Fatty Fish Benefits~ Text File Recipe
Yield: 1 ServingsRecipe by luhu.jp
Ingredients:
BENEFITS OF FATTY FISH
Directions:
In an article in the December journal of the American Dietetic
Association, editor Elaine R. Morgan reports on the recommendation to
have two servings weekly of fatty fish.
The fat in fish contains omega-3 fatty acids, which reduce the risk of
heart disease, kidney-related diseases and skin disorders.
The report further states that pregnant women and children benefit
from omega-3 fatty acids in that they are important for the
development of brain and nerve cells, including the eyes.
The recommendation does not mean that you should add more fat to the
diet but rather that you should substitute another source of protein
in the diet with fish twice a week to reduce the amount of saturated
fat in the diet. Fish contains highly unsaturated fat.
The following list was compiled by the National Fisheries Institute.
It is a listing of fish and shellfish according to omega-3 content in
a 3 1/2 ounce serving.
Most (More than 1.0 gram) Anchovy, Atlantic bluefish, Atlantic
salmon, coho salmon, herring, mackerel, pilchards, pink salmon,
sablefish, sardines, sockeye salmon, spiny dogfish, and whitefish.
Moderate (0.5 to 0.9 gram) chum, salmon, pompano, rainbow trout,
shark, smelt, spot, striped bass, swordfish, Pacific oysters, and
squid.
Least (less than 0.5 gram) carp, channel catfish, cod, flounder,
grouper, haddock, Pacific halibut, mahi mahi, ocean perch, orange
roughy, pike, pollock, rockfish, sea bass, snapper, whiting, clams,
crab, crayfish, Eastern oysters, lobsters, mussels, scallops and
shrimp.
Source: From an article in the Omaha World-Herald, February 26, 1997
MM-format by Leonard Smith
Source from luhu.jp
Association, editor Elaine R. Morgan reports on the recommendation to
have two servings weekly of fatty fish.
The fat in fish contains omega-3 fatty acids, which reduce the risk of
heart disease, kidney-related diseases and skin disorders.
The report further states that pregnant women and children benefit
from omega-3 fatty acids in that they are important for the
development of brain and nerve cells, including the eyes.
The recommendation does not mean that you should add more fat to the
diet but rather that you should substitute another source of protein
in the diet with fish twice a week to reduce the amount of saturated
fat in the diet. Fish contains highly unsaturated fat.
The following list was compiled by the National Fisheries Institute.
It is a listing of fish and shellfish according to omega-3 content in
a 3 1/2 ounce serving.
Most (More than 1.0 gram) Anchovy, Atlantic bluefish, Atlantic
salmon, coho salmon, herring, mackerel, pilchards, pink salmon,
sablefish, sardines, sockeye salmon, spiny dogfish, and whitefish.
Moderate (0.5 to 0.9 gram) chum, salmon, pompano, rainbow trout,
shark, smelt, spot, striped bass, swordfish, Pacific oysters, and
squid.
Least (less than 0.5 gram) carp, channel catfish, cod, flounder,
grouper, haddock, Pacific halibut, mahi mahi, ocean perch, orange
roughy, pike, pollock, rockfish, sea bass, snapper, whiting, clams,
crab, crayfish, Eastern oysters, lobsters, mussels, scallops and
shrimp.
Source: From an article in the Omaha World-Herald, February 26, 1997
MM-format by Leonard Smith
Source from luhu.jp
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