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What Happens to the Extras?

What Happens to the Extras?. Important to think about. Everything you eat has more than one nutrient in it Break down the cheeseburger How you cook your food effects the composition of the food Cooking with cast iron increases iron content

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What Happens to the Extras?

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  1. What Happens to the Extras?

  2. Important to think about • Everything you eat has more than one nutrient in it • Break down the cheeseburger • How you cook your food effects the composition of the food • Cooking with cast iron increases iron content • Cooking at hot temperatures may make sure vitamins or mineral more active while killing others • Condiments count toward calorie consumption

  3. Important to think about • Nutrients • Carbohydrates- 4 kcals per gram • Proteins- 4kcal per gram • Fat- 9kcal per gram • Vitamins and minerals are calorie free • The harder it is to digest the food, the longer you will feel satisfied • Complex carbohydrate vs. simple carbohydrate • Complete protein vs. incomplete

  4. Carbohydrates • Gets broken down to glucose for the energy, excess is stored as glycogen in the liver and in muscles • First source goes to when body needs energy • Highest amount of carbohydrates that should be consumed per day is 8oz • 1 slice of bread, 1 cup of cereal (cold), ½ cup of cooked rice, pasta or hot cereal equals 1oz.

  5. Fats • Second source of body fuel • No need to eat a stick of butter • Whole foods such as meats, some fruits and vegetables, condiments and the cooking process add enough fat in the diet • Overindulging in fatty foods has the greatest effect on weight management and health conditions • Highest calorie value per gram • Is already in a simple form

  6. Proteins • Whether it is taken an a supplement or in a whole food, it is used the same • When protein is broken down to amino acids, the amino acids have different functions • Protein shakes and bars tend to be an incomplete protein that are marketed toward having a specific function • i.e. body building • Highest amount of protein ever required is 6 ½ oz • Greater than average serving per meal

  7. Protein • Not all of the body can use protein as a source of energy, so it is the last source • High protein diets that eliminate carbohydrates/ starches can starve parts of the brain and heart if reserves are not there

  8. Too much of everything • Becomes more stored body fat no matter what nutrient • Stored body fat is not used until current glucose that was consumed, stored glycogen from the liver and muscles are used. • Use physical activity to burn calories • Consume less calories to use stores

  9. Nutrients • Fat soluble vitamins are stored in fat, if there is too much stored, toxicity occurs • Can cause just as many complications as over-dosing on medication • If kidneys are working properly, water soluble vitamin are excreted through urine

  10. Links to look at • www.eatright.org • Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics • www.cdc.gov • CDC • www.nutrition.gov • www.heart.org • American Heart Association

  11. Contact Information • If you would like a copy of the slides or have any questions, you can email: • bowmaj@lpha.mopublic.org • Or call: • 816-324-3139

  12. Closing • Thank you for you participation in the wellness challenge and hope this has all been helpful. • Keyword: • Proportions

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