- Before you grab some tasty morsel, ask yourself if you really want it. Are you hungry? Is it worth the calories? Odds are, the tempting display of food in front of you is visually seductive – and may smell great, too — but you’re reaching out to eat what’s in front of you for reasons not dictated by your stomach but by your eyes.
- Do you really need to stand in front of the picnic table, kitchen table, or barbecue? The further away from the food you are the less likely you are to eat it. Don’t sit or stand where you can see the food that’s calling your name. Keep your back to it if you can’t keep distant. There’s just so much control you can exercise before “see it = eat it.”
- Don’t show up absolutely starving. How can you resist all the tempting food when your blood sugar is in the basement and your stomach is singing a chorus?
- If you know that the barbecued ribs, the blueberry pie, or your cousin’s potato salad is your downfall, acknowledge that you’re going to have it or steer clear. For most of us, swearing that you’ll only take a taste is a promise that is doomed to fail and you end up with second or third helpings heaped on your plate.
- If you’re asked to bring something to a party, picnic, or barbecue, bring food you can eat with abandon – fruit, salad with dressing on the side, maybe berries and angel food cake for dessert (there’s no fat in angel food cake and moderate calories). Bring something that’s a treat but not over the top. That way you know you’ll always have some “go to” food.
- Really eyeball the food choices so you know what’s available. Then make a calculated decision about what you‘re going to eat. Taking some of everything means that you’ll eat some of everything. Is that what you want to do?
- Take the food you’ve decided to eat, sit down, enjoy it without guilt, and be done with it. No going back for seconds.
- If you’re full, stop eating and clear your plate right away. If it hangs around in front of you, you’ll keep picking at it until there’s nothing left. An exception – a study has found that looking at the “carnage” – the leftover bones from barbecued ribs or even the number of empty beer bottles – serves as a visual reminder of how much you’ve already had to eat or drink.
- Give yourself permission to eat – and enjoy — the special dessert or a burger or ribs. If you don’t, you’ll probably be miserable. Then when you get home you end up gobbling down everything in sight because you made yourself miserable by not eating the stuff that you wanted in the first place! But no seconds and no first portions that are the equivalent of firsts, seconds and thirds built into one.
- If hanging around the food gets to be too much, go for a walk, a swim, or engage someone in an animated conversation. It’s pretty hard to shove food in your mouth when you’re busy talking.
Entertaining, Buffets, Parties, Events
Nine Easy Calorie Saving Tips
Are you worried about gaining weight over vacation or from eating too much at the weddings and parties you’re planning to attend?
Have a plan — It could be your saving grace. Think about how you want to handle yourself in the face of family picnics, barbecues, fresh strawberry shortcake, and ice cream cones with sprinkles.
Your plan doesn’t have to be engraved in stone but if you have an idea about how and when you’re going to eat you’ll be far less likely to nibble and nosh all day and night. You’re in charge of what goes into your mouth.
1. Make simple swaps in the food you prepare and the food you choose at parties, picnics, and restaurants. Reduce the amount of fat and calories by doing things like using skim milk instead of whole milk, applesauce in place of oil, or two-thirds or one-half of the sugar called for in a recipe. Look online for plenty of tips about swaps and substitutions. Make a horse trade or a deal with yourself that might have you avoiding the breadbasket or a pre-dinner drink if you’re going to have dessert or an ice cream cone instead of a muffin.
2. Beware of food landmines. It’s so easy to be fooled by fatty sauces and dressings on innocent looking vegetables. Vegetables are great. Veggies smothered with butter, cheese, croutons, and/or bacon are loaded with calories. Liquid calories really add up, too, and they don’t fill you up. Plan ahead of time about how many drinks you’ll have – and adjust your menu choices accordingly.
3. Let this be your mantra: no seconds. Choose your food, fill your plate, and that’s it. Keep a running account in your head of how many hors d’ oeuvre you’ve eaten or how many cookies. Keep away from food spreads at home, the beach, or at the hotel’s breakfast buffet to help limit nibbling, noshing, and replenishing.
4. Stop eating when before you’re full. If you keep eating until your stomach finally feels full you’ll likely end up feeling stuffed when you do stop eating. It takes a little time (around 20 minutes) for your brain to catch up and realize your stomach is full. A lot of eating is done with your eyes and your eyes love to tell you to try this and to try that.
5. Use a fork and knife instead of your fingers, a teaspoon rather that a tablespoon. Chopsticks slow you down even more. Chew your food instead of wolfing it down. If you have to work at eating your food – cutting with a knife for instance – you’ll eat more mindfully than if you pick food up with your fingers and pop it into your mouth. Before you eat drink some water, a no- or low-calorie beverage, or some clear soup. The liquids fill up your stomach and leave less room for the high calorie stuff. If you know you’re going to eat treats, pick one portion controlled treat to eat each day. Pick it ahead of time and commit to your choice so you don’t find yourself wavering in the face of temptation.
6. Plan ahead, commit to your plan, and don’t go to a party or event feeling ravenous. Before you go eat a small healthy snack that‘s around 150 calories with some protein and fiber: fat free yogurt and fruit, a portion controlled serving of nuts, a small piece of cheese and fruit, or a spoonful of peanut butter with a couple of whole grain crackers. Have a no-cal or low-cal drink like water, tea, or coffee, too. When you get to the party or dinner you won’t be as likely to attack the hors d’oeuvres or the breadbasket.
7. Choose your food wisely. If you can, pick lean proteins like fish, poultry, and the least fatty cuts of pork, beef, and lamb that are grilled or broiled, not fried or sautéed. Consider beans or eggs as your protein source. Load up on vegetables – preferably ones that are not smothered in cheese or dripping with oil. Eat your turkey without the skin. You can save around 200 calories at dessert by leaving the piecrust sitting on the plate. The same thing is true for ice cream toppings like hot fudge sauce and whipped cream.
8. Leave the breadbasket at the other end of the table. If you absolutely must have bread, go easy or without butter or oil. One teeny pat of butter has 36 calories, a tablespoon has 102 and 99% of them is from fat. A tablespoon of oil has about 120 calories. Would you rather have the oil or butter or a cookie for dessert or another glass of wine? Which calories will be more satisfying?
9. Keep the number of drinks under control and watch the mixers. Certain drinks are much higher in calories than others. There’s a couple of hundred calories difference between a glass of wine or beer and a good-sized margarita. Calorie free drinks would be better yet – even if you alternate you’re your alcoholic beverages you still cut your alcohol calories in half. Calories from alcohol do not fill you up.
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How Many Calories Are In Your Favorite Summer Drink?
It’s summer. It’s hot. You’re thirsty. You want some shade and something cool – or maybe ice cold – to drink.
Check Out The Calories
A lot of those cool, refreshing drinks come with a hefty dose of calories. You might be surprised at the number of calories in a drink you’ve been having for years.
Do a little research, figure out your best choice, and then make that your drink of choice. Can you be satisfied with a bottle of beer that has around 100 calories rather than another brand that has around 300 – or water with a hint of flavor instead of a sports drink?
Water and Sports Drinks
- Gatorade: 12 oz, 80 calories
- SoBe Lifewater: 20 oz, 90 calories
- Glaceau Smart Water: 33.8 oz, 0 calories
- Vitamin Water: 20 oz, 125 calories
- Vitamin Water 10: 20 oz, 25 calories
- Perrier Citron Lemon Lime (22 oz bottle): 0 calories
- Vitamin Water Focus Kiwi-Strawberry (20 oz bottle): 125 calories, 32.5g sugars
- Hint Blackberry (16 oz bottle): 0 calories
- Gatorade G Orange (12 oz bottle): 80 calories, 21g sugars
- Water (as much as you want): 0 calories
Iced Coffee and Tea Drinks
- Dunkin’ Donuts Vanilla Bean Coolatta: 16 oz, 430 calories
- Dunkin’ Donuts Sweet Tea: 16 oz, 120 calories
- Starbuck’s Coffee Frappuccino: 16 0z (grande), 240 calories
- Starbuck’s Coffee Frappuccino, light: 16 oz grande), 110 calories
- Tazo Unsweetened Shaken Iced Passion Tea: 0 calories
- Iced Brewed Coffee with classic syrup: 12 oz (tall), 60 calories
Soda and Non-Carbonated Drinks
- Mountain Dew: one 20 oz bottle, 290 calories
- Coke Classic: one 20 oz bottle, 233 calories
- Diet coke: one 20 oz bottle, 0 calories
- Snapple Orangeade (16 oz): 200 calories, 52g sugar
- San Pelligrino Limonata (11.15 fl oz can): 141 calories, 32g sugars
- Can of Coke (12 oz): 140 calories, 39g sugars
- Bottle of 7Up (12 oz): 150 calories, 38g sugars
- Root beer float (large, 32 oz): 640 calories, 10g fat
Beer (12 oz bottle)
- Sierra Nevada Bigfoot Ale: 330 calories
- Samuel Adams Boston Lager: 180 calories
- Guinness Extra Stout: 176 calories
- Pete’s Wicked Ale: 174 calories
- Harpoon IPA: 170 calories
- Heineken: 166 calories
- Killian’s Irish Red: 163 calories
- Long Trail: 163 calories
- Molson Ice: 160 calories
- Samuel Adams Brown Ale: 160 calories
- Budweiser: 144 calories
- Corona Light: 105 calories
- Coors Light: 102 calories
- Heineken Light: 99 calories
- Budweiser Select: 99 calories
- Miller Light: 96 calories
- Amstel Light: 95 calories
- Anheuser Busch Natural Light: 95 calories
- Michelob Ultra: 95 calories
- Miller MGD 64: 64 calories
- Beck’s Premier Light: 64 calories
Wine
- Red Wine: 5 oz, 129 calories
- White Wine: 5 oz, 120 calories
- Sangria: 8 oz, 176 calories
Alcoholic Drinks
- Mojito: 7 oz, 172 calories
- Frozen Magarita: 4 oz, 180 calories (the average margarita glass holds 12 oz, 540 calories)
- Mimosa: 137 calories
- Gin and Tonic: 175 calories
Brunch: Is It Lunch Or Breakfast – And Do you End Up Eating Both?
Do you have trouble keeping the calories in check at a brunch or a buffet? It’s pretty darn hard with all of that tempting food staring you in the face. It’s even harder when there’s both tempting food and you’re with lots of friends having a good time — a classic recipe for mindless (over)eating.
A sit down brunch is a little easier to control than a buffet. At least you’re ordering something specific and not subjected to the myriad of delectable choices at a buffet.
You still have to deal with overflowing bread and pastry baskets and multiple mimosas or bloody marys – but the best bet is to make a deal with yourself ahead of time about how many drinks and how many baked goods you will allow yourself to have. Ahead of time is key – staring at freshly baked muffins while you decide what not to eat makes a reasoned decision pretty difficult!
Here’s Some Tips For Handling A Buffet/Brunch:
- Choose a seat that puts your back to the buffet table or kitchen spread and preferably some distance away. How long can you sit and stare at those sticky buns without wanting one? Not having them in your line of sight helps to keep your mind out of the “I’ve got to have it” mode.
- Distance helps, too. Having to get up and walk past lots of people, many of whom you know, with a plate filled to the brim can serve as a “seconds” and “thirds” deterrent.
- Before putting any food on your plate, just cruise the buffet eyeballing all of the choices and decide what you’ll have before you start filling your plate. Make trade-offs: a sticky-bun and coffee instead of a couple of drinks and a second slice of toast . . .
- What’s going to energize you and what are you going to eat the rest of the day? If you think you can eat at 11AM and have no food until the next day, bad decision. By late afternoon you’ll probably be so hungry that you’ll head for pizza or a cheeseburger while promising yourself you’ll get back on track the next day.
- Have a good meal that will fill you up, keep your blood sugar at a nice level, and tastes good so you don’t feel deprived. What does that mean? Some protein and some complex carbs. Easy on the fat and simple carbs.
- Put your food on a smaller rather than larger plate (look for the smaller plates near the salad/fruit section) and you’ll fill up your plate and your stomach with fewer calories.
- If you decide you really will feel totally deprived if you don’t indulge in one of those delicious baked goods, try to choose one without loads of thick buttery crumbs on top, cut it in half and be satisfied with that amount. Put it on a separate small plate that you can easily push away from you. Keeping it on your main plate means you’ll be nibbling at it the entire time.
- Enforce the no seconds rule: take what you want the first time, eat it and enjoy it, and stay away from reloads.
- If you indulge, don’t beat yourself up – keep the 80/20 rule in mind. Eat well 80% of the time and 20% of the time allow for some indulgences. Total deprivation never works and leaves you vulnerable to a major “raid the fridge” or “hit the bakery” attack. Instead, plan ahead, know you’re going to indulge, choose carefully, and enjoy your choices – without going overboard.
How Many Calories Do You Drink?
Did you know that because alcohol doesn’t register as “food” in your GI tract or your brain, it doesn’t fill you up the way food does?
But alcohol does have calories — 7 calories a gram – more than carbs and protein which clock in at 4 calories a gram (fat has 9).
So, because you don’t feel as though you’re putting calories into your body, you can drink a lot and still not feel stuffed (perhaps drunk, but not stuffed).
What’s A Standard Drink?
A standard drink is 1.5 ounces of hard liquor, 5 ounces of wine, or 12 ounces of beer.
- 12 ounces of beer has 153 calories and 13.9 grams of alcohol
- 12 ounces of lite beer has 103 calories and 11 grams of alcohol
- 5 ounces red wine has 125 calories and 15.6 grams of alcohol
- 5 ounces of white wine has 121 calories and 15.1 grams of alcohol
- 1 1/2 ounces (a jigger) of 80 proof (40% alcohol) liquor has 97 calories and 14 grams of alcohol
Alcohol And Mixers
An average shot (1.5 oz) of 80-proof alcohol has around 96 calories; the higher the alcoholic content (proof), the greater the number of calories.
- 80-proof vodka (40% alcohol; the most common type) has 64 calories per 1oz
- 86-proof vodka (43% alcohol) has 70 calories/1 oz
- 90-proof vodka (45% alcohol) has 73 calories/1 oz
- 100-proof vodka (50% alcohol) has 82 calories/1 oz
When you start adding mixers, the calories can more than double; a mixed drink runs around 250 calories.
- club soda has no calories
- 8 oz of orange juice has 112 calories
- 8 oz of tonic has 83 calories
- 8 oz of ginger ale has 83 calories
- 8 oz of tomato juice has 41 calories
- 8 oz of classic coke has 96 calories
- 8 oz of cranberry juice has 128 calories
Mixed drinks and fancy drinks can significantly increase the calorie count.
- A frozen margarita has about 45 calories an ounce
- A plain martini, no olives or lemon twist, has about 61 calories an ounce
- Sangria has about 19 calories an ounce
- One Irish coffee has 218 calories
- Jumbo and super-sized drinks with double shots and extra mixers could add up to 1,000 calories or more (a single giant glass of TGI Friday’s frozen mudslide has around 1,100 calories)
- And, if you finish with coffee: one cup with cream and sugar runs at least 50 calories (more if it’s sweet and light)
What’s In Your Wine Glass?
Most standard servings of wine have 125-150 calories, but the calories can double depending on the size of the glass and how far it’s filled up. Sweet and dessert wines are more caloric than table wine and champagne.
Calories in one ounce of various wines:
- Champagne: 19 calories
- Red table wine (burgundy, cabernet): 25 calories
- Dry white wine (Chablis, hock, reisling): 24 calories
- Sweet white wine (moselle, sauterne, zinfandel: 28 calories
- Rose: 20 calories
- Port (about 20% alcohol): 46 calories
- Sweet dessert wine: 47 calories