Making healthy resolutions  

Hot topic: Be good to yourself this New Year

Our be good to yourself products makes it even easier for you to make healthy choices with over 200 tasty options in the range. 
A selection of Sainsbury's be good to yourself products

Sainsbury's be good to yourself
It’s that time of year when festive excesses have left almost all of us feeling in need of a little TLC. All around us, people are making resolutions to diet and do without, but, when we all know that even the best intentions wane after a few weeks, it’s hard not to ask why you should be depriving yourself.

So what’s to be done when you want a mouthwatering meal made from authentic, healthier ingredients that doesn’t make you feel you need to count the calories, check for artificial flavours and colours or worry about so-called ‘nasties’ such as hydrogenated fats?

 

Be good to yourself chicken and bacon pasta bake
What the experts are saying

Health practitioners agree that adopting a nutritionally balanced diet for the long term will offer benefits way beyond a quick-fix fast or novelty weight-loss plan. But what if you can’t – or don’t want to – spend hours in the kitchen preparing a delicious, perfectly balanced meal?

 

How Sainsbury's can help

Thankfully for food lovers, Sainsbury’s have come up with an ideal solution: their Be good to yourself range is designed to offer the kind of food you want to eat – but without any guilt factor. And the great news is the Be good to yourself range has recently been extended and now includes over 200 tasty options. New products have been taste-tested by a customer panel to ensure they’re bursting with flavour and fully satisfying, and everything adheres to strict nutritional standards. Now there really is something to suit all tastes and every occasion.

Be good to yourself deserts
Why not try the succulent ‘be good to yourself’ Chicken & Bacon Pasta
Bake? Or if you fancy a bit of spice, indulge in ‘be good to yourself’ Moroccan Meatballs & Couscous. And for the ultimate comfort food, tuck into mouthwatering ‘be good to yourself’ Spaghetti & Meatballs. It’s now easy to make a healthier choice every day, with all products in the range being either reduced fat or containing less than three per cent fat.

And the best news is that not all treats have to be naughty! The ‘be good to yourself’ range has an array of puddings that are melt-in-the-mouth delicious without worrying your waistline! Try Apple and Blackcurrant Pie – juicy Bramley apples and blackberries topped with an all-butter shortcrust pastry – or Mixed Berry Sponge Pudding, a light vanilla sponge filled with a summer berry compote. Or push the boat out with the rich Chocolate Sponge Pudding (made with Belgian chocolate) and for extra indulgence, try the moist Lemon Slices and
Blueberry Muffins.

 

And, with that kind of appetising, nourishing dish on the menu, it makes sense that your wellbeing will follow suit. So, start 2011 as you mean to go on, and be good to yourself.

 

 

Charlotte Parker, company nutritionist at Sainsbury’s
Charlotte Parker, company nutritionist at Sainsbury’s, offers her advice on healthy eating:

‘Food is the fuel of life and can bring great pleasure, yet many people seem to believe that a “healthy” diet must mean deprivation or starvation.
In fact, the simple philosophy of “everything in moderation” applies to a nutritionally balanced diet. To maintain overall wellbeing, you should eat a varied diet featuring all five food groups, prepared in a healthy way, with one eye on portion control.

Most Britons consume too much saturated fat, salt and sugar, and not enough fruit and vegetables, wholegrains and oily fish.’ 

 

How to be good to yourself

Here is some quick advice to help start making improvements to your diet now.

Pasta, potatoes, cereals, rice and bread
The five main food groups

They are fruit and vegetables; starchy carbohydrates (pasta, potatoes, cereals, rice and bread); milk and dairy; protein (meat, fish, eggs and beans); fats and sugars. You’ll need them all in varying quantities. 

Planning ahead
Plan ahead

Try making time once a week to think about your meals for the days ahead, ensuring you include a variety from the five main food groups: eg, if you have pasta one night, go for rice, couscous or potatoes another night. It’ll pay off later in the week, when your energy and good intent may be flagging. 

Healthier breakfast
Make time for breakfast

Starting the day with a high-fibre cereal (ideally with skimmed milk) should help to give you enough fuel to keep you going until lunchtime – avoiding the temptation of ‘naughty’ snacks

Fresh fruit
Vitamins and minerals

To provide your body with essential vitamins and minerals, try to eat five differently coloured portions (about the size of your fist) of fruit and/or vegetables a day. You can always bulk out meat dishes like chilli con carne or spaghetti bolognese by adding vegetables such as sweet corn, diced carrots or frozen peas – a great way to ensure reluctant children boost their vegetable intake. 

Grilled salmon
Eating fish

Aim to eat two portions of fish each week, one of which should be an oily variety such as salmon, trout, mackerel, sardines or fresh tuna.

Watch your alcohol intake
Watch your alcohol intake

If you decide to drink alcohol make sure you stay within the recommended safe guidelines. Look out for the ‘Know your limits’ labels on Sainsbury’s alcohol. 

Steamer
Invest in some healthycooking equipment

Steamers are a great way to cook vegetables and they help retains  important vitamins and minerals. Nonstick frying pans and woks require no oils so they are a good way to cut down the fat; using oil sprays with them will help reduce the amount of oil needed, too.

 

Be good to yourself chocolate sponge puddingBe good to yourself mixed berry sponge puddingBe good to yourself apple and blackberry pie