Over 100 Foods That Fight Fat

sara111

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Weight loss starts with shopping. Taking control of what you eat begins with taking control of what you buy.

Every time you toss a low-calorie food into the cart, you’re taking responsibility for losing weight—even before you sit down to a meal.

There’s a very simple formula for low-calorie eating: Stock up on low-calorie staples. These are the basic packaged, canned, and frozen ingredients that you’ll reach for to create tasty, healthful, low-calorie meals anytime.



The Picture Perfect Anytime List is a menu of the lowest-calorie produce, soups, sauces, condiments, marinades, dressings, dips, candies, desserts, and beverages available. Stuff your pantry, refrigerator, and freezer with them, and reach for them anytime. Feel free to go to the foods on the Anytime List when you want a snack or are planning a meal. Eat any amount of them for any reason. When the Anytime List becomes the core of your eating—in other words, the main dish around which you build your meals—you’ll have no trouble staying thin for life.

The Anytime List
Fruits and vegetables

All fruits and vegetables—raw, cooked, fresh, frozen, canned—belong on the Picture Perfect Anytime List. Avoid any packaged fruits that have added sugar. Otherwise, the more fruits and vegetables you eat, the better.

Soups

You’ve heard of value for your money. Soups give you very good value for the calories. They are filling; a bowl of soup can be an entire meal. They are satisfying. For many people, they are more satisfying than raw vegetables, while many give you all the benefits of veggies (if you choose the soups chock full of vegetables). They are inexpensive, convenient, easy, and quick to make. Soups don’t make you feel like you’re on a diet. Above all, soups are versatile. They can serve as a snack, as part of a meal, or as a cooking ingredient.

Sauces, Condiments, and Marinades

Put the following items at the very top of your shopping list. They’re invaluable for adding flavor, moisture, texture, and versatility to every food and every meal.

Salad dressings: oil-free or low-calorie (light or lite)
Mayonnaise: fat-free or light
Sour cream and yogurt: fat-free, plain, or with NutraSweet (or low-fat nondairy substitutes)
Mustards: Dijon, Pommery, and others
Tomato puree, tomato paste, and tomato sauce
Clam juice, tomato juice, V8 juice, and lemon or lime juice
Butter Buds or Molly McButter
Cooking sprays (such as Pam) in butter, olive oil, garlic, or lemon flavors
Vinegars: balsamic, cider, wine, tarragon, and others
Horseradish: red and white
Sauces: salsa, cocktail sauce, tamari, soy sauce, A1, Worcestershire sauce, barbecue sauce, ketchup, duck sauce, chutney, relish, and others
Onion: fresh, juice, flakes, and powder
Garlic: fresh, juice, flakes, and powder
Herbs: any and all, including basil, oregano, tarragon, thyme, rosemary, marjoram, dill, chives, sage, and bay leaves
Spices: any and all, including cinnamon, cloves, ginger, cumin, nutmeg, coriander, curry, paprika, and allspice
Extracts: vanilla, almond, peppermint, maple, coconut, cocoa powder, and others
Dressings and Dips

exerciselossweight.com recommends fat-free or light dressings and dips. The light category—low-fat, reduced-fat, and low-calorie—is midway between totally fat-free and regular, and it’s often more pleasing to the palate than fat-free.

Dressings can be used as all-purpose condiments, dips, toppings, even cooking liquids. They already contain a mixture of ingredients, so just slather them on vegetables, seafood, and pretty much anything else. Or cook with them to make up for the lack of butter or oil.

In addition, keeping several varieties of dressings and dips on hand, including at least one creamy version. Try brushing a light creamy dressing on seafood, then broiling; the dressing adds moisture and flavor.

Candy

Yup, candy. The real thing—not the dietetic variety—is best when your sweet tooth starts aching. Dietetic candies have almost as many calories as regular candies, often lack flavor, and are an incentive to eat more. Stick to the real thing.

Chewing gum or gum balls: any and all
Hard candy: any and all, including sour balls, candy canes, lollipops such as Tootsie Pops or Blow Pops, Jolly Ranchers, Werther’s Original, and TasteTations


Frozen Desserts

Any fat-free frozen yogurt, frozen nondairy substitute, or sorbet is a fine addition to the freezer. Try the lower-calorie choices. Here are some examples:

Soft serve: up to 25 calories per ounce, including Skimpy Treat; TCBY, Colombo nonfat frozen yogurt, and Tofutti
Hard pack: up to 115 calories per 1/2-cup serving, including Sharon’s Sorbet, Low-Fat Tofutti, all Italian ices, and Sweet Nothings
Frozen bars: Creamsicles, Fudgsicles, and Popsicles; any others containing up to 45 calories per bar, including Welch’s Fruit Juice Bars, Weight Watchers Smart Ones Orange Vanilla Treats, Tofutti Chocolate Fudge Treats, Weight Watchers Smart Ones Chocolate Mousse, Dolly Madison Slender Treat Chocolate Mousse, and Yoplait
Individually packaged frozen bars: up to 110 calories each, including FrozFruit, Hagen-Dazs bars, and Starbucks Frappuccino Blended Coffee Bars
Beverages

Avoid beverages labeled “naturally sweetened” or “fruit-juice sweetened,” but help yourself to these:

Unsweetened black coffees and teas
Diet teas and juices: Crystal Light, Diet Snapple, Diet Natural Lemon Nestea, Diet Mistic, and others
Noncaloric flavored waters: orange, chocolate, cream, cherry-chocolate, root beer, cola, and other flavors of bottled or filtered water
Seltzer: plain or flavored, but check the calorie count if the product is labeled “naturally sweetened,” since this usually means that the product has sugar in one form or another
Hot cocoa mixes: 20 to 50 calories per serving, including Swiss Miss Diet and Fat-Free and Nestle Carnation Diet and Fat-Free; avoid cocoa mixes with 60 or more calories per serving
Let’s Go Shopping

Today’s supermarkets are filled with choices for the weight conscious. Here are some of the lowest-calorie choices for a variety of food categories that aren’t covered in the Anytime List.

Cereals

Cheerios: a whole grain cereal with 110 calories and 3 g fiber per cup
Kellogg’s All-Bran with Extra Fiber: 50 calories and 15 g fiber per 1/2 cup
Original Shredded Wheat: 80 calories and 2.5 g fiber per biscuit
Fiber One: 60 calories and 14 g fiber per 1/2 cup
Wheaties: 110 calories and 2 g fiber per cup
Whole Grain Total: 110 calories and 3 g fiber per 3/4 cup
Spreads

Peanut butter
Low-sugar or sugar-free jams and jellies with 10 to 40 calories per tablespoon
Breads

Light breads with 40 to 45 calories per slice: oatmeal, premium white, wheat, rye, multi grain, sourdough, Italian
Whole grain regular breads or rolls

Rice and Pasta

Whole wheat/whole grain pastas: Hodgson Mill, Ancient Harvest
Brown rice
Whole wheat couscous
Pearled or hulled barley
Other whole grains: quinoa, whole grain cornmeal, kasha, bulgur, millet
Frozen Meals

Low-calorie frozen breakfast foods such as those from Kellogg’s, Aunt Jemima, and Pillsbury—and a special mention for the low-calorie, whole grain offerings from Van’s
Low-calorie, vegetable-focused frozen meals in the 150- to 350-calories-per-package range, especially the Amy’s brand
Beans

All beans, dried or canned
Health Valley canned bean/chili combinations
Low-fat or fat-free refried beans
Snacks

Make it a point to eat starchy, crunchy snacks only in conjunction with a food from the Anytime List. For example, have fruit with popcorn or soup with crackers. Fill up on the former, and go easy on the starchy snack.

Protein Foods

Legumes: beans, peas, lentils, chickpeas
Soy products: bean curd/tofu, meat-replacement products by Boca, Gardenburger, Yves, and Lightlife
Seafood: fresh (do not fry!), smoked, canned, frozen
Please Note: Calorie counts in this story may vary depending on the brand of products used. Remember to check the labels.
 
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great ideas, + Use the freezer to add some extra oomph to summer foods. Freeze grapes for some bite-sized delights. Or get a popsicle mold and freeze some Greek yogurt with berries. :D
 
amazing list , very useful & Helpful

you can read too this list of fruits

Best Fruits For Weight Loss:

For weight loss many fruits, indeed some would say, any fruit will help, because you will eat less refined foods if you choose fresh fruit instead. Apples eaten daily can help protect against weight gain, eating and apple before a meal will make you fill full faster and you will eat less. Antioxidants in apples can help prevent metabolic syndrome, which can cause excess belly fat. Apples are also great to eat on the go as a low calorie snack. Nutrition thoughtfully packaged





in a take along container, how cool is that. Apples contain "Pectin", a fiber that binds to bile acids in the digestive system, eating apples triggers a process that can suck elevated levels of bad cholesterol out of your system!
Grapefruit
Grapefruit has no fat and only 36 calories per half, making the citrus a very helpful ally in the battle of the bulge.
While helping you cut down on fat the lowly grapefruit also loads up on vitamin C delivering a full 78 percent of daily needs in every half grapefruit serving. Studies have shown that eating half a grapefruit before each meal can help you lose and gain a healthier insulin function.
Berries
Fresh berries add a delightful flavor to your diet and are jammed full of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants. The strong flavor in berries can help satisfy the sweet tooth of the weight loss sojourner. Berries carry a high volume of fiber, and are low in fat content, thus you can pig out on berries without ruining your diet. Berries deliver a rich source of phytonutrients containing compounds to help boost your immunity and lower you risk of chronic illness. An added benefit is that even when berries are out of season they are readily available in the frozen food section of the supermarket.
Cantaloupe
At only 55 calories per cup, a sweet cantaloupe is one of the lowest-calorie fruits available. While containing very little fat and sodium the fruit contains lots of folate, vitamins C, A, niacin, potassium and even magnesium. If you're having leg cramps eat magnesium rich foods, I have found that supplementing with magnesium stopped my leg cramps completely. negligible amounts of fat and sodium, cantaloupe is rich in folate, niacin, potassium, magnesium, vitamin C and vitamin A, according to Diet Bites. High fiber and water content makes cantaloupe a filling bulky fruit that can help stave off hunger pains while providing delicious health benefits between meals.
 
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