21 Ways to Make Your Diet 100% Easier

from Fitness magazine

By Hallie Levine
Small tweaks to your diet can make a huge difference -- and these 21 painless fixes will make weight loss even easier.


Diet Drinks, Scheduled Eating

We're with you: Dieting is no picnic. But here's a little secret -- it's not nearly as hard as most of us think. "A lot of women believe they need to change everything, but in reality small tweaks to your diet can make a huge difference," says Dawn Jackson Blatner, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association. We've got 21 absolutely painless little fixes, culled from the latest research and the country's leading weight-loss experts, to make dropping those pounds as easy as 1, 2, 3, and beyond.

1. Say So Long to Soda
Every diet soft drink consumed each day could increase your risk of being overweight by 65 percent, according to a study presented at the American Dietetic Association. Other research suggests that artificial sweeteners may actually stimulate appetite, causing you to overeat. Instead, sip plain or sparkling water with lemon added for flavor.

2. Eat Like Clockwork
Women who eat erratically consume more calories and burn them less quickly than those who have six regular small meals each day, according to a British study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Don't go more than three or four hours without eating something.

3. Become a Tea-Totaler
Green tea not only has about half the caffeine of coffee but also contains catechins, which may boost your metabolism. A recent Japanese study found that people who drank a daily 11-ounce bottle of green tea lost 5.3 pounds after three months, while those who drank regular tea lost only 2.9 pounds. If you find green tea too bitter, consider one of the new green teas flavored with fruit essences. Most have no calories and just the right kiss of sweetness, says Blatner.

Diet Plans, Supermarket Know-How

4. Dust Off the Grapefruit Diet
Eating three servings of grapefruit a day (either half of a whole one or a cup of juice) for 12 weeks could help you lose just over three pounds, according to a recent study. "It helped lower insulin levels, which can contribute to weight loss by reducing appetite and encouraging fat burning," explains study author Ken Fujioka, MD, director of nutrition and metabolic research at Scripps Clinic in Del Mar, California.

5. Pack in the Protein
A University of Washington study found that doubling up on protein could help you eat less without feeling hungry. "Protein may make your brain more sensitive to leptin, a hormone that helps you feel full," says study author Scott Weigle, MD, a professor of endocrinology at the University of Washington School of Medicine. Make sure at least a third of each meal and snack is a source of lean protein.

6. Shop Around, Literally
The center aisles of your local supermarket are loaded with highly processed, sugary, and fatty foods. "The first couple of outer aisles is where you'll find all the fresh produce, dairy, and seafood," explains Oz Garcia, PhD, a nutritionist in New York City.

7. Buy To-Go Veggies
"Most of the vegetables in your fridge should be as easy to pop into your mouth as a potato chip, which means they should be precut and prewashed," says Bethany Thayer, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association. Same goes for fruit. "And keep them at eye level in your fridge, so they'll be staring you right in the face when you open the door."

8. Get Some Sleep
People who sleep seven to eight hours per night are leaner than those who get only five or six hours, according to research from Laval University in Quebec. "When you're sleep-deprived, your body produces more stress hormones, which may increase your appetite," explains Michael Breus, PhD, cofounder of Sound Sleep Solutions in Atlanta. Having trouble nodding off? Consider hitting the treadmill before, not after, work: One study done at Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center found that women who exercised in the a.m. fell asleep faster at night than those who did a p.m. workout.

9. Shop from a List
"Never go to the grocery store without a master list, which provides insurance against impulse buys," suggests Donald Hensrud, MD, an obesity specialist at the Mayo Clinic. And never, ever shop when you're hungry.

10. Stock Up on Frozen Shrimp
"I always have a bag or two in my freezer," says Ellie Krieger, RD, a New York City nutritionist and author of Small Changes, Big Results (Clarkson Potter, 2005). "I add them to stir-fries and pasta or sometimes just serve them with cocktail sauce as a snack." Bonus: At 84 calories per three-ounce serving, shrimp has about a third the calories of chicken and about half that of sirloin. Food snobs, take note: Frozen shrimp is often fresher than "fresh" because it's frozen just after it's caught.
 
Snack Sizes, Cooking Tips, Calorie Savers

11. Count to 100
These days, everything from potato chips to yogurt to ice cream is being rolled out in 100-calorie snack sizes. "You may have to pay more than if you bought an economy size bag, but the smaller portions mean you'll end up eating less," says Barbara Rolls, PhD, a professor of nutritional sciences at Pennsylvania State University.

12. Look What Brown Can Do for You
"Instead of refined and processed white foods, aim to have whole-grain starches such as brown rice, whole wheat pasta, whole wheat breads and bran cereals," says Blatner. For the most part, the browner the food, the higher the fiber, which spells w-e-i-g-h-t l-o-s-s. According to a 2005 research review, increasing consumption of dietary fiber is critical to losing weight, because it helps you feel fuller and decreases absorption of calories from other food sources. Some easy adds: Sprinkle two tablespoons of a high-fiber cereal such as Kellogg's All-Bran Bran Buds into your yogurt (5 grams); substitute whole-grain bread for white in your turkey sandwich (2 grams), and throw a half cup of white beans on top of your salad (6 grams).

13. Revisit Your Skillet
Successful dieters eat out fewer than two and a half meals per week on average, according to the National Weight Control Registry. If you're strapped for time, simply nuke a frozen dinner. A recent University of Illinois study found that dieters who followed a meal program that included two frozen entrees a day lost more weight than those who followed the USDA Food Guide pyramid. "Frozen dinners serve as a form of portion control, so you don't overeat," explains Dr. Hensrud. Look for entrees with fewer than 400 calories each: Lean Cuisine, Weight Watchers, and Uncle Ben's Rice Bowls are all good choices.

14. Have a V8 While You Cook
"I've had clients come in complaining that they can't lose weight, but then I find out that they're taking in hundreds of calories while preparing dinner," says Blatner. "Every little 'taste' counts!" Her tip? Sip a Low Sodium V8 juice. "It's only 50 calories per serving, but it will keep you feeling satisfied and stave off hunger pains so you're less inclined to snack," she explains. (The new Calcium Enriched V8 makes it easier to protect your bones, but that's another story!) Hate V8? Chew gum to keep your mouth occupied.

15. Switch to Salsa
"I have clients spoon it on everything -- baked potatoes, veggies, even chicken or salmon," says Thayer. "It's a serving of veggies that gives otherwise bland diet staples a little flavor and zest." The calorie savings are worth it: Two tablespoons of salsa instead of sour cream on a baked potato, for example, saves 42 calories and five fat grams.

16. Feel the Heat
"When food is warm, its molecules move around faster, which means it will have a stronger smell," explains Alan Hirsch, MD, director of the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago. The result: The aroma affects the satiety center in your brain, leading you to think that you've eaten more than you have, so you feel full faster. In addition, if your food is hot, you'll be forced to eat it more slowly, which will give your stomach time to signal to your brain that it's full


Craving Cut-Downs, Taste-Bud Distractions

17. Brush It Off
Brush your teeth or rinse your mouth right after you have a meal or a snack to quell the urge to keep nibbling. "It's both a physical and a psychological signal to your body that you're done eating," says Blatner.

18. Name That Craving
"One reason women overeat is that they don't hit their food craving right on the head -- they keep bingeing until they're finally satisfied," explains Blatner. Ask yourself what you really want: Salty? Sweet? Smooth? Crunchy? "Food cravings can be broken down into four categories," says Blatner. "If you are craving sweet and crunchy, try a mini bag of popcorn mixed with a little bit of artificial sweetener or even sugar. If you want sweet and creamy, opt for a light vanilla yogurt. If you're thinking about something salty and smooth, try a couple of pieces of low-fat string cheese; if you really want salty and crunchy, try a handful of dry-roasted nuts or soy nuts."

19. Fill Your Glass
Optimists are more likely to eat fiber-rich foods such as fresh veggies, salad, and fruit, and less likely to be overweight, according to a Finnish study published in the journal Appetite. "Eating right and exercising seems to be second nature for them," explains Bruce Rabin, MD, PhD, medical director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's Healthy Lifestyle Program. Happily, it is possible to shake away your pessimism. "The next time a negative thought pops into your head, force yourself to come up with something positive to replace it," says Dr. Rabin. If you practice this often enough, it will eventually become an automatic response.

20. K.I.S.S. (Keep it Simple, Sweetie!)
People who eat a variety of foods, even low-fat ones, are more likely to have trouble keeping weight off than those who rely on a few diet staples, according to a National Weight Control Registry study published last May. "When people have a wide range of foods in front of them, they generally eat more," explains study author Holly Raynor, PhD, RD, an assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown Medical School/the Miriam Hospital. The study showed that the most successful weight losers consistently consume just three to five staples from each food group, switching them around occasionally to prevent boredom.

21. Distract Your Taste Buds
Visions of Godiva flooding your head? Before you rush out to buy a box, try deflecting your attention. New research from Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia, has found that the more vivid your mental image of a particular food, the more likely you are to crave it. But there's plenty you can do to tone down those visual cues. Researchers found that randomly flicking through images on a computer screen or, to a lesser extent, listening to a speech in a foreign language, was enough to distract students from their food cravings. Anything that engages both your eyes and your mind -- like playing Sudoku -- should help, say researchers.

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SOme pretty helpful tips
 
Some of those tips are good...some aren't.

The bad ones:

Women who eat erratically consume more calories and burn them less quickly than those who have six regular small meals each day

When trying to debunk Steve on this issue I went through this study in detail. There is absolutely no evidence that regular small meals burns calories faster. And also, it can hardly be thought of as adding 3 meals more a day is a "easy/quick" tip.

Every diet soft drink consumed each day could increase your risk of being overweight by 65 percent, according to a study presented at the American Dietetic Association. Other research suggests that artificial sweeteners may actually stimulate appetite, causing you to overeat. Instead, sip plain or sparkling water with lemon added for flavor.

Purely ecologically based. It's a correlation and nothing more...done through surveys and not a scientific environment.

The rest of the tips are fine, but deal more with how to attain discipline.

Michael
 
i think the erratically deals more with women who don't have breakfast - will have a yogurt for lunch and then go nuts at dinner... rather than planned out balanced meals at regular intervals... I dont have enough hours in the day for 6 meals a day...


The rest of the tips are fine, but deal more with how to attain discipline.
and you say attaining discipline like it's a bad thing... having some discipline has gotten me this far and I expect it will get me the rest of the way as well... getting the mind in the right place is at least 85 percent of weight loss.
 
4. Dust Off the Grapefruit Diet
Eating three servings of grapefruit a day (either half of a whole one or a cup of juice) for 12 weeks could help you lose just over three pounds, according to a recent study. "It helped lower insulin levels, which can contribute to weight loss by reducing appetite and encouraging fat burning," explains study author Ken Fujioka, MD, director of nutrition and metabolic research at Scripps Clinic in Del Mar, California.

I know there are studies everyday that claim about everything can give you cancer, but my mother has a breast cancer survivors magazine that she gets that had an article that eating grapefruit can increase the risk of breast cancer dramatically. A similar article I found from the American Cancer Society says it can increase the risks as much as 30%. The article I had read from recommended not eating more than 1/2 a grapefruit a week.

There's some other good advice in this list. I already do most of it. :)
 
Quote:
Every diet soft drink consumed each day could increase your risk of being overweight by 65 percent, according to a study presented at the American Dietetic Association. Other research suggests that artificial sweeteners may actually stimulate appetite, causing you to overeat. Instead, sip plain or sparkling water with lemon added for flavor.

Purely ecologically based. It's a correlation and nothing more...done through surveys and not a scientific environment.



Drinking diet pop makes me crave sweets more. The more I drink, the more I want chocolate in any way, shape, or form. This is fact for many people.
 
As far as the diet soda goes.. I was just a tea drinker /water drinker for a while. I have been off track lately- which sucks. So I started drinking diet soda again.. and my appetite has increased alot. I plan on quitting them today. I am throwing out all the diet soda in the house. :smash:

Today has been one of the worse days for me. I have eaten way to much. Thanks for the tips mal, I really needed this.
 
ive never liked fizzy soda drinks. i hate that carpet mouth you get after, eugh.

but its true about erratic eating although i dont beleive all this 6 meals a day bollocks. diet is something realistic and a commitment for life, if you struggle with eating you gotta make it conveneint and plausable for yourself, i cant see many people used to junk food preparing nice healthy food 6 times a day. i cook always fresh food, 3 times a day and i love cooking but it bores the hell out of me sometimes!! breakfast is the most important IMO - get a really good hearty breakfast in and im set for the day/
 
I don't really care for sweets. Don't get me wrong I love chocolate. Though I don't eat much of it. Diet Coke flows through my veins. I think that's why I don't really have a sweet tooth. I didn't drink soda for three years. My weight stayed the same because I wasn't trying to lose weight. I drank ice tea with no sweetener and Canada Dry Sparkling Water. For me I don't think the soda makes a difference. It's my one vice.
 
I don't really care for sweets. Don't get me wrong I love chocolate. Though I don't eat much of it. Diet Coke flows through my veins. I think that's why I don't really have a sweet tooth. I didn't drink soda for three years. My weight stayed the same because I wasn't trying to lose weight. I drank ice tea with no sweetener and Canada Dry Sparkling Water. For me I don't think the soda makes a difference. It's my one vice.

I don't really think diet pop makes any difference with me in terms of weight loss either except maybe help me out! It's the only thing I really love to drink. A lot of times if I'm craving something, all I need to do is have a diet pepsi, and the craving goes away. I am trying to stop drinking it though for other reasons.
 
If you're strapped for time, simply nuke a frozen dinner. A recent University of Illinois study found that dieters who followed a meal program that included two frozen entrees a day lost more weight than those who followed the USDA Food Guide pyramid. "Frozen dinners serve as a form of portion control, so you don't overeat," explains Dr. Hensrud. Look for entrees with fewer than 400 calories each: Lean Cuisine, Weight Watchers, and Uncle Ben's Rice Bowls are all good choices.

I guess since I'm a foodie and a nutritional science major, these things make me cringe. I have found ways around using frozen dinners in a pinch, although freezing can be a helpful tool. For instance, I'll use my days off to make a large pot of healthy soup, and eat a serving of the soup for dinner that day, and the rest I'll let cool down then put in gladwear-type containers and freeze to heat up for times I am busy or don't feel like cooking. I make little half-sandwiches with lean lunch meats for work ahead of time and just lightly spread mustard on them, then freeze them for the coming 2 weeks. I then pack a tomato and some lettuce with my work lunch, along with at least 3 pieces of fresh produce and 1/2 cup of quinoa or rice, and the sandwich thaws as the day goes on. We have a toaster oven at work, so I toast my half sandwich in it and put the other toppings on. Very satisfying and makes lunch packing very easy.

I agree that frozen dinners can help control portions, but as someone who cares not only about caloric content, I also care about controlling my sodium and trying not to eat too many strange food additives. Frozen, processed meals are loaded with that junk, even the diet ones. If you're not eating them often, that's fine, but using them a lot makes me wary. Also, being allergic to both dairy and soy makes eating any processed anything pretty much impossible for me. The other tips were pretty good, but I do partake of a diet drink here and there. Since I mainly drink water and only drink on average 1 diet drink per day, it keeps me from craving sugary drinks. That's just me, though.
 
Morning,

I adore my diet sodas; they haven't yet caused any food desire increase in me. I'll often mix half and half with water (cold water) to increase the liquid (but the taste is still more or less the same).

Data points,

Barbara
 
I've heard of some of these before.
I'm a soda culprit, and i'm hoping to soon just toss it out of my life completely
I lost a nice bit of weight for the two months I went off it once. :]
 
Interesting thread; thanks for posting it! It has been my experience that Canadians on the whole do not consume NEARLY as much "soda" (which we call "pop") as American folk. I don't know why that is. However, I imagine we are pretty similar in our unnatural love for any type of sickly sweet fancy coffee-type drink!

However mentioned the grapefruit/cancer risk, thanks! Interesting.

Good luck on your journies!
 
Here's me thinking diet drinks were alright, though I don't think they increase my appetite, to be honest. It's more a substitute for the drinks/sweets I'd prefer. I may lay off them a bit and see if there's much different; it's always nice to know one way or another!

I'm definitely going to look into the grapefruit idea, though the cancer risk study is very unnerving. The green tea point looks good, but I'm not much for warm drinks or tea/coffee in general.

Oh, and get more sleep .. she says as the clock almost hits midnight.

Thanks for posting this!
 
I read somewhere about eating smaller meals more often. It is supposed to help keep your blood sugar stabilised, which helps you store less fat.

Great article! Thanks for posting!

Lori
 
I don't see the big deal with 6 small meals vs. 3 large ones.

A bowl of cereal, skim milk and some fruit in the morning, then a medium apple and 14 walnuts around midmorning, then what ever moderate portion lunch you have, then a stick of string cheese and an orange for mid day snack then what ever healthy, moderate supper you have. There's your six meals.

You don't actually have to do major preparation for all 6 feedings. A snack is a feeding. Most people already ARE getting those 6 feedings in.

Eating frequently and in smaller amounts does help stabilize your blood sugar and control how hungry you get - so it does stave off binging. Would you rather do 6 small meals and stay within your calorie range or set out with good intentions and eat 3 large meals and by mid day be so hungry you attack the vending machine for what ever processed garbage you can get? I would rather feel more in control of my eating than that.

Your mileage may vary, though, and if you can go along just fine eating only 3 times a day with no snacks or extra nibbles at all and no binging at meal times - more power to you :)

God Bless,
mik
 
the only time I drink coke and any soda is when I am in a bar or at the party. One of my most common drinks are JD coke and vodka 7. Since I go out 1-2 times a week it doesn't affect my diet all that much I don't think. I also drink beer which I personally think is worst than sodas. To me any kind of bad drink for the diet is no where near as bad as fast food or junk food. I just think of it that food stays inside your body much much longer than any kind of beverage.
 
I honestly am not sure I could go without diet drinks Monday-Thursdays but I will work on it. I depend on it really and I know that sounds bad.

But, it hasn't caused me to over-eat yet nor have I seen any weight-loss stop while drinking them

Mind you, I have 1-2 a day and nothing more
 
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