Normally salads are a smart nutritional choice – packed with health-promoting nutrients that make us feel good and satisfied. Many times, though, salads can be packed with more calories, salt, and fat than your average cheeseburger. Yuck!
Full-out divorce isn’t the answer. After all, salads full of colorful vegetables are our best defense against cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and other illnesses caused by an excessively rich diet. Here, then are four of the most caloric, unhealthy salads and suggestions for transforming them into health-promoting power houses.
Caesar Salad

What’s bad: In theory, a Caesar could be good for you – full of romaine, garlic, anchovies and lemon juice. In practice, the salad is often swimming in heavy dressing, covered with a mountain of Parmesan and croutons. Just one serving of Caesar dressing is up to 1,274 calories. Yikes!
Make it healthy at home: Go light on the croutons or eliminate them all together – white bread, olive oil, and salty seasoning contain virtually no micronutrients, adding nothing but empty calories. Try finely chopped almonds instead of Parmesan. (Trust me, this is actually really good!) Nuts – and almonds in particular – are some of the most beneficial foods for decreasing heart disease risk. A 2009 meta-analysis confirmed that daily almond consumption is associated with a 7 mg/dL decrease in total cholesterol.1 In addition, almonds contain vitamin E and a large and varied collection of phenol antioxidants. Finally, try a dressing upgrade. This vegan version - based on a recipe in Veganomicon - contains only 33 calories and 6 mg of sodium per tablespoon. The tofu gives it a protein and fiber boost, as well.
Caesar Dressing
Yield: approximately 1 cup3/4 pound silken tofu
2 tbsp olive oil
3 tbsp lemon juice
1 tbsp capers
4 tsp caper brine
1 tsp sugar
½ tsp mustard powder
freshly cracked black pepper, to tasteCombine the tofu, olive oil, and lemon juice in a blender and blend until smooth. Add the remaining ingredients and pulse to combine.
Taco Salad

What’s Bad: Where do I start? The fried tortilla shell? The piles of greasy meat, cheese, and sour cream? A taco salad from Taco Bell can range from 770-910 calories and is a sodium bomb.
Make it healthy at home: It is so easy to make a guiltless version of this salad at home. By substituting savory, spiced beans for meat you lose all that saturated fat and gain weight-loss promoting, cancer protection.2 This version was adapted from Vegan on the Cheap:
Taco Salad
Serves 41 ½ cups cooked pinto beans (1 can, rinsed and drained)
1 ½ cups cooked black beans (1 can, rinsed and drained)
1 cup tomatoes, diced
½ jalapeno, seeded and finely chopped
2 tbsp onion, finely chopped
1 ½ tbsp fresh cilantro, finely chopped
2 tsp chili powder
tortilla chips, optional
8 cups shredded lettuce
Optional toppings: pitted black olives, canned chopped mild or hot green chilis, shredded cheese, guacamoleIn a sauce pan, combine the beans, tomato, jalapeno, onion, cilantro, and chili powder. Use a fork or potato masher to mush everything together. Cook over medium heat until heated through.
To serve, divide a small portion of tortilla chips among plates or shallow bowls. Top with lettuce and bean mixture. Pass the desired toppings at the table.
Cobb Salad

What’s bad: Calorie-dense ingredients like bacon, blue cheese and ranch dressing put this salad over the top when it comes to calories and fat.
Make it healthy at home: Keep portions under control by limiting your toppings to 1 tablespoon (total) per cup of greens and make this satisfying, yet healthy, creamy dressing:
Ranch Dressing
6 ounces silken tofu
3 dates, pitted and chopped
1 clove garlic
3 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 teaspoons low sodium soy sauce
1/4 cup finely chopped green onion
1 1/2 tablespoons Italian seasoning
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill
1 dash cayenne pepper, optionalPlace tofu, dates, garlic, water, lemon juice, and soy sauce in a high-powered blender and blend until smooth. Add remaining ingredients and pulse to combine. You want little green flecks to remain!
Chicken or Tuna Salad

What’s bad: Mayo, mayo, mayo.
Make it healthy at home: Best to eliminate the mayo. One idea: Mix drained tuna with a few splashes of light dressing (e.g. one of the ones above or Italian) and some chopped celery and tomatoes. If you simply must have the creamy goodness, try Vegenaise made without eggs, sugar, corn syrup or preservatives. Alternately, you could make the meat-free version on this web-site which is packed full of crunchy veggie and nut goodness.
Resources:
1 Phung OJ, Makanji SS, White CM, Coleman CI. Almonds have a neutral effect on serum lipid profiles: a meta-analysis of randomized trials. J Am Diet Assoc. 2009 May;109(5):865-73.
2 Bazzano LA, Thompson AM, Tees MT, et al. Non-soy legume consumption lowers cholesterol levels: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2009 Nov 23. [Epub ahead of print]
Aune D, De Stefani E, Ronco A, et al. Legume intake and the risk of cancer: a multisite case-control study in Uruguay. Cancer Causes Control. 2009 Nov;20(9):1605-15.
Posted by Carry at 09:56 AM. Filed under: Recipes • Nutritional Wisdom •
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