StaceyH wrote:wosnes wrote:StaceyH wrote:
I guess that is pretty much what I am doing although I am trying to cut down on potatoes, rice and pasta which had become staples for every dinner.
I think they
should be staples of every meal -- along with bread!!
REALLY?! Or are you being silly?

Really. I have a starch at nearly every meal. It's a rare meal that
doesn't include a starch of some kind. Usually it's bread, but meals usually also include potatoes, corn, or pasta. The starchy vegetables appear more often than other grains, even pasta.
Rice, oats, barley (usually in soup) and quinoa make less frequent appearances. If you include them as starches, beans appear frequently, also in soups.
I definitely don't say "oh, I'm having (name of starch) so I don't need (name of another starch)." In fact, tonight's meal includes bread, corn, and potatoes (and other stuff).
I have a nearly 20 year old article from
Prevention magazine called "How in the World to Stay Slim." They looked at the eating habits of people in 9 different countries throughout the world. One of the points in the summary is that "grains star on their plates."
While we tend to make meat or cheese the centerpiece of our meals, healthier cuisines mandate that the largest serving on the plate be a filling, low-fat grain or starch -- for example, it's rice in Asia, potatoes in Sweden, bread in Europe or corn flour in Mexico.
In most of the countries it's two or three starches that form the basis of their meals.
In the conclusion they did state that world obesity was on the rise.
As societies get richer, people become more sedentary. They eat more calories, more meat and more American style fast food. American fast food combined with a sedentary lifestyle is making the citizens of the world fat.
"That which we persist in doing becomes easier for us to do. Not that the nature of the thing itself has changed but our power to do it is increased." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
"You are what you eat -- so don't be Fast, Easy, Cheap or Fake."