Navigating the nutrition info highway
October 25, 2001
Looking for some
good food jokes? Try the KidZone page at asfsa.org,
sponsored by the American School Food Service Association. Need a lesson
plan and ''ready to print'' activity sheets on the food pyramid and
good food choices? Visit nutritionexplorations.org, the site of the
National Dairy Council. Looking for ways to reduce the fat in your favorite
fettuccine Alfredo recipe? Click on cyberdiet.com and go to ''recipe
recreations.'' Not only will you get a recipe, but you'll find a ''before''
and ''after'' calorie and nutrient analysis as well.
An enormous amount
of nutrition information is on the Web, but it can be hard to find.
The Center on Nutrition Communications at the Tufts School of Nutrition
Science and Policy provides a way to navigate it all. It's called Nutrition
Navigator, at navigator.tufts.edu,
a ''rating guide to nutrition Web sites.'' Ask dieticians for their
favorite Web site and most point to this as the very first place to
visit. Tufts nutritionists review and rate Web sites for accuracy, depth
of information, and usability, among other categories. Each Web site
that is reviewed on the 25-point scale (25 being the best) gets an overall
rating and information on target audience, sponsor, and commentary.
Hundreds of sites
are reviewed under headings including Family, Special Dietary Needs,
Hot Topics, and Women. It is not overwhelming. Each site mentioned has
a short summary, then a single page with the site's Web address, rating,
and more about the content. Still interested? Click and you're there.
Most sites have
a variety of options once you get there. Parents looking for recipes
for children are also likely to find activities they can do online with
their children, such as game show-style quizzes, puzzles, and nutrition
information.
Many nutrition
sites are sponsored or co-sponsored by commercial firms or business
associations. For instance, healthychoices.org,
aimed at teachers and day-care providers, is sponsored by the Growers
of Washington State Apples and Tree Top, a fruit processing company.
The site promotes healthy eating throughout the food pyramid and has
lessons and coloring sheets to download for preschoolers, though all
the recipes use some form of apple.
Even the Tufts
Navigator site is sponsored by Kraft Foods. Some groups' agendas are
more obvious than others. The Vegetarian Resource Group, vrg.org,
rated a 24 (among the best) by Tufts, has as one of its titles ''Afraid
of Mad Cow Disease?'' It directs you toward alternatives to meat products,
such as veggie burgers. The site has informative articles, tips on feeding
a vegetarian child, and loads of recipes.
The National Dairy Council Web site, nutritionexplorations.org (rated 22, among the best), originally was designed to support the many
Dairy Council programs that are already in the schools. For teachers,
lesson plans and activities are ready to download. The site also includes
information for food service professionals and parents, a Nutrition
Bookshelf, and a colorful place called the familyfoodzone.com with a funky interactive refrigerator, games, and recipes. The primary
message is about the importance of calcium in one's diet through dairy
products but as part of a well-balanced diet from the five food groups.
Cyberdiet.com,
with a high rating of 24, promotes health and fitness, and features
articles, on-line diet support, and a variety of topics. Colorful, easy
to follow, reasonable advice and a free weight assessment tool make
this site user-friendly.
All these sites
have links galore to other sites. You can spend time going from one
place to another and end up in Ireland, at the Healthy Food magazine
sponsored by the Department of Health in Dublin: indigo.ie/~indicom/crunch.htm.
The recipes might be in grams and the Irish spell yoghurt with an ''h,''
but the information is useful.
The site dole5aday.com,
with a rating of 21, has activities and tips for parents to encourage
children to eat more fruits and vegetables.
''Hey Mikey, what
did the banana do when it heard the ice scream? It split!'' There's
plenty more where that came from at asfsa.org/kidzone/jokes.asp.
(Adapted from nutritionforkids.com)
1 can (15 ounces) black beans, rinsed and drained
1 can (7
ounces) yellow corn
1 medium
mango, peeled and diced
1/2 red pepper,
seeded and diced
1/4 cup Spanish
onion, finely diced
2 tablespoons
fresh lime juice
1/2 teaspoon
ground cumin
salt and
pepper to taste
1/4 cup chopped
cilantro
2 tablespoons
olive oil.
1. Mix all ingredients
in a bowl and chill. Serve with baked tortilla chips.
To make a burrito: Place 1/2 cup of black bean salsa on a tortilla. Sprinkle on some
grated Monterey Jack cheese, fold the burrito in half, and grill in
frying pan for 2 minutes on each side.
(Reprinted with
permission from dole5aday.com)
2 ripe, medium bananas
1 egg, beaten
1/3 cup vegetable
oil
1 1/2 cups
flour
1 cup sugar
6 tablespoons
cocoa powder
1 teaspoon
baking soda
1/2 teaspoon
salt
1/4 teaspoon
baking powder
1/2 cup raisins
1. Lightly grease
muffin tins. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2.
Mash bananas until
smooth. Add eggs and oil.
3.
In a separate bowl,
combine flour, cocoa, sugar, baking soda, salt, and baking powder. Add
banana mixture and stir until moistened. Stir in raisins.
4.
To make mini
muffins, spoon 1 tablespoon of batter into each mini-muffin pan cup.
Bake for 12-15 minutes. Cool muffins before popping out. For regular muffins,
spoon 1/3 cup batter into 10 or 12 prepared muffin cups. Bake for 20-25
minutes.
(Adapted from the
Munch'n Crunch @ Lunch site indigo.ie/~indicom/hotleg.htm)
Serves 6
8 carrots, peeled
and sliced into strips
12 chicken
drumsticks
1 tablespoon
vegetable oil
1 large onion,
sliced thin
2 teaspoons
garlic powder
1 can (16
ounces) chopped tomatoes and juice
2 heaping
teaspoons cornstarch
1/2 cup water
1 teaspoon
chili powder
2 tablespoons
ketchup
salt and
pepper
Preheat oven to
400 degrees.
1. In a 9-by-13-inch
casserole, spread the carrots along the bottom.
2.
Wash and dry drumsticks
and sprinkle on salt, pepper, and garlic powder. In a frying pan, brown
the drumsticks in the oil for 3 minutes each side. Place them on top
of the carrots.
3.
In the same frying
pan, saute the onions. Mix the cornstarch and water. Add the chopped
tomatoes and cornstarch mixture to the onions. Heat until bubbly. Add
the chili powder and ketchup. Mix well until thickened.
4.
Pour the sauce
over the drumsticks. Cover with foil and bake 30 minutes.
5.
Remove the foil
and cook another 10 minutes.
6.
If you wish, serve
with a dollop of plain yogurt over each serving. Rice makes a good accompaniment.
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