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Nutrition
Tips for Families
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Click here for the complete booklet of resources and activities about nutrition and the food pyramid.
Eat Right
- Make half your grains whole. Choose whole-grain foods, such
as whole-wheat bread, oatmeal, brown rice, and lowfat popcorn, more
often.
- Vary your veggies. Go dark green and orange with your
vegetables—eat spinach, broccoli, carrots, and sweet potatoes.
- Focus on fruits. Eat them at meals, and at snack time, too.
Choose fresh, frozen, canned, or dried, and go easy on the fruit juice.
- Get your calcium-rich foods. To build strong bones serve
lowfat and fat-free milk and other milk products several times a day.
- Go lean with protein. Eat lean or lowfat meat, chicken, turkey,
and fish. Also, change your tune with more dry beans and peas. Add
chick peas, nuts, or seeds to a salad; pinto beans to a burrito; or kidney
beans to soup.
- Change your oil. We all need oil. Get yours from fish, nuts, and
liquid oils such as corn, soybean, canola, and olive oil.
- Don’t sugarcoat it. Choose foods and beverages that do not have
sugar and caloric sweeteners as one of the first ingredients. Added
sugars contribute calories with few, if any, nutrients.
Exercise
- Set a good example. Be active and get your family to join you.
Have fun together. Play with the kids or pets. Go for a walk, tumble in
the leaves, or play catch.
- Take the President’s Challenge as a family. Track your
individual physical activities together and earn awards for active
lifestyles at www.presidentschallenge.org.
- Establish a routine. Set aside time each day as activity time—
walk, jog, skate, cycle, or swim. Adults need at least 30 minutes of
physical activity most days of the week; children 60 minutes everyday
or most days.
- Have an activity party. Make the next birthday party centered
on physical activity. Try backyard Olympics, or relay races. Have a
bowling or skating party.
- Set up a home gym. Use household items, such as canned
foods, as weights. Stairs can substitute for stair machines.
- Move it! Instead of sitting through TV commercials, get up and
move. When you talk on the phone, lift weights or walk around.
Remember to limit TV watching and computer time
- Give activity gifts. Give gifts that encourage physical
activity—active games or sporting equipment.
HAVE FUN!!!
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