If you only eat mush, it doesn't necessarily mean that your body turns to mush.
Likewise, you may love eating moon pies, but hey, they won't give you a pair of sweet cheeks and a bubble butt.
The following exerpts are from http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/food/the-year-of-eating-better-starts-here/2011/12/26/gIQAO7kjYP_story.html?hpid=z12
Meat eaters, relax. You don’t have to swear off your favorite meals, but you’ll want to learn how to build a dinner plate with vegetables at the center instead of on the side. Here are some strategies you can handle:Pack your pastas or rice dishes or alternative pizzas with vegetables and/or beans. Roasted peppers and onions tossed with a few cups of cooked penne might help convince you. What about orzo combined with a medley of root vegetables and shredded Brussels sprouts? Or how about primavera, that Americanized Italian tradition of mixing spring vegetables with starches? You can blend your favorite diced vegetables into a rice pilaf.
You also can kick off your new virtuous-eating plan by using whole-wheat pizza dough as the basis for creating flatbreads (trending now in restaurants). Steam or saute your favorite vegetables, all cut into bite-size pieces, then deepen the flavor with sauteed garlic, browned onions or roasted peppers. Top small, rolled-out pizza dough circles or ovals. Sprinkle with fresh herbs and grated Parmesan or Romano cheese, and season with pepper and a sprinkle of kosher salt. Bake until beautiful. You’ll hardly miss the meat or gobs of melted cheese on a pizza.
Transform your favorite dishes. Shepherd’s pie is perfect cold-weather fare, but it’s not something that registers in the “healthful” range. So top it with a mash of sweet potatoes instead. Make a filling out of curried chickpeas. If that’s not your thing, what about a version with a cabbage and cannellini bean filling? You might even sneak in a little pancetta (Italian unsmoked bacon) to bump up the savory-salty quotient. Take the flavors and ingredients in spanakopita, the spinach-filled Greek pastry, and work them into a pasta dish.
Look to old favorites that happen not to have (much) meat. One example: potato salads. Cubed, cooked potatoes can become a great lunch entree when you add cooked kasha (buckwheat) and onions, or chickpeas and lemon zest. Toss with a flavorful vinaigrette.
And don’t forget the stir-fry, a classic vegetarian main course. It’s a method just about every vegetarian cook learns. You can stick with the ginger-soy-sesame trio of greatness or expand into Thai peanut sauces and Vietnamese lemon-grass-infused choices; the seasoning is up to you. Be sure to include something substantial, such as thick slices of mushrooms or small cubes of tofu. If you’re adding meat, a minimal amount of lean ground pork or chicken can go a long way.
These guys eat responsibly. They practice what they preach.
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