|
Start smart
Begin lunch and dinner with a veggie-rich salad
or broth-based soup, says Pennsylvania State
University satiety expert Barbara Rolls, author
of The Volumetrics Eating Plan. “That
lets you fill up first on a big volume of
low-calorie food and ends up displacing some of
the foods you’ll eat next—the choices that are
usually higher in calories.” Here’s a good salad
recipe: Mix 11/2 cups of salad greens with 3/4
cup of raw veggies like onions, bell peppers,
carrots, broccoli, or cucumbers; drizzle with 2
tablespoons of low-cal bottled dressing.
Sneak a snack
“Ten minutes before each meal, eat some healthy
fat (around 70 calories or fewer): a handful of
nuts, a few slices of avocado, or a spoonful of
peanut butter, for example. That helps activate
ghrelin, a hormone that lets you know you’re
full,” says Michael Roizin, MD, co-author with
Mehmet Oz, MD, of You on a Diet: The Owner’s
Manual for Waist Management.
Try the 3-hour rule
“The secret to losing weight comes down
to keeping your metabolism alive and active,”
according to fitness guru Jorge Cruise, author
of The 3-Hour Diet. [ital book title] How do you
do that? By eating every 3 hours, give or take
10 to 20 minutes, he says, which translates to
three moderate meals with three snacks (100
calories each) between meals. Though other
experts say there’s nothing magic about 3-hour
intervals, eating small, frequent,
portion-controlled meals and snacks can keep
your blood sugar level steady, your energy up,
and keep you from overindulging.
Have liquid assets
“If you’re going to drink anything with
calories (i.e., fruit juice, soda, sweetened
coffee and tea, or alcohol), you need to
consciously adjust your diet to accommodate
those extra calories,” says Purdue University
nutrition researcher Richard Mattes, PhD. His
research shows that people typically make
adjustments to eat fewer calories over the
course of a day after eating a solid food like
jelly beans, but not after drinking the same
amount of calories in a glass of soda. And if
you want to replace sweetened drinks with their
calorie-free counterparts, rethink it. Some
research suggests that people who drink no- or
low-calorie drinks might actually end up eating
more, Mattes says. The best thirst quencher—and
a dieter’s best friend—is still plain old H2O.
Cut out this combo
Skip those munchies made with white
flour and sugar, like white bread, cookies, and
pretzels, says integrative medicine guru Andrew
Weil, MD. They signal the body to produce more
insulin and set the stage for turning calories
to fat, fat, and more fat.
Choose your pals
Studies show that most of us base how
much we eat on what others around us eat, says
University of Toronto psychologist Peter Herman,
PhD. So steer clear of the big eaters in your
social circle, at least when food is around.
Sashay over and make small talk at parties with
the folks who aren’t hovering near the food
table. “Marching to your own caloric drummer
requires some independent thought and
calculation,” Herman says. Get help by finding
out how much you need to eat to lose weight with
the American Cancer Society’s calorie counter at
cancer.org (search for “calories”).
Pare portions
Everything from beverages to bagels is
two to five times bigger today than in the
1970s, says New York University nutrition
professor Lisa Young, PhD, author of Portion
Teller, who has studied the servings dished
up in restaurants and by food companies. “So if
you grab a bagel or eat out, chances are you’ll
be served double what you need,” she says. Her
advice: Start leaving just a little bit on your
plate or, if you can, cut the amount you eat in
half. She also suggests that you “use your hand
as a portion guide—3 ounces of meat fits into
your palm, 1 cup of potatoes looks like a fist.”
Be an early bird
Eat the most food earlier in the day,
says Elisabetta Politi, nutrition manager at
Duke Diet and Fitness Center, Duke University’s
successful weight-management center. “Many
dieters try to trim calories from their
break-fast and lunch and then get hungry,” she
says. “Research shows the calories you eat
earlier in the day help you eat less at night”
—a good idea since you probably won’t be active
after an evening meal.
Step it up
“Get a pedometer and start walking,”
says University of Colorado obesity expert James
Hill, author of The Step Diet. To keep
the weight off forever, the goal is to take
11,000 to 12,000 steps (around 90 minutes) a
day. “You don’t need to do it all at once,” Hill
explains. Start with 2,000 steps a day, or about
15 minutes of walking. Add another 5 minutes
(500 steps) each week. You can find supercheap
pedometers at drugstores and big-box retailers
to help you keep count. There are lots of other
sneaky little ways to add more steps to your
day, too: Use a cordless phone and walk while
you talk, or get up and walk during TV
commercials.
Think thin
“Seeing is believing,” says Janice
Taylor, weight-loss coach and author of Our
Lady of Weight Loss (ourladyofweightloss.com).
“You have to picture yourself thin if you want
to become thin.” Visualize what you’re wearing,
where you are, who you are with, and how you
feel. “The more vivid the picture, the more real
it will feel to you,” Taylor says, “and the more
likely it will take form.”
Shula Lazarus, PhD, a psychotherapist at the
North Carolina–based weight-management program
Structure House, agrees, though the method isn’t
clinically proven. “We use it to help dieters
visualize a healthy eating pattern and the right
portions on their plate. It can’t hurt, and it
might help.”
Fill up on fiber
Crowd out calorie-dense foods by
ratcheting up on fruits and veggies. “Start by
eating one more serving of fruit and one more
vegetable a day,” says Donald Hensrud, MD, a
Mayo Clinic nutrition specialist. Hitting that
midafternoon slump? Reach for carrots—the carbs
will give you a lift. Not only does munching on
nature’s bounty become a good habit, but it’ll
also help you tap into dozens of
disease-fighting phytochemicals and vitamins.
The biggest fiber bulker-upper: beans. Just a
cup of black beans nets you nearly 15 grams of
filling fiber.
Brush your teeth
Sometimes the best advice comes from
your best friend or, in this case, a fellow
Health reader. Barbara Haug of Grosse
Pointe Park, Michigan, says she brushes her
teeth right after dinner instead of at bedtime.
“I can be a compulsive snacker in the evening,”
she says, “but I don’t like messing up freshly
brushed teeth.”
|