Tip to Lower Cholesterol
Where and how you shop can have a huge
impact on your cholesterol levels. And here is a tip to lower
cholesterol: If you do most of your shopping at the local
supermarket, are you often tempted by the foods you see on sale
in the aisles - foods such as potato chips and frozen chicken
dinners? Do you leave the store with high-fat items that were
not on your list? You are not alone.
The many foods and choices available to us when we shop
should make it easier to choose healthy items that we enjoy and
are good for us, but often the opposite is true. When faced
with lots of food choices, many of us find it hard to resist
the foods that we know are bad for us. Luckily, relearning to
shop can go a long way towards lowering your cholesterol over
the next 30 days. For the next 30 days, consider where you shop
for food:
1) Greengrocers, farmer’s markets, and farmer’s stands.
These are excellent places to shop, and if you want to lower
your cholesterol over the next month, you will want to make it
a priority to shop at these types of locations for groceries.
Shopping at farmer’s markets, farmer’s stands, and greengrocers
has several advantages:
- You will get a wider variety of very fresh food
products than you would get at a grocery store.
- You will support local farmers and enjoy lower
prices.
- These places are more environmentally friendly and give
you better healthy choices.
- These places to shop feature fewer advertisements and
convenience foods packed with fats.
If you want to lower your cholesterol and enjoy a lower-fat
diet, shopping at your local farmer’s market, greengrocer or
farmer’s stand is an excellent way to get the foods you need to
stay healthy.
2) Farms and organic farms. Pick-your-own farms, organic
farms, and farms that sell directly to customers offer great
value and fresh in-season healthy foods, often at great prices.
A few hours at one of these farms can give you some fresh air,
exercise, and the foods you need to stay healthy. Visiting
these sorts of farms for some of your menu items is a great way
to eat more heart-healthy products.
3) Health food stores. Health food stores often have a wide
variety of products that are low-fat and animal-protein-free
(there products are sometimes called vegan). These stores can
be great places to buy dried peas and lentils, herbs, natural
products and a wide variety of items that are not available at
your grocery store but which are great for your heart
health.
4) Grocery stores. Many grocery stores offer a produce
section as well as meat and deli sections which feature low-fat
products. However, most grocery stores are also filled with
high-fat convenience foods. If you need to shop at a grocery
store for all or much of your food, make conscious choices to
pick out the healthiest products possible and avoid the aisles
or sections of the stores that have high-fat foods.
Tip: When shopping in a grocery store, do your shopping
around the perimeter of the store. This is usually where the
produce, milk, and meat sections are. Avoid the center aisles,
where chips, pop, cookies, and other high-fat foods tend to
lurk.
5) Convenience stores. You should avoid shopping in these
types of stores unless it is a true emergency. Most convenience
stores have higher prices and lots of high-fat and processed
foods that are prominently displayed. Healthy foods are often
at the back and fresh produce tends to be in less than fresh
states. Since these stores are tiny and specialize in
"convenience foods," there is usually very little variety of
healthy options available. If you want to lower your
cholesterol over the next month, avoid shopping at convenience
stores.
6) Cafeterias, cafes and restaurants. Since cafeterias,
cafes, and restaurants are businesses, they want to make money
by having you enjoy their food enough to purchase more of it.
For this reason, these places worry more about taste than about
heart-health. High-fat and high-sodium foods are on too many
restaurant and cafeteria menus, and if you want to lower your
cholesterol, you need to stay away from these places.
If you want to lower your cholesterol over the next thirty
days, avoid buying prepared or pre-packaged food, whether from
grocery stores or restaurants. Brown-bag your lunch and arrange
to meet friends somewhere else besides a restaurant. If you
need to eat at a restaurant, choose the smallest portions of
the plainest foods available. This is better than ordering the
salad, assuming that it will be healthier - a salad packed with
bacon bits and cheese can sometimes be among the highest-fat
items on a menu!
Instead, choose dishes that seem to have low-fat elements -
such as skinless chicken or fruits. Ask for dressings on the
side and eat around any high-fat items such as cheese. Avoid
cream sauces.
You don’t need to completely change the way you shop over
the next thirty days in order to lower your cholesterol, but
stopping by the farmer’s market once a week and avoiding
convenience stores and restaurants will make it that much
easier to find a terrific variety of fresh heart-healthy foods
that you will enjoy eating. After all, how good your diet is
depends on the ingredients you put into your food.
How you shop can be as important as where you shop.
Taking a few simple steps can make it easier for you to choose
foods that will help you lower your cholesterol:
1) Shop for food once a week. Plan your menu for each week
ahead of time and select one day a week for food shopping. This
will minimize the amount of time you spend thinking about food
and will reduce the chances that you forget items or overshop
(and overeat).
2) Shop after eating. Shopping on an empty stomach will
encourage impulsive buying. Your willpower will also be at its
weakest when you are hungry, making you more likely to reach
for fatty comfort-foods.
3) Choose a time to shop when the stores are not too full
and the selection is at its height. At farmer’s markets and
greengrocers, the selection may be best earlier in the day. You
can ask your grocery store when their deliveries of produce are
scheduled. If you shop when stores are uncrowded and selection
is good, you are more likely to have the time to make good
choices - and you will be able to enjoy a selection that makes
healthy eating easy.
4) Stick to a list. Plan your shopping list -based on your
weekly menu - ahead of time and stick to the list to prevent
overbuying and overeating. The only exception to this should be
fresh fruits and vegetables you see that may make good snacks.
You can buy some of these if you find fresh produce that you
have not tried before or produce that is one sale. In general,
though, buy only what you need each week so that you will have
complete meals rather than food that goes bad or invites
binging.
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