8 Ingredients You Can Add to Your Meal Plan to See You Through Winter

By Align/WELL

August 3, 2024


HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Understanding the Keto Diet: The ketogenic diet is a low-carbohydrate, high-fat eating style that shifts your metabolism to burn fat as fuel, aiding in weight loss and energy maintenance.
  • Carbs vs. Fats as Fuel: When carbohydrates are limited, the body switches to burning fat, producing ketones for energy, which mimics the effects of fasting without actually fasting.
  • Potential Benefits and Risks: The keto diet may aid in weight loss and help manage certain metabolic disorders but can lead to side effects like constipation, nutrient deficiencies, and the "keto flu" during adaptation.
  • Ketosis Guidelines: The classic ketogenic diet requires 90% of calorie intake from fats, but modifications like the Medium-Chain Triglyceride Diet and Modified Atkins Diet can also sustain ketosis with varied fat-to-carb ratios.
  • Keto-Friendly Foods: Stick to leafy greens, berries, avocados, full-fat dairy, meats, and healthy oils while avoiding bread, pasta, starchy vegetables, and most fruits.
  • Seasonal Immunity Boosters: As the days get shorter and colder, increase your intake of specific foods to reduce the risk of catching a cold or seasonal flu. Incorporate these ingredients into your meal plan for enhanced immunity and better health.
  • Citrus Fruits: Packed with vitamin C, citrus fruits like lemons, oranges, and grapefruits are essential for tissue repair and immune protection. Enjoy them in fresh juice, salads, or morning lemon water to increase your vitamin C intake.
  • Fermented Foods: Foods like yogurt, miso soup, kefir, and sauerkraut contain probiotics that improve gut health and boost immunity. Add these to your diet for better digestive and overall health.
  • Salmon: Rich in vitamin D, salmon helps maintain healthy bones, teeth, and muscles, especially in winter when sunlight is limited. Include other sources like eggs and mushrooms or consider supplements to meet your vitamin D needs.

As the days get shorter and the weather colder, you are at a higher risk of catching a cold or seasonal flu. To better get you through winter, add these 8 ingredients to your meal plan for boosted immunity and better health.

1. Citrus Fruits

Citrus fruits like lemon, orange, clementine, or grapefruit are full of vitamin C, a water-soluble vitamin necessary for the growth, development, and repair of all body tissues. What’s more, they are powerful antioxidants that neutralize free radicals to protect cells and are a powerful common cold protector. Drink fresh-pressed orange juice, add grapefruit to your salad, or have lemon water in the morning to up your daily vitamin C intake.

2. Fermented Foods

Live yogurt, Miso soup, kefir, kombucha, soft cheeses, sauerkraut, or sourdough all have one thing in common: they are powerful probiotics, which are live microorganisms that provide a number of health benefits by improving or restoring your gut flora.

3. Salmon

Among its many health benefits, vitamin D is essential to keeping your bones, teeth, and muscles healthy. Since humans primarily source vitamin D from sunlight, which, in many places, is scarce in the cold winter months, it’s essential to supplement it. You can choose to eat more salmon, other oily fish, eggs, or shitake mushrooms, which contain vitamin D in small amounts, or can opt to take a good vitamin D supplement.

4. Kale

Much has been said of the infinite powers of kale. And it’s true that it is good for you and your body: as one of the most nutrient-dense plant foods in the world, it is rich in folic acid, vitamin A (beta-carotene), K, B6, and C, calcium, potassium, copper, and manganese. In addition, it’s low in calories and carbohydrates, making it a diabetes-friendly vegetable. Add it to your morning smoothie, your salad, or cook it as a vegetable side to your meal.

5. Chia Seeds

Omega 3 fatty acids help to maintain cardiovascular health, lower blood pressure and reduce triglycerides, a type of blood fat. They also help to support your brain health and vision. A great and vegan source of Omega 3 is chia seeds, which can be easily added to salads, smoothies, oatmeal, or consumed as healthy and delicious chia-pudding desserts.

6. Legumes (Lentils or Chickpeas)

Zinc is crucial in the winter as it helps to fight colds, rashes and gives you immune support. Add legumes like lentils or chickpeas to your daily meals to increase your zinc levels.

7. Sweet Potato

Rich in vitamins A (beta-carotene), C and B6, manganese, and potassium, sweet potatoes aren’t just delicious root vegetables, they also support your immune system and bone health to get you through the winter. They make a great side to meat or fish, and not just on Thanksgiving. You can also get creative by making healthy sweet potato desserts like sweet potato brownies, pudding, or pie.

8.Berries (Raspberries, blueberries, etc.)

Aside from maintaining a healthy lifestyle, including sleeping well, exercising regularly, and abstaining from alcohol and smoking, an antioxidant-rich diet will boost your immune system. Add blueberries, blackberries, or raspberries as a daily snack to your winter diet to reduce inflammation and boost immunity.

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