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How To
Turn Super Sizing, Dietary Displacement and Portion Distortion To Your
Advantage
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Title: How To Turn Super
Sizing, Dietary Displacement and Portion Distortion To Your Advantage!
By line: By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
URL: www.burnthefat.com (replace with
your clickbank affiliate hoplink - click on "hoplink instructions in
navigation links to your left if you need help)
Word count: 630 words
Related keywords: portion sizes, food
portions, serving sizes, super size me, super size, super sizing,
dietary displacement
How To Turn Super
Sizing, Dietary Displacement and Portion Distortion To Your Advantage!
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.burnthefat.com
Ever since the independent film, Super Size Me was
released,
research on the relationship between increasing obesity and
increasing portion sizes has skyrocketed and the results
have been virtually unanimous.
There have been numerous well-designed studies
published
just in the last several years which confirmed exactly what we
suspected (and much of what the movie suggested):
* Portion sizes have increased in restaurants and
fast food
venues on a major scale over the last several decades
* We self-serve ourselves larger portions in the
home
than we used to
* When more food is put in front of us, we almost
always
eat more
* most people underestimate how many calories they
are eating
* All of these factors have contributed to the
growing
obesity problem and the related health problems that come
along with it
The obvious solution would seem to be to decrease
portion sizes across the board, and indeed awareness of and control
over
portion sizes in general is important.
However, research has demonstrated that perhaps an
even better
solution is to keep the portion sizes generous, but decrease the energy
density (calories per unit of volume) in the foods you put on your
plate.
Several studies revealed that eating more low
calorie density foods, especially green vegetables, salad vegetables
and other fibrous carbs, as well as very lean proteins, maintains a
feeling of fullness while reducing energy intake.
In other words, large portions of highly
nutritious, low calorie
foods displaced the less nutritious, calorie-dense foods! Most
people allow the bad foods to push out the good foods,
but you can actually do the same in reverse!
In a study published in the Journal of The
American Dietetic Association, researchers fed one group a compulsory
first course salad which was kept low in energy density by using very
low calorie dressing with no high calorie toppings no bacon, cheese or
croutons, etc).
After the salad, the subjects were allowed to eat
as much pasta as
they wanted.
A second group was also allowed to eat as much
pasta as they wanted
but was not given a compulsory salad to eat beforehand.
The results: As you might guess, eating a low
energy density first course enhanced satiety (fullness) and reduced the
overall amount of
calories that were eaten during the whole meal.
Since the research has repeatedly discovered that
almost everyone
will eat more when served larger portions from a larger plate or
container, and there is obviously a serious issue of "portion
distortion" occurring, another group of scientists and psychologists
decided to test this even further by providing larger plates or
containers of low energy density, high nutrient density foods before
the main course and or in between meals.
When more of the low energy density foods were
made available first,
the subjects ate even more of these healthy foods, which filled them up
even more and decreased the amount of high calorie density foods eaten
in the main course.
Reporting their findings in the Journal of
Nutrition Education And Behavior, the researchers said that there is a
silver lining
to all the negative findings about super sized portions and overeating
that we have discoverd inrecent years:
That is, although we eat more when more is put in
front of us,
We can use this phenomenon in reverse by serving large plates, bowls
or containers of healthy, low energy density foods like fruits, salads
and
raw vegetables as snacks and first courses.
"While a small bowl of raw carrots might make for
a good afternoon snack", said one of the researchers, "a large bowl
might even be better."
You can learn more about calorie density, low
energy density foods
(thermogenic foods), and choosing your portion and meal sizes
with precision inside the Burn The Fat ebook. For more information,
visit: www.burnthefat.com
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder and author of
the #1 best selling e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle,”
which teaches you how to burn fat without drugs or supplements using
the little-known secrets of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness
models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and turbo-charge your
metabolism by visiting: www.burnthefat.com.
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