The Dairy Group — milk, yogurt, cheese, and fortified soymilk — provides calcium, vitamin D, potassium, and protein. Choose low-fat or fat-free options to get those nutrients with less saturated fat and fewer calories.
The Dairy Group — milk, yogurt, cheese, and fortified soymilk — provides calcium, vitamin D, potassium, and protein. Choose low-fat or fat-free options to get those nutrients with less saturated fat and fewer calories.
Drink fat-free (skim) or low-fat (1%) milk. If you currently drink whole milk, gradually switch to lower fat versions. This change cuts saturated fat and calories but doesn't reduce calcium or other essential nutrients.
Choose fat-free or low-fat milk or yogurt more often than cheese. Milk and yogurt have more potassium and less sodium than most cheeses. Also, almost all milk and many yogurts are fortified with vitamin D.
Use fat-free or low-fat milk on cereal and oatmeal. Top fruit salads and baked potatoes with low-fat yogurt instead of higher fat toppings such as sour cream.
Many cheeses are high in saturated fat. Look for "reduced-fat" or "low-fat" on the label. Try different brands or types to find the one that you like.
Cream cheese, cream, and butter are not part of the dairy food group. They are high in saturated fat and have little or no calcium.
When recipes such as dips call for sour cream, substitute plain yogurt. Use fat-free evaporated milk instead of cream, and try low-fat or fat-free ricotta cheese as a substitute for cream cheese.
Flavored milks and yogurts, frozen yogurt, and puddings can contain a lot of added sugars. Get your nutrients from dairy foods with fewer or no added sugars.
If so, get your calcium along with your morning caffeine boost. Make or order coffee, a latte, or cappuccino with fat-free or low-fat milk.
If you are lactose intolerant, try yogurt, lactose-free milk, or soymilk (soy beverage) to get your calcium. Calcium in some leafy greens is well absorbed, but eating several cups each day to meet calcium needs may be unrealistic.
Parents who drink milk and eat dairy foods show their kids that it's important for their health. Dairy foods help build the growing bones of kids and teens and maintain bone health in adulthood.