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A Heart-Healthy Meal for Valentine’s Day

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Prepare your loved ones a heart-healthy meal for Valentine’s Day and show them that you’ve got a heart of gold!

Valentine’s Day is usually about hearts, candy and flowers, but here’s another way to show everyone that you really care you can prepare a delicious meal featuring heart-healthy foods one that you and your loved ones can literally €œeat to your heart’s content€.

You may want to start off with a toast to your good health. You can use champagne which, like wine, contains natural antioxidants from the grapes or you can make a festive non-alcoholic drink by adding a splash of 100% fruit juice to some sparkling water. Red-purple juices, like 100% grape and pomegranate are rich in polyphenols €“
naturally-occurring compounds in the fruit which help to increase blood flow and support healthy blood pressure.

For your first course, have a colorful salad. Bright orange carrots, red tomatoes and deep-green spinach owe their colors to a group of hearthealthy antioxidant pigments, called carotenoids.

For added benefit, toss in some avocado and dress your salad with a little olive oil since carotenoids are fat-soluble, the addition of small amounts of heart-healthy fats to your salad will help your body absorb these beneficial compounds from the vegetables. Cooked beans make a heart-healthy addition, too, since their water-soluble fiber can help to keep cholesterol levels in check.

For the main event, grill up some fresh fish. Fish is generally low in total fat and saturated fat and is also one of the best sources of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids which help to control the levels of certain fats in the blood, like triglycerides and cholesterol.Then, let yourself go €œa little nuts€ tree nuts like almonds, walnuts and pistachios are rich in compounds called phytosterols that can help keep cholesterol in check.

Try toasting them lightly in the oven or a dry frying pan it brings out their natural flavor and then you can sprinkle them on top of some steamed veggies for a great side dish, or add them to your salad.

Finally, no Valentine’s Day would be complete without a little bit of chocolate. Naturally occurring compounds in cocoa, called flavonoids, act as antioxidants and the darker the chocolate, the more flavonoids you get.

So have a bite of dark chocolate to finish your meal, or for a doubly healthy dessert, drizzle some melted bittersweet chocolate over fresh berries.

The natural red-purple pigments that give berries their beautiful color act as antioxidants, too.

 

Written by Susan Bowerman,
Director of Nutrition Training at Herbalife.
Susan is a Registered Dietitian and a BoardCertified
Specialist in Sports Dietetics.
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