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    How food shapes a healthy life

    You really are what you eat: The new food plate blows away the pyramid

    Ann Smith Barnes
    Jul 15, 2011 | 5:01 am
    Stick with water or low-fat dairy drinks to quench your thirst.

    Why does an apple a day keep the doctor away?

    Why did Popeye the Sailor Man eat cans of spinach and not SPAM to get strong?

    Every time you eat, you make a choice: Eat foods that fuel your body and equip it to resist disease and be strong OR eat foods that do nothing for your health or worse yet, nudge you along a path to sickness.

    Healthy made simple

    The world of “Wellness” is a trillion dollar industry; consumers are bombarded with “super-food” claims and trendy prepackaged meals. Although there is nothing wrong with eating fruits high in antioxidants or paying for portioned-controlled meals, the world of balanced eating has become incredibly complicated and sometimes costly.

    Recently, the USDA changed its look and offered a simpler way to remember how to maintain a balanced diet. Gone is the rainbow-colored food guide pyramid with hard-to-remember numbers of servings in each food group. The new logo is modeled after a dinner plate and is a lot more familiar than the previous one modeled after an Egyptian Wonder of the World.

    In general, half of a meal or plate should be fruits and vegetables, a quarter ought to be lean (or low-fat) protein like fish, chicken or beef, and the remaining quarter should be carbohydrates, preferably whole grains.

    ChooseMyPlate.gov highlights the plate model that has been used for years by registered dietitians and nutritionists to guide clients toward balanced eating and building a healthy meal. In general, half of a meal or plate should be fruits and vegetables, a quarter ought to be lean (or low-fat) protein like fish, chicken or beef, and the remaining quarter should be carbohydrates, preferably whole grains.

    This configuration should remind you of the divided plates you used as a kid. In fact, a good way to follow this plan for healthy eating is to return to your childhood and buy a divided plate for use at home. Let’s face it! It would be hard to fit a slab of pork ribs or a 22-ounce rib eye in that little purple quarter of the plate labeled protein!

    In addition, www.ChooseMyPlate.gov has a variety of easy-to-understand tips and tools to help you personalize an eating plan that is right for you.

    Why the focus on fruits and vegetables

    Beside the fact that your mother told me to write this, fruits and vegetables have been proven to provide great health benefits when generously consumed. Although a variety of popular diets promote eating produce (Mediterranean Diet, Ornish Diet, etc), our parents’ claims were supported by a large study called the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH). The DASH study assessed the benefits of eating a non-vegetarian diet heavy in fruits and vegetables.

    In addition to lowering blood pressure, individuals who followed the diet over the long term had lower rates of stroke, congestive heart failure and some cancers. Also, the focus on higher proportions of fruits and vegetables, which are naturally lower in fats and calories, resulted in many participants losing weight. Consider this: If you’re eating a banana, the odds are in your favor that you’re not woofing down a large side of French fries.

    Fruits and vegetables are packed with a variety of health-promoting fiber, vitamins and other nutrients that help maintain your body’s good health. Those are a few perks of eating fruits and vegetables. A more complete list can be found on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website.

    Nutrient Benefit Foods

    Certain foods have nutrients that scientific studies have proven lead to a healthier life. Here are some suggestions:

    Fiber: Decreases risk of coronary artery disease

    Eat: Black beans, navy beans, lentils, soybeans, chickpeas, artichokes

    Folate: Decreases risk of women having children with spinal cord defects

    Eat: Cooked spinach, great northern beans, black eyed peas, asparagus

    Potassium: Maintains healthy blood pressure

    Eat: Sweet potatoes, tomatoes, carrots

    Vitamin A: Maintains healthy eyes and skin and protects against infections

    Eat: Sweet potatoes, carrots, spinach, mustard greens, kale, cantaloupe, red peppers

    Vitamin C: Helps to heal cuts and wounds and maintains healthy teeth and gums

    Eat: Kiwi, strawberries, pineapple, broccoli, oranges, mangoes, cauliflower

    Buy produce that is in season and locally grown to support farmers in your area and to ensure the best flavor (and cost). Strawberries shouldn’t look and taste like red mush! The meal planning and shopping section of the Fruits and Veggies Matter website has a link to a list of fresh produce by season and month of the year. Check it out before you shop or eat out.

    Watch the liquid calories

    Did you notice that the myplate.gov logo does not have a space for soda or juice? Sugar sweetened beverages — yes, even some bottles of fruit juice have added sugar —account for almost 180 extra calories a day and can contain up to 10 teaspoons of sugar!

    Although having your favorite carbonated beverage every once in awhile will not derail efforts to eat healthily, excessive and mindless drinking of sugar-laden beverages can add on weight and can counter the benefits you gain with other healthy food choices. Stick with water or low-fat dairy drinks to quench your thirst and chose to eat your fruit rather than drink it — you get more fiber when you chew and less sugar, which is better for your body.

    Maintaining a healthy diet doesn’t have to be confusing. Using the plate model and tools on ChooseMyPlate.gov makes it easy for all of us to find our health at home plate.

    Here’s to YOUR good health!

    Dr. Ann Smith Barnes is medical director, Weight Management Services & Disease Prevention, Harris County Hospital District, and assistant professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.

    The new logo is modeled after a dinner plate and is a lot more familiar to people than the previous one modeled after an Egyptian Wonder of the World.

      
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    What's Eric Eating Episodes 471 and 472

    Texas Monthly's BBQ Snob dishes on the magazine's new top 50 list

    CultureMap Staff
    Jun 6, 2025 | 5:41 pm
    Texas Monthly's BBQ Snob dishes on the magazine's new top 50 list
    Texas Monthly's BBQ Snob dishes on the magazine's new top 50 list
    Texas Monthly's BBQ Snob dishes on the magazine's new top 50 list

    On this week’s episode of “What’s Eric Eating,” Texas Monthly barbecue editor Daniel Vaughn joins CultureMap editor Eric Sandler to discuss the magazine’s new list of the 50 best barbecue joints in Texas. Seven Houston-area restaurants made the list, led by Truth BBQ at No. 9.



    What may surprise Houstonians is which barbecue joints made Texas Monthly’s list. Familiar names like Feges BBQ, Blood Bros. BBQ, and Killen’s Barbecue have been relegated from the top 50 to an honorable mentions list. In their place are newer restaurants such as Bar-A BBQ in Montgomery, Rosemeyer Bar-B-Q in Spring, and Brisket & Rice in Cypress.

    The two writers discuss what stood about the new Houston restaurants on the list, as well as the honorable mentions. Vaughn shares that Roegels Barbecue Co. in Briargrove almost made the top 50 based on a strong meal he had there. Sandler asks Vaughn whether the magazine felt compelled to choose between Blood Bros. and Brisket & Rice, since they’re both serving an Asian-influenced take on Texas barbecue.

    “It wasn’t about two different places serving similar cuisines. With Blood Bros., the things I love about them are really not their straight up sliced brisket, pork ribs, and sausage,” Vaughn says. “In comparing those items with others in the area, it didn’t seem fair to our readers to send them there saying it’s one of the 50 best barbecue restaurants. All things considered, it’s one of the 50 restaurants I’d want to go to eat barbecue, but maybe some of the specials — the banh mi, the boudain, the pho-strami, that sandwich was an absolute revelation. Comparing the barbecue with a place like Brisket & Rice, the brisket, ribs, and sausage were just a little better than Blood Bros.”

    After a thorough discussion of the Houston newcomers, Sandler turns to a few statewide questions. Tune in to hear Vaughn’s explanation for why Snow’s BBQ in Lexington and Franklin Barbecue in Austin — arguably the two most famous Texas barbecue joints in the world — moved out of the ranked top 10 and into the alphabetized top 50. They also discuss the restaurants that made the top three: Burnt Bean Co. in Seguin, LeRoy & Lewis Barbecue in Austin, and Goldee’s Barbecue in Fort Worth.

    The conversation concludes with a look ahead to the magazine’s best new list that will be published in 2027 as well as Vaughn’s thoughts on the Houston barbecue pop-up that would have a strong shot at the top 50 if it ever begins serving food at least once per week.

    In this week’s other episode, Sandler and co-host Michael Fulmer discuss the news of the week. Since Fulmer is a co-founder of the Houston BBQ Festival, he has his own thoughts on the Texas Monthly list. He and Sandler also discuss the reopening of Cecil’s Pub.



    In the restaurants of the week segment, Fulmer and Sandler share first impressions of Silk Road, the dim sum restaurant in a West U. hotel that’s generating a lot of buzz. They conclude by talking about Doko, the new sushi restaurant in Autry Park from the chefs behind Handies Douzo and Aiko.

    -----

    Subscribe to "What's Eric Eating" on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Hear it Sunday at 9 am on ESPN 97.5.

    Daniel Vaughn Texas Monthly
      

    Courtesy of Texas Monthly

    Daniel Vaughn is this week's guest.

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