My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

General health

Are our meals so unhealthy?

28 replies

carrottopper · 20/11/2016 20:36

I'm getting quite obsessed with what we eat. We eat prob 2 veg a day and a couple of fruit a day on average. Some days we eat more fruit and veg.

I'm starting to get anxious about what we eat as I'm panicking that if I don't provide super healthy meals, one of us will get a serious illness or disease. We are both reasonably fit, in our early 40s, in the normal weight range bmi. Hubby had a heart attack when he was in his20s due to a complication but has been fit since and is regularly checked and on blood pressure tablets. He has a very active job and is healthy. We also have two little ones. They mostly eat what we do but I also give them freezer stuff once or twice a week.

I worry about us not eating healthily enough, the amount of red meat we eat etc.

The regular meals I cook are
Roast chicken with 2 veg and all trimmings
Pork and chorizo burgers with veg and chips
Tagliatelle with mushrooms, pepperoni and onions
Penne in tomato sauce
Cottage pie
Chicken wrapped in bacon
Chinese chicken curry with onions and mushrooms

Any suggestions? Does anyone else worry about what they eat as much as I do? I take in all the health recommendations and I wonder if I take them too much to heart

OP posts:
Report
Tottyandmarchpane1 · 21/11/2016 23:45

Thank you OP Smile

Report
Ebbenmeowgi · 21/11/2016 22:26

Sounds like you're doing fine. Could you not sneak in more veg with your current meals if you're worried? Eg handfuls of spinach with the penne and tomato sauce? If you're not a big veg fan try chopping them up really finely and just adding them to your sauces/curries with a bit less meat.

I think fruit is v good for you but general recommendation is to have more veggies in your diet than just fresh fruit. We eat tons of veg, mainly veggie meals with meat just a couple times a week - would you consider being a part time carnivore? Smile

Having a veg box delivered really helped us as you just get a random selection and have to be creative. So some veg I thought I hated (like mushrooms) I've grown to love as have found recipes to really suit them that I would never have normally eaten (like nut, lentil and mushroom roast - so good!).

Report
Badcat666 · 21/11/2016 22:25

That weird wtffgs because on the Radio they were discussing 5 a day and baked beans and fruit juice can be counted as one of your 5 a day. Plus if you look online the NHS advise the same.

You only need about 150ml of fruit juice to count, not a whole pint of it and about 3 heaped tablespoons of baked beans so not an entire tin.

www.nhs.uk/Livewell/5ADAY/Pages/Portionsizes.aspx

Report
carrottopper · 21/11/2016 22:11

Wttfgs thanks for your info


No none of us are overweight. I lost 2 stone this year and have started exercising regularly. It was baby weight that needed to go.

OP posts:
Report
ArgyMargy · 21/11/2016 22:04

It's as much about portion size as content, I think. Are any of you overweight?

Report
wtffgs · 21/11/2016 22:01

Baked beans and fruit juice really shouldn't be in the 5-a-day list. Fruit juice is just sugar really. Actual fruit is much better.

There's quite a bit of dishonesty as far as food-labelling goes. You need to eat unprocessed fresh or frozen veg without loads of added sugar. It's hard to fit in if you're out of the house all day.

We do eat baked beans regularly and served on wholemeal toast with cheese they make a decent meal but they really aren't a vegetable.

OP your meals sound better than mine Blush

Report
Leanin15yearsmaybe · 21/11/2016 21:47


Yummmmm
Report
carrottopper · 21/11/2016 21:42

Totty- the pork and chorizo burgers are just that really. Nothing fancy. Pork mince less than 2% fat in a bowl, chop chorizo in to small pieces, good squeeze of tomato purée (add a red onion in if you like and other herbs) and mix. I then just take a small handful, squeeze into a ball, flatten and shall fry. Voila. Had them tonight with a big salad (lettuce, tomatoes, beetroot and sweet corn) and bread cakes.

Yes hubby cooks a few times a week too.

Thank you x

OP posts:
Report
Leanin15yearsmaybe · 21/11/2016 21:39

Ps potato gratin is fab for hiding small flakes of fish throughout (if you want to treat your dh like I do my DS!!!)

Report
Leanin15yearsmaybe · 21/11/2016 21:36

It's lovely that you are concerned and want to do the best for your family! I would continue as you have been unless advised otherwise... i.e. You mentioned ill health, if anyone has low/high sodium, potassium, diabetes etc follow dietetic advice, but otherwise, you are doing brilliantly. Try to not stress and relax about it. If you are the shopper and planner i hope others do some cooking! Smile

Report
Tottyandmarchpane1 · 21/11/2016 21:24

I think your diet looks fine to me - as a pp said, many people live long lives in a far less healthy diet. Genes play a large part.
Pork and chorizo burgers sound lush - do you make them? Can you post a link? Sorry - appreciate this isn't a recipe thread Smile

Report
Badcat666 · 21/11/2016 21:22

Looks really good to me!

One way I have found to sneak in more veg are chicken fajitas.

I thinly slice chicken breasts, peppers and onions and chop up a few tomatoes and finely slice some iceberg lettuce. I then dry fry the chicken, onions and peppers with some fajita seasoning and cook until chicken is done. Then warm up tortillas and everyone fills them up with want they like. (also have some grated cheese as well, I use a fine grater so it looks more!)

I get cheap frozen cod fillets and prawns and make OH a fish pie every now and then to get some fish in him! Poach the fish and prawns in milk and water. then use the liquid to make a sauce (with a roux) then put some mash on top. I also add in a lot of frozen peas and sweetcorn to sneak in veg! (I have to sneak in veg in stealth mode)

Report
BrieAndChilli · 21/11/2016 21:18

Look at your diet over a week rather than a single meal, so yes one meal may be unhealthy with little veg but then a roast in this house can have 6 veg! One day we may eat 4-5 pieces of fruit, another day none.

Do you like tuna? Fish pie is also a winner in our house.

Report
Artandco · 21/11/2016 21:16

Buy pollock fish, far cheaper than cod, I would buy plain not breaded though

Report
carrottopper · 21/11/2016 21:09

I don't particularly worry about anything but we have had people close to us suffer ill health or loss and it's made me think. I just want to feel that the food we provide is helping give us the best chance we can. There's always an element of bad luck but I just want to be able to say I looked into it and did my best (I'm mainly the shopper and cooker).

Yep pork and chorizo burgers are yum Smile

Any suggestions for how to get fish in our diets cheaply?? Frozen breaded cod?? It's all hubby will eat

OP posts:
Report
Leanin15yearsmaybe · 21/11/2016 20:26

Sound good as long as are adding veg as a side to what you have listed. In terms of you dh's pmh, Cholesterol gained from food is actually very small percentage overall, and I personally would watch how often you are serving the chorizo/bacon/pepperoni ones due to salt content. Other than that, they sound good main dinners.....am off to Google your burgers now as sound lush!

Report
PickAChew · 21/11/2016 20:17

It's fine, honestly. People live long lives on much less healthy diets.

Is it just food that you are so anxious about, or are you a worrier in general?

Report
carrottopper · 21/11/2016 20:08

Really appreciate these replies.

Thank you x

OP posts:
Report
NoSuchThingAsThePerfectParent · 20/11/2016 23:15

I'd cut down on the pepperoni, chorizo, bacon, red meat side of things, personally. The recommendation is one portion per week, two at most. I'd probably try and add trout, mackerel or salmon in there somewhere if possible too.

As for 5-a day. Drinking a fruit juice at breakfast sorts one without even noticing it. Likewise, tomato purée on pizza or in cottage pie counts because it's so concentrated.

Some days I feed my kids hummus and carrot sticks (2- counts as 1 each), apple juice (counts as 1), baked beans with pizza (2 - counts as 1 each) and that's the 5 a day, without adding in the yoyo fruit bar on the way home from school (counts as 1), cucumber and blueberries for lunch boxes (1/2 - 1 each). It's pretty to smuggle it in without noticing it some days.

Report
pasbeaucoupdegendarme · 20/11/2016 21:15

I get all sorts of veg into pasta sauces, or we have things like stuffed peppers. Could you try to have vegetarian meals a couple of times a week? That way you up the number significantly.

TBH we don't have take away curry or fish and chips more often than once every 6 months, they're really not that healthy. We do make a mean curry though so we're not missing out!

We also have stir fry from packets of prepped veg once a fortnight or so on nights when I literally get in at supper time and the kids need to eat half and hour ago.

Report
Artandco · 20/11/2016 21:10

I would make sure every meal has fruit or veg at, not just dinner

Report
Mrstumbletap · 20/11/2016 21:07

Maybe cut out the chips or just once a fortnight? Or just make your own in the oven with sweet potato?

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Mrstumbletap · 20/11/2016 21:06

I just read a book called 'how not to die' by Micheal McGregor or something like that.

It says the superfoods and how to balance your diet and enjoy food but with little tips and tricks to increase your health like adding turmeric, eating Brazil nuts etc. Eating more broccoli and cruciferous vegetables. So nothing extreme, just little swaps that could maybe have an effect on long term health.

I worry about what I eat too, well not that much as just had pizza express for dinner, but it's in the back of mind. But I don't think that's a bad thing, being conscious of our health and diets must be better than thinking sod it I will eat what I want and being unhealthy and a strain on the NHS later down the line.

Report
NattyTile · 20/11/2016 20:59

Current guidelines suggest aiming for minimum 5 portions fruit/veg every day, some health people suggest 7-10 instead.

You could try adding in more - maybe fruit with breakfast, or if you want a cooked breakfast add in mushrooms, grilled tomatoes, baked beans and onions; if you have sandwiches for lunch then adding a salad or thermos of vegetable soup, chopping a load of veg into your tomato based sauces, maybe having a stir fry, vegetable omelette, warm salad type thing in your rotation for evening meals?

Report
carrottopper · 20/11/2016 20:51

We have an Indian takeaway once a week and sometimes fish and chips mid week. Confused

OP posts:
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.