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Knowledge is power! And knowledge about proper nutrition is a powerful tool for staying healthy. What you eat every day influences your health, your appearance even your mental attitude.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) offers nutrition guidance
through its 2005
Dietary Guidelines for Americans and its MyPyramid.
MyPyramid
is an interactive food guidance system that can help you make healthy
food choices. The pyramid features six color bands that represent
the five food groups and oils. The first band and one of
the largest belongs to the grains group. Foods made from
grains include bread, pastas, cereals, and tortillas. The USDA recommends
you eat 6 ounces of grain-based foods every day and that at least
3 ounces be whole grain foods. One ounce is about 1 slice of bread.
Grain-based foods, especially whole grain foods, are rich in complex
carbohydrates and are also a good source of fiber. Below is some
information on why carbohydrates are important for health. For more
information on why grain-based foods are good for you, visit the
Grain Foods
Foundation
A few good reasons why bread is good for you:
- A diet rich in whole grains may reduce the risk for developing coronary heart disease, according to a 1999 study reported in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
- Many varieties of bread are enriched with iron and other B vitamins, including niacin, thiamin and riboflavin. Enrichment has helped to nearly eliminate nutrition-related diseases, such as beriberi, pellagra and severe nutritional anemia.
- Many commercially produced breads are enriched with folic acid, which can potentially decrease
the risk of neural tube birth defects (NTDs). Because of the
folic acid fortification of breads and other grain foods, NTDs
have been decreased by 15 to 30 percent. Other benefits of folic
acid fortification include an amazing 60 percent reduction in
infant neuroblastoma, an embryonic tumor that is the most common
cause of cancer-related death among children between the ages
of one and four. New research is proving that folic acid also
appears to help prevent heart disease as well as certain cancers,
including colon cancer, the second-deadliest cancer in the United
States. People on low-carb diets may have an inadequate intake
of folic acid.
- A study published in the October 1998 Pediatrics journal found that bread is among the
top fiber sources. Yeast bread contributes nearly 14 percent
of total fiber intake and is the largest fiber contributor for
children, with white bread supplying about half that amount.
Want More Nutrition Knowledge? Check out these helpful online links:
The food and nutrition information found in our Nutrition Center is not intended to be used to diagnose or treat a health problem or substitute for consulting a licensed health professional.
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