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Cutting Back on "Bad" Carbs

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 
    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.
     
    missmay 
    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!
     
    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
     
    HANNAH 
    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!
     
    pdale 
    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!
     
    pdale 
    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.
     
    Meilier 
    Mar. 9, 2010 6:03 am
    Low Carb Foods List - http://www.etoolsage.com/Chart/Low_Carb_Foods_List.asp?Cate=0&NutriCate=205&NutriAmount=9&pageNo=1

This is a searchable collection of low-carbohydrate/sugar data on thousands of foods. The carbohydrate and sugar data of foods is based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture database for standard reference SR22.
     
    Meilier 
    Mar. 9, 2010 6:04 am
    Low Carb Foods List - http://www.etoolsage.com/Chart/Low_Carb_Foods_List.asp?Cate=0&NutriCate=205&NutriAmount=9&pageNo=1
     
    Lo 
    Mar. 15, 2010 8:13 am
    Chocolate lovers rejoice! I found these LOW CARB/NMO SUGAR chocolate bars at Trader Joe's! I always forget the name BUT they are usually by the check out aisles and have like 2 carbs and no sugar... they have milk or dark chocolate and the dark chocolate is the best.... a little high in calories, but if you have a sweet tooth a couple pieces will not kill you and it will satisy your chocolate craving trust me
     
    Bmitche 
    Mar. 15, 2010 11:24 am
    Great comments! Easy to do.
     
    Judy 
    Mar. 17, 2010 10:51 pm
    There are great ideas here. I was disappointed in the Diabetes site, so glad to find these postings. 3/17/10
     
    FireBella 
    Mar. 18, 2010 6:49 am
    Bluegoose78, can you give me any additional info on Dr. B Diet, such as limitations on carb, fat, calories, etc? I checked them out and gave them a call, however, there aren't any clinics in Georgia so I can't sign up. Please help, I have been fighting my weight all my life. Thank you!
     
    patty5 
    Mar. 18, 2010 7:46 am
    In reference to Jan. 17th's 'live-it', this from the Mayo Clinic: Question Blood type diet: Does it work?Is there any merit to the blood type diet? Answer from Katherine Zeratsky, R.D., L.D. Some research suggests that people who have certain blood types may develop specific patterns of food allergies. However, there's no scientific evidence to support the so-called "blood type diet," in which different diets are recommended based on a person's blood type. At this time, eating or avoiding certain foods according to your blood type isn't thought to have any favorable influence on weight or overall health. In fact, a "blood type diet" may not meet your nutritional needs.
     
    Mar. 18, 2010 10:24 am
    Appreciate this article, it reaffirmed what we do for health and weight control. We count carbs and it makes fixing meals and eating out so much easier. One carb = 15 grams; when checking total carbs on a package be sure to note the serving size- that is how many total carbs in a serving not in the whole package. We keep our carb count to 5 per meal and we eat a meal every 4-5 hours. My husband is a big cowboy who used to eat like one. With this way of eating he is full, satisfied and loses weight. When eating out we automatically ask for a to go container, so when our meal arrives we portion it out and put the extra in the container out of site that way we don't end up over eating, even with low carb meals you end up usually getting more than one serving. When recipe hunting on web I use Allrecipes Healthy Recipes exclusively (they are yummy!) and when printing out also include the nutrition info so as to know what the fat and carb contents are.
     
    Lynn 
    Mar. 18, 2010 6:04 pm
    I am on a low carb diet and the best thing for me is pizza without the crust...it's fab...just use a drained chopped frozen spinach package and 3 eggs for base, bake at 350 for 15 min, use a sugar free pasta sauce,then add mozza cheese and pizza pepperoni from the deli as this isn't too greasy, bake and enjoy, freezes well and don't bother spraying the pizza tray it comes off easier without.
     
    marianthomas 
    Mar. 19, 2010 8:18 am
    I read all the comments and now I am confused between carbohydrates and grams of carbohydrates. You said 1 carb = 15 grams of carbs. So to be on a low card diet, how many carbs or grams of carbs am I supposed to have? I have never counted grams, so I might be doing this all wrong. Please help. Thanks so much. (Doc put me on low card because my sugar has been too high)
     
    deb 
    Mar. 19, 2010 8:34 am
    I found pasta that has little carbs and taste better than whole wheat, it is call dreamfield. doesn't run my blood sugars up after eating.
     
    nasv 
    Mar. 23, 2010 6:37 am
    I think there is way too much of a carb-phobia here, and while whole-grain breads are certainly better than white-breads, the idea of removing bread (a STAPLE for centuries) is sort of ridiculous. Look at the Mediterranean diet as an example, and that's portions of white bread almost with every meal! Just be smart, and get up and exercise - even just walking around.
     
    Mar. 29, 2010 10:58 am
    I checked out some of the suggested websites posted in these comments and found them to be misleading, people are advertising here. The netrition.com sells suppliments also the drbdiet.org is a diet you have to pay for. Just saving you the time.
     
    Matt P. 
    Apr. 18, 2010 2:00 pm
    Actually, there IS some good science on low carb dieting, and there are two very distinct ways to approach it: you can basically "crash diet" by eating less than 20 "net carbs" per day, or try to cut carbs our of your daily routine on a long term basis. Doing the "crash diet" version is very effective, but shouldn't be used for more than 2 weeks at a time as it is very unhealthy to keep with it any longer than that. Calories and fat are irrelevant if you're eating fewer than 20 carbs per day, you are guaranteed to lose weight, as you are tricking your body into thinking it is getting starved, and will burn fat as long as you keep the net carbs very low. If you are trying to cut carbs long term, it is not smart to use most "low carb" products (bars, shakes, etc.), which are very high in saturated fats and calories. If you're eating more than 20 carbs a day, these products are probably going to make you gain weight, not control it!
     
    Nicole 
    Apr. 23, 2010 3:16 pm
    I disagree with #10 “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. *all I can say is it does offer a 'unique' weight-loss benefit. Just because something is not regulated as it's put, by the FDA does not mean it has no health benefit. Herbal remidies fit the bill for this as well...The food pyramid also is supposed to help set a standard to be healthy but we can see it's not always effective or realistic. Keeping track of the 'net carbs' helped me to stay in that fat burning mode and drop lbs while stabilizing my blood sugar levels.
     
    jan 
    Jul. 25, 2010 9:08 am
    Thanks MYRTS78...saved me some time
     
    equineluvr 
    Aug. 7, 2010 10:13 am
    Patty5, The powers that be -- medical establishment -- DOES NOT want people to know the TRUTH about so many things... Remember that "Baycol is safe; it's FDA approved.. L-tryptophan, a NATURALLY-OCCURRING amino acid, is bad for you because the FDA says so..." Mayo Clinic is part of the MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT that would lose a LOT of patient$ if everyone who was obese did something as simple as following the blood type diet. Remember that the MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT poo-pooed Atkins diet too.. The bottom line is, these approaches work!! I have been following Dr. D'Adamo's blood type diet for years, and I am healthy as a horse and look younger than I am. It WORKS!!
     
    equineluvr 
    Aug. 7, 2010 10:49 am
    Wanda, Shiritaki noodles are NOT made from soy, they're from an Asian root plant.
     
    Aug. 11, 2010 1:06 pm
    There is a type of shiritaki noodle that is made from tofu. I recently bought some from my local health food store. You just have to read the label carefully. I just ordered some non-soy shiritaki noodles from www.miraclenoodle.com. I'm looking forward to them arriving and trying my old pasta recipes with them. Also, for those of you out there who are on the Atkins Diet, my husband and I have lost a combined 150 pounds in the last 5 1/2 months, and we are so happy to be at healthy weights again. I just think people need to find out what works for them and do it. Good luck to you all!!!
     
    Joan 
    Aug. 20, 2010 3:20 pm
    Whole wheat carbs raise my blood sugar just as much as "white" wheats. Oatmeal spikes me more than wonder bread...to each his own, I limit all carbs regardless.
     
    JBKEITHLEY 
    Sep. 5, 2010 7:28 am
    I can speak from experience,as I have been limiting my carb intake for the past 6 months.No bread,sugar or potato. Lost 30 lbs and lost all cravings for sweets. My carbs consist of low starch veggies,occasional fruit and high quality proteins such as fish and meat. My cholesterol is much improved and I feel great.
     
    Floridagirl 
    Sep. 16, 2010 5:29 am
    Excellent article, very helpful..thank you!
     
    missvickie 
    Sep. 20, 2010 10:41 am
    Thanks for all the good ideas! How long does it take for the sugar cravings to go away? I have always been hooked on sugar.
     
    jonsbabydoll 
    Oct. 3, 2010 8:15 am
    leidilola I'm just getting ready to start low carbing again. When I did this years ago it took (for me anyway) about a week for the bad cravings to subside. Then after you've been on it for awhile it gets much easier. If you do cheat it NEVER tastes as good as you remembered. I got lazy and stopped doing a strict low carb diet, but my blood sugar and waistline have reminded me its time to get serious about it again.
     
    Oct. 9, 2010 4:04 am
    Since I had WLS, low carb-high protein has become my new way of life. I avoid and/or limit ALL carbs, except those found on fresh fruit and vegetables. I've found that carbs make you want to eat more carbs. Only naturally occuring carbs in nuts and seeds are my one vice. I have dropped almost 80 lbs and am still going strong. My blood sugar has become normal. I am almost never hungry and if I am, I eat some protein based snack. Someone mentioned the slabs of bread they eat in the Mediterranean diet. Well, I live in Greece. I ate slabs of bread too. Who says that people on the Med diet don't get fat or have other health problems? If they do say that, it's a lie. Maybe the percentages are lower but that's all.
     
    kare 
    Dec. 20, 2010 11:37 am
    Try bean sprouts instead of spaghetti noodles, in your pasta dishes, it's really good. It also is a great substitute in homemade chicken soup! A lot of people can't tell the difference from noodles.
     
    Julie 
    Jan. 5, 2011 1:43 pm
    Tons of great advice and hints (love the spinach/egg pizza crust idea--trying that out tonight!) on this thread. I also went to the a couple of the sites listed in this thread. I'd rather not get directed to pay for the diet sites without warning, people. If you're going to direct folks to sites like that, better say what it is.
     
    Jan. 7, 2011 11:28 am
    People who limit carbs are morons. The problem isn't food. It's the fact we're pigs and eat too much of everything while being lazy sitting on our butts surfing the Internet. You want to lose weight? EAT LESS!
     
    deeswan200 
    Jan. 9, 2011 1:37 pm
    I have change to a low-carb lifestyle. I don't want to call it a diet because I cannot go back to the way I once ate. I have lost 20lbs thus far. I have tried thinly sliced zucchini in the place of pasta and it is great. I have noticed that I have more energy. Also to next step for me is exercise. This will help in this process.
     
    playmytune 
    Jan. 27, 2011 4:19 pm
    I think some of the comments entered here should be monitored....such as the one from MPOST2...
     
    pearl13 
    Feb. 1, 2011 4:08 am
    I have started on a diet with less carbs(rice,pasta)and more on green salad.Reading the article is very informative and helpful to my fitness routine.
     
    Witchysis31 
    Feb. 9, 2011 5:58 am
    @Davidica doctors always say to eat that way when it comes to high tryglicerides and i don't know why, we get high tryglicerides when we consume more calories then we burn off so even if your eating like a diabetic, and cutting calorie and fat your still gonna have high tryglicerides if your eating more calories then your burning off... the key to lowering tryglicerides is making sure you burn off all extra calories.. you can do a bmi test to determine how many calories you body needs to maintain the weight your at u have and keep consume that amount of calories to maintain your weight no more or exercise to burn the excess of, or consume less calories then to loose weight
     
    Witchysis31 
    Feb. 9, 2011 6:27 am
    @marianthomas if you are diabetic go by what your dietitian suggest as far as low carb, the lady above said her doctor recommended a 1600 cal, 180g carb and 60g protein diet for her meal wich she was eating 3 carbs (45g carbs)and 1 protein (15g protein) for breakfast, 4 carbs (60g carbs) and 2 protein (15g protine) each for lunch and dinner and 1 carb (15g carbs) and 1 protein (15g protein) for evening snack
     
    MADFURNITURE 
    Feb. 9, 2011 8:51 am
    I used Atkins years ago and it works, it even works AFTER you decide to start eating sugar again. I was burning pds up to a year after. The key for me, (a bonafide brownie eater), is if I am going to eat a sugar snack, I eat it with a protein, like a brownie with a boiled egg. Crazy, but the protein curbed the sugar high. I do not think a lo carb diet is the thing, it is balance, as with any diet. Move a little more, eat less cake at the office! I still do not eat bread, white pasta-rice, or anything sweet that has a wrapper! I also do not ingest ANY sugar substitutes, diet sodas, from the research I have done, the ingredient they use instead of sugar actually makes the body want to store fat more. Either way, I am thinking fake sugar is not a healthy way to go!
     
    dee59 
    Mar. 27, 2011 4:53 pm
    Another good thing to try are potato skins. Bake a potato...scoop out the potato...and fill the skins with cheese, bacon and green onion! The potatoes have all the carbs..... not the skins!
     
    jean 
    Apr. 4, 2011 7:24 pm
    I found this information very helpful as I research the best way to lose weight and get healthier.
     
    tina's*meltdown 
    Apr. 6, 2011 7:51 am
    After reading these comments I see that everyone has different ways of losing weight. What works for one may not necessarily work for another but all these ways of losing weight discused on here do work. Each person has to find the way that works for them. And the mention of Doctors not wanting people to get healthy is so true. If everyone got healthy we wouldn't go to the Doctor hardly ever. They wouldn't make those big bucks and they would have to struggle like most other people. I don't wish that they have to struggle but I do wish for all people to become more healthier. Healthy people are so much more HAPPIER and that's what we all need to be. So to each and every one of you out there trying to lose weight never give up you can do it. A Doctor told me that I would never lose weight...I say WHAT EVER. I have lost over 60 pounds and I will continue to lose until I get where I need to be. My health is so much better and will continue to get better as I continue to lose weight. I switch out..low carb sometimes then low fat it works for me. It also keeps my body from getting use to one way of eating and slowing down my metabolism. It tricks my body so it keeps my metabolism going. It may go slower some days than others but I maintain the weight lost and continue to lose weight.
     
    ADORABLEMAMA 
    Apr. 27, 2011 1:35 pm
    I am diabetic so I really have to watch the carbs, but on the upside it really works. I eat maybe 40 carbs a day to keep losing and I can go up to 60-70 and maintain my weight loss. The good news is my A1c is 5.6!!! For those who don't know that is almost nondiabetic. I'll be doing low carb for the rest of my life thank you very much.
     
    wilma 
    May 13, 2011 3:21 pm
    I just started reading all the advice on this board....I will be back and try to get myself motivated to start a low carb diet. Thanks guys and girls for all the advice.
     
    Tina Supporting Member (Click to learn more about Supporting Membership)
    May 13, 2011 4:06 pm
    just read an excellent book- "why we get fat and what to do about it" Really gives you a lot about the science of low-carb eating (a good read for Malevolentmuse!) Low calorie diets and exercise just don't work in the long run ...
     
    aper0126 
    Jun. 8, 2011 10:35 pm
    great article check out my blog for some other good recipes
     
    aper0126 
    Jun. 8, 2011 10:36 pm
    http://lowcarbgoodeats.blogspot.com/
     
    Pat 
    Jun. 9, 2011 3:22 pm
    My husband lost 52 lbs. and I lost 33 lbs. on the low carb Atkins Plan. Use the book as your guide...it's soooo easy. Good luck.
     
    Pat 
    Jun. 9, 2011 3:23 pm
    Forgot to mention the timeframe...from Oct. 1, 2010 to present date.
     
    Ashley 
    Jun. 16, 2011 6:51 pm
    I was looking for healthily recipes (for my diabetic patients) and found that a few of you are of the opinion "doctors do not want you to be healthy". This is absolutely ridiculous. I assure you I want the very best for every single one of my patients and my colleges do as well. I like many other health care providers go out of our way to help our patents lose weight, eat healthy and be successful. It is very unfortunate you feel this way
     
    Jul. 4, 2011 9:13 am
    @Tina I've also very nearly finished reading that same book (Why We Get Fat). I only got it two days ago but found it to be such a good read, and very persuasive that I've started a low-carb diet today. Can't wait to see how it goes but so far so good, when I found out they had great tasting pizza crust substitutes I was all for it!
     
    tonitdg 
    Jul. 8, 2011 11:08 pm
    I have never been a proponent of erasing any one food group from the diet, but because of an infection/spirochete I have contracted and the liver damage that has occured, I have been told to use an Anti-Inflammatory, Low/No Carb, No sugar diet. I've done the AI diet before and remember feeling full /not hungry and having better energy. Hoping it will help me be able to take the meds / protocol I need to cure the infection. Good luck to us all !!
     
    prima_donna 
    Jul. 12, 2011 9:51 am
    Gary Taubes book, "Why We Get Fat...." definitely makes you wonder why you've let yourself be so misled, all these years, by the medical community and the federal government. Just ask yourself, "what are the statistics on how many people lose weight and keep it off while on a low-fat, low-calorie diet?" It's in the single digits, and yet this is what they keep promoting as the answer. Something is terribly wrong when there are little-to-no successes. Isn't it time to look at another paradigm?
     
    Bigsister815 
    Jul. 12, 2011 11:37 am
    Another bonus to the "low carb" diet (for me anyway) is no more acid reflux! I can sleep all night without choking to death.
     
    fran 
    Aug. 19, 2011 1:49 pm
    NET carb subtraction works
     
    Sep. 17, 2011 12:38 pm
    @ JOY1CIE I have been eating a low-carb "diet" for a long time now. I limit carbs to less than 150g per day and take in over 100g or protein and average about 38-45g of fat and have had stellar results. No cereal, very little bread (Arnold's flax & fiber thins is pretty much all "bread" I eat) pasta maybe once per month. The majority of my carbs come from fruits and veggies. In 2 years I have lost 115 pounds and am very happy with my nutritional lifestyle. I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have.
     
    Dec. 29, 2011 5:56 am
    I've read through these posts and some people are stating that cutting back in general is all one needs to do and that carbs are not the problem. The fact is its the cookies, cakes, pies, bread etc... that people need to cut back on and they all consist of carbs. Do the math its pretty easy to see that indeed, carbs are the problem.
     
    Shannon 
    Dec. 31, 2011 8:42 am
    Low carb works great, I feel that with any life style change, especially food, I get the most success when I focus on what I can have rather on what I cannot have. Food is fuel.
     
    Cinnamon 
    Jan. 4, 2012 9:32 am
    I am enjoying many of these low carb ideas and recipe varities for meals to help me continue with my weight loss program. I was part of a 100 day clinical trial and have lost 20lbs. and 22 inches. It is the inches that have helped me the most as I did not have a lot of weight to lose in the first place. I am now working on the last 10 pounds as part of my New Year's Resolution. There were over 200 of us testing the system and everyone lost weight and inches. Most have great testimonies about the success of the CieAura Weight Management System that was just launched in November of 2011. Very safe, all natural, and it is helping me learn to manage what I eat and get healthier all of the time.
     
    nlm4353 
    Jan. 10, 2012 1:24 pm
    I am loving the low carb way of life. I do not call it a weight loss program as I do not intend "to find the weight" again. I started this in July 2011 because my glucose levels were getting high and my mother had diabetes and I do not want to go thru what she did. I have lost 65 lbs. since July 11 and am continuing on for hopefully 80-90 more. Most important is that I feel great and don't feel like i am deprived. Eating all the protein makes me fill fuller all of the time and i actually only eat 2 meals most days because of that. i agree with Shannon above, I focus on what I can have and not what I cannot have.
     
    nlm4353 
    Jan. 10, 2012 1:26 pm
    I forgot! My A1c in July was 7.4 and now is 4.4 and my 3 month average glucose reading was 303 (eating a lot of ice cream and candy bars) and is now 84.
     
    leg111847@gmail.com 
    Jan. 11, 2012 7:50 am
    Does anyone know how few carbs a 6'2" - 260# man can live on?
     
    lexkmw 
    Jan. 14, 2012 6:43 am
    leg111847, Carbs aren't like calories where you figure how many you can live on. Technically, you could live on zero, but it would be a boring existence and you would be short on vitamins and nutrients. The Atkins Diet recommends 20 grams of carbs per day for their phase 1. I recommend that you start with their website.
     
    Family Arborist 
    Jan. 20, 2012 10:35 am
    I have been doing low carbs for the past 6 months. I lost 25 lbs without adding in exercise and I'm now a size 10 vs. a size 14+. It might not sound like much but I survived the holidays and living with two carb crazy met. Any day that I don't gain weight is a good day! I plan on adding exercise to the program which should up my weight loss.
     
     

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