Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 05 Nov, 2014 03:20 PM
    Do you want to help trim yours and your family’s waistlines? One can save over a month’s worth of calories every year by ditching 'ready meals' and instead taking a Do it Yourself (DIY) approach to making common foods.
     
    The research by etailer AppliancesDirect found that the average family stands to save 240,000 calories, the equivalent of 32 days’ recommended calorie intake for a family of four, by home-making meals, instead of relying on shop prepared versions, reports femalefirst.co.uk.
     
    The statistics indicate Britain is a nation of false foodies which, despite being obsessed with cookery shows like the “Great British Bake Off” and “Masterchef”, has the highest ready meal consumption in Europe.
     
    “Obesity rates have never been higher and that is largely due to our lifestyles. Our grandparents were brought up on single-ingredient whole foods and we should eat more like them,” said Nik Litwinenko-Jones, lifestyle nutritionist at Quality for Life Fitness.
     
    “Yet now it's too easy to opt for ready-meals packed with long lists of ingredients - as a rule the longer the list the more you should avoid. These meals have best before dates of many weeks, meaning they are packed with salt, sugar and preservatives, increasing your risk of life-threatening illnesses such as Coronary Heart Disease and Type II Diabetes,” added Jones.
     
    More than 65 percent of Britishers admit to eating ready meals five times per week, while 57 percent buy readymade fruit juices or smoothies three or more times per week.
     
    But not only are these pre-prepared products often laden with excessive sugar, salt and fat, statistics indicate they are also much more expensive.
     
    By switching to home-prepared foods instead, the statistics show that the average family could save almost 2,000 pounds per year, the cost of the average family holiday.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts

    Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts
    Oleate, a common dietary fat found in olive oil, may help restore proper metabolism of fuel that gets disturbed in case of heart failure, a study suggests....

    Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts

    Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies

    Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies
    Sleep twitches activate circuits throughout the developing brain, says the study, suggesting that twitches teach newborns about their limbs and what they can do with them....

    Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies

    Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer

    Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer
    Scientists have received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to use "Tumour Paint", a product derived from scorpion venom for study...

    Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?
    The cells that control our rhythms of sleep and wakefulness may have first evolved in the ocean - hundreds of millions of years ago - in response to pressure...

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

    How exercise keeps depression at bay

    How exercise keeps depression at bay
    It is known that physical exercise has many beneficial effects on health and researchers have now found how exercise shields the brain from stress-induced depression....

    How exercise keeps depression at bay

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer
    British scientists have found that chemical signals produced by a type of immune cells, called macrophages, also act as a "survival signal" for melanoma cells....

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer