Carbohydrates
Your body’s preferred everyday energy. Lean on wholegrains, oats, legumes and starchy vegetables for steady, slow-release energy.
The balanced plate, what macronutrients actually do and how to glance at a packet without getting overwhelmed.
The balanced plate is the easiest way to mentally portion food without weighing anything. Aim for half the plate to be vegetables and salad, about a quarter to be a lean protein and a quarter to be a slow-release wholegrain or starchy vegetable.
Add a small drizzle of healthy fat — extra-virgin olive oil, avocado, seeds or nuts — and you have a plate that tends to leave you satisfied for longer without strict counting or rigid portions.
Macronutrients sound clinical, but the everyday version is genuinely simple — here is the short version.
Your body’s preferred everyday energy. Lean on wholegrains, oats, legumes and starchy vegetables for steady, slow-release energy.
The building blocks for muscle, repair and a more satisfying meal. Spread intake across the day rather than loading one plate.
Carry flavour and support nutrient absorption. Favour olive oil, nuts, seeds, avocado and oily fish for everyday cooking.
Often forgotten, always useful. Wholegrains, fruit, vegetables and around eight cups of water keep things ticking along nicely.
The Australian Nutrition Information Panel can be read quickly when you know what to look at first.
Use this column for fair comparisons between two similar products on the shelf.
Look for products with under 15 g of sugars per 100 g, or under 5 g if the food has no naturally occurring sugar.
Aim for under 400 mg per 100 g where possible, and under 120 mg per 100 g for everyday staples.
Ingredients are listed by weight. If sugar, salt or refined oils sit in the top three, that is worth noticing.
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