Calorie, macronutrient and portion tracking are popular and effective tools in the quest to lose weight. The main reason they are effective is that they make us aware of how much we should be consuming vs. how much we actually are consuming. Research shows that we generally underestimate our food intake by 30-50%! There are two reasons for this:
Calorie and macronutrient tracking means setting calorie and macronutrient ratio goals and then logging all of the calories and grams of macronutrients you consume. For example, you may set a goal of consuming 1,600 calories daily in a ratio of 25% protein, 25% fat, 50% carbs.
Calorie and macronutrient tracking provide several important benefits:
The bottom line: Calorie and macronutrient tracking are good in the short-term to create awareness but it’s not a great long-term strategy.
Portion tracking is an alternative method to tracking food. Precision Nutrition, a well- established nutrition coaching outfit, has developed an ingenious approach to tracking portions that is nearly as accurate as tracking calories and macronutrients.
In this system, you use your hand to determine food portions. It looks like this:
These portion sizes correlate well with the appropriate number of grams for each macronutrient that you want to consume:
PN provides simple guidelines of how many portions to consume based on your gender, activity level and goals (i.e. weight loss, muscle gain). For more information about using your hand as a portion guide, you can download this Portion Control Guide.
The Precision Nutrition Calculator is also an excellent free tool that provides you the recommended calories and macronutrient ratio to achieve your goals and converts those numbers to equivalent hand portions. You simply enter your sex, body weight, goals, activity level, and eating preferences and you will receive a personalized nutrition plan.
Hand portion tracking has several benefits:
Calorie, Macronutrient and Portion tracking all share the same disadvantage. They don’t distinguish between healthy proteins, fats and carbohydrates vs. unhealthy ones. For example, if you have a calorie goal of 1,600 calories a day and 40% of those calories coming from carbs, you could theoretically consume 640 calories of Skittles and still achieve your tracking goal. But it certainly won’t help you get to your weight loss goal. And the hand portion method doesn’t distinguish between a cupped hand of Cheetos and a cupped hand of wild rice. They are both considered one portion of carbohydrates even though the wild rice is far more nutritious and lower in calories than the Cheetos.
The bottom line with food tracking is that it can be effective but it’s not enough to optimize our health and achieve long-term weight loss. We have to pay attention to the quality of the food we are eating. For most people, the Mediterranean diet is a great dietary approach. It is proven to help people lose and maintain their weight and it is the only “diet” that people can stick with long term. This is because it emphasizes delicious, high-quality, nutrient dense foods. It doesn’t require severely limiting an entire macronutrient like the Keto or Atkins diets. Nor does it require limiting calories. This handy infographic provides may Med friendly food ideas.
When it comes to weight loss, it’s also important to develop mindful eating habits. Mindful eating means eating slowly and only until 80% full. It takes 20 minutes for the body’s satiety mechanism to kick in. But the majority of people finish their meals in under 10 minutes, leading to overeating. Studies show that fast eaters gain more weight over time than slow eaters. For more benefits of eating slowly, click here. Some tips to slow down your eating include setting a timer, chewing each mouthful 15-20 times before swallowing, sipping water between mouthfuls, and not eating in front of the computer.
Mindful eating also means being aware of how we feel at the conclusion of a meal and the next day. In general, when we eat a healthy meal and we don’t overeat, we feel satisfied but not bloated or sluggish. We wake up feeling more alert and in a better mood. We have all experienced the food hangover that comes with overeating a heavy dinner and then struggling to get going the next day. All it takes to become more mindful is to ask yourself how you feel after each meal and when you wake up. The connection between the food you eat and how you feel will become more obvious with time.
By focusing on the quality of the food we eat and developing mindful eating habits, our need to track our food diminishes. We develop an intuitive sense of what and how much to eat because our body speaks to us. What is beautiful about this is that a healthy weight and body composition tend to follow with limited effort.
Sed at tellus, pharetra lacus, aenean risus non nisl ultricies commodo diam aliquet arcu enim eu leo porttitor habitasse adipiscing porttitor varius ultricies facilisis viverra lacus neque.