By: KLA
In preparing for a happy holiday season, give some thought to trying to make it a healthy season, too. In this article, Emilia Klapp, the gifted author of "Your Heart Needs the Mediterranean Diet", discusses the risks presented by trans fats in your holiday dietary temptations, and how to avoid them.
If you have heart disease or any health condition such as high cholesterol or high triglycerides, you may have started feeling a little apprehensive as you see the holiday season approaching. You are fully aware that plenty of sweets, cookies, pies, cakes and the like are going to be around during the next few weeks and you know that despite the bad press all those goodies have earned over the years, you are going to sink your teeth into them. You also know that when the holidays are over, you'll feel guilty as they come for having succumbed to temptation. Not a rosy outlook, indeed!
Relax, don't panic. Just by taking a couple of preventive steps, you can have your cake and eat it, and by that I mean that you can eat your cakes, pies, cookies, and still protect your arteries. If you are wondering how that's possible, here is how: watch out for trans fats and stay away from them as much as possible.
Trans fats are the worst of all fats. Hydrogenated oils or trans fats, as they are usually called, are produced artificially by inserting molecules of hydrogen in vegetable oils, a process called hydrogenation. Through this process, the oil, which is liquid at room temperature, changes it original form and becomes solid. In addition, the new fat ends up with an unnatural chemical structure.
Trans fats can hurt because:
You probably have guessed by now. During the holiday season (and this goes also for the rest of the year) you need to pay particular attention to commercial baked goods containing high amounts of fat such as cakes, pies, cookies, croissants, donuts, ice cream, and the like.
No. What you need to do is minimize the potential harm trans fats can cause. How? By doing the following:
Health authorities are concerned that the consumption of trans fats might have contributed to the 20 century epidemic of coronary heart disease because they are compounds that have unnatural shapes. But if you follow these few guidelines, you will have taken a big step towards the protection of your heart and arteries. And what is even better, you won't have to deal with a guilty conscience on January the 2 .
Remember, however, to practice moderation when it comes to amounts and portions; after all, baked goods can be high in calories since they contain large amounts of fat and sugar.
To buy a copy of "Your Heart Needs the Mediterranean Diet", or for more information on the book and a free report on the "Top 10 Mediterranean Curative Ingredients", go to: http://www.mediterraneanheart.com
Emilia Klapp RD, BS. A member of the American Dietetic Association, Emilia Klapp gives nutrition counseling and teaches nutrition to senior citizens in day care centers.Her website is http://www.emiliaklapp.com/index