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Nutrition Nutrients • Substances in food that your body needs to function properly to grow, to repair itself, and to supply you with energy • Affect how you look, feel, act, grow, and even your abilities • Physical need • Psychological desire Hunger •A natural drive that protects you from starvation • Your brain tells your body it is hungry by how much glucose you have in your bloodstream Appetite • Desire, rather than a need, to eat. • Learned • Environment and emotions Advertising • Ads may try to persuade you to buy their product. • Control what foods you buy and eat • Cost • Convenience • Food safety • Emotions Nutrition •The process by which the body takes in and uses food Carbohydrates •The starches and sugars found in foods •4 calories per gram Simple carbohydrates • Fruits - fructose • Some veggies • Milk – lactose • Table sugar – sucrose • Grain - maltose • Average adult eats 133 lbs in sugar a year – 76% is invisible sugar. • 12 oz coke has 10 tsps of sugar • Fruit contains hidden sugar Complex carbohydrates • Found in great supple in rice and other grains, seeds, nuts, legumes and potatoes or yams • Before your body can use carbohydrates, it must first convert them to glucose – a simple sugar and the body’s chief fuel. • Glucose that is not used right away is stored as a starch-like substance - glycogen Glycemic Index •Amount and speed of glucose entering the blood determines the corresponding insulin response Fiber • Complex carbohydrate • Non-digestible part of plants • Moves waste out of the body Proteins •Nutrients that help build and maintain body tissues. •4 calories per gram Amino acids • Substances that make up body proteins • 20 different - body can make all but nine • Essential amino acids – body can not make – must come from foods you eat. Complete proteins • Foods that contain all the essential amino acids in the proper amount • Fish • Meat • Poultry • Eggs, milk, cheese • Soybean products Incomplete proteins • Lack some of the essential amino acids • Legumes • Nuts • Whole grain • Seeds Role of proteins • Infancy • Childhood • Adolescence • Pregnancy • Build new body tissues • Regulate many body process Fats Fats or lipids • A fatty substance that does not dissolve in water. • 9 calories per gram Saturated fats • All the hydrogen atoms it can hold • Animal fats, tropical, palm oil, palm kernel and coconut oil • Beef,pork, egg yolks, and dairy foods higher than chicken and fish • Solid at room temperature Unsaturated fats • Missing one or more pairs of hydrogen atoms • Veggie fats, olive, canola, soybean, corn and cottonseed oils • Reduced risk of heart disease • Liquid at room temp Hydrogenation • Adding of missing hydrogen atoms • Margarine is veggie oil in hydrogenated form – one atom away from being plastic • Fats add flavor • Satisfy hunger • Take longer to digest • Girls – 66 grams a day • Boys – 84 grams a day Cholesterol • A fatlike substance produced in the liver of all animals, found only in foods of animal origin • Meats, poultry, fish, eggs and dairy • Body makes all you need LDL • Low density lipo-proteins • Bad form of Cholesterol • Lower than 100 HDL • High density lipo-proteins • Good form of cholesterol • Removes LDLs • 1 pound = 3500 calories • Girls x 11 and boys x 12 weight to determine how many calories to eat • Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are all energy foods. Vitamins • Compounds that help regulate many vital processes, including the digestion, absorption, and metabolism of other nutrients Water-soluble vitamins • Dissolve in water and thus pass easily into the bloodstream • Excess excreted in urine • Not stored in body Fat-soluble vitamins • Absorbed and transported by fat • A, D, E, & K • Stored in body fat, liver, and kidneys • Buildup can be toxic Minerals • Inorganic substances that the body cannot manufacture but that act as catalysts, regulating many vital body processes Trace minerals • Iron – important during growth – hemoglobin (carries oxygen in blood) in blood – low iron - tired • Iodine • Copper • Calcium – structure to bones, muscle contraction, blood clotting, proper function of nervous system, vitamin D to absorb Water • A regulator and is vital to every body function • Carries nutrients • Transports waste from cells • Lubricates joints and mucous membranes • Swallow • Digest food • Absorb nutrients • Eliminate waste • Body cool down • Body uses 10 cups a day • Need 6 to 8 cups – 1.4 to 1.9 liters daily • Food is a water source Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) •Amount of nutrients that will prevent deficiencies in most healthy people Eat variety of foods • No single food provides all the nutrients your body needs • Available, affordable, and personal Sodium • Body’s essential minerals • Transport nutrient into cells • Moves out waste Healthy eating patterns • Variety • Moderation • Balance • Foundation of a healthful eating plan Breakfast • Most important meal • 10 to 14 hours without fuel • Body needs to be recharged Ingredients List • List ingredients by weight in descending order • Greatest amount is listed first Enriched food •Food in which nutrients were lost in processing have been added back Fortification •Addition of nutrients that are not naturally present Other terms • Healthy – low in fat, limited amounts of cholesterol and sodium • Light – calories reduced by 1/3 • Less – 25% less nutrient or calories • Free – contains no amount or a slight amount • Fresh – raw • Natural – meat and poultry only Open dating • Expiration date – last date used • Freshness date – last date thought to fresh • Pack date – date packaged • Sell date – pull date – last date in should be sold Unit pricing • Strategy for recognizing the relative cost of a product based on the cost of a standard unit, such as an ounce or gram