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Nutrition for the Foodservice Professional

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Let the Pyramid guide your food choices. Choose a variety of grains daily, especially ... Small roll, biscuit, or muffin. 5 to 6 small or 3 to 4 large crackers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nutrition for the Foodservice Professional


1
Nutrition for the Foodservice Professional
  • Using Dietary Recommendations, Food Guides, and
    Food Labels to Plan Menus

Virginia Stipp Lawrence, MHM
2
Welcome!
  • Questions from Last Week?
  • Reminders
  • Topic Presentations Begin Next Week

3
Dietary Recommendations and Food Guides
  • Dietary recommendations Guidelines that discuss
    specific foods and food groups to eat for optimal
    health. Dietary Guidelines for Americans
  • Food guides Guidelines that tell us the kinds
    of amounts of foods that constitute a
    nutritionally adequate diet, based on dietary
    recommendations. Food Guide Pyramid

4
Dietary Guidelines for Americans
  • Aim for Fitness
  • Aim for a healthy
  • weight.
  • Be physically
  • active each day.

5
Dietary Guidelines for Americans
  • Build a Healthy Base
  • Let the Pyramid guide your food choices.
  • Choose a variety of grains daily, especially
    whole grains.
  • Choose a variety of fruits and vegetables daily.
  • Keep food safe to eat.

6
Dietary Guidelines for Americans
  • Choose Sensibly
  • Choose a diet low in saturated fat and
    cholesterol and moderate in total fat.
  • Choose beverages and foods to moderate your
    intake of sugars.
  • Choose and prepare foods with less salt.
  • Drink alcoholic beverages in moderation.

7
The Food Guide Pyramid
8
Nutritional Goals of Food Pyramid
  • Energy Provide 1,300 to 3,000 kcal.
  • Protein, vitamins, and minerals Provide 100 of
    DRI.
  • Fiber Increase intake.
  • Total fat Limit to 30 or less of kcal.
  • Saturated fat Limit to less than 10 of kcal.
  • Cholesterol Limit to 300 mg or less.
  • Sodium Limit to 2,400 mg or less.

9
Key Concepts of Food Pyramid
Variety Proportionality Moderation
10
Number of Servings
  • 1600 kcal 2200 kcal 2800 kcal
  • Bread Group 6 9 11
  • Fruit Group 2 3 4
  • Veggie Group 3 4 5
  • Meat Group 5 oz 6 oz.
    7 oz.
  • Milk Group 2-3 2-3 2-3
  • Total fat (g) 53 73 93
  • Total added
  • sugars (tsp) 6 12 18

11
Food Pyramid Serving Sizes
  • Bread, Cereal, Rice, Pasta Group
  • 1 slice of bread
  • ½ hamburger bun or English muffin
  • Small roll, biscuit, or muffin
  • 5 to 6 small or 3 to 4 large crackers
  • ½ cup cooked cereal, rice, or pasta
  • 1 ounce ready-to-eat cereal

12
Food Pyramid Serving Sizes
  • Fruit Group
  • A whole fruit such as a medium apple, banana, or
    oragne
  • A grapefruit half
  • A melon wedge
  • ¾ cup juice
  • ½ cup berries
  • ½ cup chopped, cooked, or canned fruit
  • ¼ cup dried fruit

13
Food Pyramid Serving Sizes
  • Vegetable Group
  • ½ cup cooked vegetables
  • ½ cup chopped raw vegetables
  • 1 cup leafy raw vegetables, such as lettuce or
    spinach
  • ¾ cup vegetable juice

14
Food Pyramid Serving Sizes
  • Meat, Poultry, Fish, Dry Beans and Peas, Eggs,
    and Nut Group
  • Amounts should total 5 to 7 ounces of cooked lean
    meat, poultry without skin, or fish per day.
  • Count 1 egg, ½ cup cooked beans, or 2 tablespoons
    peanut butter as 1 ounce of meat.

15
Food Pyramid Serving Sizes
  • Milk, Yogurt, Cheese Group
  • 1 cup milk
  • 8 ounces yogurt
  • 1-1/2 ounces natural cheese
  • 2 ounces process cheese (such as American cheese)

16
Planning Menus Using the Food Guide Pyramid
  • Does a days menu on the average provide at least
    the lower number of servings?
  • Does the menu have 2 or more servings of
    whole-grain breads and cereals each day?
  • Does the menu include several servings of each of
    the vegetable subgroups each week?
  • Do most vegetables and fruits have their skins
    and seeds?
  • Are foods high in fat, sugar, /or sodium
    balanced with choices lower in these nutrients?

17
An Adaptation of the Pyramid
18
Food Labels
Required on Labels Food Name Ingredient List Net
weight Name and address of manufacturer Nutrition
Facts
19
Nutrition Facts
Daily Value A set of nutrient-intake values
developed by the Food and Drug Administration
used as a reference for expressing nutrient
content on nutrition labels.
20
Nutrient Content Claims
  • Claims on food labels about the nutrient
    composition of a food.
  • Regulated by the FDA.
  • Examples
  • Low calorie 40 kcal or less
  • Low fat 3 grams or less of fat
  • High in.. 20 or more of Daily Value
  • Healthy Low in fat and saturated fat, contains
    no more than20 of DV for sodium and cholesterol,
    contains at least 10 of DV for 1 of the
    following vitamin A or C, calcium, iron,
    protein, fiber

21
Health Claims
  • Claims on food labels that state certain foods or
    food substances as part of an overall healthy
    diet may reduce the risk of certain diseases.
    Must be approved by FDA.
  • Example Diets low in sodium may reduce the
    risk of high blood pressure, a disease associated
    with many factors.
  • This claim may be put on foods that meet the
    criteria for low sodium (140 mg sodium or less).

22
Portion Size Comparisons
  • Portion sizes in the Food Guide Pyramid do not
    always match the serving sizes on food labels.
    Food labels allow consumers to compare the
    nutrients in two products.
  • Portion sizes in the US have been steadily
    increasing.

23
Questions?
24
Next Week
Sugar
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