Making a Game Plan for a Healthier Super Bowl

A healthy Super Bowl?!?  What?!

Sunday is the Super Bowl (duh), and Tim is throwing a party.  Let’s be honest, I don’t know or care about anything football related and obviously only go to Super Bowl festivities for the delicious food!  I know not everything on Tim’s menu will be the healthiest, although I’m sure I will pester him to change up some of the ingredients he uses.  Which he is really good about doing, by the way.  When it comes to the Super Bowl, game day “clocks in as one of the biggest calorie fests of the year for many Americans. The average football fan eats about a day’s worth of calories during the game’s four quarters, and the U.S. Calorie Control Council estimates that Americans pack away 11 million pounds of chips by the time the clock runs out.” [Source]

That’s ridiculous!  Of course we all need to be realistic and know that Sunday is probably NOT going to be our best eating day of the year, but there’s no need to kiss all our healthy habits away at kickoff!

Whether you are going to or hosting a party on Sunday, here are my tips for having a healthier Super Bowl!  The Pats aren’t the only ones who need a game plan. 🙂

Making a Game Plan for a Healthier Super Bowl

Move Before the Party
Schedule some time on Sunday before the party to get a good workout in.  If you don’t have time for a full workout, you could try some of my condensed but intense plans or even go for a brisk walk.  I always find that if I exercise before a party that’s sure to have a lot of food, I’ll be less likely to want to “ruin” that workout.  And then if I do indulge, at least I’ll feel less guilty about it later!

Eat Before You Go
Similar to my “Tips for a Thinner Thanksgiving,” have a snack or small meal before you head out for the game or pregame.  If you arrive starving, you will be more likely to overeat during the party.  Opt for a protein filled healthy snack before you go to keep you feeling full and prevent unnecessary indulging later.

Portion Control
Yes, you CAN eat a little bit of everything.  But that’s the key – a LITTLE.  One tip I like to use is to grab a smaller plate, if there are different sizes available.  Or just ask the host for one!  This definitely helps with portion control.  Just be smart about the amounts of food you pile on your plate.  Go for golf ball sizes, not tennis ball!

Use the Two Thirds Rule
This one is simple!  Fill your plate with 2/3 healthier options and 1/3 not so great options.  And take your time to really think about what you really want.

Make Smart Substitutions
If you are hosting, there are PLENTY of healthier snacks and food you can choose to serve on game day.  And also plenty of ways to make “traditional” dishes healthier.  Just don’t tell your guests!  Chances are, if you come up with creative ways to serve better meals and snacks, your friends and family won’t even notice.

Here are some of my recommendations for a healthier menu:

  • First, pass on the store-bought food and take out items.  These can be LOADED with sodium and have a high fat content.  Anything you make on your own means you can cut out tons of calories and fat.  For example, you can substitute plain Greek yogurt for sour cream and still make a delicious dip!  You can also purée a lot of your own ingredients for this.
  • Make sure you have veggies.  Make a pretty display of carrots, celery, red pepper, broccoli, and cheery tomatoes to go with that dip.  Aside from a traditional veggie platter, you can use veggies for veggie kabobs or whole wheat quesadillas.
  • Salsas and guacamole both make for tasty, low-cal treats!
  • Instead of serving high ground beef in dishes such as hamburgers, chili, or nachos, try to go with lean ground turkey or sirloin if you absolutely must.  Better yet?  Use chicken!
  • For dessert, make them bite sized and try to stick with somewhat healthier options.  Tim asked if I would bake a dessert for his party, and I am going to try my hand at Peanut Butter & Pretzel Truffles.  I’m going to use natural peanut butter, and pretzels aren’t TERRIBLE for you.  Plus a truffle is smaller than a cookie or cupcake, so hopefully will help with still getting a taste of dessert without eating too much!  And these are certainly better than cupfuls of butter, oil, and frosting right?!
  • Watch out for the empty calories.  There’s no need to have sooooo many beers.  Limit yourself to just a few, and drink water between alcoholic beverages.  It is a work night for most, after all.  And you don’t want to be drinking and driving!

Bring Your Own Dish
If  you aren’t hosting, offer to bring a dish.  And be specific with what you offer to bring.  Then make it healthy!  This way if there’s nothing else, you’ll have one healthier option at the very least.

Remove Yourself
It’s definitely easy to lose track of how much you’ve actually eaten.  Maybe sometimes it even seems impossible to STOP snacking?  If you find yourself at this point, get up and physically seat yourself away from the food.  If it’s not within arm’s reach, you may find you are less likely to get up and get it.  Depending on the crowd you’re with, you can also physically move the plate or snacks to the other side of the table, again out of arm’s reach.  Still going for it?  Chew some gum!

Think About the Next Day
Like I said earlier, it is a work night for most people.  Think about how lethargic and tired you might feel the next day if you stuff yourself silly during the Super Bowl.  I recommend making a gym plan for the morning or signing up for a group exercise class, so you have thoughts of that as you make your snacking decisions.  If you make a plan, you’ll also be more likely to stick to it and burn off the calories the next day!

Don’t Let One Night Get You Down
If all else fails and you still find yourself overeating, don’t get down on yourself!  It’s just one night.  And don’t let that throw you off for the week either.  You don’t want to find yourself saying “Well I already started the week off wrong, so I might as well continue eating poorly” on Wednesday.

Point is, just realize where you went wrong and learn from it for next time.  No need to harp and dwell on it all week long.

What are you guys doing for the Super Bowl?  Anyone have their own game plan for keeping it a healthier night than most? 

Shedding Through the Season: Week 3

Welcome back to my 2011 Shedding Through the Season Guide! 

Ready for Week 3?

The week before Christmas = busy, busy, busy, so let’s try extra hard to stay on track this week.

If you missed the first two installments, here they are:

  • Shedding Through the Season:  Week 1
  • Shedding Through the Season:  Week 2

Reminder:  Each of these weekly posts will include weekly “condensed but intense” workouts, healthy meal and snack ideas, and three holiday survival tips.  The goal of this guide is to help keep you all healthy and happy through the holidays, avoid stress, avoid holiday weight gain, make time for exercise, and boost energy!!

FOOD

Breakfast Suggestions

  • Protein Pancakes
  • Plain Chobani yogurt with a Kashi product of your choice mixed in.  Lately I’ve been into the Autumn Wheat and Cinnamon Harvest!
  • Whole wheat or multi-grain English muffin with almond butter

Lunch Suggestions

  • Salad greens with grilled chicken, chick peas, red kidney beans, and some other veggies of your choice + a low cal dressing.
  • Sliced avocado and olive oil with a sprinkle of pepper on multi-grain bread, with an apple on the side
  • Grilled goat cheese sandwich with fig and honey

Dinner Suggestions

Snack Suggestions

  • 1 serving of red grapes
  • Wasa crackers with low-fat cottage cheese
  • A hard-boiled egg!

FITNESS

Condensed But Intense Holiday Blast – Week 3

What You Need:  Just yourself!
Time:  Approximately 15 minutes

This is a great way to squeeze in a workout that gets your heart rate up and lets you sweat when you don’t have a lot of time.  This can also be done in the comfort of your own home to cut travel to and from the gym.  Do about 45 seconds through of each move, and if you have time this can be repeated through for a second or third circuit – totaling 15, 30, or 45 minutes depending on your needs.

  • Warmup:  March in place, march wide, jog in place
  • Regular Squats
  • Jump Squats
  • Side to side jump squats
  • Ski Lunge Taps
  • Lunge pulses – right leg
  • Lunge pulses – left leg
  • Jumping Jacks
  • Burpees
  • Pushups
  • Mountain Climbers
  • Crunches
  • Bicycles
  • Cooldown:  Stretching

TIPS

This week’s survival tips!

  • Still have shopping to do?  Head to the mall during very early or very late hours.  This way you have a better chance at avoiding your fellow last-minute shoppers in the midst of crowds and can do more in less time.
  • Hosting the party?  Delegate to your visitors.  Don’t be afraid to ask your guests to bring something along.  A few extra desserts or side dishes that someone else can bring just means less dishes for you to prepare, as well as less cleanup!  Also, delegate to your family, children, spouse, roommates, etc.  You cannot possibly do all the cleaning and preparation on your own.
  • Be realistic on what to expect.  There is no such thing as the perfect family out there, but there IS such thing as being able to have control over your own holiday and yourself.  Be realistic and know that someone’s feelings are bound to get hurt, someone is bound to get in an argument, and something messy is bound to spill on your rug.  However, if things do get out of control, you can say no and stand your ground.  For those with difficult situations and dysfunctional families – and unfortunately the truth of the matter is that there are plenty out there – people don’t change just because it’s Christmas Day.  Stay true to your boundaries and be grateful for the things you do have, but know it’s okay to leave if things get out of hand.

Question of the Day:  How have you been surviving?  Are you finding my Shedding Through the Season Guide helpful?

Shedding Through the Season: Week 2

Welcome back to my 2011 Shedding Through the Season Guide! 

Hope you guys are ready for Week 2.  If you missed Week 1, here it is.  Just a reminder that each of these weekly posts will include weekly “condensed but intense” workouts, healthy meal and snack ideas, and three holiday survival tips.  The goal of this guide is to help keep you all healthy and happy through the holidays, avoid stress, avoid holiday weight gain, make time for exercise, and boost energy!!

FOOD

[Picture Source]

Breakfast Suggestions

  • Oatmeal with sliced banana, cinnamon, and a scoop of Teddie’s unsalted peanut butter
  • Breakfast sandwich – Eggs, reduced fat cheddar cheese, tomato, and onion on a whole wheat sandwich thin
  • Low-fat cottage cheese with pineapple

Lunch Suggestions

  • Lower-fat Chicken Salad
  • Tuna & salsa.  Yes, tuna and salsa.  Don’t mix with mayo or anything else, just those two together.  Probably not enough to fill you up for lunch, so pair with a piece of fruit.
  • Whole wheat wrap with hummus, radishes, sliced carrots, and avocado.  And a Chobani yogurt on the side.

Dinner Suggestions

Snack Suggestions

  • Fresh veggies of your choice with hummus.  Lately I’ve been really into broccoli with hummus or carrots with hummus!
  • 1 serving of blackberries
  • Air-popped popcorn.  Instead of butter, sprinkle with cinnamon for some extra flavor.

FITNESS

[Picture Source]

Condensed But Intense Holiday Blast – Week 2

What You Need:  Cardio Machine (Treadmill, Elliptical, Bike – or somewhere to run), and an exercise band
Time:  Approximately 30-35 minutes

CARDIO:  15 minutes

  • Minutes 0-2:  Warmup
  • Minutes 2-4:  Moderate
  • Minutes 4-8:  Tabata (20 second sprint, 10 second recovery intervals – repeat 8 times for 4 minutes)
  • Minutes 8-10:  Moderate recovery pace
  • Minutes 10-14:  Tabata (20 second sprint, 10 second recovery intervals – repeat 8 times for 4 minutes)
  • Minute 15:  Cooldown

STRENGTH:  15-20  minutes

  • Bicep Curl + Squat:  Place band under feet, hold band at each end.  Squat and curl on the way up.  3 sets of 10.
  • 30 seconds of burpees
  • Seated Row:  Place band around feet (legs straight out in front of you).  Pull band back for a seated row.  3 sets of 10.
  • 30 seconds of mountain climbers
  • Pushup with resistance:  Position the band across your shoulder blades with tight resistance, each end tucked under a hand.  Go for 10-12 reps, twice.
  • 30 seconds of side to side hops
  • Curtsy lunge and lift:  Hold one end of band in hand, other end is under the front foot of the curtsy lunge.  Lunge, then draw elbow up first, then extend the arm all the way, then come up.  Go for 10-12 reps, twice.
  • 30 seconds of jumping jacks
  • Plank Series (no band):  Hold regular plank for 30 seconds, flip right into a side plank for 15 seconds, back to 30 seconds of regular, other side plank for 15, and finish with 30 of regular.

TIPS

[Picture Source]

This week’s survival tips!

  • Spread things out.  Holiday card writing, gift wrapping, baking – it all seems like a ton of fun until you sit down and actually do it.  Every year I get excited to write my holiday cards and then by the end of card 3, I find myself groaning “Do I really still have 22 to go?!”  Spread it out.  Do 5 cards a night for a week.  Wrap 3 gifts a night.  And plan your baking and cooking accordingly!
  • Fight holiday fatigue:  Get enough sleep, stay hydrated, stay warm, and wash your hands often!
  • Be smart with your money.  It’s a tough season for those trying to remain financially stable!  Use coupons, don’t buy the most expensive presents “just because,” and realize that sometimes homemade presents go a long way.  Set a budget – before you just wander into a store without a plan where you will be more likely to make unnecessary purchases, decide how much you are going to spend on each person on your list.  Try and pay with cash to avoid a huge post-season bill, avoid the urge to buy more once you’ve crossed someone off  your list, and try to cut down a bit by suggesting fun things like a scarf exchange, Yankee Swap, or Secret Santa instead.

Question of the Day:  How have you been surviving!?