
By Jerry Sabo

You came, you saw,
you shopped. But then you got home from the supermarket and started unloading
fatty snack items and deli meats. What went wrong? You fell back into the habit
of shopping like an average American rather than a person with a dietary
purpose. In an enticing palace of eating designed to lead you astray, here's
how to stay on track.

1. Make a list.
Before you shop, write down what you need -- to reduce the chances of buying
what you don't.

2. Limit your
trips.
Make your shopping list long so you have to make only one or two trips to the
store per week. Besides being more efficient, this provides less opportunity to
make impulse purchases.

3. Avoid shopping
on an empty stomach.
When you're hungry, you're more likely to grab high-fat snacks and desserts.

4. Follow the
walls.
Limit browsing to the perimeter of the store, where you'll find the freshest,
most healthful foods: raw produce, low-fat dairy products, fresh lean meats and
fish. Venture into the interior aisles only when you're after specific foods
such as pasta and dried beans, to avoid picking up extra items not included in
your diet plan.

5. Pay attention to
portions.
Those cookies look great -- and hey, eating them only costs you 75 calories.
But check the serving size: 1 cookie. Eating "them," say three
cookies -- brings your calorie count up to 225.

6. Ignore the
pictures.
Golden sunshine glows on heaps of freshly harvested grains -- an image of good
health that signifies nothing. Look at the side of the box instead for the
facts, and choose foods that are high in fiber and low in fat and calories.

7. Grade your
grains.
Want high-fiber bread? Look for the words "whole grain," "100
percent whole wheat," or "stone-ground" on the label. Breads
labeled simply "wheat" -- even if they are brown in color -- may not
contain whole grains. True whole-grain bread contains at least two grams of
fiber per serving.

8. Watch the
language.
Beware of foods labeled "no sugar added" -- the wording is carefully
chosen, because the product may be loaded with natural sugar. You'll find the
real story on the label, under "Sugars."

9. Add some spice
to your life.
Instead of creamy condiments, load up on such spices as basil, chives,
cinnamon, cumin, curry, garlic, ginger, horseradish, nutmeg, oregano, paprika,
parsley, and Tabasco sauce. They're very low in carbohydrates, fat, protein,
and calories.

10. Keep your eye
on the cashier.
You're waiting in line, nothing to do -- a captive audience. It's no accident
that supermarkets pile their impulse items next to the registers. Keep a couple
of items from your basket in your hands. It'll stop you from reaching for the
candy bars.
Questions
or comments email me I would love to hear from you!
Have
a great summer!
Jerry
Sabo