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Recipe Re-Do: Substituting Healthier Ingredients in Foods

Why should you substitute ingredients? You can substitute items that will taste just as good and be lower in fat, calories, and sugar!

Here are some ideas for healthier (and tasty) substitutions for commonly used ingredients:

If the recipe asks for this: Try this substitution instead:
Dry bread crumbs Crushed bran cereal or dry oats
White bread Sourdough, whole wheat, English muffins, pita, corn tortillas
Bacon Turkey bacon, lean ham, Canadian bacon
Eggs 2 or 3 egg whites and 1 yolk, or egg substitute
Butter or Shortening Cooking spray and nonstick pans
Mayonnaise Reduced calorie or fat-free mayo or fat free sour cream
Iceberg lettuce Most other lettuces, spinach, arugula, watercress, collard, or mustard greens have more nutrients
Salt Herbs, spices, vinegar
Syrup Pureed fruit, fruit spread (not jelly), applesauce, low-calorie syrup
Sugar You can usually reduce sugar in recipes by 2/3 to 1/2 and not affect the taste; adding vanilla or cinnamon makes it taste sweeter.
Flour You can substitute 1/2 of the flour with whole wheat flour to add nutrients and not affect cooking; also adding wheat germ to flour will boost the nutrients.
Cream Evaporated skim milk will give the rich flavor of cream in most soups and cream-based dishes; fat-free half and half also works.
Cream Cheese Use low fat, Neufchatel, or pureed cottage cheese (low or nonfat).
White rice Brown rice, wild rice, and converted rice have more nutrients
Salad Dressings Usually high-calorie—look for light and fat-free versions, vinaigrettes, and flavored vinegars; consider using just the vinegar instead of oil and vinegar along with olives and other pickled items.
Sour Cream Low-fat yogurt, fat free, or low-fat sour cream
Meats Cut your meat in dishes to 1/2 of what it calls for and add more vegetables, particularly in soups, stews, casseroles, and pizzas. Buy lean cuts in bulk (white meat instead of dark) then freeze in smaller packages.
Bottled Spaghetti Sauce and Chili Puree into the sauce cooked carrots and other vegetables or use jars of baby food vegetables—it won’t affect the taste but will provide servings of vegetables that are hard to get children to eat.
Butter or margarine, shortening in baked items Try marshmallow cream in sweet recipes (cut down on your sugar, too); substitute applesauce for 1/2 of your butter, shortening or oil (it makes cakes very moist); avoid trans-fat products.
Canned Fruit in Heavy Syrup Fruits in juice or fresh fruit
Mashed potatoes Well-cooked and pureed cauliflower (it really does taste like mashed potatoes but healthier), mashed sweet potatoes
Pies Cook with fresh fruits and cut your sugar in 1/2; pumpkin pie with less sugar is especially nutritious and good tasting.
Ice Cream Replace ice cream with sorbets and light ice creams with fruit for toppings; blend canned fruit (in juice) and freeze in small paper cups for popsicles; freeze a banana and blend; blend fruit and ice with nonfat milk and vanilla for a smoothie.

 

Don’t forget to journal!

What substitutions from this list are you going to try while cooking meals for your family?

Back to: Growing Healthy Families Online Program > Chapter 8 - Budgeting, Shopping and Substituting