Volumize Your Meal Portions. Maximize Satisfaction While Minimizing Calories
Eat more and
weigh less?
For many,
it's a concept that flies in the face of conventional dieting wisdom.
Yet that's
exactly what the scientifically sound Volumetrics approach to healthy eating
advocates by encouraging people to abandon a "dieting" mindset and
instead enjoy generous amounts of delicious, nutritious foods.
"'Eat
less' is not always the best strategy," says Barbara Rolls, Ph.D.,
professor and nutrition researcher at Pennsylvania State University and author
of "The Volumetrics Weight-Control Plan" and "The Volumetrics
Eating Plan." "It's learning how to eat satisfying portions while
managing your weight-and as a bonus, eating foods that are good for you."
"The
Volumetrics Cookbook for Jenny Craig," a collaborative effort with Dr.
Rolls, offers the following tips for incorporating low-calorie-density foods
like fruits, vegetables, high-fiber foods and lean protein into your daily
meals to fill you up-without filling you out:
Start your
meal with minestrone, tomato or rustic barley soup.
Grill
omega-3 fatty acid-rich fish twice a week and pair it with lots of vegetables.
Choose whole
grain or wheat-blended pastas to boost your fiber intake and increase satiety.
Add seasonal
berries to yogurt for a fresh fruit parfait.
Keep the
proportion of vegetables in your salad high, and reduce the amount of dressing,
cheese and croutons.
A survey of
1,258 visitors to a website revealed
that 27 percent currently eat a soup or salad at lunch or dinner five to seven
times per week. When told that eating such items before or instead of a meal
might help them lose weight, nearly twice as many people-48 percent-indicated
that they'd consider consuming them at that frequency.
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