Making comfort foods healthfully
Categories: Diet & Weight Loss, Nutrition & Supplements
I grew up in a big family, with big family-style meals. So now when I have a craving for something, it tends to be heavy comfort foods, like chicken and dumplings or my family's version of chicken noodle soup.With some simple substitutions you can enjoy these comforting favorites and not feel guilty. Just take a look at your recipes and find opportunities for increasing the vegetable content, using healthy fats instead of not-so-healthy versions (e.g. olive oil instead of butter), using whole grains instead of refined versions (e.g. whole-wheat flour instead of all-purpose or brown rice instead of white) and using leaner meats instead of fattier versions (e.g. ground turkey instead of hamburger). Take a look at how Crabby McSlacker made the quintessential comfort food -- meatloaf and mashed potatoes -- a little more on the healthy side.
Eating Well has a whole list of comfort foods made healthier. Here are some of Eating Well's recipes that I plan to try:
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Crabby McSlacker 7-11-2008 @ 12:21PM
Hi Maggie,
Thanks for mentioning Cranky Fitness!
Sometimes my attempts to alter recipes to make them healthy totally backfires (For example I just made some really terrible low-fat macaroni and cheese last night).
But other dishes seem to taste just fine when you mess around with them, and for me, meatloaf is one of them. Other people, of course, totally disagree! It really is a personal thing which classics you can doctor and which you just have to leave well enough alone and not eat very often.
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