American Heart Association nutrition handouts give printable tips, targets, and worksheets to build heart-healthy meals fast.
Saturated Fat
Sodium
Added Sugars
Quick Start
- Use a half-plate of produce
- Pick a lean protein base
- Season with herbs and citrus
Beginner
Label Smart
- Scan %DV for sodium
- Find the added sugars line
- Compare two similar items
Everyday
Meal Builder
- Batch beans and grains
- Rotate fish or poultry
- Keep a house vinaigrette
Home Cook
Why These Handouts Work
These printable sheets distill the heart-smart pattern into plain steps you can act on today. You get targets for salt, saturated fat, and added sugars, meal ideas that meet those targets, and checklists that make shopping easier. The format suits busy schedules: quick to scan, easy to post on a fridge, and simple to share with family.
The set aligns with steady nutrition messages: more plants, less salt, lean proteins, and smart fats. You’ll see repeat cues across sheets, which keeps habits consistent in the kitchen, at restaurants, and in the snack aisle. The result is a plan that’s steady, affordable, and friendly to real life.
AHA Nutrition Handouts: What To Print First
Start with a core pack that covers meals, labels, and pantry swaps. These three pieces give the fastest wins and help everyone in the house pull in the same direction.
| Handout Type | When To Use | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Healthy Plate | Weeknight meals | Portion visuals and quick mix-and-match ideas |
| Label How-To | Grocery runs | %DV cues, added sugars, sodium scan order |
| Pantry Swaps | Restocking days | Lower-sodium sauces, whole-grain picks, oil swaps |
| Breakfast Builder | Busy mornings | Fiber-rich combos with fruit, oats, and protein |
| Snack Smart | Afternoons | Crunchy options with nuts, yogurt, veggies, hummus |
| Dining Out | Work lunches | Menu cues: grilled, baked, steamed; sauces on side |
| Salt-Savvy Sheet | Recipe tweaks | Herb blends, citrus, and umami tricks in place of salt |
| Sugar Sense | Drinks and desserts | Limits in teaspoons, beverage swaps, label pitfalls |
How The Numbers Translate To A Plate
Targets on the sheets are meant to be practical, not perfect. Think of the day as a budget. If dinner is a salty takeout night, push lunch and snacks toward lower-sodium picks. If brunch leans sweet, cut added sugars in the hours around it. Small shifts compound across the week.
For sodium, most adults aim for less than 2,300 milligrams per day, with 1,500 milligrams as a steady goal for many. Added sugars stay under 6% of daily calories. Saturated fat lands under 6% of calories, which nudges choices toward fish, legumes, and plant oils. These ranges match widely trusted guidance and map cleanly to swaps below.
Easy Meal Frames
Build meals with four moves. First, choose a lean base: beans, lentils, tofu, fish, chicken, or lean beef cuts. Next, cover half the plate with produce. Then add a whole-grain side such as brown rice, farro, or whole-wheat pasta. Finish with a spoon of olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, or a sprinkle of toasted nuts for flavor.
Smart Flavor, Less Salt
Season with layers. Start with aromatics like onion and garlic. Add acids such as vinegar or citrus. Bring umami with mushrooms, tomato paste, or a splash of low-sodium soy sauce. Finish with fresh herbs. The taste pops, and the salt stays in check.
Reading Labels Without Guesswork
Turn the package over and scan in this order: serving size, calories, then % Daily Value for sodium, saturated fat, and added sugars. A %DV near 5% is low; 20% is high. The label lists added sugars separately, which helps you spot syrups and sweeteners at a glance.
When a favorite item runs salty or sweet, look for a close cousin in the same aisle: no-salt tomatoes, lower-sodium broth, or unsweetened yogurt. Small shifts across staples trim hundreds of milligrams of sodium and dozens of grams of added sugars each week.
Build A Week Of Heart-Friendly Meals
Use the handouts as tiles to plan a simple week. Pick three dinners to repeat, two lunches you like, and two breakfasts you can make on autopilot. Batch a pot of beans, roast a tray of vegetables, and keep a jar of vinaigrette on hand. The rest falls into place.
Sample Day
Breakfast: Oatmeal with berries, chia, and a spoon of peanut butter. Lunch: Leftover roasted vegetables over quinoa with chickpeas, olive oil, and lemon. Dinner: Grilled fish tacos with cabbage, salsa, and avocado. Snacks: Greek yogurt, an apple, or a handful of nuts.
Sauces And Spreads That Help
Keep a small set that earns its spot: salsa, plain yogurt, tahini, mustard, low-sodium soy sauce, and tomato paste. These add punch without a heavy salt or sugar hit. Stir yogurt with herbs for a fast dip. Thin tahini with lemon and water for a creamy drizzle.
When Eating Out
Skim menus for cooking methods first. Grilled, baked, steamed, roasted, and poached tend to be safer picks. Ask for sauces on the side. Trade fries for a side salad or steamed vegetables. Share a dessert or choose fruit. These small moves keep totals steady across the day.
How To Use The Handouts With Family
Post the Healthy Plate sheet where everyone sees it. Let kids circle veggies to try this week. Give teens the Label How-To when they shop. Ask housemates to pick one pantry swap and one breakfast win each week. These cues build momentum without nagging.
What Counts As Progress
Two or three steady habits beat bursts of perfection. Aim for a produce boost at lunch, a swap from refined to whole grains, and one salty staple moved to a lower-sodium version. Add a fish night. Keep beans in the rotation. If you like data, use a label app to track sodium and added sugars for a few days.
Trusted Targets You Can Rely On
Public nutrition targets change over time, so it helps to rely on the most trusted pages. The added sugars line on the Nutrition Facts label calls out grams from syrups and sweeteners. The sodium line shows milligrams per serving and %DV. When two items tie on calories, those lines break the tie fast.
| AHA Target | Daily Goal | Handy Swap |
|---|---|---|
| Sodium | < 2,300 mg; aim for 1,500 mg when you can | Choose low-sodium broth; rinse canned beans |
| Added sugars | ≤ 6% of calories | Pick unsweetened yogurt; flavor with fruit |
| Saturated fat | < 6% of calories | Use olive oil; swap fatty cuts for fish or legumes |
| Whole grains | Most grain servings as whole | Trade white rice for brown or farro |
| Produce | Plenty across meals and snacks | Add a side salad or fruit at each meal |
Quick Label Walkthrough
Pick up a cereal box and assess it in ten seconds. First, serving size. Next, sodium under 140 mg per serving is a solid floor for many boxes; higher picks can still fit, just balance the day. Then, added sugars. A spoon or two of sugar can work when the rest of the day stays low. Fiber at 4 grams or more per serving is a plus.
When An Item Looks Close
Compare two jars or two breads side by side. Choose the one with lower sodium and added sugars with fiber the same or higher. Ingredients tell a story too. Short lists with whole foods near the top tend to align with the goals.
Kitchen Moves That Keep You On Track
Stock The Right Staples
Beans, lentils, frozen vegetables, canned fish, whole grains, nuts, and seeds form the backbone of fast meals. Keep extra-virgin olive oil, vinegar, garlic, and dried herbs in the front row. With these on hand, you can build a plate that hits the numbers in minutes.
Cook Once, Eat Twice
Roast double trays of vegetables. Grill extra chicken. Make a large pot of brown rice. Store in clear containers so the next meal assembles itself. Add a quick sauce and a fresh element, and you’re set.
Set A Snack Plan
Pack a small tub of nuts, a banana, or plain yogurt for the afternoon gap. Having something ready lowers the pull of salty chips or sugary drinks.
Helpful References
You can cross-check targets against the AHA healthy eating page and the FDA label guide if a package looks confusing. Both sources keep numbers clear and up to date.