Tampa Medical Group, P.A.

Medical Update*

Getting to the Heart of a Healthful Diet: Grain Products

The American Heart Association recommends eating a variety of grain products, including whole grains. Grains should make up the base of your diet, aim for six or more servings per day.

Here's Why:

Grain products, such as bread, rice, pasta, oatmeal, cereal, and tortillas, are generally low in fat and provide fiber, vitamins, minerals, and some phytochemicals. Most of the foods we eat are refined grains; for example: white bread, white rice, pasta, pretzels, etc. Refined grains do not contain as many nutrients as whole grains.

A whole grain is the entire edible portion of a grain. A whole grain includes three parts, each with a valuable store of nutrients:

  • Bran – contains large amounts of B vitamins, minerals, and fiber
  • Endosperm – houses most of the protein and carbohydrate, and small amounts of vitamins and minerals
  • Germ – contains B vitamins, minerals, and some protein

 

White flour, which is the base of many of our foods, is made by refining whole grains. During the refining process, most or all of the bran and germ are removed. White flour that has been enriched has certain nutrients added to it: iron and some B vitamins (including folate). However, many other nutrients are lost, these include:

  • Fiber
  • Vitamins E and B6
  • Minerals: magnesium, copper, zinc
  • Phytochemicals

 

Whole grains are a healthier choice, because the ingredients they contain can help lower the risk for heart disease. Soluble fiber (found in oats and barley) can lower cholesterol levels. Antioxidants, such as vitamin E, are believed to help prevent atherosclerosis and lower the risk for coronary artery disease.

Here's How:

It's easy to eat six grain servings per day. One serving is equal to:

  • 1 cup flaked cereal
  • 1/2 cup of cooked oatmeal, grits, or cream-of-wheat cereal
  • 1/4 cup nugget or bud-type cereal
  • 3 tablespoons wheat germ
  • 1 pancake or waffle, 4 inch diameter
  • 1/2 English muffin, hamburger roll, pita, or bagel (frozen kind; those from bagel shops can be up to 4 servings)
  • 1 slice of bread or dinner roll
  • 1 tortilla, 6 inch diameter
  • 1/2 cup cooked rice, pasta, or barley
  • 1/2 cup quinoa, bulgur, millet, or other whole grain
  • 1/2 cup pretzels
  • 3-4 small crackers

 

Finding the Whole Grain

The trickiest part about eating whole grains is figuring out which grains truly are whole. To do this, check the ingredient label. The product is a whole grain if the first ingredient is whole wheat or oatmeal. Don't be fooled by brown breads, some are dyed to be that color. Also, a food label that reads "wheat bagel," "stoned wheat," or "seven grain" is not necessarily "whole grain."

The following are whole grains:

  • Oatmeal
  • Whole wheat
  • Quinoa
  • Brown rice
  • Popcorn
  • Some cold breakfast cereals, for example:
    • Cheerios
    • Granola or muesli
    • Grape-Nuts
    • Nutri-Grain
    • Raisin bran
    • Shredded wheat
    • Total
    • Wheat germ
    • Wheaties
  • Some hot breakfast cereals, for example:
    • Oat bran
    • Oatmeal
    • Quaker Multigrain
    • Roman Meal
    • Wheatena
  • Some crackers, for example:
    • Triscuits
    • Wheat Thins

RESOURCES: American Dietetic Association, www.eatright.org, Food and Nutrition
United States Department of Agriculture, www.usda.gov/FoodAndNutrition/

*The purpose of this page and linked pages is to answer common questions for health problems as well as to present unique ideas towards taking care of your health.   The ideas, procedures and suggestions are not intended as a substitute from the medical advice of a trained health professional.  All matters regarding our health require medical supervision.  Consult your physician before adopting the suggestions in this book, as well as about any condition that may require diagnosis or medical attention. The authors disclaim an liability arising directly or indirectly from the use of techniques described here.


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Revised: Fall 2008