Dec 12, 2022

KRUG: Tiny taste bites add up

Posted Dec 12, 2022 10:55 AM
<i>Donna Krug is the District Director and Family and Consumer Science Agent with K-State Research and Extension – Cottonwood District.&nbsp;</i>
Donna Krug is the District Director and Family and Consumer Science Agent with K-State Research and Extension – Cottonwood District. 

Extra calories can sneak in over the holidays and they don’t always come in large portions. They can tiptoe in through tiny tastes throughout the day. Alice Henneman, a retired Extension Educator from Nebraska share the following information a few years ago and it is still relevant today. Let’s look at how the calories in tiny tastes can add up in one day.

•Taste 1– Eating a cookie that broke while removing it from the baking sheet. I deserve it for getting up early to bake these cookies before heading to work. (Approximatecalories = 30)

•Taste 2- Someone brought holiday candy to work today! “I’ll just have one small piece of the peanut brittle. (Approximatecalories = 80)

•Taste 3– Need to stop at the grocery store over the noon hour. Great – they are offering cheese and cracker samples. That will tide me over until I can swing through afast-foodplace. (Approximatecalories = 40)

•Taste 4– Thefast-foodplace is giving out ¼ cup samples of its special flavored holiday coffee. (Approximatecalories = 20)

•Taste 5– Chocolate covered cherries in the break room! It’s still a few hours before the dinner party tonight. Chocolate’s good for you – right?AndI’m just eating one! (Approximatecalories = 60)

•Taste 6– The party is great – but maybe I shouldn’t stand near the snack table. I’m dipping my third chip. (Approximatecalories = 75)

•Taste 7– Who can pass up old-fashioned style eggnog?  I’ll have just a half cup. (Approximatecalories = 200)

•Taste 8– There are just a couple of tablespoons of candied sweet potatoes left. Someone should enjoy them so they don’t go to waste – it might as well be me! (Approximatecalories = 60)

•Taste 9– Helping dish up dessert lets me take a little “preview” taste. One heaping tablespoon of candy cane ice cream coming right up! (Approximatecalories = 70)

If you add the nine taste bites you will have consumed an extra 635 calories for the day. If such “tiny tastes” are continued through the holidays, you might gain a pound a week. Consuming an additional 3,500 calories above your body’s needs and expenditures can lead to gaining that pound a week. 

Maybe those “tiny tastes” aren’t so tiny after all! What “tiny tastes” are totaling big calories for you?

Donna Krug is the District Director and Family and Consumer Science Agent with K-State Research and Extension – Cottonwood District. You may reach her at: (620)793-1910 or [email protected]