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Diets

5 Diet Traps to Avoid If You Really Want to Get Healthy in 2019

A new year has begun, so you may have noticed more trendy diets and fads becoming popular. Unfortunately, there’s so much conflicting advice out there that really has very little value if you’re looking to optimize your health and lose weight effectively. Check out this list of diet traps you should be avoiding, plus the real, healthy habits to follow instead. 

Diet Trap 1: Green Juices

The most obvious healthy choice is a green juice or smoothie. Unfortunately, store-bought smoothies are full of fructose, which means that when you’re over that sugar high you’ll be even hungrier than before. Shona Wilkinson, nutritionist at SuperfoodUK.com, explains: “Shop-bought fruit smoothies can seem like a healthy choice — fruit is good for us, right? But a single serving bottle of fruit smoothie can easily contain 25 grams of sugar or more — that’s five to six teaspoons! Therefore, these drinks are not a great idea, especially when trying to shed a few extra pounds.”

Here’s what Wilkinson recommends instead: “Try making your own smoothie at home with 100 grams of berries, quarter of a large avocado (or half a small one), a small handful of spinach, and topped up with unsweetened almond milk. As well as containing less sugar, it will fill you up for longer and make you less likely to want to snack on sweet foods later in the day.”

If you want to make sure you’re still getting in all your daily greens, you can always add a powder to your smoothie. Nutritionist, Cassandra Barns explains, “Adding in a teaspoon of a super greens mixture to your water or juice can help keep hunger at bay. It’s a great way to boost your nutritional intake with greens such as spirulina, chlorella, and barley or wheat grass. These superfoods contain fiber, helping you to feel fuller for longer, as well as many energy-giving nutrients such as B vitamins to help you get through the day. 

Diet Trap 2: Cereal or Granola Bars

One of the easiest snacks to keep in your bag ready for when you’re in the mood for a snack are cereal or granola bars. They sound so healthy — surely cereal is good for you? Yes, cereal itself may be fine, especially if its whole-grain, but many cereal bars contain a great deal of refined sugar and worse — sugar syrups, such as glucose and high fructose corn syrup. These types of sugar syrups travel through our bodies very quickly and are potentially damaging on a cellular level, which isn’t good for the immune system and skin, to name a few. Fruit added to cereal bars is often coated in sweet syrups, so that just loads on more sugar.

A great alternative to cereal bars are almonds, which will keep you fuller for longer and are just as easy to keep in your handbag. Lily Soutter, nutritionist and weight loss expert at www.lilysoutternutrition.com explains, “Almonds are often avoided due to their high calorie content, however numerous studies have shown that they can actually help us to lose weight. Those who consume a handful of almonds a day tend to lose more weight in comparison to those who have none. Their high protein and healthy fat content are responsible for keeping us fuller for longer, leading to a lower overall calorie consumption throughout the day.”

Diet Trap 3: Muesli

The traditional picture of a healthy morning often includes a bowl of muesli, but its the high sugar content can leave you feeling hungry well before lunch.

Marilyn Glenville, PhD, author of Natural Alternatives to Sugar ($9.77, Amazon) says: “Muesli conjures up a picture of a healthy breakfast and is often presented in advertisements in a beautiful alpine setting with trees, bright blue skies, clear lakes, and clean air. But not all mueslis are the same, and as with anything you buy, you need to read the label and not just go by the hype on the front of the package. Many can be laden with high amounts of added sugar and salt, and this can turn a healthy breakfast into an unhealthy one.”

Diet Trap 4: Sushi

Sushi is one of the easiest lunches to buy, but it’s also one that won’t keep you full for long. The amount of protein and vegetables you actually get in sushi is often very tiny (if not minuscule) in comparison to the amount of white rice in each serving. Some outlets do have brown rice sushi, which would be better but that is still a higher serving of starchy carbohydrates to vegetables and protein.

“It would be healthier to have a fist-sized portion of protein alongside half a dinning plates worth of vegetables and a brown rice portion that fits into an espresso coffee mug,” suggests Wilkinson.

Diet Trap 5: Low-Fat Yogurt

While yogurts are promoted as a healthy snack, the resulting sugar crash will inevitably have you reaching for more food. “The label might say ‘low-fat fruit yogurt’ and so you would think it would help with controlling your weight, but the yogurt can contain up to eight teaspoons of added refined sugar,” says Dr. Glenville. “Often sugar is the next ingredient after milk in highest amounts in the yogurt. This type of yogurt will be a high-GI food, causing your body to release more insulin to deal with the quick rise in blood sugar, and insulin is your fat-storing hormone of the body.”

This article was originally written by Yours editors. For more, check out our sister site, Yours.

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