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ReginaW
Wed, Jun-04-08, 16:31
Four Foods You Should Be Eating to Stay Slim

Keeping those extra pounds off is even tougher than losing them in the first place. Here's what to stock in your fridge so your weight doesn't creep back up.

About 70 percent of dieters report that they regain their lost pounds, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. The good news is that bucking the trend and staying slim doesn't mean starving. In fact, one issue may be the foods dieters don't eat. If your weight keeps yo-yoing up and down, the problem may be that you're not eating enough of these four food groups (sorry—sugary, fried and fatty foods still aren't recommended):

1. Protein In May early results were reported for the multipart study called "Diogenes" (a name created by combining the words diet, obesity and genes), which is being funded by the European Community. Researchers split 205 people who'd lost weight on a fixed diet over two months into five groups, each eating a different kind of diet, to see which group did the best at keeping the weight off. The results: participants who ate more protein were least likely to regain the lost pounds. (A diet focused on low-glycemic foods, such as diabetics follow, didn't work as well.)

2. Nuts Although they are high in calories, research suggests that nuts help keep people thin. In one study with more than 8,000 participants, at the University of Navarra in Spain, people who rarely or never ate nuts gained slightly more over two years than those who munched on them at least twice a week (the results were adjusted for risk factors for obesity). Another study, at Loma Linda University in California, found that overweight women lost weight over six months when they were given almonds to eat and otherwise ate as they chose. Nuts contain mostly unsaturated fat, especially monounsaturated fats, which raise "good" cholesterol. They tend to be filling and may push the body to burn more fat, says Dr. Leo Galland, author of "The Fat Resistance Diet" (Broadway, 2005).

3. Fruits and Vegetables Women who consume five or more fruit and vegetable servings daily are more likely to maintain weight loss than those who eat fewer servings, according to the Centers of Disease Control. (How much is a serving? It's about a half cup of cut-up fruit, berries, or nonleafy vegetables, one full cup of leafy veggies or one medium-size whole fruit.)

4. Berries As you enjoy your daily servings of fruit, don't forget berries. Research at Doshisha University in Japan suggests that anthocyanins, the flavonoids that give berries (and other plant foods) a red, blue or purple color, alter the activity of genes found in human fat cells. In a separate study in which mice were fed anthocyanins, researchers found they didn't gain weight, even when they were given an otherwise high-fat diet that would typically plump them up.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/140027

Wifezilla
Wed, Jun-04-08, 17:01
In a separate study in which mice were fed anthocyanins, researchers found they didn't gain weight, even when they were given an otherwise high-fat diet that would typically plump them up.

I would llike to know EXACTLY what they were feeding these mice. I am guessing very little carbs other than the berries!

Cerridwen
Wed, Jun-04-08, 17:07
But wait... A high-fat diet wouldn't plump them up anyway. They're making an assumption that "an otherwise high-fat diet that would typically plump them up".
You don't have much of a study.
Did they check that the diet actually plumped up the mice first, and then feed them the berries and they didnt' gain more weight? dumb...
The rest was interesting. Looks like an atkins diet to me....
Cerridwen.

paleodude
Fri, Jun-06-08, 18:22
Speaking of berries...
There is a low carb diet (similar ratios as the Zone) called the Fat Flush Plan. Anyone here using it?
One of the things you do is drink diluted pure (no sugar or sweetener added) cranberry juice. People who have tried it tell me there is an added benefit that your typical aches and pains from yard work, golfing, etc.. are greatly reduced.
(I am 56 years old so at times for me getting out of bed can involve aches and pains)
The reason you drink diluted cranberry juice is because pure cranberry juice has a lot of 'pucker power'.
Even diluted it is hard to drink.