Healthy Living

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Did you pig out at the cookout? 6 Food fixes that beat bloat fast!

Lately I’m all about what to eat (as opposed to what not to eat) to look and feel great, and I’m also all about enjoying myself on vacation. So this July 4th weekend, go ahead and have that burger, beer, macaroni salad and whatever else is on the menu at your mid-summer fete, and then make the necessary diet adjustments AFTER the party. Here, 6 simple swaps that will help you lose a little water weight and keep calories in check:

 

1) Season Food Without Salt

Smart Swap: Add zing to your meals with salt-free seasoning blends such as the Original and Italian medley Mrs. Dash instead of salt, salt-based seasonings, and highly processed foods. The reason? You may be attracted to your saltshaker, but water is, too. When you take in higher than usual amounts sodium, you’ll temporarily retain more fluid, contributing to that sluggish feeling, a puffy appearance, and extra water weight. Yuck.

Get your sexy summer body and your confidence back!

 

2) Thirsty? Stick to plain H20

Smart Swap: There's nothing like a nice cold carbonated beverage when you're hot and thirsty but plain old tap water is a better way to stay hydrated—those tingly bubbles just end up in your belly, causing it to puff out more.

Try these simple, belly-flattening beverage alternatives

 

3) Up the protein, lower the carbs

Smart Swap: Use one slice of whole grain bread for your sandwich at lunch instead of two, and swap snacks like pretzels for nuts or seeds. At dinner, try to stick to lean protein sources and, if you must have a carb, try something made with whole grains like quinoa or brown rice. Unless you’re running a marathon this weekend, loads of high-carb foods like bagels, bread, pasta, pretzels, and cereal will just boost bloat. The science-y reason: as a backup energy source, your muscles store a type of carbohydrate called glycogen, and every gram of glycogen is stored with about 3 grams of water. But unless you have a vigorous exercise routine, you don't need all this stockpiled fuel. When you decrease the carbs, you'll temporarily train your body to access this stored fuel and burn it off. At the same time, you'll drain off excess stored fluids.

Get loads of healthy warm-weather recipes and meal ideas!

 

4) Cook your veggies

Smart Swap: Eat veggies, just eat them cookedsteaming is quick and easy. Fruit is gorgeous and plentiful right now so indulge in moderation. When you’re trying to watch your weight it may be temping to fill up on a grapes, but if you want a flat belly filling it with all that volume is counter-productive: A half-cup serving of cooked carrots delivers the same nutrition as one cup raw, but it takes up less room in your GI tract. The same goes for fresh fruits: Compare the size of a few grapes to a few raisins. Big difference! While you’re at it skip those notorious gas-causers like broccoli and cauliflower and cook up green beans, mushrooms, and squash—which is bountiful right now anyway.

 

5) Season food with belly-friendly flavors

Smart swap: some people love their food four-alarm spicy (I’m one of them)! Feel the heat for one night, then lay off the barbecue sauce and garlic for a few days while debloating. Give dishes a flavor boost with in-season fresh or dried herbs like dill, basil, mint, sage, tarragon, and rosemary. You can also use curry powder, lemon or lime juiceall perfect with fish or chicken. Try to avoid Black pepper, nutmeg, cloves, Chili powder, hot sauces, onions, garlic, mustard, barbecue sauce, horseradish, catsup, tomato sauce, vinegar; Spicy foods can stimulate the release of stomach acid, which can cause irritation.

Spice up your dinner with these delicious, 30-minute chicken recipes

 

6) Satisfy an oral fixation with seeds, not gum

Smart Swap: If you chew gum by habit or just like to bite down on something crunchy, reach for some nuts, like roasted or raw unsalted sunflower seeds. You probably don't realize this, but when you chew gum, you swallow air. All that air gets trapped in your GI tract and causes pressure, bloating, and belly expansionnone of which are swimsuit-friendly.


Get More Nutrition and Weight Loss Advice From Prevention:

10 Perfect Plates To Help You Survive The Cookout

Don't Ditch Your Diet This Weekend

Shrink A Size In 14 Days!

 


 

  Afraid to face that swimsuit? Lose that winter weight with Liz and 2-Week Turnaround!






Having trouble slimming down? Sugar could be your problem. Find a new approach with The DTOUR Diet book -- Free for 21 days!

Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 11-20 of 168
  • gary's Avatar
    Posted by gary Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:53am PDT

    Liz - as a professional you have to know you're absolutely wrong about the "chili powder" comment. Cayenne pepper specifically has many medicinal benefits including improving blood circulation, ulcer prevention, weight loss aid, immunitiy booster, is generally good for the stomach, and is a decent anti-oxidant to boot. Finally, Cayenne pepper improved the efficiency of other herbs. Perhaps you're making a general statement when you say this and other spicy foods should be avoided but generally speaking spicy foods are not the problem - it's acidity you want to be concerned with.

    Report Abuse
  • Michele Dene' D's Avatar
    Posted by Michele Dene' D Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:53am PDT

    I've been saying for awhile that Yahoo needs to get their facts straight. I don't know how many retractions I've read in the past 2 months about something supposedly a FACT that was misrepresented.

    It's not just the writer's fault but also the editor, here. How many times have you read a title only to read the article and find it's not about that at all?!

    Report Abuse
  • Boback's Avatar
    Posted by Boback Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:55am PDT

    Whereas some of the advice here sounds good, most of it seems like trash. How can you add nutritional value in carrots by cooking them? What are you cooking them in? Obviously not in water as most people I know do. Common knowledge is that when you cook vegetable you loose some of the nutritional value. That is why steaming is better, it keeps the good stuff in there. Drinking water is better that other drinks but sodas causing bloating because of gas? That is a new one on me. The body has simple ways to expel gas on both ends. Prevention Magazine is usually filled with good advice but maybe I need to look twice on their recommendations based on this article?

    Report Abuse
  • Kade6767's Avatar
    Posted by Kade6767 Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:58am PDT

    You want to lose weight ? First, lose her as editor of any magazine. Raw foods diet is the best for anyone. What an idiot to talk about cooking your veggies. Raw carrots are way better for you than cooked. If you ate THAT much over July 4th to where you actually gained that much weight, then you have a bigger problem than what is mentioned in this horrendous story.

    Report Abuse
  • german's Avatar
    Posted by german Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:01am PDT

    I agree with the above comments, these are just rehashed old tips. Its good to see the dietitian above speak out with her advice though.

    <a title="Dating & Breakup Advice" href="http://www.loveandbreakupadvice.com/">Dating & Breakup Advice</a>

    Report Abuse
  • Sotero's Avatar
    Posted by Sotero Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:01am PDT

    I can’t believe some of these tips! Not very good. First, why would you recommend TAP water? Recommend good clean water (distilled is my preference) But DO NOT recommend TAP which is filled with toxic chemicals like chlorine and fluoride.

    Second, COOKED veggies DOES NOT have the same nutritional value as raw. That is an absolute lie. Cooked veggies lose their natural digestive enzymes. Can you plant a cooked seed? NO because the heat killed it. Same with veggies. When you cook it you kill it. Raw is healthier and most recommended as it is in its natural state.

    Third, why are onions, garlic chili pepper to be bad? Another lie. The fact is that they are highly nutritious and are high in antitoxins.

    Fourth, sea salt is the best form of salt. Hands down. We NEED salt. The belief that we do not is a myth and misunderstanding.

    Report Abuse
  • Shubop's Avatar
    Posted by Shubop Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:02am PDT

    Wow, I stuffed my guts again and now I've got a truck driver gut. Oh, boo hoo. I'll drink water and go doodle-deedle-doodle, and I'll be perky and slim in no time. Wheeeee! I'm a chuckle-head.

    Report Abuse
  • Qw's Avatar
    Posted by Qw Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:02am PDT

    I usually never go out of my way to comment but I had to on this one. Despite the numerous typos/grammatical errors within this article, almost everything is completely full of crap. Swallowing air? - Are you serious? You shouldn't drink soda because it contains a high amount of sugar- not because you get "tingly bubbles that puff out your belly". I got a solution- just stop breathing the next day so you don't get any air in your gut, God!! This author should be fired for making up this kind of crap with no valid scientific evidence!! It's because of misinformation like this that people think they can still sit on the couch and lose weight, or get a Big Mac but just take off the bun and burn calories. You really want to fight bloating? Good old fashion thing called exercise, with lean meats like skinless chicken breasts and turkey breast, and salads- without fattening dressing. This is coming from a guy who has lossed 50 lbs himself. There's no short cut to dieting like it or not- this crap is just a waste of time!!!

    Report Abuse
  • Kyle S's Avatar
    Posted by Kyle S Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:03am PDT

    WTF... this is the stupidest article if ever seen on yahoo... not the topic, but the content!... who the heck wrote this crap?? They need to never write again, this is junk...

    "You probably don't realize this, but when you chew gum, you swallow air. All that air gets trapped in your GI tract and causes pressure, bloating, and belly expansion—none of which are swimsuit-friendly." - Idiot...

    "When you’re trying to watch your weight it may be temping to fill up on a grapes, but if you want a flat belly filling it with all that volume is counter-productive" -Moron... (this is for realz the dumbest quote off all...)

    Report Abuse
  • 张嘉's Avatar
    Posted by 张嘉 Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:04am PDT

    oh my god! so strong of reaction

    Report Abuse
Comments 11-20 of 168

leave your comment

You must sign in to post a comment

Sign In for personalized information

New User? Sign Up

Updates Chatter on Shine…

Health Byte

Tune in to our fitness forecast! These are the top ten exercise trends for 2010.