Houston Chronicle

5 nutritiona­l pointers to take your health to a new level for 2023

- Marci Sharif FEELING MATTERS Marci Izard Sharif is an author, yoga teacher, meditation facilitato­r and mother. In Feeling Matters, she writes about selflove, sharing self-care tools, stories and resources to know and be kind to yourself.

Most of us have at least a basic understand­ing of healthy nutrition.

We generally know more than just apples=good, cookies=bad. We understand there’s nuance with diet and lifestyle, and our collective knowledge has only continued to grow as fads have come and gone and food culture has revved up.

But it’s a new year and a great moment to broaden our nutritiona­l horizons — get some fresh perspectiv­es, try some new things.

That’s what I was thinking, at least, while recently browsing Ali Miller and Becki Yoo’s website and work.

Miller is the author of the bestsellin­g “The Anti-Anxiety Diet,” as well as “The AntiAnxiet­y Diet Cookbook” and “Naturally Nourished: FoodAs-Medicine for Optimal Health.” Yoo partnered with Miller several years ago after having opened two popular juice and smoothie bars in Houston and running a local farmers market.

Their focus on food as medicine involves pursuing natural solutions to health complicati­ons, digging into root causes and lasting solutions instead of quick fixes with medication, which they say, “may contribute to additional health issues by causing side effects.”

Every time I look at their work (cataloged at alimiller RD.com), I learn something new and discover a recipe, approach, or product to try. I have a backlog of their content on my desk.

So, I asked them for some of their favorite nutritiona­l pointers for, ideally, a new level of health and vitality this year.

If you already have some level of balance in your diet, here are their five recommenda­tions to kick things up another notch.

1. Skip the noncaloric sweeteners.

“Even those that claim to be ‘natural,’ like Stevia and monkfruit, are highly processed, chemically extracted and can have an unfavorabl­e metabolic impact, driving

insulin resistance and weight gain,” says Yoo. “Stick to real food sweeteners like raw local honey, dark amber maple syrup, dates and bananas.”

Yoo adds that using real food sweeteners (sparingly) can actually do a body good. They give us a boost of healthy stuff like B vitamins, electrolyt­es, prebiotic fiber and potassium.

2. Consume bone broth.

“We love bone broth for its ability to support gut lining integrity, as well as support healthy hair, skin and nails. Bone broth is an immune supporting powerhouse, containing high levels of NAC or n-acetyl-cysteine to thin mucus and phlegm,” says Yoo.

To make it at home: Simmer chicken or beef bones for 2448 hours with onions, carrots, celery and nearly any vegetable scraps, like carrot tops, onion skins, etc. Add a splash of apple cider vinegar to enhance the extraction of the minerals in the bones.

Yoo and Miller recommend FOND Bone Broth or Bonafide Provisions if you prefer to buy it instead. “Many companies now sell bone broth that is not slow simmered or made with quality ingredient­s. Always look for a broth that ‘jiggles’ when cold, as a sign that it is true bone broth,” Yoo says.

3. Incorporat­e garlic and onions as natural flu fighters.

Yoo says garlic and onions contain antimicrob­ial compounds that help fight the common cold, flu and other viruses. These are two of the main ingredient­s in a pair of recipes they recommend when you’re feeling under the weather: 40 cloves of garlic soup and master tonic.

The master tonic recipe is on their website. The 40 cloves of garlic soup recipe is published here. They advise making it at the first sign of cold or flu. They promise it’s worth the subsequent halitosis.

4. Pick your cooking oil with care.

Yoo suggests avoiding “highly processed oils like canola, soybean, corn, cottonseed, safflower, grapeseed, rice bran and sunflower oil.” She adds that many products marketed as healthy tend to contain sunflower oil, so reading labels is always wise.

“These oils are high in polyunsatu­rated fatty acids, which can promote inflammati­on, especially when they are oxidized or heated.”

As an alternativ­e, Yoo and Miller suggest using wholefood fats like lard, tallow, coconut oil, butter or ghee, avocado oil and olive oil.

5. Make teatime your thing.

“Tea can dramatical­ly reduce hunger by lowering levels of ghrelin (your hunger hormone), and green tea in particular has been shown to reduce body fat as well as LDL cholestero­l,” Yoo says.

They suggest sipping tea between meals and/or enjoying it in the evening as a way to settle in and get over the urge to snack.

For more tips and recipes visit alimillerR­D.com.

 ?? Becki O'Brien Yoo ?? Next time you feel a cold coming on, try a bowl of 40 Cloves of Garlic Soup.
Becki O'Brien Yoo Next time you feel a cold coming on, try a bowl of 40 Cloves of Garlic Soup.
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