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Healthy Eating Lifestyle Balance Inspiration

Healthy eating starts with a lifestyle plan. And having inspiration helps us to stay on course like a visual or reminder.

Example of a healthy eating lifestyle plan for February heart healthy month.
February is heart healthy month

If you want to balance and optimize healthy eating and tasty foods, this article is meant to help encourage you.

I’m convinced you can fulfill both goals at the same time because that has been my practice and desire for my entire adult journey.

I’ve enjoyed and been enamored with foods like most people who think they have a deeper relationship with food (as a lifelong companion of comfort, love, and joy).

I started my young career around my passion for food in event planning, seeing through a “foodie” work lens in the kitchens I worked beside along with thousands of event hosts and planners.

I can’t think of one instance where healthy food menus were requested for the larger ballroom and banquet space events.

But, when I planned parties in restaurants, the healthy menu requests became more obvious.

Like in the Mediterranean restaurants that use healthier ingredients, methods, herbs, and spices. They used EVOO and vinegar bases for dishes, instead of creamy-butter sauces.

That aligned with a healthy identity I was evolving into where healthy foods can be good and better-tasting than non-healthy.

Plus, healthy eating is easier on the body where you and your gut get along better in happy and healthy agreement.

Reflecting on this, I think it starts from appreciating food and the body.

That’s where a healthy balance and triad relationship between you, food, and your body are daily observed from a mirror and a nutrient absorption lens (that only the body sees).

When we have a healthy eating lifestyle, then we don’t have to let the next evolving health trend (or diet) impact us so much or at all.  It’s sustainable until we choose to change our plan.

We can change one food or category under question or change, and rely on the variety of others.

Maybe you remember like I do when nuts were considered bad for you because of the fat content, and now they’re the hero of healthy fat and snacks.

If you eat them along with the right foods (like fat-soluble Vitamin A foods), they synergistically help your body.

From your body (aka the end-user or the health critic in you), it’s smart to know how foods are better absorbed from a nutrition-biology standpoint.

I made a visual of some of these researched nutrition synergies that you can take healthy advantage of.

Some are palatable for pairing, like chocolate and raspberries. A few are odd and you have to really get creative to appreciate.

For those, instead of trying to put them together in the same dish, you could figure out how to start with one and end with the other.

Your gut doesn’t care what it looks like on a plate. It cares how it mixes together in your mouth and ultimately in your stomach.

It helps to be informed and to listen to your inner gut if that’s a strength for you.

If that’s not so easy or has not been helping you out much lately, then eating “from the rainbow” and having healthy eating habits is a good start.

You can turn a boring broccoli side into a delicious soup or a can of pinto beans into a zesty dip.

Both are then easier to digest and you get to enjoy better. That’s just a couple of examples of how healthy eating can be delicious.

Sometimes it just takes a little thought and food prep. It’s encouraging we can reset and start over each day with new healthy eating goals.

In my younger years, I studied the French language, and that helped me to learn catered dishes back then with French titles and names like hors d’oeuvres and foie gras.

The French are also known for their buttery recipes and patisseries, where a bakery is on every Parisian corner.

So, it’s interesting their obesity percentage stats are lower than we have in the U.S.

One reason for this is that French people eat smaller meals and take time to enjoy the bites.

They slow down to chew and appreciate food aromas.

They enjoy a slower-paced lifestyle.

Paris has the pace of living similar to a smaller metro city in the U.S. where the emphasis is on quality living, and not just immersing in the hustle and bustle.

French foods revolve around the idea of high quality over high production. There’s a respect for ingredients.

They have a different way of seeing and appreciating the food they eat. Take cheese: they use the highest quality milk to make their cheeses. And in our American factories, we turn the lower quality milk into cheese.

In the U.S., we love our convenience, fast-paced, and relatively inexpensive options. And in our Melting Pot culture and diversity, we have many cooking influences that help bring back helpful balances.

And each of us can get interested in the nuances behind what we eat, ingredients, cooking, and knowledge. And that helps to become healthy eating inspired. It’s a lifestyle choice.

Each day, it starts in the morning. Breakfast can be nourishing like a protein-rich smoothie.

You can choose a prebiotic-probiotic combination. Examples would be starting your day with oatmeal or a banana and yogurt.

Then rolling into lunch, you can add a healthy eating menu: cooked red onions with fermented foods.

It’s easier to make your own fermented foods than you think as they’re not advertised everywhere like fruits in a produce section.

These days, many of us are into sustainability and feel deeply for the climate changes we’ve seen especially over the past couple of years.

We value recycling despite knowing our efforts of placing our trash in the right bins are limited and we have almost no control.

One way where you can do something about this is to reuse grocery containers for fermented foods that are healthy for you, us, your gut, and the environment.

You could make simple sauerkraut leaving the slaw in a jar of water and salt out at room temperature for a few days and then refrigerate.

Your slaw tastes better and has health benefits. Plus you salvaged the jar as a bonus.

When you make healthy eating changes, in the beginning, it may seem odd to you and your stomach as you both adjust.

You can gauge how this impacts your daily gut and entire GI system and see how that lands.

All our bodies are different (e.g. we’re all given different metabolisms).

But our bodies are similar too as we have the same systems and needed organs to function.

So what works best for one person is different for another.

But I think too often we reject ways that could work for us because we don’t see the benefits of it working out for us or our busy lifestyle, and so we skip the healthy habit and lose out on an opportunity.

Another worthwhile cause (and food for thought) is snacking on healthy snacks like carrots and hummus every few hours in the day.

I think many would have their weight goals met as the body is happy with the food energy boost, and thereby fed assurance that it won’t need to go in survival mode.

Plus, it wouldn’t have to process as much food in one sitting.

…Retraining our body, restoring our body-minds and learning how the body functions along with the world can make a difference for all of us.

Onion Ring Snack (Baked) – Plant-Based Diet

Onion ring snack can be a healthy stack when not fried, but baked. Because onions are one of the healthiest allium foods out there.

Jump to Recipe

Healthy red onion ring snack.

They’re prebiotic foods that are fiber and feed the good bacteria in the gut. AND they are great for immunity. Plus they add so much savory flavor without much effort.

Baked onion ring recipe below 🧅

In cold and flu season, I stock up on onions. And they’re such an easy and affordable add to foods and plant based dishes. One that I didn’t like when I was younger. Today, it’s a staple because I know how healthy they are!

Onions are a good way to start a plant-based diet morning. They are part of the Crudite I begin with. And a more plant-forward intention for the day, along with healthy proteins from all sources.

Plant-based diet doesn’t mean you  have to give up non-plant based foods like meats. It simply means adding more natural plants into your diet (and less processed plants 🏭).

While a full plant-based diet is not what I do, I have incorporated one plant-based meal per day that matters. I share below a meal plan that I think is a good way to maintain a consistently healthy ideal weight, year after year.

Eating healthy and balanced doesn’t just affect your physical body, it also positively impacts your brain, daily thinking mind, and mental health.

Getting proper vitamins and minerals that come from animal proteins help our brains function properly, that helps us keep our mind-body system balance.

I believe that not including fish, meats, carbs, fruits, and vegetables is missing what God gave us here on this earth.

We hurt our bodies when we don’t eat enough from any of these categories, or we eat too much.

In most meals, strict vegetarians don’t receive enough vitamins and micronutrients (minerals), some that are richly found in animal protein.  Fish that are also considered animal meat, contains necessary B vitamins and good omega fat sources that healthy vegetarians usually come to realize they’re missing.

If only we could take vitamin supplements as a 1:1 nutrient exchange for food, but that’s not the case and especially with diluted vitamin pills.

And onion is food medicine with Vitamin C and some B vitamins.

And was is every diet book I was looking into.

My favorites were The South Beach Diet and The Inflammation-Free Diet.

Today those are evolved to a Mediterranean diet and an anti-inflammatory diet that I prescribe to that has a list of foods that are healthy and easy to find at the grocery store.

And there are similarities like plant-based food, and a baked onion ring snack that would fit the bill.

I do my own meal prep that incorporates these more sustainable and healthy ways of eating daily, and that includes a hybrid plant-based diet and a wide array of foods.

Everyone’s immediate health goals can be slightly different. Overall we all want to maintain a consistently healthy weight, have more energy and vitality, and prevent disease and inflammation.

Aligned to those goals, I’ve noticed this is the eating way my body appreciates and my healthy mind works to prepare meals.

Here’s a quick overview of my meals today…

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner

Eating 3 meals per day, balancing roughly one plant-based meal per day (dinner preferred as later in the day), a heavier lunch with chicken or fish, and a health-conscious breakfast, I believe is a way to maintain your ideal weight, year-round, and what I practice to stay a consistent size 4 for over the past decade.

Breakfast for me can be a smoothie, cereal, or oatmeal which sounds healthy but these are all still either high in sugar, acidity, or both. That’s why athletes and extreme health fanatics eat lean protein for breakfast, such as fish. They’ll include non-sugar carbs and sprouted bread.

Egg whites (and eggs) seem to be the safe breakfast protein. In my balanced natural Vata form, I like to mix it up. But if someone comes up with a plant-based diet for breakfast I’d definitely try to incorporate. Easy foolproof poached eggs and onion are a great healthy start and tasty combo.

Bearnaise sauce (like in bougie Eggs Benedict served in fine brunch restaurants) is so easy to make at home deliciously and healthy (without butter).

I consider breakfast the creative meal of the day where you make it interesting. For a typical Vata (that’s me!), every morning it’s a brand new day to choose a mix of healthy sweet (e.g. cereal or smoothies) and salty (e.g. eggs and potato) desires.

A sticky sweet bun would be too cloying for me now because I’ve trained myself to not like super sweet items as they make my skin crawl. And that evolved into my blindsiding adult eczema.

And I had to re-learn (again) healthier ways to not-tip-the-(skin)-scales. Thank goodness low-sugar recipes work for a sweet tooth… and is a good formula for healthy and happy long living happy missions in life.

You find what works for you.

And then for lunch, I consider the energy and productive meal that keeps you going…

For lunch, I have a filling carb like pasta along with chicken or another low-fat protein that hits the spot and I know I won’t be hungry for hours so I can make it through the afternoon. Rarely will you see me eat a light salad bowl for lunch as high calories burned in the daytime.

Without sustenance, especially if you have a dominant Vata body (or have a combination Vata body), you can have a tendency like I do for your blood sugar level to drop fast so you wanna stay ahead of those crashes.

For me, I learned in those past situations where I felt light-headed or a bit jittery.

You know exactly what I’m talking about if you try to carry a dry snack or some in-between snack (like an onion ring would be good) with you around when you go out in the day.

So I eat or snack before any hunger sneaks up.

And the big switch that I’ve made over the years is eating a plant-based meal with sauteed spinach salad. Some are harder to spell than to add to the diet like broccoli or Brussels sprouts (named after the Belgium capital so is funny with two ending “s”).

For variety and taste, I will add some tofu or garbanzo beans, but it’s not necessary. That’s the meal I keep light.

The difference is that I’m not hungry by dinner so eating a light meal makes sense.  If you find you’re most hungry around dinner time, then you may want to experiment eating heavier meals earlier in the day, seeing how that lands, so that you can try a lighter, plant-based meal way in the evening.

That was a gradual shift for me from years before, but definitely a healthy move.

When I used to go out to restaurants at night to eat a substantial dinner (or after eating a heavy Thanksgiving meal), I’d find that hard on the digestive system… maybe that’s what you’ve found in your experiences.

Without taking a digestive aid to help break down the food enzymes or drinking peppermint tea afterward to calm the stomach, that could keep me (or you) up all night or bring on nightmares and a rough night of sleep. Maybe you’ve experienced that before?… if so, you could take advantage of eating at home more often that can change your habits to the healthier ones you want to make like eating heavier meals earlier in the day.

As you get older, your body changes, and what you could do to your 20-year old body doesn’t work anymore.

Plant-Based Meal vs. Vegetarian Meals

We all know vegetables (like this onion ring that looks like another planet) are good for us.

Strict vegetarians and vegans won’t eat fish and seafood.

As the Vata body I live in (and the one you learned about above)… I know I would just graze and graze all day, still being hungry, if I ate beans and vegetables all day.

A variety of protein fills the hunger in a good way and provides healthy vitamins that aren’t filler like processed sweet and salty snack substitutions that are empty calories.

So that’s how I moved toward a plant-based meal in the evening.

I just listened to my body.

I never called it a plant-based diet that you hear about everywhere now…

Having one plant-based meal (over a fully plant-based diet) plus one low protein animal meal daily or regularly, I think you get the best of all worlds–having energy and vitality, and looking young, as your food and what you ingest shows up on the healthy glow of your face and skin.

Having a regular, healthier eating plan to stay consistent gives you the best chance for achieving and sustaining an ideal healthy weight and energy that we all desire.

These tasty plant-based onion ring snacks can help you toward your goals! 🎯

And when you’re feeling like you’re coming down with a cold, eat onions for some assurance.

red onion ring stack.
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Panko Red Onion Ring Snack

Course Snack
Cuisine American
Author Brandy @ Healthy Happy Life Secrets

Ingredients

  • 1 Red onion
  • Nutritional yeast (or panko bread crumbs for panko method)

Instructions

  • Cut rings of onions to thickness desired.
  • Bake on low heat until crispy-texture desire. 300°F temperature recommended. Nutritional yeast is vegan-friendly and gluten-free, and has a powdery cheese texture and will melt in the oven as such -- it won't be a melted cheese effect and it won't be a full-on powder that doesn't melt.
    Alternatively you can use the Panko (breaded crumb) method. Dip onion rings in olive oil or water, flour, and then bread crumbs before baking, depending on your desires and diet needs.