Can a multivitamin supplement make up for a poor diet? The answer is just a click away. While you’re there, don’t forget to check out “This Week’s Tip”–it will help you get on the road to healthier eating!
Food—The Ultimate Source for Vitamins, Minerals, and Phytonutrients
Tip of the Week: Add a glass of 100% juice daily to increase your intake of fruits and vegetables*. While most juices don’t contain the fiber of whole fruits and vegetables, 100% juice is packed with beneficial phytonutrients, as well as vitamins and minerals. Adding a glass of juice is an easy way to get started on the road to healthier eating.
Suggestions for incorporating this tip into your lifestyle: Instead of 2 cups of coffee in the morning, how about 1 cup paired with a glass of juice? You might want to try subbing a grape juice for that soft drink at afternoon break. Love tea? It is terrific when combined with a variety of juices. (I prefer to mix the tea with equal parts of sweeter juices—such as apple, grape, peach, and cranberry—but pick whatever juice you like. These combinations are great either hot or cold!)
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And now, this week’s discussion–
Let’s face it–most of us don’t eat the way we know we should. The excuses for this are almost endless: too little time. . .too much work. . .didn’t have it in the house. . . it costs too much. . . it wasn’t available. . . the package is too big. . . I don’t like the taste!
Unfortunately, this laundry list of excuses is not rivaled by a lengthy array of solutions. In fact, there is only one—that solution is known as commitment. If you’re serious about extending the quantity and quality of your life, commit to a healthier way of eating.
But what about supplements? you ask. Why can’t they provide the nutrition that’s lacking in a poor diet? Once again, the answer is simple—food is superior to supplements! Yes, supplements serve a purpose, but their role is that of the supporting cast—not the lead! By definition, supplements are an addition, an accompaniment—not the main course.
These unidentified elements, as well as those more familiar to us (such as fiber, trace elements, etc.) can make significant contributions to the outcomes of research studies (as well as to our health!) They present yet another reason to favor food over supplements as the body’s major nutrition provider. Supplements simply cannot duplicate the “total food package”.
*The eventual goal is a minimum of 5 servings/day.
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