Archive for October, 2008

Healthiest Foods Under $1

Monday, October 6th, 2008

divine carolineBy Brie Cadman, Divine Caroline
Food prices are climbing, and some might be looking to fast foods and packaged foods for their cheap bites. But low cost doesn’t have to mean low quality. In fact, some of the most inexpensive things you can buy are the best things for you. At the grocery store, getting the most nutrition for the least amount of money means hanging out on the peripheries—near the fruits and veggies, the meat and dairy, and the bulk grains—while avoiding the expensive packaged interior. By doing so, not only will your kitchen be stocked with excellent foods, your wallet won’t be empty.

1. Oats
High in fiber and complex carbohydrates, oats have also been shown to lower cholesterol. And they sure are cheap—a dollar will buy you more than a week’s worth of hearty breakfasts.  

Serving suggestions: Sprinkle with nuts and fruit in the morning, make oatmeal cookies for dessert.

2. Eggs
You can get about a half dozen of eggs for a dollar, making them one of the cheapest and most versatile sources of protein. They are also a good source of the antioxidants lutein and zeaxanthin, which may ward off age-related eye problems.

Serving suggestions: Huevos rancheros for breakfast, egg salad sandwiches for lunch, and frittatas for dinner.

3. Kale
This dark, leafy green is loaded with vitamin C, carotenoids, and calcium. Like most greens, it is usually a dollar a bunch.

Serving suggestions: Chop up some kale and add to your favorite stir-fry; try German-Style Kale or traditional Irish Colcannon.

4. Potatoes
Because we often see potatoes at their unhealthiest—as fries or chips—we don’t think of them as nutritious, but they definitely are. Eaten with the skin on, potatoes contain almost half a day’s worth of Vitamin C, and are a good source of potassium. If you opt for sweet potatoes or yams, you’ll also get a good wallop of beta carotene. Plus, they’re dirt cheap and have almost endless culinary possibilities.

Serving suggestions: For lunch, make potato salad; for dinner, have them with sour cream and chives.

5. Apples
I’m fond of apples because they’re inexpensive, easy to find, come in portion-controlled packaging, and taste good. They are a good source of pectin—a fiber that may help reduce cholesterol—and they have the antioxidant Vitamin C, which keeps your blood vessels healthy.

Serving suggestions: Plain; as applesauce; or in baked goods

6. Nuts
Though nuts have a high fat content, they’re packed with the good-for-you fats—unsaturated and monounsaturated. They’re also good sources of essential fatty acids, Vitamin E, and protein. And because they’re so nutrient-dense, you only need to eat a little to get the nutritional benefits. Although some nuts, like pecans and macadamias, can be costly, peanuts, walnuts, and almonds, especially when bought in the shell, are low in cost.

Serving suggestions: Raw; roasted and salted; sprinkled in salads.

7. Bananas
At a local Trader Joe’s, I found bananas for about 19¢ apiece; a dollar gets you a banana a day for the workweek. High in potassium and fiber (9 grams for one), bananas are a no-brainer when it comes to eating your five a day quotient of fruits and veggies.

Serving suggestions: In smoothies, by themselves, in cereal and yogurt.

8. Garbanzo Beans
With beans, you’re getting your money’s worth and then some. Not only are they a great source of protein and fiber, but ’bonzos are also high in fiber, iron, folate, and manganese, and may help reduce cholesterol levels. And if you don’t like one type, try another—black, lima, lentils … the varieties are endless. Though they require soaking and cooking, the most inexpensive way to purchase these beans is in dried form; a precooked can will still only run you around a buck.

Serving suggestions: In salads, curries

9. Broccoli
Broccoli contains tons of nice nutrients—calcium, vitamins A and C, potassium, folate, and fiber. As if that isn’t enough, broccoli is also packed with phytonutrients, compounds that may help prevent heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers. Plus, it’s low in calories and cost.

Serving suggestions: Throw it in salads, stir fries, or served as an accompaniment to meat

10. Watermelon
Though you may not be able to buy an entire watermelon for a dollar, your per serving cost isn’t more than a few dimes. This summertime fruit is over 90 percent water, making it an easy way to hydrate, and gives a healthy does of Vitamin C, potassium, and lycopene, an antioxidant that may ward off cancer.

Serving suggestions: Freeze chunks for popsicles; eat straight from the rind; squeeze to make watermelon margaritas (may negate the hydrating effect!).

11. Wild Rice
It won’t cost you much more than white rice, but wild rice is much better for you. Low in fat and high in protein and fiber, this gluten-free rice is a great source of complex carbohydrates. It packs a powerful potassium punch and is loaded with B vitamins. Plus, it has a nutty, robust flavor.

Serving suggestions: Mix with nuts and veggies for a cold rice salad; blend with brown rice for a side dish.

12. Beets
Beets are my kind of vegetable—their natural sugars make them sweet to the palate while their rich flavor and color make them nutritious for the body. They’re powerhouses of folate, iron, and antioxidants.

Serving suggestions: Shred into salads, slice with goat cheese. If you buy your beets with the greens on, you can braise them in olive oil like you would other greens.

13. Butternut Squash
This beautiful gourd swings both ways: sometimes savory, sometimes sweet. However you prepare the butternut, it will not only add color and texture, but also five grams of fiber per half cup and chunks and chunks of Vitamin A and C. When in season, butternut squash and related gourds are usually less than a dollar a pound.

Serving suggestions: Cook and dot with butter and salt.

14. Whole Grain Pasta
In the days of Atkins, pasta was wrongly convicted, for there is nothing harmful about a complex carbohydrate source that is high in protein and B vitamins. Plus, it’s one of the cheapest staples you can buy.

Serving suggestions: Mix clams and white wine with linguine; top orzo with tomatoes and garlic

15. Sardines
As a kid, I used to hate it when my dad would order sardines on our communal pizzas, but since then I’ve acquired a taste for them. Because not everyone has, you can still get a can of sardines for relatively cheap. And the little fish come with big benefits: calcium, iron, magnesium, zinc, and B vitamins. And, because they’re low on the food chain, they don’t accumulate mercury.

Serving suggestions: Mash them with parsley, lemon juice, and olive oil for a spread; eat them plain on crackers; enjoy as a pizza topping (adults only).

16. Spinach
Spinach is perhaps one of the best green leafies out there—it has lots of Vitamin C, iron, and trace minerals. Plus, you can usually find it year round for less than a dollar.

Serving suggestions: Sautéed with eggs, as a salad, or a Spinach Frittata.

17. Tofu
Not just for vegetarians anymore, tofu is an inexpensive protein source that can be used in both savory and sweet recipes. It’s high in B vitamins and iron, but low in fat and sodium, making it a healthful addition to many dishes. 

Serving suggestions: Use silken varieties in Tofu Cheesecake; add to smoothies for a protein boost; cube and marinate for barbecue kebobs.

18. Lowfat Milk
Yes, the price of a gallon of milk is rising, but per serving, it’s still under a dollar; single serving milk products, like yogurt, are usually less than a dollar, too. Plus, you’ll get a lot of benefit for a small investment. Milk is rich in protein, vitamins A and D, potassium, and niacin, and is one of the easiest ways to get bone-strengthening calcium.

Serving suggestions: In smoothies, hot chocolate, or coffee; milk products like low fat cottage cheese and yogurt.

19. Pumpkin Seeds
When it’s time to carve your pumpkin this October, don’t shovel those seeds into the trash—they’re a goldmine of magnesium, protein, and trace minerals. Plus, they come free with the purchase of a pumpkin.

Serving suggestions: Salt, roast, and eat plain; toss in salads.

20. Coffee
The old cup-o-joe has been thrown on the stands for many a corporeal crime—heart disease, cancer, osteoporosis—but exonerated on all counts. In fact, coffee, which is derived from a bean, contains beneficial antioxidants that protect against free radicals and may actually help thwart heart disease and cancer. While it’s not going to fill you up like the other items on this list, it might make you a lot perkier. When made at home, coffee runs less than 50¢ cents a cup.

Serving suggestions: Just drink it.

Although that bag of 99¢ Cheetos may look like a bargain, knowing that you’re not getting much in the way of nutrition or sustenance makes it seem less like a deal and more like a dupe. Choosing one of these twenty items, or the countless number of similarly nutritious ones, might just stretch that dollar from a snack into a meal.

healthiestArticle republished with permission by Divine Caroline. Divine Caroline is a unique community of women writers.

Fight Breast Cancer In Under 5

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

By Heather Cabot, The Well Mom
This month, there are lots of fast ways to give back by helping to raise money to fight breast cancer and to spread the word about early detection. Here are four quick ways to get involved that will take a few minutes and make you feel good!

1. Walk the Walk walk
No time to participate in a Walk or Run for the Cure this month?  No worries, you can do it in cyberspace and join other virtual gals raising money for the Gal to Gal Foundation.  The proceeds help the 300,000 women and men diagnosed every year with Stage IV breast cancer and their families. Go to www.galtogalwalk.org , sign up, (and here’s the fun part), design an avatar to go the distance for you.  You can search for friends, invite friends and start a team, including The Well Mom team!

On a sad note, the woman who has spearheaded this incredible philanthropic effort for the last two years lost her own battle with Stage IV breast cancer just a few days ago. 38-year-old Dorit Shapiro inspired thousands of women to get involved with the Gal to Gal Walk and TMW has learned the event will continue to pursue its goal of raising $250,000 this year in Shapiro’s honor. Watch a tribute to this inspiring woman here.

2. Shop Pink
Countless retailers are offering to donate a portion of their proceeds to breast cancer research and prevention.  Our friends at Someone Spoil Me put together a fun list of the pink products you can buy online this month (and beyond) to support the cause.
walk
I personally like the cute iPod cases – 10% of the purchase price goes to the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade.
walk

3. Feel Your Boobies
Remind a friend or family member to get to know her breasts. Send her an e-card!
Read more about the founder of Feel Your Boobies (www.feelyourboobies.com) and her amazing story of survival and triumph about here on TWM.
walk
4. Spread the word about TWM!
Tell your friends to sign up for The Well Mom this month! We’re donating $1 to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation for every new person who registers.

Why I Have A Muffin Top

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

muffin topBy Petra a.k.a Wise Young Mommy, Work It Mom
OK, so I fell off the diet wagon — HARD. Luckily, my ass is so fat that it broke my fall and it barely hurt at all. But, it did get me thinking of all the reasons why I just can’t seem to lose these extra pounds that are clinging to me for dear life. So I have come up with a list: The Top Ten Reasons I Have a Muffin Top. (For those of you who don’t know what a muffin top is, put on a pair of jeans that are too tight and top it off with a spandex shirt and you will quickly learn the meaning of the phrase.)

10. I was going for a J-Lo booty and just went too far.

9.  Watching FitTV doesn’t actually burn calories.

8.  Whenever I have free time, I choose to take a shower over exercising.

7.  Although it makes me sweat profusely, paying bills is not actually exercise.

6.  I feel it necessary to finish the uneaten food on my children’s plates, because in this economy, who am I to waste food?

5. I spend all day sitting around with my feet up eating bon-bons (HA! Yeah right!).

4. I love Ben and Jerry’s. ‘Nuff said.

3.  I spend so much time in front of my computer that the radioactive waves coming off the device are mutating my genetics in such a way that makes it impossible for me to lose weight.

2. I don’t want my husband to feel insecure that I will leave him if I get a rockin’ bod.

And the number one reason I have a muffin top is…

1. BLOGGING DOES NOT COUNT AS EXERCISE!

work it mom
Republished with permission from Work It! Mom, “a place where working moms find support to de-stress.”

Feel Your Boobies

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

boobiesBy Heather Cabot, The Well Mom
For many moms, the reminders to do self breast exams go in one ear and out the other.   We’re busy. We forget. We don’t really know if we’re doing it right.

Breast cancer survivor Leigh Hurst decided there must be a better way to encourage women to take the time.  She says detecting breast cancer is really about getting to know your breasts and what is normal for your body so that if there is a change, you can notify your doctor. 

“I was diagnosed at age 33 with breast cancer after finding myown lump just by simply “feeling my boobies.” I had noticed the lumpfor two years prior to my diagnosis, but the doctors didn’t feel thelump during my annual exams until I brought it to their attention,” says Hurst, who eventually learned she had Stage I cancer four years ago.

During chemotherapy and radiation treatment, she started thinking about how she could remind her close circle of friends to be more mindful of their breasts.  She started making fun t-shirts to encourage them to “feel their boobies,” which eventually inspired other friends to create a cute logo for her slogan, “Feel Your Boobies,” plus a website to sell the shirts.

Shortly after, a fortuitous plug by Katie Couric on the Today Show turned Hurst’s project into a full-time job and has evolved into the national Feel Your Boobies campaign.  October 10-17th marks the 2nd annual Feel Your Boobies Week.  The Well Mom interviewed Hurst about her mission, her passion and how you can get involved.
boobies
TWM:
Moms have very little time for themselves. How long does it really take to “Feel Your Boobies?”

LH: “Feeling Your Boobies” is as simple as taking a few extra minutes in the shower when you’re soaping up or when putting on your bra when getting dressed.  The more familiar you are with your breasts the easier it is to recognize a change. The key is not to think of it like an additional thing you need to do – you really are already doing it.

TWM: Why is making the time to get to know your breasts so important  
for women under 40?

LH: Women under 40 generally do not get mammograms so for women between the ages of 20 and 40, getting to know your breasts by “feeling your boobies” is even more important because formal screening hasn’t begun.  In addition, as in my case, sometimes doctors are unable to feel a lump and since you know your body better than anyone it’s important to not rely on your annual exam to find a lump.  In order for the doctors to feel my lump, I had to call it to their attention.  If I hadn’t been in touch with what was normal for me, the lump would have gone undetected even longer.

TWM: Why did you launch this campaign? How has it changed your life?

LH:  Upon being diagnosed I realized that I wasn’t doing a traditional self-breast exam, I was just in touch with my own body through the course of my daily routine of showering and getting dressed.  I also realized that the breast cancer messages that were out there really were not reaching my friends and I – we never talked or thought about breast cancer at all.

My life is completely different than it was prior to my diagnosis and every day I feel like breast cancer has given me the gift of clarity and purpose in my life. There is nothing better than getting an email from someone who’s been touched by the Feel Your Boobies campaign and whose early breast diagnosis is a result of our efforts.

TWM: How can women get involved?

LH: There are many ways you can get involved with our “Are You Doing It?”® Reminder Campaign to help us spread our message. All of the information is posted on our website at www.feelyourboobies.com.

•    Talk about Boobies: Tell your friends about us and remind them to “feel their boobies”
•    Donate to Boobies: Donations help fund our “Are You Doing It?” ® campaign.  This year our campaign included a Boobies @ the Beach promotion and the Boobies Bus®. 
•    Buy Boobies Stuff: Our message spreading gear is not only a great reminder to you and those who see it, but it also helps fund our campaign – oh, and it’s pretty darn hip too!
•    Join our Online Communities: Sign up to receive our e-newsletter from the home page of our website, and join our MySpace and Facebook pages too!
•    Download Boobies Icons: Share Boobies with your friends by downloading our free badges, wallpapers, icons & avatars for your computer.

TWM: Do you have advice for moms battling breast cancer while trying to  
juggle family responsibilities? Advice for those around them?

LH: The advice I have for anyone going through breast cancer is to be open about what you need.  Allow yourself to lean on those who want to help and don’t be afraid to feel sad and down sometimes.  I think women are often the caretakers in relationships so this can be hard for us, but in order to be able to take care of those around you it’s important to take care of yourself first, especially when dealing with something as physically and emotionally draining as a breast cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatment.  Many women, like myself, find it helpful to find a counselor or therapist you can talk to while going through it so you have an objective ear to share your thoughts with throughout the process and even afterwards if need be.  Getting back to your “normal” life after breast cancer can be just as hard as treatment and having a support system in place to help you through it is very important.

Watch this video about Feel Your Boobies: