Calorie Hacks to Lighten Your Favorite Thanksgiving Dishes

We all have Thanksgiving Day dishes we love but the calories and saturated fat, not so much. Dietitian Julie Upton, MS, RD of Appetite For Health has great tips and simple tweaks to make your favorite holiday dishes healthier without sacrificing the flavor.

Rich and creamy mashed potatoes, sweet cranberry sauce, bread stuffing, pecan pie . . . oh my! Eating healthy isn't the first thing that comes to mind at Thanksgiving, but with a few simple tweaks, you can lighten up even the most decadent holiday recipes.

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Here are 10 tricks that slash calories, added sugars, and artery-clogging sat fat while instantly upgrading your diet — all without sacrificing taste!

  1. The traditional turkey sidekick, bread stuffing, is loaded with both calories and saturated fat, thanks to the butter, sausage, and fat drippings (if cooked inside the bird) it contains. Instead of bread stuffing, switch to a wild rice-based stuffing with dried or fresh fruit and plenty of earthy herbs and spices.
  2. Many sweet potato casseroles call for a stick of butter (1/2 cup), which contains nearly four day's worth of saturated fat and more than 800 calories. Replace stick butter with a "light" whipped butter or a soft spread. In place of the sugary marshmallow topping, top your casserole with toasted chopped pecans and a drizzle of antioxidant-packed maple syrup.
  3. To make trimmed-down mashed potatoes, skip cream or whole milk and mash your potatoes with skim or 1% milk or buttermilk. Add sweet roasted garlic for an unexpected flavor boost.
  4. To cut the tartness of cranberries in your sauce or relish, use chopped apple or unsweetened applesauce in place of up to half of the sugar in your recipe. (1/4 cup of sugar can be replaced with 1/2 cup of unsweetened applesauce or chopped apples.)
  5. Cut the crust: pie crusts are high in calories and saturated fat, so the best options are single-crust pies like pumpkin or pecan, or go crustless. Here are two of my irresistible fruit-based desserts — Apple-Ginger Phyllo Nests and an Apple-Cranberry Crisp — that allow you to indulge without the bulge.
  6. Cut a quarter of the sugar from recipes. Most recipes have way too much sugar, so you can safely nix a quarter of it without negatively impacting the recipe whatsoever.
  7. Replace up to half of the fat in baked goods like cookies, muffins, and quick breads with an equal amount pureed beans, canned pumpkin, or unsweetened applesauce. (Trust me — no one will even notice.)
  8. Instead of baking with shortening or butter, which pack in saturated fat, use canola oil. Canola oil is best for baking because it's heart healthy and has a neutral flavor and creates the perfect texture for baked goods.
  9. Replace buttercream frosting on cakes and cupcakes with lower fat meringue frosting, made from just sugar and egg whites.
  10. Swap half the white flour in a recipe with an equal amount whole-wheat flour for more nutrients, antioxidants, and fiber.