ShoppingLifestyle.com
Sign in/ Register Follow us:      
Dating Recipes Games Tools RSS Newsletters Scoop of the Day
Health & Wellness



How To Snack The Healthy Way

7 tips from the Eat-Clean Diet author.
Elizabeth Hurchalla
Here's the good news: Snacking isn't inherently unhealthy, and you don't have to stop snacking altogether. In fact, if you snack on the right foods and follow a few simple guidelines, munching between meals not only helps you stay on your diet, but it may help you maintain or even lose weight too.

The problem, of course, is that for many people, a snack means, well, "snack foods" -- chips, biscuits, cakes, chocolate and other processed, high-calorie goodies. Snacking also becomes a weighty problem when you choose foods with little or no nutritional value, because they don't fill you up, meaning you're more likely to eat -- and overeat -- between meals and at mealtimes, says Tosca Reno, wellness consultant and author of the bestselling Eat-Clean Diet series.

Check out these tricks to stop snacking on all the wrong stuff and start making smarter, healthier choices.

1. Sit down with a plate
It's common to graze when you prepare meals or even walk through the kitchen. From now on, promise yourself that you'll put every morsel on a plate and sit down before eating it. By making this simple commitment, "it puts you into the mindset that mealtimes are an event and that food is something to be tasted, savored and enjoyed. You become more mindful about what you're putting in your mouth and when you feel full," Reno says.

2. Make snacking unsavory
When a craving strikes, temporarily trick your taste buds by brushing and flossing your teeth. Nothing tastes good when your mouth is fresh and minty. Likewise, scented body lotion may turn you off of the idea of eating for the time being.

3. Never skip meals
According to a survey by the Canadian Council of Food and Nutrition, which produces the Tracking Nutrition Trends, about four in 10 people skip either breakfast or lunch. But skipping meals is a mistake: It makes you ravenous, especially for high-fat, high-sugar snacks. "When you skip meals, your blood-sugar levels become unstable, which causes your energy to dip and your mood to plummet. It also causes your metabolism to slow down, making weight loss more difficult," says Reno.

4. Choose substantial snacks
Having a snack can stop you from getting too hungry and overindulging at mealtimes. But it only works if you eat both lean protein and complex carbohydrates in the right portions, says Reno. The secret: Pairing foods that contain fibre-rich carbs with high-protein picks. The duo keeps blood sugar levels steady and you feeling full. Try a pear with low-fat cheese, an apple with peanut butter, yogurt with low-fat granola or whole-wheat pita bread with hummus. Whatever you eat, aim to get about 100 to 250 calories.

Like This?
Share it with your friend!
Share |
Subscribe our newsletter. It's FREE!
 
Name
Email (won't be published)
250 characters
PAGE: 1 of 2
page  1  2



advertisement






Best viewed with 1024 x 768 resolution.
Copyright © 2012 ShoppingLifestyle Pte Ltd All rights reserved.
Sitemap

All content appearing on ShoppingLifestyle.com including but not limited to photographs and text, is protected by copyright.
No material may be copied or reproduced without written permission from the copyright holder.
US
Health & Wellness