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Nine Myths About Your Salad
It's not just the fries. Many diet
nightmares can be traced to the seemingly virtuous
salad.
By Jeanie Lerche Davis WebMD Feature
Myth #1: It's
Just a Salad!
There's nothing "just" about the 490 calories
and 41 grams of fat in a Subway BMT salad with
ranch dressing. That adds up to even more
calories and fat than a Burger King Bacon
Cheeseburger (360 calories, 18 grams of fat). At
Ruby Tuesday, the Carolina Chicken Salad packs —
brace yourself — 1,300 calories and 72 grams of
fat (275 fewer calories without dressing).
Myth #2: Fatfree
Dressing Is Healthiest.
Not quite. You do save on calories when you take
out the fat, but many such dressings are loaded
with sugar — more than 2 teaspoons per serving —
and offer zero nutrition. Plus, they block your
ability to absorb the carotenoid antioxidants in
salad greens and tomatoes — important compounds
that reduce the risk of heart disease. In one
study, people eating fullfat salad dressing
absorbed twice the nutrients of those using
reducedfat dressing. Fatfree dressing allowed
for virtually no absorption of these good guys.
Myth #3: Celery
Has Negative Calories, so It Will Compensate for
the Extra Cheese!
At six calories per stalk, celery is
unquestionably a weightfriendly food. But, alas,
the body doesn't expend more calories than that
to chew and digest it, according to David Baer,
Ph.D., a research physiologist at the USDA
Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center in
Maryland. "No negativecalorie foods have been
discovered yet," he says.
Myth #4: Lettuce
Is Lettuce.
Not when it comes to nutrition (or flavor):
Arugula and watercress are superstars, loaded
with cancerfighting compounds. In fact, a
chemical in watercress has been shown to
deactivate one of the cancercausing toxins in
tobacco smoke. Spinach is another hero because
of its cache of lutein, thought to protect
against cancer and blindness. And baby versions
of kale, mustard greens, and turnip greens are
less sharp, tough, and bitter than the grownups
but are outfitted with the same cancerfighters.
Dark leaf, mildtasting greens, including
romaine, redleaf lettuce, and many mesclun
mixes, don't have a wealth of phytonutrients but
have respectable levels of betacarotene. Light
greens, like iceberg and endive, are pretty much
all nutrition duds.
Myth #5: Go for
the Green.
Colorful, allvegetable salads offer goodforyou
phytonutrients that aren't available in greens.
For instance, powerful antioxidants (anthocyanins)
in purplish vegetables such as eggplant help
reduce heartdisease risk and improve brain
function. Radishes offer cancerfighting indoles;
red tomatoes are the ultimate in lycopene,
linked to lower risk of heart disease and
cancer.
Myth #6: Garbanzo
Beans Give Me a Meal's Worth of Protein.
A ladleful (about 1/4 cup) provides roughly 4
grams of protein — not enough, if that's the
only protein you're having in that meal. You
need .36 grams per pound of body weight per day
(so a 154pound woman needs about 55 grams of
protein daily). Get more by using 3/4 cup of
beans — that's 11 grams of protein — plus 1/4
cup of chopped egg (4 grams of protein) or 1/4
cup of shredded cheese (7 grams of protein).
Myth #7: If I Add
Bacon, I Might as Well Have Ordered a Burger.
Bacon won't ever win any health prizes — in
fact, nutritionists consider it a fat (and not a
healthy fat!), as opposed to a meat. But it's
not as bad as you might think. One slice, about
1 tablespoon crumbled, has about the same amount
of fat as 2 tablespoons of feta or shredded
cheese or 1 tablespoon of sunflower seeds. Just
make sure you keep other fats, such as croutons
or creamy dressing, out of your salad.
Myth #8: You
Can't Get Food Poisoning from Salad like You Can
from Beef or Chicken.
"Lettuce, sprouts, and tomatoes are some of the
most common carriers of salmonella, toxic
strains of E. coli, and other harmful microbes,"
says Christopher Braden, M.D., at the Centers
for Disease Control in Atlanta. How do they get
into your salad? From the manure and
contaminated water they're grown in, from a
dirty cutting board or knife, or from people
touching the vegetables without washing their
hands. Not much you can do about it when you're
out, but at home, wash veggies under running
water.
Myth #9: Organic
Salad Is Healthier.
When it comes to nutrients, freshness matters
more than an "organic" designation. Every day
after they're picked, vegetables lose vitamin B,
vitamin C, and other nutrients; heat and light
speed the decline. A conventional head of
lettuce that was picked yesterday will have
retained lots more nutrients than an organic
head of lettuce that's a week out of the fields.
Of course, there are reasons to choose organic,
but a nutrient bonus isn't one of them.
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Wash them Well! |
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"Lettuce, sprouts, and tomatoes
are some of the most common carriers of
salmonella, toxic strains of E. coli, and other
harmful microbes," says Christopher Braden,
M.D., at the Centers for Disease Control.
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