Wednesday, April 12, 2023

How do you stay consistent with calorie counting?

I find that counting calories is effective in helping with my weight loss, but I rarely manage to keep up the habit for more than a few weeks. It can be quite time consuming to figure out the amount of calories, then reach for my phone, switch to the relevant app, and record an entry every time I eat or drink something. Sometimes it's easy of course, but other times depending on where I am, who I'm with or what else I may be busy doing I find it's often not convenient. So I tell myself "I'll just log this later", but then I sometimes forget. After a while this pattern of inconsistent logging becomes normalised behaviour so I get even less consistent, and before I know it my progress is either stalled or undone.

What things help you to log calories consistently and/or make the logging process quicker and easier?

submitted by /u/cakemonitor
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/pURTSqu

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

16 Easy Beet Recipes That Can’t Be Beat

If you’re looking to add some sweetness to your daily vegetables, it’s time to feel the beet. Those little red roots are packed with natural sugars, so they can provide a burst of sweet flavor to salads, savory one-pan dinners and even snack time.

But unlike added sweeteners, the natural sugars from beets won’t send your blood levels soaring: Beets rank in the “low to medium” range for the glycemic index, which means your blood sugar won’t spike as it would with a sugary treat loaded with simple carbs.

And unlike added sugars, the sweetness of beets comes with disease-fighting health benefits and filling nutrients your body needs. Beetroot has been shown to lower blood pressure, increase blood flow to the brain for a healthier mind, and reduce chronic inflammation, which may be a factor in several diseases, including heart disease and certain cancers.

Beets are also loaded with filling fiber: One cup of sliced, cooked beets has 3.4 grams of dietary fiber, a nutrient that can help you feel full faster—and feel fuller for longer. Fiber helps calm your appetite, fights off belly fat, and can improve your overall gut health.

So beet it! These 15 easy beet recipes make it simple to incorporate more of this sweet red vegetable into your daily diet.

1. Balsamic Beet and Goat Cheese Salad >

Balsamic Beet and Goat Cheese Salad

Besides its creamy goat cheese, sweetness from beets, and peppery arugula flavor, this Balsamic Beet and Goat Cheese Salad has another benefit: It provides all four of your daily non-starchy vegetable servings in a single dish! And that’s huge for your goals.

Nutrisystem programs have members eat four or more servings of non-starchy vegetables per day for some simple reason: These veggies are weight loss superchargers! They fill you up, give your body nutrients it needs to function, fight off disease and keep your energy levels high. Plus, they’re low in calories to help power your weight loss success.

2. Root Vegetable Chips >

Root Vegetable Chips

Potatoes aren’t the only vegetables that make delicious chips! The Leaf offers ways to make them from kale for a light, crunchy taste, and in this Root Vegetable Chips recipe, from beets, parsnips and sweet potatoes.

By baking thin slices of the vegetables for 20 to 30 minutes, you’ll have a tray full of crunchy, salty, satisfying chips that help you conquer snack time with salty goodness while staying on track to your goals. Try them with your own seasoning mixes for a personal twist, or go for an even crunchier version by experimenting with an air fryer!

3. Miso Salmon with Kale and Beets >

Miso Salmon with Kale and Beets

This dish a smorgasbord of superfoods: Dark, leafy kale is high in fiber and low in calories, and is loaded with nutrients and antioxidants like potassium. Salmon is a superstar of Omega-3 fatty acids. And beets have all those can’t-beet-it benefits outlined above.

But when the three come together in this Miso Salmon with Kale and Beets recipe, they’ve got another super power: They’re delicious! Topped with a homemade miso-ginger glaze and flavored with onions and garlic, this dish is so tasty that you’ll forget it’s great for your health!

4. Red Velvet Beet Brownies >

Red Velvet Beet Brownies

Double the dessert flavor while reducing your calories and sugar intake with this Red Velvet Beet Brownies recipe. This healthy bake combines the flavors of red velvet cake and classic brownies into a single pan—and reduces sugar thanks to the natural sweetness of beets and a stevia baking blend.

The chocolate flavor is all there, with cocoa powder in the batter and chocolate chips on top. The result are rich, red brownies that are weight loss approved—and delicious.

5. Mega Beet Burger >

Mega Beet Burger

Give your Meatless Monday a filling, flavorful kick with this mouthwatering Mega Beet Burger recipe. It’s loaded with protein, fiber and nutrients not just from beets, but from oats, lentils, walnuts and flax. All these ingredients—plus some onions and spices—get mixed in the food processor to create a mix that’s got the same consistency as ground meat, but with far fewer calories. And they’re topped with something even more surprising: a goat cheese and honey spread that adds sweetness, creaminess, and—thanks to Greek yogurt—even more protein to this filling meal.

6. Maple Roasted Root Vegetables >

Maple Roasted Root Vegetables

Nothing says fall flavor like maple … except maybe roasted root veggies. Combine their autumnal powers and satisfy your sweet tooth with this simple to prepare side dish: Just toss sliced carrots, beets, and parsnips in a mix of oil, light butter, maple syrup, and orange juice before baking for 40 minutes. The result? Concentrated sweetness from the natural sugars of the vegetables, plus even more sugary goodness from a maple glaze. You’ll hardly believe this Maple Roasted Root Vegetables recipe is only 152 calories per serving.

7. Roasted Rosemary Beets and Carrots >

Roasted Rosemary Beets and Carrots

Roasting vegetables concentrates their flavors and brings out their natural sweetness. And when it’s beets and carrots, you’re roasting two of the most flavor- and natural sugar-packed veggies you can find! In this Roasted Rosemary Beets and Carrots recipe, they’re slow-roasted with red onion and topped with rosemary for an herby side that’s got all the flavors of harvest time. Best of all, it’s all made on one pan: Just toss the ingredients together, roast them together, and then devour them together!

8. Beet and Goat Cheese Appetizer >

Beet and Goat Cheese Appetizer

Beets and goat cheese are a classic combination. There’s something about the sweetness of the vegetable and the cool, creamy flavor of the cheese that marries perfectly. This Beet and Goat Cheese Appetizer recipe gives that pairing a gourmet spin that’s worthy of a classic party.

Square slices of beets are layered with a goat cheese, yogurt, milk and lemon mixture to make a striking, red-and-white striped bite that’s straight out of a cooking competition. But unlike those impossible dishes on TV, this layered dish is easy to make, so you can wow your friends and guests with the app’s looks and flavor while sticking to your healthy eating plan.

9. Arugula Beet Salad with Orange Slices >

Arugula Beet Salad with Orange Slices

This Arugula Beet and Orange Salad recipe is a sweet, refreshing way to get two of your daily non-starchy vegetable servings for just 101 little calories—and there’s no cooking required! Spicy, peppery arugula is topped with canned, sliced beets, sharp red onion, cool cucumber slices and sweet, tangy orange. It’s all topped off with a simple, tasty dressing you make yourself from orange juice, red wine vinegar, olive oil, salt and honey.

10. Beetroot and Quinoa Superfood Salad >

Beetroot and Quinoa Superfood Salad

Yes, it’s made of superfoods, so it’s loaded with nutrients like protein and fiber from quinoa, and vitamins and minerals in the beets and kale. But this Beetroot and Quinoa Superfood Salad recipe isn’t just healthy, it’s tasty, too, made with lemon, thyme and low-fat feta cheese. It’s got cheesiness, sweetness, crunch, citrusy zest and aromatic herbs … a serious mix of flavors and textures that could make this easy to make salad your new favorite Flex Meal or side dish.

11. Chicken Root Power Bowl >

Chicken Root Power Bowl

Power bowls are a delicious way to pack in lots of great-for-you foods in a single, easy-to-eat meal … and they’re always topped with a tasty dressing that ties all the ingredients together. This Chicken Root Power Bowl recipe is no different. It’s loaded with hearty chicken, grains, and vegetables like beets, spinach, cauliflower and sweet potato.

It’s all topped by a simple, flavorful white balsamic dressing, made with vinegar, sharp Dijon mustard, honey, olive oil and black pepper. Toss it all together and you’ve got a lunch that will fill you with power—energy for your day and, thanks to the high fiber and protein content, a full stomach that gives you the willpower to feel satisfied until supper.

12. Spring Beet Orzo Risotto >

Spring Beet Orzo Risotto

Beets give this Spring Beet Orzo Risotto recipe a bright, tantalizing red hue. The meal starts by roasting some beets—just toss them in olive oil and pop them in the oven on a baking sheet for 40 minutes. While they cook, you’ll prepare the orzo the same way rice is prepared for risotto, sautéing it and then cooking it in broth for added flavor.

The pasta is combined with balsamic vinegar and pureed beets for a delicious finish that’s topped with goat cheese and sliced almonds. This side dish has a creamy, crunchy texture you’ll love.

13. Red Velvet Protein Shake >

Red Velvet Protein Shake

It’s a protein shake that tastes like cake. Need we say more? Well, we will anyway! This Red Velvet Protein Shake recipe has a rich, chocolate fudge flavor that’s enhanced by coffee, and is hiding a secret: It’s packed with vegetable nutrition from beets and a cup of leafy green spinach. The beets provide added sweetness and a deep, ruby color, but otherwise, you’d never know it’s healthy. The fudge and coffee combo masks the vegetables, so all you taste through your straw is scrumptious cake.

14. Superfood Smoothie Bowl >

Superfood Smoothie Bowl

If you haven’t had a smoothie bowl, they’re part smoothie, part pudding … and all delicious. They’re a nutrient-packed way to energize your morning with vitamins, minerals and good stuff your body needs. Plus, they have a mix of flavors and textures that will tantalize your taste buds.

This Superfood Smoothie Bowl recipe has sweet cherries, beets, crunchy pistachios and creamy Greek yogurt that all help to mask the fiber-and-nutrition bonus of riced cauliflower. All you taste is sweet and crunch, though, brightening your a.m. hours and powering you up to tackle the day and stay satisfied until lunch.

15. Farro Roasted Vegetable Salad >

Farro Roasted Vegetable Salad

Roasted vegetable salads combine the nutritional punch of a cold side salad with the warm, satisfying flavors and textures of roasted veggies. This Farro Roasted Vegetable Salad recipe features beets, Brussels sprouts, kale and carrots. It gets a bonus bit of filling fiber and nutrition from farro, an often-overlooked, nutrient-dense grain that provides 12 percent of your daily fiber—plus iron and calcium—in a single serving. The farro also makes this already-heaping and -hearty dish even more satisfying, so you’ll feel more full and satiated than you ever have from a salad.

16. Roasted Beet Hummus >

Beet Hummus

Get ready to elevate your hummus game with a recipe that will make your taste buds sing. The stunning color of this Roasted Beet Hummus recipe might steal the show, but it’s the earthy sweetness that will keep you coming back for more. By adding beets to the classic chickpea and tahini mix, you’re not only making the dip more nutritious, but also adding a depth of flavor that will have everyone asking for the recipe. Say goodbye to boring old hummus and hello to your new favorite snack.

The post 16 Easy Beet Recipes That Can’t Be Beat appeared first on The Leaf.



from The Leaf https://ift.tt/CYEasly

I’ve been drinking more water lately and it’s really been helpful!

So my vice is diet soda and when I started my weight loss journey, I decided to not give it up even though everyone told me to. But I reasoned that it was diet, it can’t affect my weight loss that much!

Wrong.

Before I started drinking more water, I always felt hungry, and it was so hard to keep to my caloric intake because I always felt hungry. Well in related, I decided to give up soda for lent, and I’ve been drinking more water and omg…. I no longer feel hungry during the day!!!!

I’m so mad at myself because I’ve heard that people often mistake thirst and hunger and I thought that was not me because I drank enough liquids in a day! But no, turns out I was just thirsty instead of hungry!

Anybody else have a similar experience on their weight loss journey???

submitted by /u/lunarianlibrarian
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/yZwYVvD

Anyone out there maintaining a weight of less than 200 after being over 400 pounds?

I have been maintaining a weight range of 220-230 for the past several years. My highest weight was 450+. My weight loss was natural. My blood pressure is perfect (it used to be dangerously high) and so are other markers of health. I have begun losing weight again, and I'm getting close to being under 200. I am wondering if it's even realistic to think I could maintain less than 200. Previously in my life (teens and 20s), I've only maintained a sub-200 weight through eating disorders and drug abuse. I will not be overly restrictive in my diet or experience constant hunger as those are unhealthy behaviors in my ED recovery (and also binge triggers). I see most formerly 400+ (even those who have weight loss surgery) who don't get under 200 either (like many of the My 600 lb life patients who were successful in losing hundreds of pounds).

I also have no idea how much my loose skin weighs and it is everywhere, including my forearms and calves. I am mostly fine maintaining a low 200 range as I feel very healthy and can still fit into plus size (though barely) and regular sizes, so I have a lot of clothing options. But I worry about still getting harassed by doctors and also want to get a brachioplasty (arm lift), and I believe they'd want me to be under 200 as well.

Is there anyone here who healthily maintains sub-200 after being 400+?

submitted by /u/astraennui
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/6bm75xJ

Advice for binge eating recovery and a plateu

I'm not going to lie and say that I've been following the plan perfectly (though that is the goal I'm after) so I know why I am at a Plateau. Ths last 3 weeks I have been hovering over the same 5 lb range. I have had about 2 days of binge eating each week despite my best efforts. I know this sounds like a cop out, but I I just really need advice on how to manage it, since im having a really hard time doing it on my own. I have most days a week where I do so well at meeting my goals and one or two where there's a meal I feel like I go almost into a fugue state. And it's really discouraging because I just feel like I have no control, and it's affecting my weight loss goals. I have to lose at least 60 lbs and I'm stuck at 15 because of those days

How do other people with eating disorders help manage those episodes? Any advice is appreciated 🙏

submitted by /u/Illustrious_Talk6153
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/WkrET9s

Shamelessly plugging microbiome health as it has truly changed my relationship with food

This may end up long winded, if so, feel free to jump to TDLR.

I am on the upper end of the healthy weight range but had been steadily putting on a few pounds a year for the past decade and reached a point of being unhappy with how I felt and looked. I also realized that throughout college and my early and mid 20s, I didn't like sweets, sugary drinks and unhealthy foods, which made weight maintenance a lot easier, but now I can't get enough. After falling off the bandwagon many times of trying to not binge eat at night, I vented to a friend at brunch who works in microbiome research (yeah, I know) who was explaining our gut and the impact that it has on our cravings, our habits, our weight, etc. I thought she was spewing some antiscience, optimistic future facing potential research, but I watched a documentary (The Invisible Extinction) and figured I'd give it a shot and see how I felt. At this point, my focus wasn't on weight loss, but just general fear mitigation as the documentary made me feel like I was going to die (and, frankly, had some problematic speculation on autism, but i digress).

It's been a few months and oh. my. god. I feel INCREDIBLE. Physically and mentally. I am a cheese ADDICT and late night binge eater and, at the point of writing this, its around midnight and I don't feel a single craving or urge. I've actually become weirdly obsessed with nuts, which I'd never been an eater of, and have a nuts drawer in my kitchen that are my go to snack. I can truly say that this renewed focus on gut health and my microbiome has changed my life and relationship with food. I think, for me, the worst part about being on a diet or trying to lose weight is that there are very few things that you are meant to DO, just lots of things you are meant to stop doing. For microbiome health, there are definitely things you should stop doing, but really it's about incorporating things that are good for your gut, which completely changed my relationship with food. Food is no longer calories, but fuel.

I think there are some claims around gut health that are wild science fiction, so take some with a grain of salt, but I would HIGHLY recommend incorporating a more gut friendly approach to your life and seeing if you have a similar experience. It's been about 3 months, but I started feeling the dietary stability after only a few days.

The changes that I've made are eliminating artificial sweeteners (I'm a sucker for splenda coffee and diet coke- probably 4 a day) which took some time to adjust to but now I'm just as happy with unsweetened coffee. I drink kombucha (absolutely hated the stuff until I tried "real" kombucha), try and ensure I am having 30 different plants per week, very little alcoholic beverages and 1 probiotic item (yogurt, kimchi, etc) per day. And that's (for the most part) it. I'm already a vegetarian, so the central premise of the most important thing to avoid is antibiotics/ antibiotic treated meat wasn't necessary for me.

To be clear- you lose weight through CICO. But if you're on a general health journey or can't seem to cut cravings, you have nothing to do lose by seeing if improving your gut health aids in that journey. The more research I did, the more I realized how absolutely horribly I was treating my gut by destroying my microbiome with my diet soda, wine, added sugar, etc. I actually can't imagine myself ever even WANTING a diet coke or "junk food" ever again as I just feel so good and am able to eat insanely "heavy" things in moderation where in the past I'd go crazy (for dinner, I had a huge slice of sourdough bread with ricotta cheese, cantaloupe and fig. I had one and felt satisfied and ACTUALLY FUCKING STOPPED).

TLDR: My friend got me hooked on giving a shit about my microbiome and now I drink kefir like it's going out of style and pooping like a champion.

EDIT: I bolded the part about antibiotics as I realize that I treated it as a side note since I don't eat meat, but that it's, like, the primary cornerstone of most of the reading material on the microbiome. Antibiotics destroy everything- good and bad. And antibiotic treated meat does the same. So I wanted to emphasize it in case anyone actually decides to give it a try.

submitted by /u/NY_VC
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/8EgiSIX

Stuck in a cycle of setting out to lose weight and then gaining more. I want it to end today.

Hey, y'all. Hoping for some advice or perhaps some encouragement.

I'm 5’4, 24, and weighed 231.2 as of last week. My goal weight is 130 or so - I am hoping to build up a lot of muscle mass so I'm okay with my final weight being a little higher if I'm happy with my figure.

I want to get on track with weight loss. I'm not very happy with my appearance, but I also don't feel great in other ways. A lot of my excess weight gathers on my stomach and it makes it hard to end over or squat for long periods of time. It also makes it hard to do certain movements in one of my hobbies. I know there are workarounds but I still get discouraged when I can't do certain things because of my massive gut.

I have been setting weight loss goals and making plans since 2017 but have only gained weight after each resolution. I am not very good at sticking to diet and exercise. What will happen is that I'll have a streak of daily exercise going from a week to about a month, and then I'll miss a day and then never her back on the wagon. Food is the same issue, with the added pressures of food cravings and impulsivity. I also like a lot of variety in my diet, which makes things worse. There was one point in time where I was able to stick to a caloric deficit, but at that point in time I had gone too far in the opposite direction and it was getting overly restrictive. I also was also making poor food choices (I remember doing shit like eating half a pint of ice cream for breakfast and then pretty much nothing else for the rest of the day).

I suspect I may have ADHD (or, if not ADHD, something that affects my concentration/habit building/organization lol) but haven't gotten tested yet. I have heard this can be a factor in weight loss and gain and want to know if any ADHD’ers have any advice.

I do have a few things going for me. I have picked up a few active hobbies, and take at least two work out classes a week to support those hobbies. I also worked with a personal trainer on my college campus for a year and a half, and through this I learned a lot about weightlifting and exercise in general. I also live with my parents, who have a lot of exercise equipment I can use. I think my main points of focus would be diet and maintaining regular exercise outside of my classes.

Do you guys have any good advice for maintaining a habit when you struggle with habit forming? Or maybe some diet tips? Thanks!

submitted by /u/fashionbackwards
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/GqYCE9c