Wednesday, November 25, 2009

4 diet myths busted

Cig Harvey

Cig Harvey

Myth No. 1: Don't Eat After 8 p.m.


The theory: You burn up the food you eat earlier in the day, while late-night calories sit in your system and turn into fat.

The reality: Calories can't tell time. "Your body digests and uses calories the same way morning, noon, and night," says Mary Flynn, Ph.D., a research dietitian at the Miriam Hospital, in Providence. They may sit around a little longer if you eat, then lie on the couch and watch Letterman, but when you move around the next day, your body will dip into its stores. That said, there are other solid reasons to avoid late-night snacking, not least of which is that snacks you grab when you're tired tend to be unhealthy ones.

The best advice: If you often unwind before bed with a bowl of ice cream or buttered popcorn, try cutting the snack out. The calories saved may be enough for you to lose a few pounds a year. If you're hungry, "eat something on the light side, like a piece of fruit or some cereal with milk," says Ellie Krieger, a registered dietitian and the author of The Food You Crave. Night eaters tend to overeat (which leads to weight gain no matter when it's done) because often they've been skimping during the day and come home famished. Being so hungry that you grab whatever is at hand means you're more likely to make poor choices.

What's better for you: Pretzels or tortilla chips? Find out the best and worst snacks.

Myth No. 2: Eating Small, Frequent Meals Boosts Your Metabolism

The theory: If you keep adding small amounts of food to your fire (the fire being your metabolism), you will keep it going strong and burn more calories overall.

The reality: Food intake has a negligible effect on metabolism. Some foods, including those with caffeine, may slightly and temporarily increase metabolism, but the effect is too small to help you lose weight. What most affects your basal metabolic rate (BMR), the rate at which your body burns calories at rest, is body composition and size. More muscles and bigger bodies generally burn more calories overall.

The best advice: Build up your muscles. A pound of fat-free tissue burns about 14 calories a day, while a pound of fat burns just two to three calories. And while that difference may not sound like a lot, it will certainly help over time. Remember, too, that when you lose pounds, part of that weight is muscle, warns Liz Neporent, an exercise physiologist and the president of Wellness 360, a New York City-based corporate-wellness-consulting company. That's why strength training is even more important if you're on a weight-loss mission. Try lifting weights, or you can maintain your muscles by going to a Pilates, body-sculpting, or power-yoga class two to three times a week.

Myth No. 3: Pasta Makes You Fat

The theory: When you eat carbohydrates, your body turns them into sugars, which are then stored as fat.

The reality: Carbohydrates per se don't make you fat; extra calories do, whether you eat them in the form of carbs, fats, or protein. Besides, carbohydrates include vegetables, fruits, and whole grains, which are important parts of a healthy diet. In short, the problem isn't pasta but the sheer volume consumed. "Americans tend to eat too much carbohydrates, fat, and protein. But they overeat carbs most of all," says Barbara Moore, Ph.D., a nutritionist in Clyde Park, Montana, and a spokesperson for the American Society for Nutrition. "You go to a restaurant and you're served three cups of pasta with lots of sauce." Those three cups of pasta can pack up to 600 calories without the sauce.

The best advice: Pasta in moderation is fine. Dietitians recommend two or three ounces of uncooked noodles per person―or half of a one-pound box to serve a family of four. This may look like a puny amount, but try thinking of "pasta as an ingredient, rather than as the basis of a dish," says Mark Bittman, author of How to Cook Everything Vegetarian. "Start with a lot of grilled or sautéed vegetables and maybe a tomato-based sauce. Then add some pasta, sparingly." If you want protein, add beans, chicken or shellfish. Make your pasta―or bread or rice or cereal―whole-grain, which has more vitamins and minerals than white pasta. You'll also be getting fiber, which helps you feel full.

Try these 6 Healthy Pasta Recipes.

Myth No. 4: Coffee Can Help You Lose Weight

The theory: The caffeine in coffee acts as an appetite suppressant and a metabolism booster.

The reality: While coffee may temporarily squelch your appetite, drinking a couple of cups a day won't have enough of an effect to help you lose weight. Besides, pouring too much coffee into your system―drinking, say, four to seven cups a day―may lead to anxiety, sleeplessness, and an increase in heart rate and blood pressure.

The best advice: Enjoy a cup or two of coffee (or tea) every day, if you please. Just be sure that if you add anything to the brew―like cream, sugar, or cocoa powder―you take those calories into account. For example, a 16-ounce Starbucks Café Mocha can contain a whopping 330 calories (60 more than some chocolate bars). What's more, those calories might not make you feel as full as the same number of calories eaten in solid form. Another coffee concern: sleep disruption, which new evidence reveals is linked to weight control. "Every time people feel tired, they think, I have to have a latte," says Liz Applegate, Ph.D., director of sports nutrition at the University of California, Davis. "They become addicted to caffeine on a higher level, and it takes four to six hours to clear out of the system. Sleep is not as good, and you're tired the next day." And probably hungrier, too. At least two studies have shown that when people are sleep-deprived, they produce more of the hormone ghrelin, an appetite stimulant, and less leptin, an appetite suppressant. Not to mention that your resistance to the doughnut's siren song is a whole lot lower when you're pooped.

Keep reading: Can milk help you lose weight? See more diet myths busted.

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Comments 1-10 of 17
  • FF's Avatar
    Posted by FF Mon Apr 27, 2009 11:03am PDT

    great post!

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  • andrew's Avatar
    Posted by andrew Tue Apr 28, 2009 4:11pm PDT

    Worst advice ever! Carbohydrates are burned as energy or stored as fat. that's a fact!!

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  • Just Wonderin''s Avatar
    Posted by Just Wonderin' Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:18pm PDT

    This is the most BS I have seen in years. The amount of pasta you ingest has no bearing on weight. I had a room mate when I was young that ate platefuls of pasta that a larger man couldn't fathom. My room mate was 5'7" 135 lbs, with a body fat percentage of 4%. You could literally count his ribs. He worked out and was indeed in shape, as well as any marathon runner or UFC fighter yet he never gained weight by the amount he ate. I chalk it up to good genes and a fast metabolism. I am 5'11" and weigh 200 lbs. I couldn't eat 1/3 of what he ate and I would feel bloated and gain weight. That should tell you something. Hope this helped.

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  • Just Wonderin''s Avatar
    Posted by Just Wonderin' Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:19pm PDT

    I totally agree with aadavis80

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  • larla's Avatar
    Posted by larla Tue Apr 28, 2009 8:39pm PDT

    I don't believe all calories are created equal. Sugar and simple carbs spike insulin. Insulin carries fat to storage. That's how pasta makes you fat... if your eat too much. The article was right about that. Whole grain pasta is the way to go. And I agree with the coffee post. Caffeine is never the answer.

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  • summer's Avatar
    Posted by summer Tue Apr 28, 2009 9:29pm PDT

    WRONG! BMR is higher in SMALLER ANIMALS, not big. Like mice have higher resting metabolism rates than elephants. Same with people. Smaller people burn more. It makes less sense, but it's what all biology texts say. The writer should really do her/his homework.

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  • D's Avatar
    Posted by D Wed Apr 29, 2009 2:55am PDT

    This advice gives no regard to quality of food versus quantity, and provides no real factual data to back it up. Sure, pasta is delicious, and isn't so bad as they say, but then whole grains really do make a huge difference. Protein and fiber all the way.

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  • Dawnella's Avatar
    Posted by Dawnella Wed Apr 29, 2009 5:16am PDT

    There is a lot of problems I have with this article. First of all Calories may not be able to tell time, but the fact is, you are more apt to put them to use and burn them as energy if you dont eat at night when you are your LEAST active. Where to they get these authors???? geesh...

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  • Dawnella's Avatar
    Posted by Dawnella Wed Apr 29, 2009 5:20am PDT

    http://dawnellasdesignsolutions.blogspot.com/

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  • pooed's Avatar
    Posted by pooed Wed Apr 29, 2009 6:51am PDT

    This article is misleading and dangerous to people as it has elements of truth (build up muscles (be sensible about it), eat smaller portions of carbs) but oversimplifies and ignores the lethal aspects of how carbs are turned to fat and mess up your sugar levels, blood vessels and major organs and how relatively difficult it is to burn the fat/ clean up the body later. It also ignores other elements such as who the heck eats pasta without some delicious sauce/butter/cheese etc which multiply the issue of the carbs in the pasta.

    Being a 50 year old guy fighting the bulge and a family history of death due to heart/blood illnesses this kind of article scares me because it might encourage others in a similar situation to make some very bad decisions. But then who believes what they read on these DA web sites anyway - possibly those who deserve what they get....

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Comments 1-10 of 17

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