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Cutting Back on "Bad" Carbs

By:   Reader's Digest

Ten ways to make low-carb healthy.

Thanks to the popularity of low-carb diets, nearly half of Americans say they are watching the amount of carbohydrates they eat. If you're among them, we're providing these 10 tips so your carb control is healthy and wise!

Bear in mind that there is a huge difference between Cheese Doodles and oatmeal. Both might be categorized as carbs, but their benefits are on opposite ends of the health spectrum. In the last chapter, we detailed the benefits of “good carbs.” Now it's time to explain what a “bad carb” is. Here's the simplest answer: white flour, refined sugar, and white rice. More broadly, any food made primarily of a carb that has been processed in such a way as to strip out ingredients that hinder quick and easy cooking. Why are refined carbs a problem? Easy: They digest so quickly that they cause blood sugar surges that lead to weight gain and other health troubles.

Here are some ways to avoid troublesome carbs while still getting the fuel you need for good health. Carb-counting meets common sense, right this way...

1. Tell the waiter to hold the bread. At almost every restaurant, your meal starts with a basket of rolls, breads, and crackers made from white flour. If it's not put on the table, you won't eat any. Or, if you really need something to nibble on, ask if they have whole wheat varieties.

2. At Chinese restaurants, ask for brown rice, and limit how much you eat to one cup. In fact, some Chinese restaurants have started offering to swap a vegetable for the rice in their combo dinners, knowing that many people are on low-carb diets. At home, always cook brown rice instead of white. Brown rice hasn't been processed and still has its high-fiber nutrients.

3. Instead of bread, use eggplant slices to make a delicious sandwich. Broil two thick slices of eggplant until brown, then add mozzarella and tomato, olive oil and basil to one slice, suggests Nicole Glassman, owner of Mindful Health in New York City. Top with the other slice of eggplant and broil again until the cheese melts.

4. Wrap your food in lettuce leaves. Yes, skip the bun, tortillas, and bread slices and instead make a sandwich inside lettuce leaves. Glassman suggests going Mexican with a sprinkle of cheddar cheese, salsa, and chicken; Asian with sesame seeds, peanuts, bean sprouts, cut up green beans, and shrimp with a touch of soy sauce; or deli style with turkey, cheese, and mustard.

5. Buy old-fashioned snacks in kidsize bags. Truth is, pretzels, tortilla chips, potato chips, and cookies are mostly bad carbs, made primarily of refined flour, sugar, salt, and/or oil. You want to remove as many of these foods from your daily eating as you can. But if you can't live without them, buy them in small bags--1 ounce is a typical “lunch box” size--and limit yourself to just one bag a day.

6. Break yourself of your old spaghetti habits. Almost everyone loves a big bowl of pasta, topped with a rich tomato sauce. The tomato sauce couldn't be better for you; the spaghetti, however, is pure carbohydrate. While spaghetti is fine to eat every now and then, for those sensitive to carbs or wishing to cut back on their noodle  intake, here are some alternatives to the usual spaghetti dinner:

  • Here's the easiest choice: Switch to whole wheat pasta. It is denser than  traditional pasta, with a firm, al dente texture similar to what you'd get in Italy.
  • Grill vegetables such as eggplant, zucchini, bell peppers, and onion and slice them into long, thin pieces. Mix up and pour your spaghetti sauce over the vegetables for a delicious and immensely healthy meal.
  • Substitute spaghetti squash for the pasta. Boil or microwave the squash until soft, then scoop out the seeds and pull the strands of squash from the shell with a fork.
  • Top with your favorite sauce and a grating of real Parmesan.
  • Try healthy whole grains as a replacement for pasta. Spaghetti sauce goes better than you'd expect on brown rice, barley, chickpeas, and such.


7. Cut up 1-ounce portions of cheese and divvy up 1-ounce portions
of nuts into tiny snack bags. Now you have a handy snack at the ready.

8. Eat potatoes boiled with the skin on. The effect of potatoes on blood sugar depends on how the potatoes are prepared. No need to unspud yourself completely! Also, new potatoes tend to have fewer simple carbs than other types of potatoes.

9. Eat lightly of the new low-carb products. More than 1,000 low-carb products were introduced in 2003, but the FDA has yet to publish any guidelines as to what “low carb” really means. Instead, many new “low carb” foods are to carbcutting what “low fat” cookies were to fat-cutting: just a new way of pitching foods high in calories and low in nutrient value. In fact, Consumer Reports found that many packaged low-carb foods are actually higher in calories than their regular counterparts. For instance, a serving of Keto's low-carb Rocky Road ice cream has 270 calories, almost double the calories found in many regular ice creams and twice as much fat.

10. Think lightly of the new net-carb measurements. Many of the low-carb weight-loss programs are trying to get their followers to use “net carbs” as the measurement of choice for the appropriateness of a carb food in their diet. This is a measurement of the “bad carbs” left in a food after you adjust for those carb ingredients that don't immediately affect blood sugar. The folks at Atkins Nutritionals say the proper way to measure net carbs is to subtract fiber (as well as sugar alcohols and glycerin, when applicable) from the total carbs listed on the nutrition facts panel of a product. But that's just their version, and that's the problem. “Net carbs” is not a regulated or standardized measurement--manufacturers can define it how they want, and say what they want on product packaging. And there is no science to say that tracking net carbs offers any unique weight-loss benefit.




From Reader's Digest Stealth Health. Buy this and other books at the Reader's Digest Store.

    Comments
    Nicole 
    Jun. 23, 2009 7:24 am
    Helpful article! Thanks!
     
    Julie Drey Supporting Member (Click to learn more about Supporting Membership)
    Jun. 26, 2009 12:55 pm
    Chuck's Mac & Cheese I made for Vacation Bible School dinner they loved it. But I did add a little milk to moisten. JD
     
    Aug. 30, 2009 4:01 pm
    IS there anyone out there who is now on a low carb diet or a slightly modified low carb diet? Any results with weight loss? What is the suggested amount of low carbs per day. any suggestions would be appreciated. Thank you.
     
    linda 
    Aug. 31, 2009 11:49 am
    My husband and I are doing "low/no carb" dieting right now. We have given up bread, potatoes,rice and high carb snacks. I won't give up veggies and fruit. So for meals we eat eggs for breakfast and meat w/ salad or other veggie for dinner. Lunch is usually some sort of left over. Snacks don't happen anymore - mostly because I don't get hungry on a protein based diet. We've been doing it for a month now and I've lost 10 lbs, husband = 8lbs. With this diet I avoid the sugar highs and lows I got with my normal food habits, I feel fuller longer and have more energy.
     
    Sep. 2, 2009 7:28 am
    Eating whole grain is good too. It keeps you full longer. When I want a snack, I eat grapes and nuts. Just limit it to 1/4 cup on the nuts and 1/2 cup on the grapes. Sugar makes you hungry. The more you eat the more you want. I like it when I'm not hungry all the time. Eating meat and vegetables together and fruit by themselves are good too. I have whole wheat bread or a whole wheat bagel with a glass of skim milk for breakfast. Meat and veggies for lunch, fruit as a snack about four and dinner meat and veggies again. Nuts or fruit if I something want later. I lost 13 pounds in 2 months.
     
    Paula Stewart 
    Sep. 29, 2009 2:39 pm
    These ten tips are awesome. I am going to put these to work to cut my Carbs.
     
    Wanda 
    Oct. 1, 2009 8:51 pm
    I just found out about "Shirataki noodles". They are found in many natural food stores in the dairy case. OMG!!! The answer to life's best kept secrets. They have ZERO (well just 1 or 2) carbs for a full serving. No guilt with any spaghetti dinners, casseroles, etc. But...be sure to know this: totally rinse the noodles first (and don't smell them when you first drain and rinse them) - then...cook them in the sauce you are preparing. They absorb the flavor of whatever you are cooking. They are FANTANTIC! I even fooled my family into eating them...and the family said they were repeaters on the table. By the way...the noodles are made from Tofu. Healthy for you and good tasting if you prepare them like I mentioned. Yeah for those of us who are diabetic and have to REALLY limit our carb intake.
     
    mia 
    Oct. 9, 2009 4:51 am
    i quit the bread and pastas, & white potatoes. ate just about every thing else it is amazing how u don't get so hungry off those things. ate 4-6 small meals through out the day. lost 100 lbs in a year. now i eat a few things w/carbs high fiber breads and wheat pastas have not gained.
     
    Jennifer 
    Oct. 21, 2009 6:26 pm
    Wanda, I just found those noodles today and am excited over all the options I will have. Thanks for the rinsing suggestion.
     
    yorgster 
    Oct. 25, 2009 9:43 pm
    These noodles are awesome! Food 4 Less carries them where the tofu is sold. I've used them with cream sauce and red sauce and with stir fry. Amazing! I don't feel slighted anymore! Low-carb is the way to go! Pounds have been melting off and I don't feel like I'm deprived in any way. I also found a way to enjoy baking again... flax flour substituted for bleached white flour. I have an awesome recipe for pumpkin cookies make with flax flour. 4 cookies only 2 1/2 carbs.
     
    Oct. 27, 2009 6:40 am
    yorgster...have you or will you be posting the recipe for the pumkin cookies that uses flax flour? Have you tried any other conventional recipes with that substitution for white flour?
     
    Tara 
    Nov. 11, 2009 11:53 pm
    I had gastric bypass 3 years ago and the goal to keeping weight off is low-carb; however lately I think I have been eating too little carbs. My favorite website is netrition.com: they have coffee, cookies, flour substitutes, noodles, you name it--all low carb. They have been saving me my sanity for months!
     
    nihce89 
    Dec. 4, 2009 4:50 pm
    Good tips if you're sticking to a low carb diet. If you're just concerned about keeping healthy, carbs can be beneficial to your health. The carbohydrates in pasta provide the body energy. I would just recommend eating it earlier in the day. Also keep in mind that moderation is key. One thing that DID bother me about this post was the tip regarding eating at a Chinese restaurant. It isn't only Chinese restaurants--anyway, it's usually Japanese restaurants that would be more likely to offer the alternative of brown rice in replacement of white rice. However, why not just ask any restaurant that serves rice if they also offer brown rice? Sorry, I found that slightly offensive/borderline amusing being Korean and having Chinese parents hahaha
     
    Jan. 9, 2010 6:35 pm
    Great ideas!! Thanks
     
    Jan. 13, 2010 9:44 am
    This was ALOT of help! I went in for my yearly check-up in December and my blood work came back with very high triglyceride levels. The doctor told me to cut back on carbs and to basically eat like a diabetic for the next four months (hoping the levels are lowered!). I was at a loss as to what to eat (and not eat) but now I know!
     
    78Bluegoose 
    Jan. 13, 2010 1:17 pm
    Check out www.drbdiet.com. A low-carb, low-calorie, low-fat, not high protein diet that is medically supervised, quick (16-20lbs month) and no diet pills. I did for 2-1/2 months and lost almost 50lbs, kept it off for over 4 years. It literally changed my way of eating for not only myself but my family. My husband dropped 60lbs in less than 6 months bringing his blood pressure to normal and cholesterol as well.
     
    live-it 
    Jan. 17, 2010 4:29 pm
    I have learned something new and I have not read it on here so I thought that I would share it. I know so many of us work so hard at getting healthy and eating right. A good friend of mine told me that she has to eat foods/drinks according to her blood type. When I first heard this I thought that she was crazy but it is so true. There are certain blood types that should not have certain foods. There is a book called, "Cook right for your blood type." Also for eating right for your blood type. She lost a lot of weight and keep it off. If you do not know your blood type give blood at the red cross and they will send you a card. Good luck to us all. Oh and totally watch the carbs. And like Richard Simons says, it is not a diet but a liveit. lol
     
    Jan. 30, 2010 6:44 pm
    Pretty cool!
     
    Feb. 6, 2010 5:41 pm
    The best balanced diet I've found...and I've lost 14 pounds in two months...is the American Dietic Plan or the American Diabetes Plan. I've recently been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and am on a 1600 calorie, 180g carb, 60 g protein daily meal plan. 3 servings carbs, 1 serving protein for breakfast, 4 servings carbs, 2 servings protein lunch and dinner, evening snack 1 serving carb, 1 serving protein. You must work in low carb veggies, the weight watchers zero points veggies. Check out the ADA website: diabetes.org. Good healthy balanced meal plans. I am satisfied all the time and don't have the cravings I used to have and I am losing weight! Fighting diabetes too! I'm going win this battle!
     
    Feb. 6, 2010 5:43 pm
    That's American Dietetic Association...can't spell! eatright.org
     
    Feb. 8, 2010 7:05 pm
    The biggest key to eating healthy is not mixing carbs with fat. If you going on very low carb diet and want to keep eating lots of fruit with natural sugars, eat them on their own. e.g don't have fruit with cottage cheese for breakfast. Eat you fruit in the morning and the cottage cheese at lunch. If we ate our potato for lunch and our meat for supper we'd be thin. The mix forces you to store the fat and burn the carbs.
     
     
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