Thursday, September 9, 2010

Tuna Time!

School is back in swing - getting dinner on the table at a reasonable hour can be tough. And what about making sure the kids (not to mention you!) are out the door with a balanced breakfast, if any breakfast at all. Tuna may be the nutritional time saver you need.

Top 5 (plus one) reasons tuna (or salmon) made the dietitian's cut:
  1. You can buy in bulk and always have some on hand. Keep in your cabinets, your desk drawer, even in the middle consul of your car.
  2. Tuna is packed with lean protein and healthy fats that support brain function and the heart.
  3. Tuna is versatile and can be used in a ton of recipes - tuna salad, tuna cakes, tuna casserole, etc.
  4. Tuna allows your creative juices to flow. Make with different seasonings (dill, cilantro, cayenne, wasabi), veggies (red pepper, onion, celery), sauces (hot sauce, lemon juice, mustard, relish), bases (plain yogurt, olive oil, canola mayonnaise), or extras (garbanzo beans, hard boiled egg, artichokes, green peas).
  5. Although not quite as tasty, canned and bagged fish is a lot less expensive than its fresh counterpart.
  6. Chicago Sun Times thought of twenty ways you can use the handy can.

Try this recipe and I promise you'll be smiling come lunch time. The same preparation works great for tuna or salmon cakes as well. Even give it a try with some melon for breakfast!


Salmon or Tuna Salad

1-2 servings

Ingredients:

1 (4 ounce) can salmon or tuna
1 hard-boiled egg, crushed
1/2 red or green bell pepper, diced
1 stalk celery, chopped
1/4 cup chopped onions
1 Tbsp light mayo
1 Tbsp low fat yogurt (Greek or plain)
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper, optional
Salt and pepper
1/4 lemon, juiced

Directions:

1. Combine salmon and hard-boiled eggs in bowl.
2. In another bowl, add chopped bell pepper, celery, onion, and mayo.
3. Add seasonings and stir to combine.
4. Pour over salmon, add lemon juice, and toss lightly.

Nutrition Information (per recipe):

Calories 266, Carbohydrates 19g, Fiber 19g, Sugars 7g, Protein 21g, Total Fat 4g

1 comment:

Aurlie said...

My boyfriend and I are huge fans of tuna. We both run / bike a lot and make the following tuna recipe for a great pre/post workout snack. Easy to make a freeze. They taste good cold or reheated:

Tuna Muffins
4 cups cooked brown rice
6 T grated Parmesan cheese
14 oz canned tuna (drained and flaked)
1 cup celery, chopped
½ cup chopped green onion
½ t pepper
10 oz plain low-fat yogurt
2 T parsley flakes
4 t soy sauce
2 T lemon juice
6 egg whites

Preheat oven to 375.

Combine all ingredients except egg whites.

Beat egg whites until stiff. Fold into rest of ingredients.

Coat a muffin tin with olive oil cooking spray. Fill each cup with tuna mixture.

Bake 35 to 40 minutes or until golden brown on top. Run a knife around the edge of each muffin to loosen.

Makes 12 muffins

CALORIES 149; FAT 2.1g; PROTEIN 13.1g; CARB 18.9g; CHOL 15mg; SODIUM 288mg