While summer seems ideally
suited to optimal nutrition with all the in-season produce available, we often
drop the ball when it comes to our eating habits in the summer. Here are a few tips to keep your health on
track during some of the most action-packed months of the year. Here are some things to consider when it
comes to your summer nutrition:
Make a plan:
School’s out, kids are home
and to your dismay, they want to be fed. . . all the time! Use
this to your advantage and involve your children in planning meals and
snacks. Making a menu and using it to
plan your grocery list will save plenty of grief at mealtime. Good nutrition doesn’t just spontaneously
happen, you have to have a plan in place.
And while you’re at it, plan to involve your kids in meal prep during the summer so they can learn some much needed life skills before they’re on their own.
And while you’re at it, plan to involve your kids in meal prep during the summer so they can learn some much needed life skills before they’re on their own.
Snack wisely:
Plan, choose and shop
carefully for snack foods. Then, once
you’re home, consider where they should live in your kitchen. Keeping fruit in the fridge and cookies on
the counter doesn’t set yourself up for success in the eating department.
Keep some produce on the counter and maybe even some nuts. Keep high-fiber, low sugar snacks at eye level in the pantry, and store the play-foods more out of sight so that it becomes an intentional choice, not just mindless munching.
Keep some produce on the counter and maybe even some nuts. Keep high-fiber, low sugar snacks at eye level in the pantry, and store the play-foods more out of sight so that it becomes an intentional choice, not just mindless munching.
Up your produce game:
One of the best ways to eat
more fruits and veggies is to grow your own.
Even if you don’t end up with a bumper crop, it sparks interest in
eating more produce. It’s not too late
to put some lettuce seeds in a planter or get a tomato plant in a pot on the
patio if you don’t have traditional garden space. Find a friend that is participating in a community
garden and trade some weeding time for fresh produce.
No comments:
Post a Comment