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Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts

Do You Still Eat More Even When Your Stomach Is Full And Your Pants Are Tight?

March 20, 2012 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

 

Have you ever had a day when it seems like all you do is eat and eat and eat some more?  You eat everything – a bagel for breakfast, a donut for a midmorning snack, and at lunch with  friends or coworkers and before you know it the breadbasket is empty.  You might follow it up by some coffee and a snack in the afternoon.  Maybe it’s a workday and you amble down to the hall to the vending machine or the snack room only to find that it’s someone’s birthday so there’s that delicious birthday cake sitting in the middle of the table.  A little nibble of some cheese around six.  Uh oh.  Dinner plans that night – how can you eat even more?

There Always Seems To Be Room

You get to the restaurant.  It’s gotten a great review and you’re with good company, too.  How can you not go for it?  The food is supposed to be phenomenal.  You’re not hungry, but you eat and eat.  Appetizer, bread, salad, entrée. Stuffed and double stuffed.  Then it’s time for dessert and it sounds so appealing. The chocolate lava cake or the key lime pie is what this restaurant is known for. You really feel like you can’t stuff in another morsel, but guess what – you order one of the spectacular choices and eat it – every last fork full including the crumbs.

Why Do You Continue To Eat?

The signal to stop eating is usually not because your stomach is full (except in some extreme cases).  According to Brian Wansink, PhD, author of the book, Mindless Eating,  a combination of things like how much you taste, chew, swallow, how much you think about the food you are eating, and how long you’ve been eating all come into play.

Incredibly, the faster most people eat, the more they eat. Eating quickly doesn’t give your brain the chance to get the message that you’re not hungry any more.  Research shows that it takes up to 20 minutes for your body and brain to both get the message — the satiation signal — and realize that you’re full.  Think how much more you can eat in that time span of 20 minutes – a burger, fries, pie, pizza, ice cream – even though your stomach is really full but your brain may not yet have gotten the message.

Twenty Minutes Or Less 

Research has shown that Americans start and finish their meals — and clear the table — in less than 20 minutes.  A study published in the journal Appetite found that people eating lunch by themselves in a fast food restaurant finish in 11 minutes. It takes  13 minutes to finish in a workplace cafeteria and 28 minutes at a moderately priced restaurant.  Eating with three other people takes about twice as long – which can still end up being a really short chunk of time.

Some Strategies

  • Slow down when you eat.  Give your brain a chance to catch up.  How many times have you devoured what you’ve made or bought for lunch in almost no time flat — and then, almost immediately, decided that you’re still hungry?  Twenty minutes to half an hour after you’ve ended up eating a whole bunch more — even though your stomach is probably full —  your belly feels like it’s going to explode and you can’t, in good conscience — unbutton any more buttons on your pants.  You realize that you should have stopped before the seconds.
  • Eat more slowly, chew more thoroughly, pace your whole eating pattern to a slower beat.  Give your brain a chance to synch its signals with the messages generated by putting food in your stomach.
  • Try getting up from the table and doing something else – and promise yourself if you’re still hungry in 20 minutes you can have more.  If you’re in a restaurant, it’s the perfect time to excuse yourself and go to the rest room or claim that you have to make a call.

In most cases, after the 20 or so minutes, your belly and brain are both happy and in synch and you won’t want more to eat. What you save:  excess calories and an uncomfortably expanding stomach.

 

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Manage Your Weight Tagged With: calorie tips, eating, eating strategies, food facts, food for fun and thought, full stomach, satiation signal, weight management strategies

Calories: Hate Them Or Love Them, But What Are They?

March 15, 2012 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

What’s A Calorie?

Technically, a (small) calorie is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) at one atmosphere of pressure.  (Aren’t you happy you now know that?)  Food or dietary Calories are actually kilocalories (1,000 calories = 1 kilocalorie and raise the temperature of one kilogram of water one degree Celsius).  It gets kind of confusing because food labels and diet plans often use the words “calorie” and “Calorie” interchangeably.  Calorie with a capital C means kilocalories (sometimes you see kcal for kilocalories on the nutrition label).  Those are the kind that are used in reference to food, but they’re often improperly written with a lower case “c.”

What’s The Point Of Measuring Calories?

We get the energy we need to survive from food — which powers us like gasoline does for a car.  Food is made up of different nutritional components, or building blocks, each with a different amount of energy. The components,  called macronutrients, are carbohydrates, protein, and fat.  A gram of carbohydrate contains 4 Calories, a gram of protein has 4 Calories, and a gram of fat has 9 Calories. (FYI, alcohol has 7 Calories per gram.)  So if you know how much fat, protein, and carbs  are in a food, you can figure out how many Calories, or how much energy, is in it.

How Many Calories Are In A Pound?

There are 3500 Calories in a pound.  If you take in 3,500 Calories beyond what your body needs for energy, your body stores it as a pound of fat – its way of saving energy for the next theoretical famine waiting in the wings. Your body needs a certain number of Calories to sustain itself  – for the energy necessary for metabolism and physical activity.  If your body uses  up 3,500 calories more than you take in and use, you lose a pound.

Energy In And Energy Out

To keep in your body in balance and not lose or gain any weight, the magic formula is: energy in = energy out. If you take in (eat) the same number of calories that you burn (through activity and physiological processes) you maintain your weight.  If you eat more than you burn you gain weight, if you eat less than you burn, you lose weight.

Does The Type Of Calorie Make Any Difference?

The short answer is NO.  When Calories are used as an energy source, it doesn’t matter whether they come from carbs, protein, fat, or alcohol.  When you eat them they are converted to energy. If they’re in excess of what your body needs for energy, the extra calories are stored as fat.

If you understand your body’s energy needs,  you can figure out what kind of food you need to eat. How many calories your body needs is mostly determined by your height, age, weight, and gender (the main components of your basal metabolic rate) and your level of activity. Any physical activity burns calories.  The average person (155 pounds) burns about 100 to 105 calories for every 2000 steps s/he takes.

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Food for Fun and Thought, Manage Your Weight Tagged With: basal metabolic rate, calorie, calorie tips, food facts, food for fun and thought, healthy eating, level of activity, weight management strategies

Should You Eat Blue Food?

March 13, 2012 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

I remember when my oldest son absolutely insisted he would only eat blue food.  His primary motivation was the blue ice cream – I don’t even recall the flavor or the name – that was Baskin Robbin’s new special fantastic flavor.  I do remember that it left my son’s mouth an incredible shade of turquoise.

Fortunately the blue food phase didn’t last very long – in part because finding true blue food is not an easy task, some say impossible — and because Mom didn’t give in.  Blue M&Ms and blue ice cream didn’t count, and still don’t, as true blue healthy food.

Why Should You Care About Blue?

Three plus centuries BC, Hippocrates, the Greek physician and a proponent of a plant-based diet said, “Let food be your medicine and medicine be your food.” Predating Hippocrates, traditional Asian diets were plant based and the belief was that they played a significant role in disease prevention — wisdom now supported by modern research.

The vibrant colors of plants give us clues about their healthy components.  More color probably means more of the good stuff.  But why are vibrantly colored foods so healthy? The answer lies in the phytochemicals which are manufactured by the plants to protect themselves from animal or insect damage, photosynthesis, and radiation.

The phytochemicals we eat give us the same protection that they give plants. Phytochemicals aren’t technically classified as nutrients but they are associated with disease prevention and treatment. You know if a plant food is rich in phytochemicals because it’s vibrantly colored.

Those vibrant blue, purple and red foods are filled with anthocyanins, which are water-soluble phytochemicals, that typically have a red to blue color. Anthocyanins, the pigments that make blueberries blue, act as powerful antioxidants which help neutralize harmful byproducts called “free radicals” that can be the precursors of cancer and some age-related diseases.

In your body, the antioxidant process is similar to what stops an apple from browning. Once you cut an apple, it begins to brown, but if you squirt it with lemon or dip it in orange juice, both of which contain vitamin C, it stays white.

Is There Really Blue Food?

Good question. True blue food is rare in nature, some say non-existent.  But, wait a minute – what about blueberries, blue potatoes, blue lobster, blue corn, blue crab and that rare blue mushroom along with some other exotic foods?

There’s some thought that because blue doesn’t exist in significant quantity as a natural food color, we haven’t developed an automatic appetite response to blue food.  The primal nature of humans is to avoid food that is poisonous. Multiple millenia ago — when our ancestors foraged for food —  blue, purple and black were “color warning signs” for food that was potentially lethal.

Some believe that the foods we consider to be blue are actually purple – even though they may appear to be blue.  As for blue cheese – well the blue veining is indeed blue, but it doesn’t seem to count because the blue veins are not naturally occurring.  And, since blue lobster and crab turn red when they’re cooked – are they really blue foods?

It is an argument that could make for great dinner table conversation or excellent trivia questions.  The thing to remember is that food that is in the range of blue or purple or red is filled with those marvelous phytochemicals that are great for you.

Blueberry:  The Classic Blue All Star

The blueberry is a native American species. When the Pilgrims settled in Plymouth in the winter of 1620, their neighbors, the Wampanoag Indians, taught them survival skills: planting corn and using native plants, like blueberries, to supplement their food supply. The colonists learned to gather berries, dry them in the sun, and store them for winter. Blueberries eventually became a really important food that was preserved and canned.  A beverage made from blueberries was a staple for Civil War Soldiers.

Blueberries, both fresh and frozen, especially the tiny wild blueberries, are truly all stars.  One cup has about 80 calories and virtually no fat. They rank first in antioxidant activity when compared to forty other common fruits and vegetables. Concord grape juice ranks second with about two thirds of blueberries’ antioxidant activity followed by strawberries, kale, and spinach.

I frequently see “true-blue” blueberries  during the summer blueberry season. I suspect that true-blue blueberry growers refer to their blueberries as blue not purple. But whether blue foods are blue only in the eye of the beholder and technically purple to the color purists and food scientists, reaching for whole and natural foods that come from that gorgeous end of the blue/purple/red color spectrum is one giant component (among many) of a healthy diet.

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: anthocyanins, antioxidants, blue food, blueberries, calorie tips, eat out eat well, food facts, healthy eating, phytochemicals, vibrantly colored food

Where’s The Sugar Hiding?

March 8, 2012 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN Leave a Comment

Sugar is sweet but it’s also sneaky, masquerading under many different names. Read one of those jam labels that says, “All Fruit” or “Spreadable Fruit” on the front.  Then turn the jar over and read ingredients. Most likely you’ll find juice concentrates (often as the first ingredient) and maltodextrin — both forms of sugar.

How Good Is Your Sugar Vocabulary?

According to Environmental Nutrition foods with all of the following names are sugars (these are common sources, there are other sugars that aren’t listed here):

  • Dextrose
  • Corn syrup
  • High fructose corn syrup
  • Maltodextrin
  • Fruit juice concentrates
  • Malt syrup
  • Molasses
  • Invert sugar
  • Honey
  • Sorghum
  • Agave
  • Maple syrup
  • Cane sugar

Added Vs. Natural Sugars

The sugars that you eat can occur naturally or be added. Natural sugars are found naturally in the food — like fructose in fruit and lactose in milk.  Added sugars are the many kinds of sugar and syrup – including sweeteners like honey, agave, and maple syrup, for example — that are added into food at the table or during the food’s preparation or processing.

Common Sources Of Added Sugars

Some sources are obvious – others require a bit of checking of the ingredients label.  Here are some examples of foods that usually have added sugar:

  • Regular soft drinks
  • Sugar; syrups (do you put maple syrup on your pancakes?); and candy
  • Cakes; cookies; pies; donuts; pastries; breakfast and snack bars
  • Fruit drinks like fruitades and fruit punch; sweetened teas, sports drinks, and flavored water
  • Dairy desserts and milk products like ice cream; sweetened yogurt; pudding; and flavored milk
  • Many cereals; toast with jelly/jam; and many breads — both home made “quick breads” and store-bought sliced breads
  • Sweeteners added to coffee, tea, cereal; canned fruit

Not More Than Half Of Your Discretionary Calorie Allowance

What’s daily discretionary calorie allowance?  It’s the number of calories you have left to use after you meet your nutrient needs — without exceeding your energy needs.

In other words, they are the calories that you can use up eating different types of foods after you’ve eaten enough to meet your body’s nutrition needs — but not so many that they would contribute to weight gain.

Discretionary calories can come from any source of calories (protein, fat, carbohydrates, alcohol).  The American Heart Association recommends that no more than half of your daily discretionary calories come from added sugars.

For most American women that’s no more than 100 calories a day, or about 6 teaspoons of sugar.  For men, that’s no more than 150 calories a day, or about 9 teaspoons of sugar.  (FYI there are about 10 teaspoons of sugar in a 12 ounce can of regular soda.)

 

Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Manage Your Weight, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: added sugar, discretionary calories, food facts, healthy eating, names for sugar, natural sugar, sugar

What Do Total Carbohydrate And Added Sugar On The Nutrition Label Mean?

March 1, 2012 By Penny Klatell, PhD, RN 4 Comments

Trying to figure out the carbohydrates on nutrition facts labels can be downright confusing.  There’s a number for total carbohydrates but then there are subheadings for dietary fiber, sugars, and sometimes insoluble fiber, sugar alcohols, and other carbohydrates.

What Does Everything Mean?

  • Total Carbohydrate, shown in grams, is first. It gives you the total number of usable carbs per serving. This number includes starches, complex carbohydrates, dietary fiber, added sugars, and non-digestible additives.
  • The subheadings under Total Carbohydrate are Dietary Fiber, sometimes broken down into Soluble and Insoluble Fiber; Sugars; and sometimes categories for Sugar Alcohols and/or Other Sugars. The sum of these numbers will not always equal the total carbs because some starches — types of carbs often used as binders or thickeners — aren’t required to be listed on food labels.
  • Dietary Fiber, shown in grams, gives you the amount of fiber per serving. Dietary fiber is indigestible, usually passes through your intestinal tract without being absorbed, doesn’t raise your blood sugar levels, and slows down the impact of the other carbs in a meal. Subtracting the non-impact carbs – the ones that don’t affect blood sugar (fiber and sugar alcohols) from the total carbs gives you the number of net (also called usable or impact) carbs – the ones that do affect your blood sugar.
  • Sugars gives you the total amount of carbohydrate, in grams, from naturally occurring sugars like lactose (milk sugar) and fructose (fruit sugar) PLUS any added sugars like high fructose corn syrup, brown and white sugar, cane juice, etc. Added sugars are the sugars and syrups added to foods during processing or preparation.  They add calories but little or no nutrients.
  • You can determine if there are a lot of added sugars by checking the product’s ingredients label. Ingredients are listed in order of quantity so if added sugars (white/brown sugar, corn syrup, etc.) are listed in the top three or four ingredients you can guess that the bulk of the sugars are added, not naturally occurring.
  • Some products, although not all, separately list Sugar Alcohols. You might see mannitol, sorbitol, xylitol, erythritol, and others on the ingredients label. If the package says the product is “sugar-free” or has “no sugar added” it must list the sugar alcohols in the ingredients. If more than one type of sugar alcohol is listed, there must be a line for sugar alcohol grams on the nutrition label.
  • Other Carbohydrates shows the number of digestible complex carbohydrates not considered a sugar (natural or added) and includes additives like stabilizers and starchy thickening agents.

Now, isn’t that crystal clear?


Filed Under: Calorie Tips, Healthy Eating, Food Facts, Shopping, Cooking, Baking Tagged With: added sugar, carbohydrates, food facts, healthy eating, net carbs, nutrition label, sugar, total sugars

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