Poop, Crap – have I gotten your attention, I hope so!
This article is from Menshealth.com
This is very important to read. Our daily allotment of fiber is hard to get unless we concentrate on it. – jug
30 Tricks to Make Fiber Taste Better
If a rabbit doesn’t eat enough high-fiber foods, its teeth may grow uncontrollably, piercing the roof of its mouth and knifing the base of its brain.
Your brain is safe, but we’re not so sure about the rest of your body. Forgo the fiber and you extend an open invitation to several different cancers. You also raise your risk of diabetes and heart disease by up to 20 and 40 percent, respectively.
And in the fate-worse-than-death category, you increase the odds that you’ll end up fat and impotent. So while you may not die like a bunny rabbit, you won’t be doing it like one, either.
Notice, we haven’t even mentioned the c-word (constipation).
But even if you have the will to eat more fiber, you almost certainly don’t have the way. Especially since the recommended daily dosage was recently raised from 25 to a throat-choking 38 grams.
The obvious solution—eating 19 slices of whole-wheat bread a day—isn’t practical. What you need instead is subterfuge. Dietary deception. In other words, this plan for smuggling more roughage into your life.
At Breakfast
1. Fill your juice glass with nectar instead of a watery juice from concentrate. Nectar is apricot, peach, pear, or papaya juice, mixed with fiber-rich pulp. It packs more than a gram (g) of fiber per 8-ounce glass.
2. Drop a whole orange into the blender to flavor your morning smoothie. (Uh, peel it first.) One orange has nearly 3 g more fiber than even the pulpiest orange juice.
3. Spice up your eggs. A third of a cup of chopped onion and a clove of garlic will add a gram of fiber to a couple of scrambled eggs. Or fold the eggs omelette-style over a cup of cooked broccoli for 2 additional grams.
4. Heat up a bowl of oat bran instead of oatmeal; it has nearly 2 g more fiber. And add even more flavor and fiber by stirring in a quarter cup of raisins or chopped dates before nuking it.
5. Sprinkle toasted wheat germ over your favorite cold cereal, or stir a few spoonfuls into yogurt. Two tablespoons equals close to 2 extra grams of fiber.
6. Grab an Asian pear instead of the regular kind. They taste similar, but the Asian variety has significantly more fiber—4 g per pear.
7. Buy spreadable fiber, a.k.a. almond butter, for your whole-wheat toast. Two tablespoons adds a couple of grams of fiber, along with a healthy dose of heart-protecting fats and vitamins like E.
8. Whip up a pack of hot-chocolate mix instead of a second cup of coffee. Most instant-cocoa mixes have up to 3 g fiber per cup.
At Lunch
9. Hate whole wheat? Make your sandwiches with rye bread. One slice has almost 2 g fiber—twice the amount found in white bread.
10. Opt for burritos instead of tacos. Flour tortillas have more fiber than taco shells. Even better, make the burrito whole wheat for still more fiber per serving.
11. And order that burrito with meat and beans instead of meat alone. Half a cup of beans adds 6 g fiber to your meal.
12. Stow some microwavable soup in your desk for when you need to work through lunch. Lentil, chili with beans, ham-and-bean, and black-bean each have between 6 and 10 g fiber per cup.
13. Shower your pizza with oregano or basil. A teaspoon of either spice gives you an extra gram of fiber. Order it with mushrooms and you’ll get one more.
14. Build your burger with a sesame-seed bun instead of the plain variety. Sesame seeds add half a gram of fiber per burger.
15. Order your dog with sauerkraut. Every quarter cup you pile on adds close to a gram of fiber to your frank.
In the Afternoon
16. Pop a pack of light popcorn instead of popping open a bag of potato chips. There’s 8 g fiber in every bag of popcorn.
17. Drink bottled chocolate milk, not white. The combination of the chocolate and the compounds needed to keep it suspended in the milk provides 3 g fiber in every 16 ounces.
18. Say nuts to candy bars. Bars with almonds—like Almond Joy and Alpine white chocolate with almonds—have almost twice the fiber content of bars without.
19. Don’t tell yourself you could have had a low-sodium V8. Have one. Unsalted V8 has 2 g fiber. The V8 that comes spiked with salt has half that amount.
20. Graze on trail mix instead of a granola bar. Most granola bars have only 1 g fiber, while trail mix with dried fruit has nearly 3.
At Dinner
21. Toss 1/2 cup of chickpeas into a pot of your favorite soup. They’ll take on the flavor of the soup and tack 6 g fiber onto your bottom line.
22. Swap a sweet potato for your standard spud. Sweet potatoes have 2 g more fiber per tuber than the typical Idaho variety. Not a fan? At least eat the skin of the regular potato—it alone has 1 g fiber.
23. Shake ‘n’ bake some fiber into your chicken by coating it with a mixture of 1 teaspoon paprika, 1 teaspoon thyme, 2 tablespoons ground flaxseed, and 1/2 cup flour. You’ll get 4 g fiber, thanks to the flaxseed.
24. Go wild when you make rice. Cup for cup, wild rice has three times the fiber of white.
25. Doctor your favorite jarred pasta sauce with 1/2 cup of frozen chopped spinach. The spinach will adopt the flavor of the sauce and pad the fiber count by more than 2 g.
26. Prepare whole-wheat or spinach pasta instead of the regular semolina kind. A cup of either has 5 g fiber.
27. Cook your broccoli, cauliflower, and carrots and you’ll take in 3 to 5 g fiber per serving, up to twice what you’d have gotten had you eaten them raw. (Heat makes fiber more available.)
28. Use uncooked oatmeal instead of bread crumbs in your next meat loaf. Add 3/4 cup of oats per pound of ground meat and you’ll boost the total fiber count to more than 8 g.
At Dessert
29. Top a bowl of ice cream with sliced fresh berries in lieu of syrup. A half cup of raspberries provides 4 g fiber; strawberries and blueberries pack half that amount.
30. Introduce your pie hole to a slice of apple, cherry, or berry pie and you’ll be up a couple of grams of fiber. Cake doesn’t have nearly as much fiber—unless you eat the candles.