Food: Your questions answered
Ok so I asked you for feedback on what
topics you want to hear about. Surprise, surprise, most of you want to hear
about food! What food to eat, how to prepare it, when to eat it, how much and
how often. And let’s not forget what foods help us to lose weight (more
specifically body fat not just weight. Muscle weighs more than fat and it’s
your fat-burning furnace. You don’t want to lose muscle!)
As you already know I am against
deprivation diets of any kind. How can you deprive yourself of valuable nutrients
when you’re training anyway? When you train the body’s resources get used up.
Muscle fibres get broken down. THEY HAVE TO BE REPLACED! If precious muscle is
not replaced you run the risk of PUTTING ON WEIGHT and losing all your exercise
gains. Don’t do it!
So what to eat. In my book it’s really
simple. Here’s some bullet points to make it easy:
Weight-loss: Cut the carbs. Anything from
bread to pasta, pastry and wheat-based cereal. Wheat will bloat you like a
hot-air balloon, even if you eat very little. It has inflammatory properties
especially for women. To add to that it turns very quickly into sugar in the
bloodstream if it’s more refined, making it an ample substance for fat storage.
Fat is not your problem when it comes to fat storage but carbs and sugars are
as they promote the fat storing hormone insulin. Reduce, eliminate or replace
starchy carbs with healthy veggies.
Energy: Do you lack energy most of the
time? While there are many factors that contribute to low energy levels like
sleep deprivation an obvious one, there are also dietary reasons why we slump
especially at certain times of the day. If you are eating energy zapping foods
like sugar and carbs (here they are again) you will get an energy slump every
time. Sugar will encourage an insulin surge to drop high sugar levels to lower
manageable ones. Not only does this promote fat storage, it also results in an
excessive drop in blood sugar leaving you more tired than before you had it in
the first place. What to do? If you can go cold turkey and cut sugar altogether
from your diet you’ll win. If you can’t do it all at once then wean yourself
off bit by bit. Or try to replace sugary foods with fruit. BUT be careful. Fruit
is also high in sugar. And even though it’s natural sugar it’s still sugar. The
only advantage that you have with fruit sugar is the fibre which slows down
absorption of sugar but it still can give you a sugar spike so keep it to a
minimum.
Protein: Ok so this an important ingredient
when you are exercising and/or looking to lose weight. If you eat meat, fish,
eggs and dairy you shouldn’t have too much of a problem taking in enough
protein each day. However, you want to aim to have protein with EACH meal. I
know it’s a pain but having a carbs-only breakfast (toast, cereal) and lunch,
will only give you lots of energy and no muscle support. Plus you’ll get hungry
within a few hours. Eating protein in the morning will enable muscle and organ
repair and set you up for the day whilst also keeping you fuller longer.
Fat: Is essential. Low fat diets have done
a lot of damage to the balanced diet plate as they have all been put into the
same category of BAD. However not all fats are created equal and we need as
much as 30% fat every day. The secret is to get in more good fats than bad fats
that help with satiety (keeping you full), brain cognition and function and
cleaning arteries, among many more things. Try to get more monounsaturated fats
in your diet than saturated fats and almost always avoid trans fats, they are
always bad for you. Saturated fats are found in meat and animal products like
dairy. Remove excess fat from meat cuts, skin from chicken and go for lean
pieces of meat and low fat milk. Eat oily fish regularly or if vegetarian eat
flaxseeds, chia seeds and hemp seeds to get valuable omega 3 and 6 oils. Other
sources of good fats are olive oil (raw), avocados and olives.
More on food next week! Please feel free to
ask more questions.
You can comment below. ⬇
Hope you’re having a good year so far and
sticking to your goals!
Sally x
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