systems? Do they help or confuse you? Will this proposed new system make it easier to choose healthier fare?

 

 

Breakfast: The Meal We All Deserve To Eat

Your great, great grandmother probably wouldn’t recognize the breakfast you eat today. That’s because the first meal of the day has evolved significantly over the past 200 years. To see how much it’s changed,  check out the the info graphic in the New York Times Sunday Food and Drink section.

Until the mid-19th century, breakfast consisted mostly of leftovers. Today, there is a wide range breakfast fare that has come to define this morning meal. Whether you eat toast, a heaping bowl of cereal, a bagel and cream cheese, an Egg McMuffin or one of the hundreds of other options, breakfast is the one meal that we all deserve to eat.

That’s because we’ve literally fasted since the night before–probably the only time in a 24 hour period when food isn’t easily available. So breaking the fast–aka breakfast–is the smart way to start the day. Eating breakfast is also linked with fostering better mental performance for kids and adults. Plus, 78 percent of the participants in the National Weight Control Registry, a group of several thousand “successful losers,” report that eating breakfast daily is one of the habits that they used to help achieve a healthier weight and to maintain it.

So what do you plan to have for breakfast today?

 

 

 

Dinner After Eight Flights in Five Days

This week marked a new personal road warrior best: Eight flights in just five days– a dubious distinction to be sure. So after arriving home tired after the last flight–delayed by 90 minutes–the inevitable question arose: What’s for dinner tonight?

Takeout could have been an option, but after nearly a week on the road, the thought of yet another restaurant meal was unappealing. Plus, the ‘fridge had

  • A dozen eggs
  • Fresh broccoli/carrot slaw (purchased last weekend, but still very usable)
  • A bag of fresh spinach
  • Two ears of corn that would not likely last the weekend (and I hate to waste food.)
  • Spaghetti squash
  • Assorted cheeses, including a tasty fat-free feta that is becoming a big favorite in our house
  • Olives
  • Pepperoni

The freezer had frozen chicken thighs, assorted frozen veggies and more. We also found sun dried tomatoes and plenty of staples that were canned or in jars.

What emerged from this inventory was a “fast food” plan to make omelets. First step: Steam the spinach and broccoli slaw separately in the microwave. While they cooked, the eggs were beaten lightly. The oven was preheated to finish the omelets. The frying pans were heated and were ready when the bell rang on the microwave.

Faster than we could have bought takeout at a nearby restaurant, there was a lovely meal ready-to-eat. One omelet was made from eggs, pepperoni and veggies (broccoli slaw and spinach) with a dusting of parmesan cheese. The other contained one egg plus egg whites (to reduce dietary cholesterol, saturated fat and calories), plus the same veggies and fat-free Feta. After starting on the stove, both turned a slightly golden brown in a 350 degree oven in two minutes. Total cooking time: about 15 minutes, from start to finish.

So what’s your trick for making a quick dinner without dialing for carryout or making a trip to the drive-through?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quick Dinner For A Hot Night

Cold Potato Soup for a Steamy Night

This may be the unofficial start of fall, but it’s still steamy here in the nation’s capitol. When it feels too hot to cook, I sometimes turn to serving cold soups. One of our favorites is a cold soup that I make in about five minutes in the blender. Add a salad, or some whole what pita bread with hummus or black bean dip and a little fruit salad and you’ve got a delicious meal.

Ingredients

1 can cream of potato soup

1 cup nonfat yogurt (preferably Greek style or 1 cup nonfat sour cream or a combination of both)

1 cup skim milk

Optional:

2-3 dashes of hot sauce such as Tabasco

a handful of fresh herbs, either cilantro or dill

Directions

1. Place all ingredients in blender or food processor

2. Mix until smooth

3. Chill for 15 minutes or until serving.

Makes about  four, 1 cup servings. Garnish with fresh herbs.

What’s your favorite meal for a hot night? Share your favorite tips and recipes when the weather is steamy. Or try this simple Epicurious.com.

 

 

 

Project Dinner

Twice a day, we cook from scratch…for the dog.

Not that he doesn’t deserve it. Our healthy, home-made meals have helped him overcome irritable bowel disease that threatened his health–and drained our bank account to pay the vet. There’s no question that our dog, who just celebrated his sixth birthday, is healthier for our efforts.

Trouble is, that we’re not always so dedicated to making meals for the rest of us. Nor are we alone.

Americans spend nearly half their food budget—42 percent—on meals eaten away from home, according to the US Department of Agriculture. That’s not only hard on the wallet, but also on the waistline. The USDA reports that for the average consumer, just one meal eaten out per week translates to an extra two pounds per year.

So the irony of cooking for the dog, then ordering takeout for the family, hit me while chopping his dinner one day. This was made all the more absurd by the fact that I love to cook and have a graduate degree in nutrition, a well-equipped kitchen and plenty of cookbooks and recipes.

Thus was born Project Dinner.  The challenge that I set for myself is this: Make a family meal on most nights of the week. Do this despite erratic schedules, occasional times of heavy business travel and the many other demands of a busy life that can interfere with cooking nightly.

Dinner is important for many reasons. It’s a way to bookend the day. If you eat a healthful dinner, you may be less likely to graze all night. And there’s striking evidence from Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, PhD., and her colleagues at the University of Minnesota that eating together as a family has a protective effect. Children who dine with their parents regularly are less likely to engage in risky behaviors (smoking, taking drugs, drinking alcohol and sexual activity) than those who don’t eat with their families.

During the eight months that Project Dinner has been going–and yes, it is still going, despite some detours–here’s what I’ve learned:

Begin small. I set the kitchen timer for 15 minutes and then skim through a few cookbooks to plan dinners for the week ahead or use Epicurious and other Web-based recipes. Any meals that take more than 30 minutes of prep time are eliminated.

Do as much ahead of time as possible. When I putter around the house on the weekends, I make large batches of rice and grains, then freeze in individual packets for later use. The same strategy works well for meat, poultry, fish and bacon that can be thawed quickly in the microwave and then sauteed or broiled.

Sometimes I rise a few minutes early to marinate meat, poultry or fish in a plastic bag that sits in the ‘fridge all day, ready for instant cooking at night.  Occasionally, I set the table in the morning too.  It serves as a commitment to that night’s meal and is a welcome sight on returning home.

Have a back-up plan. Our family schedule, like most others, rarely goes as planned.  So I try to be ready to punt. It helps is to have staples on hand. I stock eggs (omelets, frittatas and scrambled eggs can be ready in 15 minutes), pasta (a food with a long shelf life) canned beans, sun-dried tomatoes, tomato sauce and broth that can be reconstituted. Garlic, ginger and fresh spices are kept in my ‘fridge along with soy sauce and some other Asian sauces including oyster sauce, fish sauce and garlic paste and some long shelf-life cheeses, including parmesan.  The freezer has also been a life-saver. Staples include frozen vegetables, fruit, tortellini, herbs and pizza dough.

Use the grocery as your sous chef. Whether its pre-washed veggies, broccoli florets, grated cheese or marinated meat, there are plenty of ways to shave minutes off food prep without breaking your budget.

So what’s your nightly game plan for dinner? How often do you cook per week?

 

Welcome

One of the goals of this blog is to rekindle the “virtual” conversations that I had for seven years with readers of my Lean Plate Club column at The Washington Post and to begin new conversations with many others.

As always, there’s a lot happening in the nutrition world. Earlier this week, researchers at the National Institutes of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) reported in the British medical journal, Lancetnew evidence to suggest that metabolism may slow as pounds are lost.That means it could take longer than expected to shed weight, unless activity is increased–a finding that has also been suggested by those in the National Weight Control Registry, a group of several thousand “successful losers.”

To put these new findings into action, the NIDDK, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, offered a new Web based tool to help you re-calibrate activity as pounds are lost.

For inspiration, check out this featured blog from Beth Donovan on Spark People. Beth Donovan used to be bedridden because she weighed 460 pounds. She has lost 150 pounds–with more to go–and offers offers some exercise tips for those whose mobility is limited whether for weight, age or injury. It’s a good reminder that the rest of us able-bodied folks have no excuses for not moving more. With that, I’m taking the dog for a nice long walk. How about you? What’s your latest inspiration?