Nutrition and Calorie Tips

A day of snacks…

A day of snacks… ☕️ 🍫

There are lots of strategies you can use when trying to stick to your calorie deficit to lose weight/fat. Being aware of the calories in the foods you choose to consume and swapping to lower calorie foods which you also enjoy is an obvious option. As well as the calories though it’s worth considering the quantity and volume of the food you’re choosing.

Snacking is a common problem and an easy way to extra calories to sneak in. It’s not hard to accumulate over 1000 cals of snacks in a day. A coffee when you get to work with a couple of biscuits (medium semi skimmed latte and chocolate digestives), a ‘healthy’ snack mid morning of 30g cashews and an apple, a Mars bar to give you a bit of an energy boost in the afternoon, and a small bag of kettle chips when you’re waiting for dinner. None of that will seem excessive at the time, in fact you may not even notice much if it. You can see, however, how easily it could take you over your calories for the day.

There are some easy swaps you could make that won’t impact too much on your satisfaction, still allow you to follow your preferred pattern of eating but save 500 cals. In this example you could swap the coffee to a flat white and the digestives to a couple of lotus biscuits. You could just have the apple for your ‘healthy’ snack, swap to a curly wurly to give you an afternoon boost and some pop chips pre dinner and you’ll save over 500 cals, and it’s still a lot of snacks so you won’t feel deprived.

Obviously you may decide instead to cut a few of the snacks and have the higher calorie options, but that’s where knowing the calorie content comes in! You can have whatever you want, if you can fit it into your calories, this is just another strategy to add to your toolkit to help you stick to those calories.

Enjoy 🤗
Xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Mindless Snacking

Tuesday Tip: Mindless Snacking 🍪

Many of us suffer from mindless snacking which can slow your weight loss progress and stop you reaching your goals. Here are some tips to help.

# Control your environment

Don’t buy the snack in the first place. Easier said than done sometimes but if they aren’t in your cupboard you’re far less likely to eat them.

# Be intentional with meals

Take time to sit down and enjoy yours meals. Try to stay off your phone, don’t watch TV or try to do other things while yon eat. Focus on the food and flavours to enjoy it more.

# Make it harder to snack

If you are going to have snacks in the house, make it harder to eat them. So for example keep things like fruit out and easily accessible but keep the biscuits and chips in a cupboard in a different room/ at the back of the cupboard/inside a tin etc.

# Know your trigger foods

Everyone has food that triggers them to overeat. Be aware of them and try to avoid them, keep them out of the house or pre-portion them.

# Find other stress relievers

This could be working out, going for walks, doing yoga, mediation, journaling, time with family or friends, other hobbies etc.

# Stay busy

This keeps your mind off food and snacks. Use the extra time to do something productive if you can – be it towards yours fitness, a hobby or even some productive self care like a bath etc.

# Stay hydrated

This can help reduce hunger and cravings throughout the day.

# Try to get more sleep

This will help you feel like you have more energy and therefore be less likely to use food as a pick me up, and it will reduce the production of the hormones that cause hunger too.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

What happens when you eat carbs at night?

What happens when you eat carbs at night?🥔

Some people have suggested that eating carbs at night, before you sleep should be avoided because you are more likely to store fat since you are sleeping shortly after the last meal, so you won’t have a chance to ‘burn it off.’ Is there any truth to this?

Nope. This isn’t how your metabolism works. Your metabolism doesn’t shut off just because you’re asleep, you’re still metabolising nutrients and creating fuel while you sleep. It’s also not how body fat is gained or lost – it doesn’t occur at specific times of the day. When you eat it’s likely that you will store some fatty acids in adipose tissue. But they can be mobilized again as we go through periods of ‘fasting’ and ‘feeding’ during the day. For example, if you only ate one really large meal per day, you would store a significant amount of fatty acids in adipose tissue, since the meal would likely be quite calorie-dense. However, after several hours, you would likely begin mobilizing much of that energy during the long ‘fasting’ window since you only ate a single meal. If on the other hand you ate 8 meals per day (totalling the same number of calories overall) you would store fewer fatty acids after each meal, but you also have a much shorter fasting window. The overall result though would be the same – you’d end up storing / metabolising the same amount of fatty acids.

Now people tend to focus on carbs as they’re often seen as the devil and also tend to be more calorie dense (especially when you include things like cakes, biscuits, pizza, etc that technically are a combination of carbs and fat) but studies show that it makes no difference to fat storage whether your calories are from carbs or other macros. So regardless of the content of the meal if you eat a big meal at night, then yes you will probably store more fatty acids overnight as it is a high calorie meal. But as you then have a long ‘fasting’ window while you sleep you will metabolise some of them. And as long as the meals you have earlier in the day don’t take you over your calorie goal it won’t result in actual body fat gains.

So, eating (anything) at night is not going to make you store more fat, and this is supported by research. At the end of the day, the most important factor for success is hitting your calorie target consistently. Eat in a pattern that allows you to be most consistent at hitting your calories.

🤗

Xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Two weeks off won’t matter

Tuesday Tip: Two weeks off won’t matter 👌🏼

Will a few weeks lost to holiday, sickness or injury spoil all your hard-earned progress?

Only if you let it!

A couple weeks off is only a small fraction of your life and your fitness journey. It’s highly unlikely you’ll gain much fat or lose muscle over a few weeks.

Try to stop the “all-or-nothing” mentality and shift your perspective – you didn’t achieve all your progress in a week or two, and you certainly won’t lose it that quickly.

With the right mindset and approach, a brief break is simply a blip that need not hamper your progress and goals.

So if you’re injured, modify workouts to avoid aggravating your injury. For example, if you can’t train your upper body, focus on your lower body instead. If your injury is more severe, consider walks and lighter movement to stay active. And when you eventually get back to training, ease yourself in to prevent re-injury. Obviously also consult a physio for specific advice.

If you’re sick then just try to adhere to your current lifestyle and diet as much as possible. So keep tracking your food to maintain the habit. Eat a balanced diet if your appetite allows. Stay hydrated and prioritise recovery and sleep.

Reduce training intensity or stop altogether, depending on the severity of the illness.

If you’re on holiday then again try to do as much as you can – keep tracking to keep the habit going (if you don’t like going ‘over’ your cals then up your goal for the time you’re away), stay as active as you can – walk, swim etc and just try not to eat and drink for the sake of it. Focus on the other experiences of the holiday – not just what goes in your mouth.

Even if you stray from your diet, it’s unlikely that you’ll gain much fat over two weeks unless you really go off the rails. And research shows that 2 weeks off training results in little-to-no muscle loss. If you take an extended period off due to surgery etc then you may lose a little muscle but it still isn’t the end of the world. “Muscle memory” is a real phenomenon that enables you to rebuild lost muscle mass more quickly the second time around.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Good snack?…..

Good snack?….. 🍫

I often talk about this idea of foods being described as ‘good’ or ‘bad’ and I often hear people telling me they need to choose “better”snacks, or that they’ve swapped their usual chocolate for “good” snacks. So something like this caramel chocolate peanut KIND bar is often perceived to be a “good” snack, whilst Snickers is considered to be a “bad” snack.

The key to being in control of your weight management is really understanding that there is no such thing as a “bad” or “good” snack – they’re just different. There are nutritional differences between the chocolate and the KIND bar of course but not quite as many as we think ,and of course we don’t just choose food on the basis of its nutritional breakdown.

The 40g KIND bar is a great option for a snack – it’s got a bit more protein (though still not ‘high’ protein per se) and other micronutrients and less sugar (not that sugar is bad!). The combo of slightly more protein and fat may keep you fuller for longer.

The 41g Snickers bar however actually has fewer overall calories, a reasonable amount of protein and less fat. It provides you with energy, mainly in the form of sugar. For many people the chocolate can give an emotional boost as well as an energy one.

Overall the calorie difference between the two is only 20 cals but the Snickers is lower. So if you’re choosing the KIND bar in an effort to lose weight, then think again. If you’re choosing it because you like them then brilliant – keep having it. If you fancy some chocolate, then have that! Don’t be swayed by “healthy” marketing tactics. Just because a product is labeled as better for you or comes with a higher price tag, doesn’t guarantee it’s truly beneficial!

There are no good or bad foods – all foods can be accommodated within a balanced diet. Being aware of the calories in different foods empowers you to make that choice.

🤗

Xx