Healthy Eating in a Mexican Restaurant
Q: What are the most nutritious choices at a Mexican restaurant?
A: Avoid excessive saturated fat and calories by choosing grilled chicken, seafood and lean cuts of beef or pork. Choose chicken, seafood and vegetable fillings for tortillas rather than ground beef.
Although chicken fajitas may be cooked with some fat, ordering fajitas instead of chicken enchiladas, which are covered with melted cheese, will save over 100 calories and substantial saturated fat.
You can also save fat and calories by limiting use of sour cream and guacamole. Some restaurants offer reduced-fat sour cream and cheese, but fat and calories will still add up if your portions are too large.
As at most restaurants, portion control may be one of your toughest battles. Watch how much you order. If your meal appears too large, put some away in a takeout container before you accidentally eat it all.
The other calorie trap is the basket of tortilla chips often served as an appetizer. Most people find that once they start eating them it’s hard to stop.
Feel free to ask your server to remove the tortilla chips if you don’t want to be tempted.
Q: You talk about changing the proportions of meat and vegetables in stews and casseroles to make them more healthful. How do I do that without a recipe?
A: Start with your usual recipe for a stew or casserole; check how much meat, chicken, or seafood it contains. If the recipe calls for more than two to four ounces of uncooked meat per serving, reduce the amount.
If the dish contains dried beans, which are good sources of the protein and key minerals that meat provides, you can reduce the meat even further or omit it completely. If the recipe doesn’t contain beans, feel free to add them anyway.
Increase the amount of vegetables to compensate for the amount of meat you eliminate. If the recipe calls for only a few vegetables, add one or two more kinds for increased variety and nutrients.
Aim for at least a half-cup—preferably one cup or more—of vegetables per serving. If reaching this amount adds more volume than you removed by cutting back on meat, just add a little more broth, tomato sauce or other liquid to the dish to keep the same consistency.
Source: Nubella News
(by Marcela Vanharova)
3 Comments »
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Great tips! I love Mexican food and am always trying to find the best choice as far as being healthy and weight wise. The fajaita sounds lovely and I can forgo the tortilla and just enjoy the meat and mainly those grilled veggies!
Comment left on December 29, 2006 @ 11:39 am
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Pingback left on December 29, 2006 @ 11:33 pm
some resturants having carb watch choices on the menu…like las casuelas has mex-tacos which can a wheat tortilla and tomatoes and grilled chicken…i would get those instead
Comment left on June 23, 2008 @ 7:48 pm