Their are more and more products out that are "low calorie foods." Some are good, some should probably be avoided.
If your losing weight some of them can be helpful in that regard.
A good example for me was the sugar I put in morning coffee. I always put a LOT of sugar in. I shudder to factor out what I used to use, but I'm guessing it would be in the 200 calorie range just for the sugar in the coffee. My whole breakfast now is 150 calories.
Looking around we found "Stevia" which is a natural sugar substitute. It's not chemical tasting like Splenda and sweeteners like that.
Stevia is also ZERO calories! If your drinking coffee and putting even a little sugar in each one, you could save a couple hundred calories a day just switching to Stevia.
Butter/margarine- never been a fan or margarine but well over a decade ago we started using "Buttery Spray" a spray on butter substitute. Also ZERO calories. Fats and oils produce beau coup calories. If you put a couple big pats of butter on something like toast, you would be adding a lot of calories unnecessarily. Their are also products like "I can't believe it's not butter" and "Good life" (IIRC) that are also ZERO calories.
Their is a lot of calories in Gatorade/sports drinks. Powerade has a line of their product out now with ZERO calories.
For the chocolate/treat cravings, nothing beats a glass of Swiss Miss 25 calories "Sensible treats" cocoa. I put two packets in a large coffee mug cause it tastes really watered down to me with just one. Not zero calories, but better than the alternative.
For the soda drinkers, both Coke and Pepsi now have zero calorie non "diet" (and diet TASTING yuck) sodas out. Coke Zero is pretty good and I've never cared for Coke products. Like regular soda, the stuff in these isn't the best for you, but when it's late afternoon and your starting to run down cause your at 400 calories for the day, a little caffeine pick me up helps. A regular soda like a Pepsi will cost you 170 calories for nothing. And the Coke Zero doesn't taste nasty like diet coke (tastes nasty to me anyways ;)
Energy drinks- "Monster" has a zero calorie drink out as well as a "lo carb" 10 calorie drink. Both are loaded with B vitamins also. Walmart is carrying a generic called "SLAP" and their is a 10 calorie version of that also.
As with any diet and normal everyday use, be sure your drinking plenty of good water. Distilled is a good option IMO. Take your vitamins.
In the book "The ground game" Greg Jackson, famous for training fighters like GSP, has a chart that shows estimated daily caloric needs for energy balance.
For low: (sedentary) it is 13-15 calories per lb/BW
For Moderate- people that train 30-60 min/day 3-4 times a week, it is 16-18 calories per lb./BW
For high- people that train 60-90 min/day 5 or more times a week, it's 19-21 calories per lb/BW
Example- a guy 187 lbs. at the "low" need basis would require 2,431 calories to maintain current weight level. 187X 13= 2,431
Jackson goes on to say that "In order to lose one pound over the course of a week, a daily deficit of 500 calories is required. For a loss of two pounds weekly, that deficit would need to be 1,000 calories. Unless someone is significantly overweight, a loss of two pounds per week is the maximum amount that should be lost in order to minimize muscle breakdown." Ground game Page 13.
I've found his formula to be pretty accurate for me.
The little things to cut calories I mentioned above could really easy cut 500 calories a day for a loss of one pound per week for most of us. Couple that with adding in good exercise at least 3X a week and watch the magic happen!
Good luck.
If your losing weight some of them can be helpful in that regard.
A good example for me was the sugar I put in morning coffee. I always put a LOT of sugar in. I shudder to factor out what I used to use, but I'm guessing it would be in the 200 calorie range just for the sugar in the coffee. My whole breakfast now is 150 calories.
Looking around we found "Stevia" which is a natural sugar substitute. It's not chemical tasting like Splenda and sweeteners like that.
Stevia is also ZERO calories! If your drinking coffee and putting even a little sugar in each one, you could save a couple hundred calories a day just switching to Stevia.
Butter/margarine- never been a fan or margarine but well over a decade ago we started using "Buttery Spray" a spray on butter substitute. Also ZERO calories. Fats and oils produce beau coup calories. If you put a couple big pats of butter on something like toast, you would be adding a lot of calories unnecessarily. Their are also products like "I can't believe it's not butter" and "Good life" (IIRC) that are also ZERO calories.
Their is a lot of calories in Gatorade/sports drinks. Powerade has a line of their product out now with ZERO calories.
For the chocolate/treat cravings, nothing beats a glass of Swiss Miss 25 calories "Sensible treats" cocoa. I put two packets in a large coffee mug cause it tastes really watered down to me with just one. Not zero calories, but better than the alternative.
For the soda drinkers, both Coke and Pepsi now have zero calorie non "diet" (and diet TASTING yuck) sodas out. Coke Zero is pretty good and I've never cared for Coke products. Like regular soda, the stuff in these isn't the best for you, but when it's late afternoon and your starting to run down cause your at 400 calories for the day, a little caffeine pick me up helps. A regular soda like a Pepsi will cost you 170 calories for nothing. And the Coke Zero doesn't taste nasty like diet coke (tastes nasty to me anyways ;)
Energy drinks- "Monster" has a zero calorie drink out as well as a "lo carb" 10 calorie drink. Both are loaded with B vitamins also. Walmart is carrying a generic called "SLAP" and their is a 10 calorie version of that also.
As with any diet and normal everyday use, be sure your drinking plenty of good water. Distilled is a good option IMO. Take your vitamins.
In the book "The ground game" Greg Jackson, famous for training fighters like GSP, has a chart that shows estimated daily caloric needs for energy balance.
For low: (sedentary) it is 13-15 calories per lb/BW
For Moderate- people that train 30-60 min/day 3-4 times a week, it is 16-18 calories per lb./BW
For high- people that train 60-90 min/day 5 or more times a week, it's 19-21 calories per lb/BW
Example- a guy 187 lbs. at the "low" need basis would require 2,431 calories to maintain current weight level. 187X 13= 2,431
Jackson goes on to say that "In order to lose one pound over the course of a week, a daily deficit of 500 calories is required. For a loss of two pounds weekly, that deficit would need to be 1,000 calories. Unless someone is significantly overweight, a loss of two pounds per week is the maximum amount that should be lost in order to minimize muscle breakdown." Ground game Page 13.
I've found his formula to be pretty accurate for me.
The little things to cut calories I mentioned above could really easy cut 500 calories a day for a loss of one pound per week for most of us. Couple that with adding in good exercise at least 3X a week and watch the magic happen!
Good luck.
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