Drop a Size Calorie and Carb Counter. Joanna Hall

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Drop a Size Calorie and Carb Counter - Joanna  Hall

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within a healthy weight range.

      Traditionally, calorie-counting books are used as a way of helping us monitor the amount of energy we are getting from our food and drink. To lose weight, the number of calories you eat has to be fewer than the number of calories your body burns off through exercise and your daily activities. But it's not all about numbers: eating the right type of nutrients can increase your energy levels and maximize health. Unfortunately, we often forget this in our efforts to keep weight under control and, as a result, we opt for low calorie but nutritionally poor foods. Even though your first motivation for picking up this book may be to help you count and cut calories, you'll soon find the information helps you realize your weight loss goals and improve your health, by enabling you to make wiser food choices. For example, you'll learn that energy-dense foods such as fats, and specifically saturated fats, are associated with an increased risk of heart disease, while nutritionally poor foods, such as processed, carbohydrate-rich foods that are high in sugar, can play havoc with your blood sugar levels and energy levels, and foods high in salt can affect your blood pressure.

      This little book isn't just about counting calories for weight loss, but about counting your carbs and being aware of the nutrients required for a healthy body, too! So as well as lots of weight management tips, you'll also find plenty of health tips too. This calorie and carb counter is an invaluable companion to any weight loss programme but it will be especially useful for those following my Carb Curfew plan. It has been fascinating researching all the material and has been a real eye opener for me, too.

SECTION ONE THE CARB CURFEW PLAN

       CARB CURFEW - HOW IT CAME ABOUT

      As a weight management specialist, my studies and expertise led me to work with individuals and organizations in the United States, Australia and in the UK. During my travels, I became increasingly aware that many people out there were putting a lot of effort into reaching their weight loss goals, but their hard work appeared to be going un-rewarded. The scales were not moving in the right direction, their clothes were not feeling looser and their energy levels were not as high as they should be – but most galling of all, they were experiencing all of this while putting their real lives on hold! Yes, they were following recognized dietary advice to cut fat intake as a means of reducing overall calorie intake, and they were taking some physical exercise, but instead of feeling trimmer, lighter and full of energy, they didn't seem to be reaping the benefits.

      What I began to realize, as I researched my Master's degree in sports science, was that following a low-fat diet wasn't the sole solution to weight loss. Yes, sticking to a low fat intake is still sensible dietary advice – one gram of fat alone provides 9 calories (the equivalent of nearly 45 calories per teaspoon) – but my studies have shown that for successful weight loss, you need to address your total calorie intake plus the proportion of carbohydrates and protein you are eating. Reducing fat alone won't work. What's more, my research revealed that people who were cutting the amount of fat in their diets were compensating for the ‘loss’ by filling up on ‘non’ or ‘low-fat’ starchy carbohydrates such as bread, pasta, rice, potatoes and cereal. This meant, quite simply, that while their fat intake was going down, their overall calorie intake was going up. A recent study from the centre for disease control and prevention reported a 22 per cent jump in the calories we consumed between 1971 and 2000. This increase in calories was directly attributed to increased carbohydrate intake despite a reduction in the percentage of fat we consumed over the same period. It seems people are eating more ‘non-fat’ starches under the misapprehension that because these starches contained little or no fat this automatically translates into little or no calories! This is what motivated me to develop the Carb Curfew – a tool that can help people achieve successful weight loss and healthy nutrition. The Carb Curfew Plan helps you redress your nutritional and calorie balance without having to count every calorie, or put your life on hold.

       So what is the Carb Curfew?

      The Carb Curfew means no bread, pasta, rice, potatoes or cereal after 5 p.m. As a result, your evening meal now becomes based around lean meat, fish, pulses, vegetables, fruit, low-fat dairy products and essential fats. It is not about cutting out all starchy carbs, as starch provides a valuable source of muscle fuel for our bodies. Instead, to ensure you get the right balance of nutrients at the right time, I recommend you eat some starchy wholegrain carbs at breakfast (try porridge with semi-skimmed milk and a piece of fruit, or boiled egg and wholemeal toast), lunch (for example, a small jacket potato with tuna or an open chicken sandwich) and in your mid-afternoon snack if you wish, but avoid them after 5 p.m.

       WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF FOLLOWING THE CARB CURFEW?

      There are several great bonuses to implementing my Carb Curfew:

      

It will help you cut your calorie intake without you having to obsess over calories.

      

It will reduce bloatedness.

      When we eat starchy carbs, they are stored in the body in the form of glycogen. Glycogen is an important muscle fuel, but for every unit of glycogen stored in the body it is necessary to also store three units of water. This helps to explain why it is common to feel very bloated and uncomfortable in your clothes after eating a starch-heavy meal, such as pasta.

      

It will boost your energy levels.

      Since you will be eating more fruit and vegetables, you will be putting more vital nutrients into your body and these are essential in the breakdown of macronutrients (i.e. carbs, protein and fat) to release energy. Plus many of my clients say how much more energetic they feel as a result of not eating so many starchy carbs.

      

It helps you reach your five-a-day fruit and veg quota.

      The absence of starchy carbs in your evening meal will encourage you fill up your plate with these important foods.

      In essence then, Carb Curfew is a strategy that allows you to get the right balance of calories and nutrients at the right time of day.

       THE CARB CURFEW PLAN – A LIFESTYLE, NOT A DIETARY REGIME

      To me, successful weight management is all about having a strategy that fits with your life – if you have to press the pause button while you go on a diet, you can bet your bottom dollar your weight loss is not going to last long term. I developed Carb Curfew as a tool to help people achieve their weight loss goals, while boosting their energy levels, changing their shape and getting on with their lives. One of the main reasons people tell me it works is because they feel they have made a positive lifestyle change without too much effort – they feel in control and not ‘on a diet’. The Carb Curfew has helped thousands of people, and it can help you, too.

       THE

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