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Cooking Light

It’s All About Habits, Not Diets

by Janet on December 7, 2012

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It’s official.  I’m proud to announce that the book I’ve been working on for the last year with the editors of Cooking Light is being released!  You can buy it here on Amazon (and I hope that you do!)

I’m so proud of this book.  It’s such a reflection of my nutrition philosophy and the approach I try and champion here on Nutrition Unplugged.  Perhaps you’ve read my blog’s mission.

My mission:  Helping people cut through the clutter and focus on the fad-free facts about nutrition.

What I believe:

  • Nutrition is too often mired in myths, misinformation and misery.
  • Food should be enjoyed, not feared.
  • Some nutrition claims and evangelists should be viewed with a skeptical eye.
  • Nutrition is a science, not a point of view.
  • If something sounds too good to be true — it usually is.
  • No single food is the downfall of the American diet — or a savior.
  • Taste and health can happily co-exist.
  • It’s important to eat what you love and love what you eat.

Well this book puts those principles into action.  It’s the culmination of the 12 Healthy Habits program that began in Cooking Light magazine and on CookingLight.com.  The emphasis is on health, not weight.  No foods are forbidden, and eating is revered as a source of pleasure, not guilt or regret.

You’ll find an action plan with tons of road-tested tips and delicious recipes to help you meet 12 different goals: 

1. Cook at least three more meals per week.
2. Eat a healthy breakfast every day of the week.
3. Eat three servings of whole grains a day. 
4. Be active for 30 minutes a day, three times a week.
5. Eat three servings of vegetables each day.
6. Make seafood the centerpiece of two meals a week.
7. Increase healthy fats and decrease unhealthy fats every day.
8. Go meatless one day a week for all three meals.
9. Add strength training at least two times a week.
10. Reduce the amount of sodium you eat every day.
11. Find strategies to help you eat less without thinking about it.
12. Be mindful, purposeful and joyful each time you eat.

Throughout the book you’ll find some inspiring stories from real-life folks who have successfully made changes, along with some terrific advice from some of the country’s leading experts and many of my favorite nutrition bloggers, including Liz Weiss and Janice Bissex of the Meal Makeover Moms’ Kitchen, Regan Jones of The Professional Palate and Marsha Hudnall of A Weight Lifted.

This won’t be the last time you’ll hear from me about the book.  I’m just getting started.  I do hope you enjoy it, and my wish is that it will rise above all the new diet books that will be flooding the market for the New Year.  After all, to truly change your life, it’s about habits, not diets.

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A Few Other Things On My Plate

by Janet on October 24, 2011

Wanted to update you on some of my other projects and where you can find me. For starters, I’ve been busy working on a book with Cooking Light based on the 12 Healthy Habits series that’s been featured in the magazine throughout 2011. The Food Lovers’ Healthy Habits Cookbook will be published in April 2012. You can find me blogging over at Cooking Light’s blog called The Twelve.

I'm Blogging About Healthy Habits

I’m also thrilled to be one of the bloggers for a new WebMD blog called Real Life Nutrition. Please come check us out. I’m joined by some other dynamite registered dietitians. Hope you’re following their blogs as well:

Carolyn Brown: One Smart Brownie
David Grotto: Nutrition Housecall
Maryann Jacobsen: Raise Healthy Eaters
Elizabeth Ward: Expect the Best

Something else I’m thrilled to let you know about is Healthy Aperture. This is a new food gallery site that focuses on healthy foods, featuring various categories like vegetables, whole grains, gluten-free. Please come check us out, and if you’re a blogger, we’d love to get your submissions. We have an editorial board of registered dietitians evaluating the submissions. The new site is something I helped create with RD colleague Regan Jones, author of The Professional Palate.

my healthy aperture gallery

The other site I hope you’re familiar with now is the Nutrition Blog Network. This is another site I helped create that is the first aggregator of blogs written by registered dietitians. We now have more than 250 blogs featured on the site. Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Twitter too.

I think that’s all for now. Come back again soon.

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It’s Back to School: The Family New Year

by Janet on September 5, 2011

It’s Labor Day.  Summer break is officially over.  Tomorrow is the first day of school for our kids and we’re getting ready for a new routine.

I’m glad to see our school make a few changes.  For instance, now snacks can only be fresh fruits or vegetables.  They shared a note with the parents and provided all sorts of ideas for different fruits and vegetables to pack for snack time.  I liked that.

6023339428_78be6c42fc_bBack-to-school marks a new beginning.  Think of it as the Family New Year.  It’s an opportunity for everyone to get into a new routine and make some healthy changes.  But keep in mind, for changes to become habits you need to make small steps.

I wrote about the power of small steps in my latest post for Cooking Light’s 12 Healthy Habits program, along with some tips to help make your habits stick.  Check out the original article on The Twelve blog:  Small Steps to Change Your Life.

A few of the tips:

  • Change your environment. Make sure your fridge and pantry help support your healthy habits. Get rid of tempting foods, snacks, and drinks that trigger regretted behavior. Keep fresh fruit in bowls on the counter, and wash and cut fresh veggies ahead of time and keep at eye-level in the fridge for easy snacking. Make the healthy choice the convenient choice.
  • See for yourself. Create your action plan and visualize yourself carrying it out. Researchers have found that visualization techniques—or mentally rehearsing buying, preparing, and eating healthy food—helps people actually change their eating habits.
  • Get inspired. Find someone who succeeded in making the positive changes you want to mirror. Use these successful role models to keep you motivated.
  • Celebrate victories. Pat yourself on the back for making some new, positive changes—no matter how small. When you begin to succeed, you gain self-confidence, which leads to greater success. As behavioral experts say, “nothing succeeds like success.”
  • Give it time. Don’t get impatient. It takes time to establish a new habit. One recent study found that it takes an average of 66 days before a new habit becomes automatic. So commit to 30 days, then the next month will be much easier to sustain.

Happy Labor Day!  Are you making a fresh start this time of year?  If you’re following the 12 Healthy Habits program and you’ve had success making positive changes, tell me your story.  Send me an email at healthyhabits.janethelm@gmail.com.

[photo credit: madlyinlovewithlife on flickr]

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How Are You Changing Your Habits?

by Janet on August 26, 2011

Cooking Light’s 12 Healthy Habits is about to enter month 9. The September goal is to make seafood the centerpiece of two meals a week. Are you eating fish at least twice a week? The official recommendation is 8 ounces a week. Unfortunately, most Americans fall short of that goal. Be sure to check out the September issue of Cooking Light to get lots of great ideas to help you go fishing more often.

There’s been lots of great discussion on Cooking Light’s Facebook page on how to meet this twice-a-week goal. That’s what will make the book based on the 12 HealthyHealthyHabitslogo Habits so special. As you may know, I’m the author of the upcoming book, The Food Lover’s Healthy Habits Cookbook, and we want to crowdsource solutions from all of you. Are you following the 12 Healthy Habits? Have you been inspired to make changes? Have you had some success? Tell us about your journey and what has helped you to adopt new healthier habits. We want to put your solutions in the book.

Changing your habits is all about making one small change at a time. All of those small tweaks to your day can add up to something big. What have you done that’s made a big difference for you?

Keep this in mind to help your habits stick:

  • Start small. Do not completely overhaul your current routine in one day. It’s easy to get over-motivated and try to tackle too much, which can backfire. Focus on making a series of small steps, each of which is attainable, rather than attempting to change all at once.
  • Write it down. Writing helps to solidify your commitment and focuses you on your end result. Write down what you want to achieve this month. Leave reminders on your calendar or day planner. Scribble daily goals and motivating messages on sticky notes.
  • Be specific. Studies show that goals are easier to reach if they’re action-oriented. That means being specific, such as “I’ll get up 30 minutes earlier so I can walk in the morning before work,” instead of “I’ll get more exercise.”
  • Be positive. The belief that you can make a change is a powerful force. Behavioral scientists call this self-efficacy. You’re much more likely to reach a goal if you have confidence in yourself. Have faith in your ability to change.
  • Keep track. Self-monitoring is a powerful tool to help instill new habits and achieve success. That could be writing down what you eat in a food diary, using a mobile app to calculate calories, checking off vegetable servings, logging your daily activity or tracking the steps you take with a pedometer.
  • Find a buddy. Making changes are easier and more enjoyable when you have someone who will join you and keep you motivated. Seek out a friend, co-worker, or family member who will adopt these healthy habits with you.

Hope you’ll share your ideas and success stories with us — either on Facebook or on The Twelve, Cooking Light’s blog about the 12 Healthy Habits ( or to me directly).  After all, it’s about habits, not diets. Do you agree?

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If there’s one thing I hope you know by now is that I believe healthy eating should be enjoyable, easy and gimmick-free.

HealthyHabitslogoThat’s why I’m thrilled to be writing The Food Lover’s Healthy Habits Cookbook, which will be published in April 2012. It’s been an extraordinary experience working on this book with the folks at Cooking Light magazine.  I’ll be blogging about the journey — and the people we meet along the way — on Cooking Light’s blog about the 12 Healthy Habits called  The Twelve.

It’s been an amazing process.  Readers are following the monthly challenges.  They’re learning new skills, adopting new behaviors, and they’re starting to report on their successes, which has been thrilling to see.

One of the best parts — people are learning from each other.  That’s what’s happening online and I’m trying to capture this spirit for the book.  I want to find out what’s worked for you.  What have you done to change your habits  – whether that’s eating more vegetables, whole grains and seafood or watching your portions, being active and eating mindfully.

This book is about habits, not diets. So what exactly is a habit?  Stephen R. Covey, author of the iconic book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, defines a habit as the intersection of knowledge, skill, and desire.  It’s combination of what to do and how to do it, with some motivation thrown in. To make something a habit in our lives, we need all three.

Most people already know what they need to do to eat healthier or lose weight. They understand why it’s important.  They’ve heard all that before. The challenge is making it happen.  The book will help move you past knowledge, giving you new skills, realistic solutions, concrete ideas, and delicious recipes to adopt these healthy habits. For the motivation part, we’ll be showcasing real people who are on the same journey to change their habits and live a healthier life.

Plus, I’ve tapped some dynamite dietitian bloggers who plan to engage their communities in our healthy habits challenge.  You’ll find some of their advice sprinkled throughout the book, too.

So stay in touch.  Send me an email if you have an inspirational story or a change you made that made a difference for you:  HealthyHabits.JanetHelm@gmail.com.  Plus, check out the polls on Cooking Light’s Facebook page to give us your input on the various habits.  We’re trying to learn more about your habits hurdles — the barriers standing in your way.

Hope you’ll help me write this book!

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Try Something New For 30 Days

by Janet on July 13, 2011

You want to change your life? Give it 30 days. That’s the message in this inspiring TED talk by Matt Cutts. I truly believe that. Watch for yourself.

I love so many things about this short video. I totally agree with this approach: small changes, gaining self-confidence, trying something new. It’s all about adopting new habits, substracting old habits.

It’s exactly the approach I’m taking in the book I’m writing with Cooking Light magazine: The Food Lover’s Healthy Habits Cookbook. Stay tuned for more information about this book, which will be published by Oxmoor House in April 2012.

But in the meantime, watch this video and think about the message. What are you waiting for? You can do what you’ve always wanted to do…just start with 30 days.

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Did You Hear? I’m Writing A Book!

by Janet on May 21, 2011

healthyhabitsI’m thrilled to be working on a tremendous project with the folks at Cooking Light, undoubtedly my favorite culinary magazine in the world.   In fact, it’s keeping me quite busy, which means less time posting here.  But hope you’ll understand.  I’m working on a book based on a series in the magazine called 12 Healthy Habits.

You can read more about it in this post from the editor of Cooking Light, Scott Mowbray:  Can you help write our 12 Healthy Habits book? The book’s publication date is January 2012, but it’s already listed on amazon.com.

The series in the magazine is all about helping people adopt new habits — from eating more vegetables and whole grains, to embracing healthy fats, seafood and meatless meals at least once a week.  It’s not about rules and restrictions.  No foods are off-limits.  Instead of a quick-fix approach, the program is helping people establish new behaviors.  I like that.  No gimmicks, no extremes.  That’s why I signed on to the book.

Now we’re trying to make this book unique.  We want contributors, we want to have it shaped by the collective wisdom of the Cooking Light community — and my community, in addition to the help of other bloggers I’d like to recruit.  I’ll be blogging about the book and collecting ideas, tips and tricks on the book’s blog The Twelve. Plus, would love to hear from you.

My goal, this will be the last diet book anyone would ever need (although it’s not really about a “diet”).  The secret to better health (or a trimmer waist line) is not found in the next big diet book.  It’s about enjoying food, not fearing it.  And it’s about finding a way to eat that can last a lifetime.

Will you join me?

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A New View Of Calories

by Janet on April 5, 2011

5569368944_a943bbeb34A calorie is a calorie, right?  Not so fast.

That  age-old adage may no longer be true.  Increasingly scientists are realizing that not all calories are created equal.   For instance, calories from an apple may not be equivalent to calories from a Twinkie (and yes, even the new chocolate Twinkies).

Read more in my column in the April issue of Cooking Light magazine:  How Calories Really Count.

How Calories Really Count

Last summer, Mark Haub, Ph.D, an associate professor of nutrition at Kansas State University, made headlines when he lost 27 pounds after two months of living on Twinkies, Ho-Hos, Little Debbies, and other convenience-store snack cakes.

Haub’s experiment reinforced the calories-in/calories-out equation: If you drastically cut back—as Haub did, from 2,600 to 1,800 calories per day—you will lose weight, no matter how nutrient-deprived your diet may otherwise be. Anyone who knows what calories are—units of energy—knows this to be so.

But lost in the brouhaha surrounding the so-called Twinkie Diet was a more interesting trend: a revision of the idea that all calories are equal. New studies hint that the body may burn calories from whole foods better than it does calories from processed foods like Twinkies. Essentially, it appears the body can “burn” a bit hotter on whole foods and use healthier fuel at the same time. That’s great news for people who want to follow the new Dietary Guidelines, because it addresses two big problems with the American diet: calorie overload and nutrient inadequacy.

While Dr. Haub was carefully counting his Twinkie calories, scientists from Pomona College in California were preparing to publish a small study with interesting implications for anyone who wants to maintain a healthy weight and eat good food.

The researchers fed people two meals with the exact same number of calories; the only difference was how much the food was processed. Group A was treated to sandwiches made with real cheese on whole-grain bread; Group B made do with processed cheese on fiber-stripped white bread. The results, published in Food & Nutrition Research, found that the processed meal decreased the rate of diet-induced thermogenesis—the number of calories you burn when eating and digesting—by nearly 50% compared to the meal made with whole foods.

The calories burned from a single sandwich may be small, but this rise in metabolism caused by whole foods (known as the thermic effect) might account for about 10% of a typical person’s daily calorie expenditure. Although more research is needed, early indicators show that whole foods may offer a real metabolic advantage for calorie counters. Whole foods aren’t just better for you because they’re more nutritious, but they also may be, essentially, lower-calorie.

Weight Watchers, recognizing the differences in how our bodies react to calories—and nudging dieters to eat more whole foods—revamped its points system late last year to make fresh fruits and most vegetables “free.” Eat all you want, the WW plan says. In general, foods higher in fiber and protein were assigned fewer points, and processed foods were given more.

All this comes at a time when calories are back in the nutrition spotlight. The fat-phobia and obsessive carb-counting eras are waning. Governments are talking about “soda taxes” to combat the health costs of consuming too many “empty” calories. Calorie labeling is showing up—voluntarily and by law—on more restaurant menus, and calorie counts are more prominent on some food labels.

This calorie consciousness is a good and a bad thing. Most Americans do need to cut back on calories. Balancing energy in and energy out (which brings in the whole question of exercise) is critical to solving the obesity crisis. But calorie counting per se is tedious and not the real answer, unless you want to go on a Twinkie diet. The better approach is the whole foods approach, because Americans also need to increase intake of a long list of nutrients, including fiber, potassium, calcium, and vitamin D, which are associated with whole foods. Eating more fruits, vegetables, and whole grains delivers those nutrients in a form that may also hold a calorie-burning advantage.    [photo credit:  gregg_koenig on flickr]

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The Blinding Light of Health Halos

by Janet on October 7, 2010

photo courtesy of Flickr user digiyesica

photo courtesy of Flickr user digiyesica

Sometimes a single attribute of a food over-shadows all other factors.   That’s a health halo at work.

You can get blind-sided by words like low-fat, organic, gluten-free and vegan — and give products more credit than they desire.  Just because a donut is devoid of gluten or is ”green tea flavored” doesn’t mean it’s good for you.  An organic cheese puff is still a cheese puff — it’s not suddenly nutritious or lower in calories. 

Even so, it’s easy to fall victim to the allure of a health halo.  That’s the topic of my column in the October issue of  Cooking Light magazine.

I previously wrote about the impact of health halos on Nutrition Unplugged:

A health halo is one of those hidden persuaders that can get you to overeat or to eat more than you intended, says Brian Wansink, PhD, who has conducted a bulk of the studies on this phenomenon at the Food and Brand Lab at Cornell University

Health-halo based research got started because scientists were trying to explain what they call the “American obesity paradox.”  At a time when lower-calorie options and diet-friendly foods have exploded in this country — our collective girth continues to expand. 

We’re a nation of low-fat foods but high-fat people, Wansink says.

If a food is under the spell of a health halo, it increases a person’s serving size estimate.  For example, Wansink found that when people opted for a low-fat snack, they ended up eating up to 90 more calories compared to people who selected regular snacks.

When people know what they’re eating may be indulgent, Wansink says, they come much closer to estimating the right number of calories.

That’s why I’m more in favor of having a reasonable portion of the “real thing,” rather than always defaulting for the light, sugar-free or low-fat versions.  You may end up eating more and enjoying it less.  

Bottom line:  Keep your eyes wide open when making your food choices.  Don’t allow a health halo to cloud your view.  Don’t let a single claim or trendy ingredient skew your judgment.  Keep pleasure part of the picture and keep sight of your portions.  And remember, it’s the total nutritional package that counts.

Hope you’ll check out my column in Cooking Light and let me know what you think.

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