Tuesday 20 October 2020

Yogurt – a great health food


Yogurt was so popular for many years.  And rightly so as it is a very healthy food to
add to your diet.  However, in the past
year or so, my husband has noted the shelf space for yogurt is getting less and
less.  And the flavors we used to love
are getting harder to find.  This means
the popularity of yogurt is waning but this is not good news for people’s
health.  Not only does yogurt provide a
good source of calcium, it also provides vitamin D, a vitamin so many Americans
are low in.  Recently I was talking to a
health care professional and she stated how many of her patients are deficient
in vitamin D.  Guess those patients aren’t
drinking cow’s milk, eating yogurt and going outside.  Yogurt also provides an excellent quality protein.

Consumer Reports has an excellent article on yogurts. 

Why is yogurt so healthy?

  • Calcium – Children and adults need bone-building
    calcium every day.  Easy to do if you
    drink milk at meals or have some real cow’s milk yogurt in place of a glass of
    milk.  Recently, students in my class
    kept 24-hour diet recalls.  They wrote
    down everything they ate or drank for 24 hours. 
    It is always amazing to see the number of students who have no dairy in
    their diets at all.  Guaranteed their
    diets are low in calcium (and low in vitamin D).  Kids 4-8 years need 1,000 mg of calcium a
    day, teenagers 1300 mg a day and adults about 1,000 mg a day.  Yogurt packs in the calcium
    as 8 ounces of yogurt provides over 400 mg of calcium.   Most
    yogurts aren’t in 8-ounce containers but 6 ounces or less.  We try to buy yogurt in at least 6-ounce
    containers, as I want all the calcium I can get from yogurt.
  • Vitamin D – like cow’s milk, most yogurts
    are fortified with vitamin D.  We need about
    600 IU a day of D.  An 8-ounce serving of
    yogurt provides from 115 to 127 international
    units.  But check the nutrition label
    as some yogurts provide zero vitamin D.
  • Protein – most people know meat
    provides protein.  But did you know that
    cow’s milk yogurt provides a higher quality protein than meat?  The 2 proteins
    in cow’s milk yogurt, casein and whey, are very high-quality proteins.  Muscle builders often buy protein powders
    containing casein and/or whey?  Why?  Because these are 2 proteins of excellent
    quality.  But plant-based yogurts do not
    provide high quality proteins, so choose real yogurt made from cow’s milk, not
    fake milk. To boost the protein in his breakfast, my husband eats yogurt at
    breakfast every day.   


Real yogurt provides a high quality protein.

 

  • Probiotics – yogurt provides
    healthy bacteria called probiotics.  Two bacterial
    strains often found in yogurt are Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus
    thermophilus.  One would think bacteria
    are bad.  But not these bacteria.  One thing these bacteria do is convert some of
    the lactose, the natural “sugar” in yogurt to lactic acid.  So many people who are lactose intolerant,
    like some of my relatives, can tolerate eating some yogurt without any GI
    upset.  The healthy bacteria in yogurt
    help populate your GI tract with healthy bacteria.  Some yogurts are now not telling you what probiotics
    are in their yogurt. Not sure why, but I avoid buying those yogurt brands.


Yogurt provides healthy probiotics.

Why do some people call yogurt a “superfood”?

Consumer
Reports quotes Debbie Petitpain, MS, RD, the wellness director at the
Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, as saying: “In its simplest
form, dairy yogurt is almost a ‘superfood’”. 
(Note – she said “dairy yogurt” which means it is made from cow’s milk,
not the plant-based yogurts made from fake milk.) 

  • Blood pressure – Yogurt – can help lower
    blood pressure.  Real cow’s milk yogurt is
    high in potassium, and low in sodium. 
    Not only that, but the protein in yogurt helps regulate blood
    pressure.  A study in 2018 found that
    people who ate yogurt 5-6 times a week had a cut in their high blood pressure
    risk by 16%.
  • Type 2 diabetes – Eating some yogurt everyday
    can lower one’s risk of developing Type 2 diabetes by 14-26%.
  • Weight loss, weight control – WebMD
    states:  “Adding yogurt to your diet may
    rev up your body’s fat-burning engines, speed weight loss, trim your tummy…”  Guess I need to boost my yogurt intake as people
    in the study ate yogurt 3 times a day.  I
    get at least one serving of yogurt a day. 
    The other good news, is those who lost weight retained their muscle mass
    by eating real yogurt.  Not surprising
    since real yogurt is high in protein and as stated above, real yogurt provides high-quality
    proteins.
  • Less inflammation – studies
    have found that “yogurt is associated with decreased inflammation.”   Probably because of the probiotics in
    yogurt. 

Avoid plant-based yogurts

I always encourage students in my nutrition classes to add
yogurt to their diet as yogurt is such a healthy food and so many students have
diets lacking in calcium and vitamin D. 
One student came up to me after class to say she added yogurt to her daily
diet.  I was so pleased but then she said
she added almond milk yogurt.  My heart
sank.  At the time, I didn’t even know you
could buy yogurt made with fake milk.  I
knew there was almond milk but now almond milk yogurt?  Consumer Reports explains why plant-based
yogurts aren’t the best choice.  One reason
customers choose the fake milk yogurts is that they actually think fake milk yogurt
is healthier, but not true.  Many fake milk
yogurts are low in protein and the protein in the fake milk yogurts is not the
high-quality protein in yogurt made from cow’s milk.  Calcium is often lower in fake milk yogurts. Nutrients
like potassium and vitamin B-2 are missing in most plant-based yogurts.  If you do choose a plant-based yogurt, choose
one made from soy milk.  Soy milk and yogurts
made from soy milk are recognized by USDA as “dairy” but none of the other plant-based
yogurts are. 

If you haven’t had yogurt in a while, try some this
week.  If you don’t like a flavor you
try, try another flavor, another brand. 
I like lime and lemon yogurts.  I
put some real whipping cream on top and it is like eating a dessert.  A student was eating yogurt before my nutrition
class started.  She cringed at every
spoonful.  I asked her if something was
wrong.  She said she was trying to eat
some yogurt as I had recommended but she couldn’t stand the taste.  Right away, other students in the class offered
recommendations on good tasting yogurts. 
The next class she came in with a flavored yogurt she liked. This week,
boost your nutrition with some yogurt superfood (but real yogurt, not fake
yogurt.)

Sources:  yogurts
, bone-building
calcium , calcium
, international
units , proteins
,
Consumer
Reports , WebMD,
studies
 Image sources:  type
2 diabetes , protein
, probiotics 



source https://betterweightloss.info/yogurt-a-great-health-food/

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