1 Choose higher quality meat
Many traditional holiday meals center on meat as the starring dish. Turkey and prime rib, for example, often top the menu for big family get-togethers. If meat is the centerpiece of your meal, make it healthier by serving the highest quality.
So, how can you tell if you’re buying high-quality meat? Look for the USDA organic seal. Meat quality is largely determined by how the animal was raised and what it ate throughout its lifetime. To earn the USDA organic certification, animals must be fed 100-percent organic feed and forage, living conditions must allow for them to exhibit their natural behaviors (e.g. having access to pasture for grazing) and they cannot be given any hormones or antibiotics. Organic meat standards include a minimum 120-day per year grazing requirement to ensure that animals are eating what nature intended. Just like humans, animals on organic diets eat healthier food, and that’s important because you eat what they eat!
In fact, grass-fed beef contains higher levels of key nutrients essential to human health, including beta-carotene, vitamin E, B vitamins, and conjugated linoleic acid (CLA). Being a fatty acid, CLA supports cardiovascular health and a healthy body weight. What a gift to give your friends and family! The bow is optional.
2 Serve up organic produce
You can’t have the perfect holiday meal without glorious sides. And what do most of those oh-so-famous side dishes contain? Vegetables! An easy way to clean up your holiday meal is to switch to organic produce.
Denne historien er fra November/December 2019-utgaven av Alternative Medicine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra November/December 2019-utgaven av Alternative Medicine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Add These Healthy Routines to Your Day
Holistic wellness focuses on the connection between mind, body, and spirit It isn’t just about treating symptoms; it seeks to find the root causes that create the issues. By living a more holistic lifestyle, you may be able to enhance your body’s natural ability to restore itself.
7 Tips To Promote Health And Well-being This Summer
During the warmer months, there’s often a great deal of shuffling and movement, including common allergy triggers like trees, pollen, mold spores, dust and dander along with pesky sinus pressure.
Global Food System
Local Communities Empower a Resilient
How to look Your Best with SOFT AND BEAUTIFUL Senior Skin
Maybe not everything improves with age, but one thing – healthy, vibrant skin – is not something that must be relinquished to younger years. Senior skin, needs special care. And if we treat our skin right as we age, healthy, vibrant skin can accompany us into our golden years.
IN SEASON: Green Beans
Green beans, also called snap beans or string beans, are a staple in many kitchens across the United States. They’re a beloved side dish at family potlucks, holiday meals, and nightly dinners. They are one on the most popular crops in backyard gardens.
MENTAL HEALTH PROS AND CONS OF WORKING FROM HOME
Over this last year many people made the switch from working in the office to working from home, but is this a healthy change?
COMMON LIFESTYLE FACTORS - That May Be Causing Your Heartburn
Warmer weather is here which means backyard BBQ’s, campfire cookouts, and picnics are right around the corner. But if you suffer from frequent heartburn, food-based get-togethers may not be your cup of tea. But before you turn down your invite or spend even more money on your handy antacids, it’s important to note it might not be all the food’s fault.
THE FIVE MOST IMPORTANT Lifestyle Practices for maintaining a HEALTHY BRAIN
More than 6 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer’s disease. As we age we become significantly at risk for declining brain health as one in nine people age 65 and older have dementia. This debilitating disease also affects women more than men at disproportionate numbers as two-thirds of Americans with Alzheimer’s are women.
THE TALE OF TWO AGES: A Plan for Your Healthspan
For the longest time our age has been defined by the day we were born and the number of times we are fortunate enough to circle the sun.
What Is INSULIN RESISTANCE?
Have you heard of insulin resistance? One in three Americans suffer from this blood sugar-related syndrome, which can cause serious health issues including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, heart attacks, strokes, and even cancer.