The Atkins Shopping Guide: Your Essential Companion for Low-Carb Nutrition and Weight Loss - Softcover

Atkins Health & Medical Information Services

 
9780060722005: The Atkins Shopping Guide: Your Essential Companion for Low-Carb Nutrition and Weight Loss

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This easy-to-use pocket guide, the ultimate shopping reference and an indispensable companion to the #1 New York Times bestseller Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution, will show you which foods to buy and which to avoid as you follow the Atkins Nutritional Approach™— a celebrity-favorite diet perfect for losing weight before your wedding or to bounce back into shape post-baby, or if you just want to look and feel your best.

What should I eat, and where can I find it?
Which products are the most Atkins-friendly?
Are there hidden dangers in seemingly "acceptable" foods?

Now Food Shopping the Atkins Way is Easier Than Ever!

Whether you're one of the millions already losing weight and feeling great thanks to the remarkable Atkins Nutritional Approach™ or you are just discovering the healthy benefits of a low-carb lifestyle, shopping for food need no longer be a daunting process.

The Atkins Shopping Guide contains everything you must know to stock your pantry with the right foods, while avoiding products devoid of nutrients and full of sugar and white flour.

With foods clearly arranged by category, this essential handbook takes you aisle-by-aisle through the supermarket, putting helpful information at your fingertips. It also provides useful pointers for shopping at "superstores" and natural foods retailers, all in a handy format portable enough to carry in your pocket or purse.

So throw away that misguided food pyramid chart and stop counting fat grams and calories. With The Atkins Shopping Guide, confusion about the right way to eat will be a thing of the past, as you follow the proven Atkins path to healthy living!

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This easy-to-use pocket guide, the ultimate shopping reference and an indispensable companion to the #1 New York Times bestseller Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution, will show you which foods to buy and which to avoid as you follow the Atkins Nutritional Approach™— a celebrity-favorite diet perfect for losing weight before your wedding or to bounce back into shape post-baby, or if you just want to look and feel your best.

What should I eat, and where can I find it?
Which products are the most Atkins-friendly?
Are there hidden dangers in seemingly "acceptable" foods?

Now Food Shopping the Atkins Way is Easier Than Ever!

Whether you're one of the millions already losing weight and feeling great thanks to the remarkable Atkins Nutritional Approach™ or you are just discovering the healthy benefits of a low-carb lifestyle, shopping for food need no longer be a daunting process.

The Atkins Shopping Guide contains everything you must know to stock your pantry with the right foods, while avoiding products devoid of nutrients and full of sugar and white flour.

With foods clearly arranged by category, this essential handbook takes you aisle-by-aisle through the supermarket, putting helpful information at your fingertips. It also provides useful pointers for shopping at "superstores" and natural foods retailers, all in a handy format portable enough to carry in your pocket or purse.

So throw away that misguided food pyramid chart and stop counting fat grams and calories. With The Atkins Shopping Guide, confusion about the right way to eat will be a thing of the past, as you follow the proven Atkins path to healthy living!

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The Atkins Shopping Guide

By Atkins Health &. Medical Information

Avon Books

ISBN: 0060722002

The Produce Aisle

Walk into any supermarket and the first thing you see is produce. It's no accident that bounteous displays of brightlycolored vegetables and fruits greet you: Your first impressionis surely one of variety, freshness, and healthful, wholesomefoods. These are the core carbohydrate foods you willbe eating on the Atkins Nutritional Approach™.

Vegetables and fruits, of course, are the bulk of the produceaisle, but some supermarkets also stock soy-basedfoods, like tofu, soy cheese and vegetarian hot dogs, here(often near organic produce), as well as Asian specialtieslike wonton wrappers. You might find imported cheeses,cured meats, and bakery breads and crackers, and perhaps anolive bar, in this area, too.

The problem with produce is that almost nothing bearsa Nutrition Facts label. Unless you're armed with a carbohydrategram counter, you have no sure way of knowinghow many grams of Net Carbs are in a particularfood. And while most vegetables are acceptable at allphases of Atkins, starchy ones such as sweet potatoes andpeas, and most high-glycemic fruits (those that cause agreater rise in blood sugar), are usually added back onlyduring the Pre-Maintenance and Lifetime Maintenancephases -- unless you're one of the lucky folks with a highCritical Carbohydrate Level for Losing (CCLL) who canintroduce them during OWL (see "Fruits and Vegetables:What's the Difference?" on page 54).

Because most produce lacks packaging with descriptive copy about the vegetable or fruit, recipes, tips on how tocook it, or nutritional benefits, we'll go into more detail forfoods in this section.

VEGETABLES

With few exceptions, the vast majority of vegetables can beenjoyed at any phase of Atkins. If you're not sure, go for theparts of plants that grow above ground. Roots and tubers likecarrots and potatoes provide energy for growing plants, sothey're usually higher in carbohydrates than leaves (lettuce,kale), flowers (broccoli florets, asparagus), and "fruit" or seedcontainers (tomato, zucchini, pepper). Vegetables that fall intothe leaves, flowers, and fruit categories are the most nutrient-dense carbohydrates and, in the early phases of the Atkins Nutritional Approach, they're the major source of carbs.

Another clue to choosing nutrient-rich vegetables is toreach for the darker, more deeply colored ones. Pigments inplants contain compounds that can promote health in a varietyof ways (see "Phytochemicals" on page 35). If your grocerylist includes a vegetable with pale flesh -- zucchini,say -- be sure to leave the skin on to maximize nutrition aswell as flavor.

Get to know the incredible array of vegetables out thereand experiment with using them in your meals. For recipesand meal ideas, visit www.atkins.com.

DARK, LEAFY GREENS

An important source of folate (think foliage), dark, leafygreens are low in calories and Net Carbs, and high in flavorand nutrients.

Beet Greens (Phases 1-4)
3.7 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

If you purchase beets with the greens attached, separate them when you get home and store them individually, asthey lose nutrients if left intact. Beet greens are high inbeta carotene, vitamin C, and iron; they provide some calcium,too. (Note: While beet greens are perfectly acceptablefor Induction and beyond, the beet root is notacceptable until the later phases of the ANA; see "Beets"on page 36.)

Bok Choy (Phases 1-4)
0.2 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

One of the many varieties of Chinese cabbage, thismild-tasting green is often found in the Asian vegetablessection (usually near the tofu and wonton wrappers).Choose a head with lots of dark green leaves; the stemsshould be pearly white. Baby bok choy looks like its fullgrowncounterpart except its stems are greener, not white.This versatile vegetable can be chopped for a salad, orstir-fry it until the leaves wilt and the stems are tender.For a more flavorful side dish, braise it with soy sauce,rice wine vinegar, gingerroot and a touch of low-carbsweetener.

Chard (Phases 1-4)
1.8 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

Chard is a member of the beet family; it's grown for itsleaves and stems rather than its roots. Chard is an excellentsource of beta carotene, vitamins C and E, and iron. Ifyou're taking an anticoagulant medication, opt for a differentdark green leafy vegetable, since chard is also high in vitaminK, which can interfere with drugs that prevent bloodclotting.

Collard Greens (Phases 1-4)
2 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

Collard greens are high in folate and beta carotene, butthey're particularly high in calcium -- ½ cup cooked weighsin at 113 milligrams of this essential mineral.

Dandelion Greens (Phases 1-4)
1.8 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

Related to the sunflower, dandelion greens are indeed thesame at the market as they are in your yard and a delightfuladdition to a salad of mixed greens. Unless you're certainyour yard is untouched by pesticides and fertilizers, play itsafe and go with the ones at the store. Choose small leaves;they become bitter as they grow.

Kale (Phases 1-4)
2.1 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

Many types of kale exist, but the most common is curlykale. This dark green leafy vegetable is remarkably high inbeta carotene, as well as the carotenoids lutein and zeaxanthin.Kale tastes somewhat sweeter after it's been exposed tofrost, so purchase it in the winter. Choose bunches with slenderstems -- they're younger and milder in flavor.

Mustard Greens (Phases 1-4)
0.1 g Net Carbs per ½ cup cooked

This crucifer looks like smaller, brighter kale, but its flavoris much more assertive. Mustard greens are high in calcium,folate, and beta carotene.

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Excerpted from The Atkins Shopping Guideby Atkins Health &. Medical Information Excerpted by permission.
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