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All
about the Food Pyramid
The Food Pyramid was developed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture,
gives you the building blocks to create a balanced, healthy diet
and get all the nutrients you need.
Find out how much to eat to keep your body happy. Think of the
Pyramid as a key to healthy eating.
Food Pyramid
Fats,
Oils and Sweets
Go easy.
You don't have to be a nutritionist to know that jelly beans
and butter are best in moderation. The guideline here is simply
to limit how much salad dressing, oil and other fats and sweet
treats you eat each day. Try half a ladle of salad dressing
at the salad bar, or one tablespoon of sour cream on your potato.
Milk, Yogurt and Cheese
2 to 3 servings a day.
One serving (one and one-half ounces) of cheese is about the
size of six dice or three dominoes. A serving of milk or yogurt
is one cup (or one small container of yogurt). Unfortunately
for us all, frozen yogurt and ice cream count in the Sweets
group.
Vegetables
3 to 5 servings a day.
If you're talking leafy-green veggies like spinach, kale or
collard greens, put a baseball-sized portion (one cup) on your
plate. Half a baseball will do it for veggies like green beans,
carrots and Brussels sprouts. Since that equals about eight
green beans, 10 carrot slices or three Brussels sprouts, it
should be easy to get a few servings at a time. A small (6-ounce)
glass of tomato or other vegetable juice works too.
Meat, Poultry, Fish, Eggs and Nuts
2 to 3 servings a day.
A deck of cards or a small fist describes what one serving (three
ounces) of meat, fish or poultry looks like. A 1 1/2 cup portion
of cooked beans make a great stand-in for three ounces of meat.
Two tablespoons of peanut butter-about the size of a golf ball-are
a third of a serving, but three scoops on your PB&J would
pack a calorie and fat punch. Likewise, you'd have to eat a
cup of nuts or three eggs to equal three ounces of meat. That
doesn't mean you shouldn't eat them, just don't choose them
for every serving.
Fruit
2 to 4 servings a day.
Picture filling half a baseball with fruit. That's all it takes
to get one half-cup serving. Whole fruits only need to be about
the size of a tennis ball, and a small (6-ounce) glass of juice
counts as a serving too.
A large glass of OJ and a big banana will fill your daily quota,
but fruit is so easy to add to everything you might as well
eat a couple of servings at each meal. Put a handful of raisins
in your salad, toss some blueberries into your cereal or add
apples and pears to your stuffing.
Bread, Cereal, Rice and Pasta
6 to 11 servings a day.
It's easier to eat your share than it sounds. Your bagel would
only have to be the size of a hockey puck to equal one serving
(one ounce) of bread. Most bakery and supermarket bagels are
more like Frisbees than hockey pucks, which means you'll probably
get three servings from your bagel. Likewise, one-half cup of
cooked cereal, pasta or rice equals one serving, and is about
the size of a cupcake wrapper or a scoop of ice cream. The same
goes for an ounce of dried cereal. So fill up your bowl with
noodles, oatmeal or whole-grain cereal and you're already halfway
there.
Source: USDA, The Food Guide Pyramid, Home and
Garden Bulletin No. 252
USDA, Dietary Guidelines for Americans, Fourth Edition, 1995
American Dietetic Association,www.eatright.org
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