Winter Food Intake... Without Despair! |
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When winter rolls around, you feel your body slow down, and probably you'll notice that all you want to do is eat bread and cheese. While a certain amount of comfort eating can help your spirits up when days are short, you'll soon realise that too much of this pleasant activity can, in it's turn contribute to feeling groggy and listless. People are often ignorant about the need to change their diets as season changes, this article explores a few tips for eating well while keep back those winter blues! 1.Be colorful! The more color that is in your diet, the better. Avoid relying mostly on meat, cheese and bread. It is time to visit your neighborhood super mall and look for bright colors that catch your eye. Beets, sweet potatoes, hydroponic tomatoes and various fruits provide Vitamin A and Vitamin C in sufficient quantities which your body so sorely needs during this season. 2.Figure out what's in season. It is possible that a vegetable that you have eaten so eagerly turned out to be tasteless. This is what comes of eating vegetables that are out of season and have been grown in the hothouses or shipped over a long distance, and it can make eating vegetables during winter very difficult. Leeks, which are a wonderfully mild green vegetable, and beets are a great early veggies, though, so see what you can do with some recipes involving those ingredients. 3.Sugar Believe it or not, a bit of sugar can be worth the calories when it spurs you towards more energy and getting things done. Start avoiding heavy refined sugars that are found in candy and chocolate and instead see what you can find in the dried fruit area. This is again a great way to integrate some color into your diet, so look for dried papaya, dried pineapple, and other sugary goodies. 4.Buy locally Support your local farmers and buy your food locally. Chances are, there's a farmer's market somewhere near you and you can take a look at exactly what is in season and what has recently come up. This is a great way to make sure that any food that you get tastes great and has the added bonus of helping out small farmers as well. You will very soon feel the difference between food that is grown locally and food that has been preserved and treated to be sent over long distances. In short, the advent of winter doesn't warrant bad food practices or a retreat from vegetables. Simply take a look around and make some carefully considered choices before you buy.
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