Good Housekeeping The Supermarket Diet Cookbook
By Janis Jibrin and Susan Westmoreland
()
About this ebook
Let Good Housekeeping hold your hand, guiding you as you prepare tasty diet-friendly meals! Remember: people who eat at home tend to be thinner than those who eat out often. Even those who don’t feel comfortable in the kitchen can easily make these recipes, which have all been triple-tested in the magazine’s acclaimed kitchens. Most of the recipes take no more than 20 minutes from stove to table—less time than picking up calorie-laden take-out. And they’re also nutritious, so they not only help you drop pounds, but also could lower the risks for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and other ailments. But of course, vitamins and minerals don’t lure dieters to the table: taste does, and these dishes are absolutely delicious. Meals such as Asparagus, Red Potato, and Romano Frittata; Salmon with Tomato-Olive Relish; Steak and Pepper Tortillas, and Tortellini with Zucchini and Radicchio are as palate-pleasing as they are weight-reducing. And leave room for desserts like Apricot Soufflé and Seattle Cappuccino Angel Food Cake. Both veterans of the plan and newcomers will find this cookbook—which summarizes all the Supermarket Diet basics—invaluable!
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Good Housekeeping The Supermarket Diet Cookbook - Janis Jibrin
GoodHousekeeping
the Supermarket
Diet Cookbook
Janis Jibrin, M.S., R.D.
Susan Westmoreland
HEARST BOOKS
A division of Sterling Publishing Co., Inc
New York / London
www.sterlingpublishing.com
Copyright © 2006 by Hearst Communications, Inc.
All rights reserved. The recipes and photographs in this volume are intended for the personal use of the reader and may be reproduced for that purpose only. Any other use, especially commercial use, is forbidden under law without the written permission of the copyright holder.
The information in this book is not meant to take the place of the advice of your doctor. Before embarking on a weight loss program, you are advised to seek your doctor’s counsel to make sure that the weight loss plan you choose is right for your particular needs. Further, this book’s mention of products made by various companies does not imply that those companies endorse this book.
9781588168412_0003_002The Good Housekeeping Cookbook Seal guarantees that the recipes in this cookbook meet the strict standards of the Good Housekeeping Research Institute, a source of reliable information and a consumer advocate since 1900. Every recipe has been triple-tested for ease, reliability, and great taste.
Cover Design by Roberto de Vicq de Cumptich
Book Design by Richard Oriolo
Photo Credits: Antonis Achilleos: ♣ and ♣. Quentin Bacon: ♣. James Baigrie: ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, and ♣. Beatriz Da Costa: ♣. Brian Hagiwara: ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, ♣, and ♣. Rita Maas: ♣, ♣, and ♣. Steven Mark Needham: ♣ and ♣. Alan Richardson: ♣, ♣, and ♣. Mark Thomas: ♣ and ♣.
The Library of Congress cataloged the hardcover edition of this title as follows:
Jibrin, Janis.
The Good housekeeping supermarket diet cookbook / Janis Jibrin & Susan Westmoreland.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-58816-590-9
1. Reducing diets—Recipes. I. Title: Supermarket diet cookbook. II. Westmoreland, Susan. III. Title.
RM222.2.J5243 2006
641.5’635—dc22
2006006046
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 1
Published by Hearst Books
A division of Sterling Publishing Co., Inc.
387 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016
Good Housekeeping and Hearst Books are trademarks of Hearst Communications, Inc.
www.goodhousekeeping.com
For information about custom editions, special sales, premium and corporate purchases, please contact Sterling Special Sales Department at 800-805-5489 or specialsales@sterlingpublishing.com.
Sterling ISBN 978-1-58816-774-3
Sterling eBook ISBN: 978-1-58816-841-2
9781588168412_0004_001The Good Housekeeping Triple-Test Promise
At Good Housekeeping, we want to make sure that every recipe we print works in any oven, with any brand of ingredient, no matter what. That’s why, in our test kitchens at the Good Housekeeping Research Institute, we go all out: We test each recipe at least three times—and, often, several more times after that.
When a recipe is first developed, one member of our team prepares the dish and we judge it on these criteria: it must be delicious, family-friendly, healthy, and easy to make.
1. The recipe is then tested several more times to fine-tune the flavor and ease of preparation, always by the same team member, using the same equipment.
2. Next, another team member follows the recipe as written, varying the brands of ingredients and kinds of equipment. Even the types of stoves we use are changed.
3. A third team member repeats the whole process using yet another set of equipment and alternative ingredients.
By the time the recipes appear on these pages, they are guaranteed to work in any kitchen, including yours. WE PROMISE.
9781588168412_0005_001Contents
Foreword
1 It’s Simple! How to Lose Weight on The Supermarket Diet
2 The Healthy Kitchen
3 Savvy Shopping
4 Be Your Own Nutritionist
5 Avoiding Diet Pitfalls
6 Your Menus and Meals
7 Slimming Recipes
9781588168412_0007_001Foreword
Ready to start cooking healthy meals and shaving off the pounds? The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet Cookbook is the perfect way to do it. As you may know, The Supermarket Diet is an easy, affordable, real-world program that shows you how to buy the right foods and put together tasty, healthful meals that keep your weight under control.
The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet Cookbook does the diet one better by featuring more than 175 delicious, triple-tested recipes from the Good Housekeeping kitchens and more than 140 Meal Plans tailor-made to the diet.
Most of the recipes are quick as well as healthy, usually taking no more than 30 minutes to prepare. And our Meal Plans offer complete breakfast, lunch, and dinner menus, making meal prep that much easier.
The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet Cookbook also offers the helpful advice that you expect from Good Housekeeping. You’ll learn how to choose the right foods when shopping the supermarket aisles (including how to read nutrition labels) and how to freeze and thaw foods properly.
Because this is a cookbook to help you diet, we have included plenty of weight-loss advice. For instance, we show you how to avoid the most common diet pitfalls, and we provide tips on how many calories you burn doing different types of exercise.
We think you’ll find The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet Cookbook is a great companion to The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet. If you would like even more dieting advice and healthy recipes, be sure to visit www.goodhousekeeping.com. Best of luck, and here’s to a long, healthy life!
The Editors of Good Housekeeping
9781588168412_0009_0011 It’s Simple! How to Lose Weight on The Supermarket Diet
Hello, veterans of The Supermarket Diet, and welcome, newcomers! Our first book, The Supermarket Diet, laid out the basics of losing weight: how to shop smart in the supermarket, how to stock your kitchen with slimming foods, plus an exercise routine and loads of menu plans and recipes.
Now, in The Supermarket Diet Cookbook, you get more than 175 brand new recipes and more than 140 brand new meal plans in a convenient cookbook format. With the two books, you could truly stay on this plan—and maintain your weight loss—for the rest of your life!
Remember: People who eat at home are thinner than those who eat out often. If you’re truly serious about losing weight and keeping it off, you’ve got to get in the kitchen. Let Good Housekeeping hold your hand, guiding you as you prepare delicious pound-paring meals.
Not a big fan of the kitchen? Well, even if you’re not much of a cook, you can deal with the convenient recipes here. Most take no more than 30 minutes to prepare, many no more than 20 minutes. That’s less time than picking up take-out. For instance, Cool and Creamy Shrimp Salad takes all of 10 minutes to make. You’ll have the Asian Flounder Bake) on the table in just 20 minutes. And if you are a cook, you’ll revel in whipping up sophisticated—but still speedy—dishes such as Glazed Pork with Pear Chutney or Thai Noodles with Cilantro and Basil).
The Supermarket Diet meals are super-nutritious, not only helping you lose weight, but lowering the risk for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and other diet-related chronic diseases. But even the most impressive fat, fiber, and vitamin stats aren’t going to lure you to the table: Ultimately, the dishes have to taste good. Just flip through the book and you’ll see how yummy these recipes are. And they work: They’ve all been triple-tested in the Good Housekeeping Test Kitchen.
Have a sweet tooth? Don’t worry, there’s even room on this plan for sweets and other occasional not-entirely-nutritious fare. For example, it’s OK to have a glass of wine, a light beer, chocolate, ice cream, chips, and the like.
HOW THE DIET WORKS
Losing weight on the The Supermarket Diet is straightforward: Simply choose from a wide variety of meals, prepare them, and eat them! Each day, just choose any breakfast, lunch, dinner, and calcium-rich snack (Calcium Break) from our Meal Plans, add a treat, and you’ll end up having consumed just 1,500 (for women) or 1,800 calories (for men).
If you’re new to The Supermarket Diet, you may opt to start with the Boot Camp weight-loss plan, which you’ll find at www.goodhousekeeping.com. (Enter supermarket diet
into the search bar, scroll down to The Good Housekeeping Supermarket Diet,
select menus,
and click on the link for 1,200 calorie regiment.
) At 1,200 calories a day for women and 1,500 calories a day for men, Boot Camp will get you off to a quick start as you can lose up to four pounds a week for two weeks. After the two weeks are up, the Keep On Losin’ plan—featured in both The Supermarket Diet and this book— helps you to lose one half to two pounds each week. You can stay on the Keep On Losin’ plan for as long as you like. You can also skip Boot Camp altogether and simply start with Keep On Losin’.
Women should follow the 1,500-calorie Keep On Losin’ plan. Once you’ve reached your desired weight-loss goal, the 1,800-calorie Stay Slim plan will be your maintenance plan. However, if you find that you’re too hungry on the Keep On Losin’ plan or losing weight too quickly—more than two pounds a week—add 100 or 200 calories a day from the lists found in Graduating to Your Maintenance Plan
. Or if you’re still feeling too hungry, simply jump to the 1,800-calorie Stay Slim plan. Once you’ve reached your weight-loss goal, whether on 1,500 calories a day or more, then simply add 200-300 calories daily to maintain that weight. You know you’re doing it right when your weight stays put and you’re not gaining or losing.
Men should follow the 1,800-calorie Stay Slim plan as a weight-loss plan. The Stay Slim plan is simply the Keep On Losin’ plan plus an additional 300 calories daily. Once you’ve reached your desired weight, then you should have 2,100 calories a day for your maintenance plan. However, if you find that you’re too hungry on the Stay Slim plan, or losing weight too quickly—more than two pounds a week—add 100 or 200 calories a day from the Graduating to Your Maintenance Plan lists. Once you’ve reached your weight-loss goal, you should then have about 2,100-2,200 calories a day.
You get oodles of choices with The Supermarket Diet. For instance, one morning you might pick a frozen breakfast burrito. From a list of 34 lunches, you might make a Fresh Mozzarella and Tomato Sandwich. Dinner that night could be Provençal Salmon with Tomato-Olive Relish, one of 82 dinners. Also on that day, you might choose a skim latte for your Calcium Break and a little chocolate for your 125-calorie treat. The next day, you can have a completely different menu. Since all the breakfasts are around 375 calories, with roughly the same nutrition content, you’re in good shape no matter which you choose. Ditto for the 400-calorie lunches, the 500-calorie dinners, 100-calorie Calcium Breaks, and 125-calorie treats.
The Meal Plans for breakfasts, lunches, dinners, calcium breaks, and treats start on Meal Plans; recipes for all the breakfasts, lunches, and dinners start on Slimming Recipes. At times when you’re too busy to figure out what to eat, or if you’d like a little help, just turn to Weekly Menu Plans; we’ve done the planning for you!
While you’re eating right, you also need to get some exercise. Most weight-loss books focus only on what goes into your mouth. But, as you know, exercise is just as important as diet for losing weight, and critical for maintaining that weight loss. The Supermarket Diet provides a walking program and tips on how to strength train. That—or any other exercise program of your choice—is a necessary accompaniment to this diet plan. Chapter 5 of this book shows you how many calories you burn walking, playing golf, swimming, and doing other activities.
Both The Supermarket Diet and The Supermarket Diet Cookbook are about empowerment. Instead of spoon-feeding you a rigid menu plan, you get to choose which meals you want on any given day. And instead of just one level of calorie intake, we show you how to turn the diet into an 1,800-calorie plan (and we also help you figure out how to set it somewhere in between 1,500 and 1,800 calories). Chapter 4 even shows you how to design your own meals to fit into the plan. Plus, you get powerful tools to take into the grocery store so you can figure out which cereal, spaghetti sauce, salad dressing, and other foods are the most nutritious and slimming.
WHY THE DIET WORKS
On paper, losing weight is extremely simple: You drop pounds by lowering calories—either by eating less, burning more, or, ideally, a combo of the two. That’s what The Supermarket Diet and The Supermarket Diet Cookbook offer: a reduced-calorie eating plan and exercise guidelines for burning calories.
But as anyone who’s tried it knows, weight loss isn’t so simple in reality. Busy schedules, emotional eating, genetics, post-pregnancy weight, a sedentary desk job, and all sorts of other issues life throws at you gum up the best-laid weight-loss plans.
So we’ve made The Supermarket Diet as do-able as possible. The calories are all worked out for you, the foods are easy to prepare, and even a couch potato can handle the exercise suggestions—mainly walking. So, this plan works, and it’s not complicated or demanding. As for those other life issues… well, turn to Chapter 5, Avoiding Diet Pitfalls,
to help get a handle on them.
Meanwhile, enjoy your delicious meals.
2 The Healthy Kitchen
Your kitchen is going to make you slimmer. Stock it properly, cook the meals in this book, keep out the junk food, and your kitchen will become a healthy place instead of a den of overindulgence! This chapter offers lists of the very basic foods to stock; you’ll find a more complete list—as well as foods to throw out—in The Supermarket Diet. Also, here you’ll find out how long you can safely keep those leftovers in the fridge, as well as other important food safety information.
What’s the ideal meal for weight loss? One that’s based on:
1 healthy carbs (including whole grains and vegetables)
1 lean protein
1 healthy fat
The healthy carbs contain fiber, which expands in your digestive system, making you feel fuller, longer. Fiber also slows the conversion of starch to blood sugar. This means sugar enters the blood slowly and evenly, instead of with the spikes and dips which can leave you feeling fatigued and hungry. Meanwhile, protein acts as an appetite suppressor and fat slows stomach emptying, contributing to that full, satisfied feeling.
Ever notice that you’re hungry an hour after a bowl of fat-free cereal and skim milk? The missing element is fat. Likewise, an all-vegetable salad tossed with low-fat dressing for lunch won’t get you through the afternoon. But add some chicken or tofu (protein), a full-fat dressing, and a small whole-wheat roll, and you’ll make it through exercise class after work.
You’ll find the healthy-carb/lean-protein/healthy-fat combination over and over again in Supermarket Diet recipes and meals. For instance, the hot cereal breakfast (Salt and Your Buds) has all the elements:
1 multigrain hot cereal (whole-grain carbs)
1 blueberries (more healthy carbs)
1 skim milk (lean protein)
1 walnuts (healthy fat)
Here’s how the Dijon-Fennel Pork Tenderloin with Sweet Potato Fries dinner breaks down:
1 pork tenderloin (lean protein)
1 sweet potato fries (healthy carbs)
1 salad (more healthy carbs) tossed with olive oil–based dressing (healthy fat)
Stock Up!
Naturally, recipes in this book call for very different ingredients, but there are certain foods that appear in many recipes. Stock up on these, and you’ll cut down on the time spent in the supermarket. You can focus your shopping trip on just the new or fresh ingredients particular to a recipe, secure in the knowledge that the other healthy standbys are already sitting in your kitchen. And when you can’t make it to the grocery store, rely on these staples to create a healthy meal. Here are the healthy carbohydrates, lean protein, and healthy fats to keep on hand:
HEALTHY CARBS
High-fiber/low-sugar cereals
Your rule of thumb: at least 4 g dietary fiber and no more than 5 g sugar per 100 calories (that’s at least 6 g dietary fiber and no more than 8 g sugar per 150 calories). Examples: Kellogg’s Complete Wheat Bran Flakes, Kashi GoLean (regular, not GoLean Crunch), and Nature’s Path Optimum Slim.
Bread
Make sure bread has no white flour (see Chapter 3 for tips on reading ingredient lists). So, 100 percent whole-wheat sliced bread, 100 percent whole-rye bread, multigrain breads where all the grains are whole, and 100 percent whole-wheat pitas all fit the bill. For example, Arnold’s 100% Whole Wheat Bread or Pepperidge Farm 100% Whole Wheat Bread.
Grains
Whole grains used in this book: bulgur (whole wheat), brown rice, whole-wheat couscous (Fantastic Foods and Casbah make it), whole-wheat pasta, oatmeal, whole-wheat flour. Brown rice shows up a lot in the menu plans. If you don’t have the 45 minutes to cook regular brown rice, Uncle Ben’s Whole Grain Brown Ready Rice, which takes only 90 seconds, is a fine alternative. If you do have the time, try a brown basmati, brown jasmine, or brown Texmati rice. These varieties have a wonderful aromatic, slightly nutty quality.
Crackers
Check to make sure there’s no white flour in the ingredient list. Instead, the products should be based on whole wheat (such as Ak Mak or Triscuits) or whole rye (such as most of the Wasa crackers and Ryvita).
Fruits and vegetables
While many of the fruits and vegetables in this book are fresh, here are the ones you can stock up on:
Frozen: unsweetened strawberries and blueberries, broccoli flowerets, frozen corn kernels
Canned: vacuum-packed, no-salt-added corn (such as Del Monte Fresh No Salt Added Whole Kernel Cut Corn) reduced-sodium or no-salt-added tomatoes (such as Hunt’s Whole Tomatoes No Salt Added or Pomi Chopped Tomatoes)
LEAN PROTEIN
Eggs
If you can find them (and afford them) buy omega 3–enriched eggs. Be careful though: Some of these eggs contain ALA, the less potent omega-3 (also called linolenic acid or alpha-linolenic acid). ALA is still good for you, but it’s hardly worth the extra price of the eggs. What you want to see on the label is DHA and maybe a little EPA, the potent omega-3s found in fish (chickens are fed fish meal to produce the DHA). For instance, Eggland’s Best, a nationally distributed brand, contains approximately 50 mg DHA and 50 mg ALA per egg. That’s a good standard from which to judge other omega 3–enriched eggs.
Canned beans
Kidney beans, garbanzo beans, black beans, white beans, lentils, and all other legumes are rich in both protein and carbohydrates. If you’ve got the time and inclination, make your own by boiling dry beans. Otherwise, look for canned beans with the lowest sodium levels. Health food stores and the health food section of many larger supermarkets are still the most reliable source of these beans. However, in a hopeful sign, Goya—a mainstream supermarket brand—came out with a great low-sodium line with no more than 120 mg sodium per ½ cup. In your supermarket’s health food section, or, if you make it to a health food store, look for Eden Organic no-salt-added beans or Westbrae’s line of canned beans, or any other bean with no more than 140 mg sodium per ½ cup (as opposed to the 350 mg in many other brands).
Canned fish
Canned tuna is getting