Dietician Shows How The Same Meal Can Have 400+ Calorie Difference And We All Need To Make These Changes
The liquid diet, the baby food diet, the raw food diet, people have gone to some pretty extreme lengths to lose weight, but even those who don't follow the craziest diet trends and stick with plain old healthy eating regimens, could be doing it wrong. Yes, one dietician is shedding some light on these healthy food mistakes by posting identical photos of the same healthy recipe but with an upward difference of around 300 calories.
The nutritionist, Paula Norris, has captioned the collection on Instagram 'Spot The Difference' and trust us - you can't. Along with the high calorie and low-calorie photos, she writes out the calorie saving recipes and general healthy diet tips such as portion control, focusing on healthy oils and replacing starchy carbs with nutritious foods.
For Norris, the key is attainability, writing on her page: "Ever since I studied Dietetics, I haven't bothered with drastic diet changes to achieve goals because I know how short term, unsustainable and depressing they are. Changes I make are small, almost unnoticeable, and spread across days and weeks. Decreasing the serving size of energy-dense foods and increasing portions of low energy density but high in nutrition value foods has been key for me. A lot of small changes can add up!"
Scroll down below to see these amazing plate comparisons and see if you can spot the difference!
This post may include affiliate links.
Sneaky ‘Salads’⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Unfortunately calorie heavy dressings, too much grain and not enough veg can result in a ‘salad’ with calories closer to that of a risotto. Here’s how easily it can happen, even with ‘salads’ of similar bulk...🔸On the left:• 1 cup cooked Pearl Barley• 70g Haloumi• 1/3 Zucchini• 2 florets Broccoli• 1/4 Capsicum• 50g Eggplant• 3 Cherry Tomatoes• 200g Poached Chicken• 1/2 cup herbs• Dressing of 2tsp EVOO and 2tsp Balsamic Vinegar 🔹On the right:• 1/2 cup cooked Pearl Barley• 35g Haloumi• 2/3 Zucchini• 5 florets Broccoli• 1/2 Capsicum• 100g Eggplant• 5 Cherry Tomatoes• 100g Poached Chicken• 1/2 cup herbs• Dressing of 2 tsp Balsamic Vinegar and 2tsp seeded mustard
Both Of These Meals Are Healthy But Depending On Your Goals You May Make Some Modifications For More Or Less Calories⠀
Both of these meals are healthy but depending on your goals you may make some modifications for more or less calories.This one is also important as while good fats are ofcourse amazing for and required by our bodies- the calories can add up. So if you’re trying to move some weight you need to be aware of portions of even good fats. 🔸On the left
• Large (220g) Salmon fillet (when raw)• 2tsp oil for pan frying• 1 serve (~200g) soba noodles• 1 Tbsp Edamame
• 1/4 carrot - julienned• 1/2 cup cooked spinach• 25g Broccoli (~2 florets)• 1/2 medium Avocado 🥑 • 1 tsp lime juice
• 1/4 cup basil• 1/2 tsp sesame seeds 🔹On the right:• Small (150g) Salmon fillet (when raw) baked without added fat
• 1/3 serve (~70g) soba noodles• 2 Tbsp Edamame• 1/2 carrot - julienned• 3/4 cup cooked spinach• 50g Broccoli (~2 florets)• 2 cherry tomatoes• 1/4 medium Avocado 🥑 • 1 tsp lime juice• 1/4 cup basil• 1/2 tsp sesame seeds
The Impact That Ingredient Manipulation Can Have On The Overall Calories In A Meal
These posts are NOT to encourage calorie counting but are to demonstrate the impact that ingredient manipulation can have on the overall calories in a meal (obviously important for those of you who are trying to lose weight). On the left:🔸50g Feta🔸200g Sweet Potato
🔸4 Cherry Tomatoes🔸1/2 cup Baby Spinach🔸1/4 small Capsicum🔸1/6 medium Zucchini🔸1 cup cooked Quinoa🔸180g Poached chicken🔸Dressing of Balsamic Vinegar + Olive Oil. On the right:🔹25g Feta🔹100g Sweet Potato🔹8 Cherry Tomatoes🔹1 cup Baby Spinach🔹1/2 small Capsicum🔹1/3 medium Zucchini🔹1/2 cup cooked Quinoa🔹120g Poached chicken🔹Dressing of Balsamic Vinegar
Healthy Fried Rice⠀⠀⠀⠀
🔸On the left: • 1 1/2 Cup Brown Rice• 1/4 Capsicum• 1/4 Cup Peas• 1/2 Cob Corn• 1/2 Egg
• 2 Tbsp Soy Sauce• 1/4 Carrot• 180g chicken• 2 tsp Oil🔹On the right:• 1/2 Cup Brown Rice
• 1/2 Cup Cauli Rice• 1/2 Capsicum• 1/2 Cup Peas• 1/2 Con Corn• 1/2 Carrot• 1/2 Egg• 8 Green Beans• 2 Tbsp Soy Sauce• 100g chicken
Easy Ways To Save Cals In Your Stir Fry⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
On the left: 🔹2 tsp oil for cooking🔹1Tbsp Sweet Chilli Sauce🔹280g Chicken (1 medium breast)🔹1 cup Brown Rice🔹Half the amount of Veg (1/4 red capsicum, 1/2 small carrot, 1 Medium Mushroom, 2 pieces Broccolini)🔹2 tsp Soy sauce, 2 tsp Oyster sauce, 2 tsp Lime Juice. Healthy Swaps on the Right:🔸No oil for cooking (you can use water or the sauce instead)🔸1tsp Sriracha instead of Sweet Chilli (it’s stronger flavour means you need less)🔸150g chicken🔸1/2 cup Brown Rice🔸Double the Veg. (1/2 red capsicum, 1 medium carrot, 2 Medium Mushrooms, 1/2 bunch Broccolini)🔸 2 tsp Soy sauce, 2 tsp Oyster sauce, 2 tsp Lime Juice
A Chicken Pad Thai Spot
if you want to gain weight or maybe you want to maintain but have higher energy requirements- go left. If your goal is to lose or maintain weight - go right. This Pad Thai is on MEDIUM sized dinner plates (hence why they fill up most of it!) 🔸On the left:• 200g cooked chicken thigh• 2tsp oil for cooking• 130g (when dry) rice noodles• 1/4 red onion• 1/2 carrot - julienned• 3 snow peas - chopped• 1Tbsp Soy sauce• 1/2tsp Fish sauce• 1Tbsp Lime juice• 1/2 egg 🔹On the right:
• 120g cooked chicken breast• 1tsp oil for cooking• 70g (when dry) rice noodles• 1/4 red onion• 1 carrot - julienned• 8 snow peas - chopped• 1 bunch Chinese Spinach• 1Tbsp Soy sauce• 1/2tsp Fish sauce• 1Tbsp Lime juice• 1/2 egg
No Change In Ingredients - Just Different Amounts⠀⠀⠀
No change in ingredients - just different amounts! On the left:🔸180g steak (untrimmed)🔸1tsp Oil (to cook steak)🔸2 cups Lettuce🔸4 rings Red Onion🔸50g Avocado🔸1cup Cooked Rice Noodles🔸30g Cucumber🔸2 Cherry Tomatoes🔸2 tsp Sesame Oil🔸2 tsp Lime Juice🔸1 tsp Soy Sauce. One the Right: 🔹100g steak (trimmed) and grilled (without oil)🔹2 cups Lettuce🔹4 rings Red Onion🔹25g Avocado🔹1/2cup Cooked Rice Noodles🔹50g Cucumber🔹4 Cherry Tomatoes🔹1/2 medium Carrot🔹1 tsp Sesame Oil🔹2 tsp Lime Juice🔹2 tsp Soy Sauce
[Both recipes have equal amounts of garlic, mint, coriander, chilli and ginger]
Spot The Difference
Meal on the left has:🔹300g chicken breast (medium sized breast) pan fried in 1tsp oil
🔹Mayonaise dressing🔹Bacon rasher🔹Croutons baked with 1tsp oil🔹15g Parmesan cheese.
The salad on the right has:🔸120g chicken grilled without added fat🔸Add Red Onion for flavour (since you're omitting Bacon!)🔸Additional Cherry tomatoes and carrot for bulk since you're using less chicken🔸Croutons baked without oil🔸Dressing made on 1Tbsp natural yoghurt + 1 tsp Dijon mustard + garlic (which is actually delicious)🔸5g Parmesan cheese [Both have the same amount of lettuce, bread and anchovies]
Too Big A Burrito?⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Too big a burrito? Ok so the size of the wrap (which saves about 100cals) makes this one more obvious but the other differences save you an extra 300cals!⠀🔸On the left: • Large wrap• 1tsp oil for cooking• 1/2 brown onion• 160g Regular mince• Taco seasoning• 1/2 tin tomatoes• 1 cup lettuce• 1/2 tomato• 50g Avocado• 40g cheese🔹On the right:• Medium wrap• 1/2 brown onion• 100g Extra lean mince• 50g black beans• 1/3 Zucchini• 1/2 medium carrot• Taco seasoning• 1/2 tin tomatoes• 1 cup lettuce• 1/2 tomato• 25g Avocado• 20g Low Fat cheese
Easy Ways To Cut Cals⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
EASY WAYS TO CUT CALS: • Reduce oil in cooking. Try spray oil.
• Replace some of the starchy carbs with non-starchy vegetables
• Add moderate amounts of healthy fats (nuts, seeds, oil in dressing)
Same Bowl, Filled Differently
The calories in the bowl on the left quickly add up because of: - Large amount of rice (1 cup cooked)- Half an Avo (even though it is healthy- it is still energy dense)- Extra seeds (same disclaimer as the Avo)- Mayonnaise dressing. The bowl on the right has:- 1/3 cup cooked rice- 1/4 Avocado 🥑- 1 tsp seeds- Tahini + lemon juice for dressingl
Small Change Diet⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
While 170 Calories difference doesn’t seem huge, a few small changes like this across the day can be the difference between weight gain, maintenance and loss 3 almost unnoticeable changes like this across your day will cut the calories required to lose 0.5kg per week. So while 170 Calories doesn’t sound like much, it can help you get to your goals. And because the difference between these bowls in bulk is minimal, both will be filling! On the left:🔹3/4 cup muesli🔹100g full fat yoghurt🔹1Tbsp sultanas🔹1/4 cup mixed berries🔹1 Tbsp Chia seeds🔹1 tsp Pomegranate seed. On the Right:🔸1/2 cup muesli🔸100g reduces fat yoghurt🔸3/4 cup mixed berries🔸2 tsp Chia seeds🔸1 tsp Pomegranate seeds
As someone who loves pomegranates I would never just sprinkle them on yogurt lol those things pack a painful crunch on the seed! Chew them up and spit them out
If You Want To Gain Weight - Go Left. If Your Goal Is To Lose Or Maintain Weight - Go Right⠀⠀
You can apply some of the below modifications based on your fitness goals- if you want to gain weight - go left. If your goal is to lose or maintain weight - go right. The bulk of these meals is pretty much the same, so both will be equally filling. This is important because satiety is one of the major challenges when trying to lose weight and many people think they need to eat smaller meals. This is simply not necessary!🔸On the left• 3 small soft shell tacos• 1tsp oil for cooking• 1/2 garlic clove• 1/2 brown onion• 200g Regular mince• Taco seasoning + herbs• 1/2 tin tomatoes• 4 cherry tomatoes• 1/4 small corn cob• 50g Avocado• 40g full fat cheddar cheese
🔹On the right• 3 large lettuce leaves for shells• 1Tbsp water for cooking• 1/2 garlic clove
• 1/2 brown onion• 100g Extra lean mince• 70g red kidney beans• 1 small grated carrot
• Taco seasoning + herbs• 1/2 tin tomatoes• 8 cherry tomatoes• 25g dices capsicum • 1/4 small corn cob• 25g Avocado• 10g Parmesan cheese (Parmesan has a much sharper flavour so you can get away with much less)
If You’re Trying To Lose Weight Then It Can Be Easy To Overdo The Cals On Even Seemingly Healthy Meals Like Stir Fry
If you’re trying to lose weight then it can be easy to overdo the cals on even seemingly healthy meals like stir fry!
***As a note- I have weighed the non starchy veg for this demo but I DO NOT weigh non starchy veg at home- I throw as much as I can in! Scales are good to keep portion sizes in check for meats, starchy carbs and good fats (although measuring in spoons, cups usually works for a lot of starchy carbs and fats) but weighing is not required for non starchy veg! On the left: 🔸50g capsicum🔸20g zucchini🔸2 stalks broccolini🔸1 large mushroom🔸15g beans🔸1/2 small onion🔸200g beef (when cooked)🔸2tsp oil🔸1Tbsp sweet chilli sauce🔸2tsp oyster sauce🔸2tsp lime juice🔸1 cup cooked rice. On the right:🔹100g capsicum🔹50g zucchini🔹3 stalks broccolini🔹1 large mushroom🔹40g beans🔹1/2 small onion🔹100g beef (when cooked)🔹Spray oil🔹1tsp Sriracha🔹3tsp oyster sauce🔹2tsp lime juice🔹1/2 cup cooked rice
Hummus Vs Hummus
Hummus is often a go to healthy snack but the calorie density of some brands is almost triple others due to the amount of oil added in production ✔️Check the label and pick one with between 500-650kJ/120-150cals per 100g product
Changes I Make Are Small, Almost Unnoticeable And Spread Across Days And Weeks
Ever since I studied Dietetics, I haven’t bothered with drastic diet changes to achieve goals because I know how short term, unsustainable and depressing they are. Changes I make are small, almost unnoticeable and spread across days and weeks. Decreasing the serve size of energy dense foods and increasing portions of low energy density foods has been key for me. A lot of small changes can add up!
Fuller For Longer?⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
So you might think more calories and volume will help keep you fuller for longer. Unfortunately this is not always the case. The high carbohydrate load thanks to adding the muffin and danish on the plate on the right hand side may actually leave you feeling hungry SOONER.When we eat a large amount of carbs in one sitting (known as glycemic load), our blood sugar levels go up relative to the amount we’ve eaten. Our bodies then release insulin in an effort to regulate our blood sugar levels to bring them back to within a desirable range. The spike and fall of blood sugar and insulin has been shown that it can leave people feeling hungry sooner.
So while carbs are NOT BAD- our bodies are better at processing them when they’re consumed in moderate portions across the day instead of in huge loads.
**Results will vary between individuals but it is something to consider if you find yourself often getting hungry soon after what seems like a decent sized meal!
There's already rye bread, why add a muffin and a Danish? Just throw some waffles , pancakes and a piece of cake on there while your at the buffet counter.
How Much Avo?⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
While Avo is oh so healthy, if you're trying to achieve the calorie deficit needed to lose weight then it's best to moderate your portion size• Aim for 1/4 large or 1/3 small max 🥑🥑
Ott On The Oats?
It's easy to fill our bowl up with oats. They're unprocessed nature means a 'serve' doesn't look like a lot in the bowl when they're raw. If you're trying to save some calories opt for a smaller bowl of oats and top up with some extra fruit! 👆🏻This pic is 2/3 cup uncooked on the left and 1/3 on the right. Over a year this small change made daily is the equivalent of 5kg worth of calories
Spot The Difference
Bowl on the left made with: 🔹180g regular mince🔹1 tsp Oil for cooking🔹15g Parmesan🔹1 cup cooked pasta 🍝Save some cals by:🔸Replacing 1/2 cup pasta with zoodles (but still keeping 1/2 cup pasta!)🔸Use less mince (100g) and choose extra lean🔸Add 1 grated carrot, a fresh tomato and extra grated zucchini🔸Start cooking with a small amount of water instead of oil🔸Use a smaller amount of Parmesan (5g) [both have tinned tomato, herbs, garlic, onion and chilli]
Healthy Pasta?⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
While pasta is not the devil, it gets a bad wrap. The portion size and what we load it up with can be an issue, it’s easy for the cals to add up! 〰️On the left:🔹 2 tsp EVOO🔹 200g chicken🔹 30g semi-trimmed bacon🔹 2 cups cooked pasta🔹 30g full fat cheddar🔹 2 large Florets Broccoli, 1 medium mushroom. ✔️Easy swaps to get the dish on the right: 🔸100g chicken (cooked in a little water instead of oil)🔸 1 cup cooked Pasta🔸 1 tsp capers🔸 10g Low Fat cheddar🔸 1/4 large capsicum, 4 large florets Broccoli, 2 medium mushrooms[Both recipes contain 100ml passata, 1Tbsp tomato paste, garlic clove, 1/4 red onion, 2 anchovies, Chilli, herbs, salt and pepper]
Healthy Swaps For Your Lasagne⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
HEALTHY SWAPS FOR YOUR LASAGNE.⠀One the left (per serve):🔹150g Standard Mince🔹2tsp oil to cook mince🔹100g cream🔹40g Cheese for white sauce and to top. On the right (per serve):🔸100g lean Mince🔸Use water to cook in fry pan (less need for Oil when you’re using so many tasty ingredients!)🔸1/2 Medium Carrot🔸1/4 large Zucchini🔸Replace 100g cream with 75g Ricotta + 25ml milk (to get right consistency)🔸12g Parmesan cheese to top. Parmesan has a sharper flavour which means you need less on top. Using Ricotta for white sauce means you can go without cheese🔹🔸[Both contain 1/4 brown onion, 1 lasagne sheet, 35g tomato paste, 1/4 tin tomatoes, chilli, thyme, oregano and parsley per serve]
I thought lasagne used ricotta to begin with? I have made really tasty garden veggie lasagne but I am sure they still weren't healthy!
Did you know that a big steak and a small carrot has more calories than a smaller steak and a bigger carrot? That's the article, in a nutshell.
Wayyyy too wordy to be clear, you actually have to read, re-read and compare the whole 2 recipes when you could just state what is different in each one.
This is the best argument for not going on a diet that I have ever seen. If you want to lose weight and gain better health in the process, then the small, smart, everyday changes are what will bring lasting results. If you choose any diet, this will mean that you radically change the way you eat until the extra weight is off - and then what? You go back to eating as you did before because you did not actually change your eating habits. You just exchanged them for something else for a limited amount of time.
She claims that the focus isn't on calorie restriction, but clearly it is. In many of these, the protein goes down a lot more than it should. Why reduce the amount of chicken in just about every recipe except to make the calorie difference more dramatic? If you reduce everything else but keep the healthy fats and proteins the same, you will (generally) eat fewer calories *without* feeling hungrier later.
These may look similar at first glance, and maybe even have the same bulk, but the caloric density is very different, meaning that while you may be able to fool your eyes, your stomach will know the difference. Yes, these seem like feasible changes at first glance, but if you go for the low calorie option, you will be hungry that much sooner. Other than that, it is just emphasizing the obvious: portion control, especially when it comes to the ingredients with a higher caloric density is the key. The thing is that, even if it is nominally the same meal, replacing 100 g of cheese or chicken with 100 g of broccoli or tomatoes will leave you feeling as if you'd eaten 100 g less of cheese or chicken, and 100 g more of broccoli or tomatoes, which will do nothing for your hunger. Sorry, that's just how biology works.
Discover of the year : if you low the quantities, you low the calories... Good damnit no one would think about that !
What pisses me off most about this post is assuming I eat +250 grams (+8oz) of meat with a meal. I measure out most of my meat and it's always within 100-150 grams. PER DAY. Yeah I eat lots more carbs than this plan suggests but it's very hard to take it seriously when they suggest I eat a large restaurant steak amount of meat for every meal. Ridiculous. And for things like broccoli servings, two florets and a bunch of leaf s**t? When I eat broccoli I eat about 300 grams of it at once. Same for carrots and cauliflower and such. Leaf veg is good but eating non leaf vegetables is fine and way more filling. Also, avocado's have fat in but you can never eat enough avocado. EVER. You'll be bored of avocado (and too full) before it makes a serious impact on your diet. There's no reason to reduce the amount of avocado you eat unless you're eating 2 fastfood meals a day. Just cut down on carbs, that's all the realistic advice you can take away from this.
TBH, most of that food looked disgusting to begin with... So yeah I'll save another 500 calories by going nowhere near it.
If anyone noticed the pattern..any diet in which you ramp up the fruits and veg, lower the carbs and protein and bake or steam over frying is going to be healthier for you. And here is the other kicker. The other step to losing weight is cook the food yourself, stop eating the highly processed c**p...especially at the fast food drive thru...
This is why the best way to lose weight is to cook the majority of your own meals - you can’t control the oil, fat content or sugar content in takeaway or even fancy restaurants. You don’t know what type of oil the food was cooked in or how much, or the sugar content of the brand of sauces they use, or whether they used lean beef mince or not. Aim to cook most of your own meals using whole ingredients like fresh fruit and vegetables, lean meats, whole grains and healthy fats like olive oil and avocado.
Hello, actual fat person here. And not "average" fat, either. I've lost 60lbs this year from lifestyle changes and I feel pretty confident when I say: this article is stupid. Cutting out protein and healthy fats are never going to help you lose weight. Fat is necessary for weight loss. EVOO is not going to make or break your diet, ffs. But the thing that irks me the most is, s/he never just suggests- "hey, just eat less of what you were already eating before!" Mind blowing, isn't it? You don't need to become a mathematician or food scientist. You don't need to do all the stupid subs and calculations and bargaining the author does. Just take the stuff on the right and cut it in half, or slightly less. Add a garden salad with light or fat free dressing (OK if you have fat from other sources), add a serving of fruit for dessert, drink some water, eat three meals a day, eat a calorie deficit every day, exercise to the best of your personal ability. Boom.
I realize this is trying to be helpful but just tell me the difference. I'm not motivated enough to get out my calculator for all of these dishes.
Reading the comments is very enlightening. It is amazing to see how resistant my fellow Americans are to eating what is universally recognized as a healthy diet. Even our own US government recommends that we all get about 3 cups of vegetables per day (https://www.choosemyplate.gov/vegetables). This is in addition to whatever fruits we eat.
This is a dispiriting article. Useful, I suppose, but so disheartening.
If you want to go even further toward healthy (and reduce your environmental impact), you could replace the animal ingredients with non-animal ingredients. Check out Gardein products for healthier versions of a number of meat ingredients, for example.
Did you know that a big steak and a small carrot has more calories than a smaller steak and a bigger carrot? That's the article, in a nutshell.
Wayyyy too wordy to be clear, you actually have to read, re-read and compare the whole 2 recipes when you could just state what is different in each one.
This is the best argument for not going on a diet that I have ever seen. If you want to lose weight and gain better health in the process, then the small, smart, everyday changes are what will bring lasting results. If you choose any diet, this will mean that you radically change the way you eat until the extra weight is off - and then what? You go back to eating as you did before because you did not actually change your eating habits. You just exchanged them for something else for a limited amount of time.
She claims that the focus isn't on calorie restriction, but clearly it is. In many of these, the protein goes down a lot more than it should. Why reduce the amount of chicken in just about every recipe except to make the calorie difference more dramatic? If you reduce everything else but keep the healthy fats and proteins the same, you will (generally) eat fewer calories *without* feeling hungrier later.
These may look similar at first glance, and maybe even have the same bulk, but the caloric density is very different, meaning that while you may be able to fool your eyes, your stomach will know the difference. Yes, these seem like feasible changes at first glance, but if you go for the low calorie option, you will be hungry that much sooner. Other than that, it is just emphasizing the obvious: portion control, especially when it comes to the ingredients with a higher caloric density is the key. The thing is that, even if it is nominally the same meal, replacing 100 g of cheese or chicken with 100 g of broccoli or tomatoes will leave you feeling as if you'd eaten 100 g less of cheese or chicken, and 100 g more of broccoli or tomatoes, which will do nothing for your hunger. Sorry, that's just how biology works.
Discover of the year : if you low the quantities, you low the calories... Good damnit no one would think about that !
What pisses me off most about this post is assuming I eat +250 grams (+8oz) of meat with a meal. I measure out most of my meat and it's always within 100-150 grams. PER DAY. Yeah I eat lots more carbs than this plan suggests but it's very hard to take it seriously when they suggest I eat a large restaurant steak amount of meat for every meal. Ridiculous. And for things like broccoli servings, two florets and a bunch of leaf s**t? When I eat broccoli I eat about 300 grams of it at once. Same for carrots and cauliflower and such. Leaf veg is good but eating non leaf vegetables is fine and way more filling. Also, avocado's have fat in but you can never eat enough avocado. EVER. You'll be bored of avocado (and too full) before it makes a serious impact on your diet. There's no reason to reduce the amount of avocado you eat unless you're eating 2 fastfood meals a day. Just cut down on carbs, that's all the realistic advice you can take away from this.
TBH, most of that food looked disgusting to begin with... So yeah I'll save another 500 calories by going nowhere near it.
If anyone noticed the pattern..any diet in which you ramp up the fruits and veg, lower the carbs and protein and bake or steam over frying is going to be healthier for you. And here is the other kicker. The other step to losing weight is cook the food yourself, stop eating the highly processed c**p...especially at the fast food drive thru...
This is why the best way to lose weight is to cook the majority of your own meals - you can’t control the oil, fat content or sugar content in takeaway or even fancy restaurants. You don’t know what type of oil the food was cooked in or how much, or the sugar content of the brand of sauces they use, or whether they used lean beef mince or not. Aim to cook most of your own meals using whole ingredients like fresh fruit and vegetables, lean meats, whole grains and healthy fats like olive oil and avocado.
Hello, actual fat person here. And not "average" fat, either. I've lost 60lbs this year from lifestyle changes and I feel pretty confident when I say: this article is stupid. Cutting out protein and healthy fats are never going to help you lose weight. Fat is necessary for weight loss. EVOO is not going to make or break your diet, ffs. But the thing that irks me the most is, s/he never just suggests- "hey, just eat less of what you were already eating before!" Mind blowing, isn't it? You don't need to become a mathematician or food scientist. You don't need to do all the stupid subs and calculations and bargaining the author does. Just take the stuff on the right and cut it in half, or slightly less. Add a garden salad with light or fat free dressing (OK if you have fat from other sources), add a serving of fruit for dessert, drink some water, eat three meals a day, eat a calorie deficit every day, exercise to the best of your personal ability. Boom.
I realize this is trying to be helpful but just tell me the difference. I'm not motivated enough to get out my calculator for all of these dishes.
Reading the comments is very enlightening. It is amazing to see how resistant my fellow Americans are to eating what is universally recognized as a healthy diet. Even our own US government recommends that we all get about 3 cups of vegetables per day (https://www.choosemyplate.gov/vegetables). This is in addition to whatever fruits we eat.
This is a dispiriting article. Useful, I suppose, but so disheartening.
If you want to go even further toward healthy (and reduce your environmental impact), you could replace the animal ingredients with non-animal ingredients. Check out Gardein products for healthier versions of a number of meat ingredients, for example.