GAME DAY FOOD ADVICE
Many Super Bowl menus are not only high in fat and calories but also a recipe for indigestion and, if not careful, food-borne illness.
Tips for preparing, serving party food
- Safe food handling: Always wash your hands before and after handling food. Always serve food on clean plates, not those previously holding raw meat or poultry.
- Cook meat thoroughly: Beef and pork should reach an internal temperature of 145 degrees. And poultry should reach a minimum internal temperature of 165 degrees.
- The two-hour rule: Foods should not sit at room temperature for more than two hours. Keep track of how long foods have been sitting out and discard anything left out for two hours or more.
- Keep hot foods hot, cold foods cold: Hot foods should be held at 140 degrees or warmer (you can use chafing dishes, slow cookers or warming trays). Cold foods should be held at 40 degrees or colder (you can nest dishes in bowls of ice or use small serving bowls and replace them).
Source: USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service
Tips for fun and healthy Super Bowl eating
- Don't skip meals: Since the game isn't until after dinner, serve your family breakfast, lunch and dinner so they will have filled up on healthy foods and be less tempted by snacks later.
- Be active: Let this day of sports inspire your family, anything from taking a walk around the block to walking the dog to a friendly family pickup football game. During the game, channel that energy into dancing around when Katy Perry performs at halftime. Let your kids create their own touchdown moves and do them each time a team scores.
- Sack sugary beverages: Have plenty of water on hand for the kids in place of sugary juices or sodas (even if you choose to drink them during the game). Wake up your water by adding slices of fruit.
- Adults, go easy on the alcohol: Alcohol is full of empty calories, and excess alcohol can lower inhibitions and lead to overeating.
- Go easy on processed starches: Watch the intake of chips, crackers, french fries, etc., and keep plenty of raw vegetables around for easy, healthy munching.
- Get creative: Fruit kebabs, homemade popcorn and build-your-own salads are fun and healthy options.
Sources: local nutritionist Keith Kantor, personal chef Jennifer Hill Booker and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta’s Strong4Life
For recipes on jazzing up your popcorn, go to www.strong4life.com/pages/galleries/Popcorn.
MENU IDEAS
Fans can put their spirit on full display for the Patriots by serving up fresh strawberries, blue tortilla chips, red-hot chicken tenders, and crunchy cauliflower. As for Seattle fans, go for a spinach salad, broccoli, guacamole and blue tortilla chips. For more ideas, go to www.strong4life.com/pages/EatMoveLive/HealthyEating/HealthyEating.
For more healthy menu ideas, go to http://parenting.blog.ajc.com/.
Sunday is not only a big game day.
As fans everywhere prepare to watch the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots compete, there is another rivalry to keep in mind: you versus the chips and dip.
In fact, the Super Bowl is the nation’s second-largest day for food consumption, next to Thanksgiving Day, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That’s gobs of chips and salsa, spicy meatballs and, of course, the staple food of the Super Bowl, chicken wings. Get this: 1.25 billion wings will be devoured during Super Bowl XLIX.
But Sunday doesn’t have to be centered on the TV — and endless snacking. A few simple adjustments — such as swapping out processed foods for raw vegetables and sliced fruit, and getting off the couch (even if it’s just during the commercials) — can help curb unnecessary calorie consumption, according to experts.
Keith Kantor, a Norcross nutritionist and author of the book “The Green Box League of Nutritious Justice” (Effective Press, $38.95), recommends fighting the temptation to skip meals before the game. Showing up to a party starving is “only asking for trouble,” he said, and will lead to devouring double the amount of dip and chips you’d normally consume.
And for those drinking alcohol, he suggests sipping a glass of water between alcoholic beverages. Drinking water will keep you hydrated and fill you up — ultimately leading to less eating (and less alcohol consumption).
Another way to balance out excess calories is by getting plenty of exercise. Avoid sitting around before the game, since you will be doing so much of that during the game, he said.
Jennifer Hill Booker, a personal chef in Atlanta and owner of the catering company Your Resident Gourmet, likes to serve food in courses, which can help keep the menu exciting (even if the battle between the Seahawks and the Patriots isn’t). Bringing out food little by little also ensures food doesn’t sit too long.
She likes to mix traditional Super Bowl bites with low-fat options. For example, she often begins with a hummus platter paired with a plate of hot wings, followed by fruit kebabs accompanied by queso and chips, and finishes with a build-your-own-salad and side of meatballs.
This year, Booker, author of the new book “Field Peas to Foie Gras: Southern Recipes With a French Accent” (Pelican Publishing Co., $26.95), will be watching the game at a friend’s house, and she plans to bring grilled honey and lime chicken strips (a low-fat alternative to hot wings) and a black-eyed pea salad-like dip served with baked tortilla chips.
One of Booker’s favorite low-fat munchies is homemade popcorn dishes. By adding some spices such as cayenne or brown sugar for sweetness, popcorn can be an enticing and high-fiber, vitamin-rich alternative to chips. (One of her stove-top recipes calls for up to 1/4 cup of oil and 1/2 to 2/3 cup of popcorn kernels; once popcorn is popped, add 1-2 teaspoons of fresh, cracked black pepper, 1/3 cup of shredded Parmesan cheese and sea salt to taste.)
Kristen Smith, a registered dietitian in Atlanta, said one of the best ways to keep noshing in check is through portion control. She suggests using small and single-size serving dishes, such as mini cups for dips and coffee mugs for chili, along with mini-size cans of soda.
“The Super Bowl is a day when you can enjoy yourself, but you shouldn’t go overboard,” she said. “One of my approaches is to eye all of the food and fill up at one time one plate instead of picking and grazing all night.”
Watching what you eat, she added, does not mean skimping on dessert.
Smith, founder of and contributor to the blog www.360FamilyNutrition.org, said her favorite game day treats include mini brownies cut in the shape 0f little footballs, and sliced strawberries with a sweet topping that mixes equal amounts of Greek yogurt and whipped topping.
Ashley Skorcz, a registered dietitian with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, said sometimes placement of food can help stave off overeating: Position foods away from the TV and out of direct sight.
And experts say it’s not always really about your appetite. Sometimes, we overeat because we are simply tired. With that in mind, getting a good night’s rest Saturday night could be the key to eating in moderation.
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