Home > SUB Hub > Nutrition > Is it Quality or Quantity

Is it Quality or Quantity

Getting more bang for your buck!

Wind your clock back 10 or 15 years… do you remember what food potions used to look like? A standard bottle of soft drink was not 600ml like it is today, muffins used to be cup-cake size and now they are mini meal size. And did you know that there are 9 regular biscuits in a large cookie! Even the slices of our breads are getting bigger!

So as a nation we have become really good at eating more and moving less. Sure, some of our food choices have changed but does the answer to our obesity epidemic lye not in the quality of our food but the quantity. You can definitely still have too much of a good thing. Take fruit for example. The other day I was buying apples and I struggled to find ones that comfortably fitted into my hand. Most of them were almost double that size – that’s equivalent to eating two apples! Even though apples are good for you, anything in excess isn’t.

 

Dinner is where many New Zealanders tend to over eat. If you’re wondering how much food is the right amount for you, here is a trick – it’s all to do with the size of your hands.

  • Your carbohydrate portion (potato/kumara/rice or pasta) should be no bigger than the size of your clenched fist. For most people, that’s around 1 cup cooked.
  • Your protein serving (meat/chicken/fish or alternative) should be no bigger than the size of the palm of your hand (with out your fingers and your thumb!) and about the same thickness. 
  • With 1/3-1/2 plate being vegetables or salad. The New Zealand dinner plate definitely doesn’t look like this!! 
Other tricks for getting your portions right
  • Eat regularly throughout the day i.e. include a morning and afternoon snack. A lot of people fall into the trap of not eating enough during the morning and so by the time 5.00pm rolls around are absolutely ravenous and could eat the decorations off a Christmas tree!
  • Eat foods that are going to fill you up. That’s foods with lots of whole grains, fruits and vegetables. These will keep you fuller for longer so less likely to overeat.
  • Ensure you have breakfast. People who don’t eat breakfast are more likely to overeat later on in the day.
  • Drink adequate amounts of water – sometimes we think we’re hungry when in fact we’re just thirsty.
  • Buy grated cheese – you’ll use less and can’t cut big chunks.
  • Buy foods that are already pre-portioned into serves or divide them yourself into portions. For example, nuts are a great snack and packed full of nutrients. But a serving of nuts is only 1 tablespoon!
  • Buy your meat to weight or check the weight to work out how many portions you should get out of it. Women should aim for a portion between 120-140g and males between 150-180g (raw weight).
  • Never upsize when you eat out. Small servings are enough!
  • If you’re having ice-cream, put it between two pink wafers or in a cone, instead of having a bowl because you can’t put 5 scoops in a cone!

Kath Fouhy NZRD
Sport & Health Dietician

 
For further information and details, contact Kath Fouhy
www.food4fuel.co.nz  email:  kath@food4fuel.co.nz

Website by WebSpring