The Truth About Turkey
All along, turkey has been associated to once a year family
feasts. You know, the Thanksgiving turkey. The Christmas turkey.
Roast turkey stuffed with some yummy stuffing, eaten with gravy
or cranberry sauce is a must for the end of the year
celebrations.
The fact is, turkey is such a healthy meat, it should not be
reserved ONLY for Christmas and Thanksgiving. You should have
turkey as part of your daily diet. Especially the breast meat of
the turkey, without the skin.
Why?
3 reasons.
1. Turkey meat has a very high protein content
2. Turkey meat itself has low fat content.
3. Turkey can be really delicious. My mom cooks a fantastic
roast turkey. Here are 2 of her roast turkey
recipes.
Protein
Ok, so we can get lots of protein from meat, fish and soya
beans. Sure, beef packs plenty of protein that you body needs,
but red meats are high in cholesterol.
For example, 1 oz of turkey contains between 15 mg and 24 mg
cholesterol while 1 oz of beef contains 20 and 30mg of
cholesterol. It all adds up to a large difference in artery
clogging cholesterol between beef and turkey. That means if you
have heart disease or high blood pressure, switching from beef
to turkey can make a big difference.
As for protein, USA Poultry and Egg Export Council billed turkey
as the perfect protein. It has more protein than chicken,
or even a top loin beef steak.
That makes turkey the ideal food for growing children, athletes
and anyone who wants lean muscle.
Fat
Most of the fat in poultry is found in the skin. That means, by
trimming off the skin in chicken or turkey, you remove most of
the fat. Beef, pork and lamb on the other hand have the fat
embedded in the meat itself. So just by switching to poultry
alone, and removing the skin, you effectively remove most of the
fat.
In fact, 3 ounces of skinless, boneless turkey breast contains a
mere 1g of fat and no saturated fat. That is a weight watcher's
dream. This is about as healthy as you get.
This makes turkey the ideal meat for anyone who wants to stay
slim, yet eat to his or her heart's content, without
consuming much fat. Still even if you do switch to turkey,
watch your portion size. Double the amount you eat and you will
still gain weight.
The flip side is the lack of fat in turkey meat compromises the
taste. After all, the yummiest food contain fat. Fat flavors
food.
Then again, with the right seasoning, gravy and all, turkey can
be delicious. Just try my mom's recipes like her roast
turkey with rice stuffing or the ro
ast turkey with bread crumb stuffing. It is time to
switch to something healthy and yummy.. like turkey.