Diet Hacks to Lose Weight: Effective Tricks that really WorkDiet Hacks to Lose Weight: Effective Tricks that really WorkDiet Hacks to Lose Weight: Effective Tricks that really Work

Diet Hacks to Lose Weight: Effective Tricks that really Work

Diet Hacks to Lose Weight: Effective Tricks that really Work

5 Effective Diet Hacks to Lose Weight and Keep It Off Forever

Losing weight and keeping it off can be challenging, but incorporating simple diet hacks into your routine can make a significant difference. These hacks are designed to optimize your eating habits for sustainable weight loss without feeling deprived or hungry. Let’s dive into five effective diet hacks that can help you achieve your weight loss goals.

Hack 1: Increase Your Protein Intake

Benefits of a High Protein Diet

A high-protein diet can increase your metabolic rate, the amount of calories you burn, while also reducing food cravings and hunger while dieting. Increasing the amount of protein that you eat at meals and snacks can have huge benefits for both short and long-term fat loss. Research has shown that increasing the protein content of your diet to around 30% can increase metabolism by 212 kcal per day.

Remember that metabolic rate is estimated to reduce by around 230 kcal per day as we age, so by simply eating more protein, you can almost completely offset that metabolic slowdown that causes weight and fat gain.

Metabolic rate is elevated for many hours after the protein-rich meal, so it’s important that you consume protein at regular intervals during the day and avoid having just one single, large protein meal. So you essentially fuel the furnace continually at breakfast, lunch, snacks, evening meal, and before bed.

How to Incorporate More Protein in Your Meals

Now take a second to think about how you can increase the amount of protein you eat at all meals and snacks. Some recommended low-fat, go-to protein sources include: eggs, low-fat Greek yogurt, cold cuts, smoked salmon, and collagen at breakfast, meat, fish, tofu, beans, pulses at lunch and dinner, whey protein, beef jerky, boiled eggs, low-fat milk as snacks and build your meals around these items.

Hack 2: Focus on Foods with High Satiety Scores

Understanding Satiety and Its Role in Weight Loss

Satiety is the scientific term used to describe how full and satisfied a food makes you feel after you have eaten it. Obviously, when you diet, you need to reduce the number of calories you are consuming, which can naturally increase feelings of hunger and cravings. So paying attention to a food’s satiety score and eating those with the highest satiety score will most certainly help you lose fat and keep it off.

We have all been there, haven’t we? Crash dieting before a holiday or social event, eating poverty calories for a few weeks until we break as the hunger and cravings are just too much. Then the whole thing unravels, and we are back to square one.

Top Foods with High Satiety Scores

Research has shown that foods with the highest satiety score are those with the highest essential nutrient density. Foods rich in protein, fiber, calcium, and potassium can make you eat less and feel more satisfied.

Surprisingly, protein-rich foods score incredibly high on the satiety index. Protein is, in fact, the most satiating macronutrient. That means it fills you up the most, preventing hunger, cravings, and the cookie monster that so often creeps up on you!

It does this by increasing hormones PYY and GLP-1, which send signals to the brain telling it that it's full and satisfied, and ‘don’t eat anything else,’ while also reducing ghrelin, the “hunger hormone.”

In one study, increasing protein intake to 30% of total daily calories reduced energy intake by 441 kcal per day. That is pretty astonishing!

Similarly, when people drank a whey protein shake an hour before going to a buffet, they ate 193 - 215 kcal less than if they did not consume the whey protein shake. This is thanks to the filling effect of protein and the clear signals that protein sends to the brain.

Here is a short list of the foods with the highest satiety score that you should include in your diet daily, ideally with every meal or snack: shrimps, grilled chicken breast, white fish fillet, salmon, fillet steak, canned tuna, fat-free Greek yogurt, shrimps, skimmed milk, broccoli, kale, asparagus, brussel sprouts, potatoes, oats and oatmeal, apples and oranges.

Foods to Avoid with Low Satiety Scores

Now, a list of foods with very low satiety scores that you should limit to small quantities in your daily diet as they likely just make you feel hungry and make dieting harder: nuts, olive oil, cereals, white bread, croissants, raisins, dark chocolate, avocado, and tahini.

Hack 3: Choose Foods with Low Energy Density

What is Energy Density?

Following on naturally from the satiety score, let’s now discuss energy density. Eating fewer calories does not necessarily mean you have to eat less food. Now that sentence may be a little difficult to comprehend, so I’ll say it again: Eating fewer calories does not necessarily mean you have to eat less food.

A typical comment from Reverse Health members after week 3 of the program is, “I am eating so much food and losing weight so quickly. I can’t believe it!”

When you understand nutrition science and the makeup of food, this becomes really easy to understand and apply. We coach our members on this within the course in our app. But to summarize, building your diet around foods with low energy density allows you to eat larger volumes of food (e.g., delicious salads from a big mixing bowl) while also eating fewer calories.

Low Energy Density Foods for Weight Loss

Energy density refers to the number of calories per gram of food consumed. Low energy density foods provide fewer calories per gram than high energy density foods.

In general, foods with low energy density tend to have a high water content, lots of fiber, and very little fat. Things like low-fat proteins, fruit, vegetables, and broth-based soups. On the other hand, foods with high energy density tend to have very low water content, low fiber, high fat, carbohydrate, and salt.

Here are some examples of foods with incredibly low energy density: watercress, cucumber, zucchini, lettuce, coconut water, bell peppers, broccoli, cauliflower, watermelon, onion, low-fat milk, egg whites, fat-free Greek yogurt, fat-free cottage cheese, shrimp, white fish, grilled chicken breast, butternut squash, orange, kale, apple, kiwi, green peas, and sweet potatoes.

High Energy Density Foods to Limit

Now, some examples of foods with incredibly high energy density: coconut oil, butter, pepperoni, parmesan, cheese, pate, olive oil, nuts, nut butters, flaxseeds, wholewheat bread, coconut milk, and avocado.

Research has clearly shown that individuals who ate a low-energy density diet eat fewer calories but consume more food volume, experience less hunger, and achieve greater weight loss than those who eat higher energy density foods or have no control over the energy density of their diet. This is exactly what we at Reverse Health preach in our meal plans and course content!

Sidenote: Avoid the health halo. Foods such as olive oil, coconut oil, avocado, and nuts are spoken about in the media all the time for their health benefits. There is no doubt they are all packed with beneficial vitamins and minerals, but also fat, which makes them incredibly energy dense. The biggest mistake I see people make in their weight loss journey is failing to pay attention to the energy density of foods. The number one reason people don’t lose weight is because they succumb to the health halo of foods and eat these so-called healthy foods in unlimited quantities, but in doing so wrack up an incredibly high energy intake and then cannot lose weight.

Hack 4: Be Smart with Carbohydrate Timing

The Role of Carbohydrates in Weight Loss

Being smart with your carbohydrate intake, particularly the timing of your carbohydrate intake, could be the difference between rapid weight loss and diet failure.

Carbohydrates are the primary fuel for intense actions, muscle contractions, and the brain. Shifting the way you think about carbohydrates, away from ‘carbs are the devil’ to ‘carbs are fuel,’ can help you in your weight loss journey.

Research has shown that consistent exercise and activity, particularly resistance training, can increase metabolic rate by 7 - 9% or 90 - 140 kcal per day. To train harder, longer, and better, time your carbohydrate meals and snacks in such a way that the fuel is available to propel your performance in workouts.

Optimal Timing for Carbohydrate Intake

Eating a carbohydrate-rich meal (e.g., potato, oatmeal, rice) 2 - 3 hours before or a carbohydrate-rich snack (e.g., rice cakes, banana) 1 hour before a workout will ensure your body, brain, and muscles have the energy they require to work hard and keep progressing in your workouts, so you can increase the number of calories you burn and keep weight loss on track.

The biggest issue we see is women often follow a low carbohydrate, very low-calorie diet and then do not have the energy to work out or maintain high levels of activity in their day-to-day life. They then burn fewer calories and weight loss becomes more challenging.

The biggest transformation we see in the mindset of Reverse Health users is that they no longer fear carbohydrates and also have the energy to exercise intensely, take the dog for a walk, take the stairs, play with grandkids, and so on.

Hack 5: Ensure Your Diet is Enjoyable

The Importance of Enjoyment in Dieting

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, your diet has to be enjoyable.

Research over the past 30 years has clearly shown that your ability to actually follow a diet consistently for a long time is the most important factor in weight loss. No matter whether it’s a keto diet, low carb diet, intermittent fasting, or any other diet.

More often than not, women will begin a diet that’s on trend, without really thinking about how long they may be able to follow it. Example: Anne’s favorite food is pasta. Her husband and children also love pasta. She wants to lose 30 pounds and reads about the low carbohydrate diet in a magazine, so starts the following Monday. At first, she finds it really easy until Friday comes around. The family wants pasta for dinner, but she can’t eat it. She watches on as they eat the delicious pasta, but then she breaks. She lost a little bit of weight that week but then gained it all back because the rules of the diet she was following did not suit her lifestyle and personal preferences.

How to Make Your Diet Enjoyable

So, like Anne, before you begin any diet, think long and hard about whether or not you will actually be able to follow the diet for a long period of time.

Reverse Health has developed a diet that is not overly restrictive, with no strict rules or regulations, no food restrictions, and therefore it is likely most women can follow it for a long period of time. Check out our 10-day free meal plan here.

We also allow users to eat their favorite foods, even pizza and pasta, balanced against their unique nutritional requirements as we understand enjoyment is critical to the process of being consistent.

Imagine being able to eat pizza and pasta while also losing weight and keeping it off forever!?

Check out our members group on Facebook and you will find hundreds of examples of happy users posting pictures of their favorite meals alongside how much weight they have lost.

Conclusion

All of the food hacks that you just read about can be quickly and easily incorporated into your daily diet to help you lose weight and keep it off forever. Alternatively, you could just take our quick quiz and let us do it all for you.

FAQs

What are the best diet hacks to lose weight?

Increase protein intake, focus on high satiety foods, choose low energy density foods, time carbohydrates smartly, and ensure your diet is enjoyable.

How can I increase protein in my diet?

Incorporate high-protein foods like eggs, Greek yogurt, lean meats, and protein-rich snacks into your meals.

What foods have high satiety scores?

Foods like shrimp, chicken breast, white fish, vegetables, and certain fruits have high satiety scores.

What are low energy density foods?

Low energy density foods include watercress, cucumber, lettuce, fruits, vegetables, and low-fat proteins.

How should I time my carbohydrate intake?

Consume carbohydrate-rich meals or snacks 1-3 hours before workouts to fuel performance and support weight loss.

TAGS:
Mindful Eating
Weight Loss
Diet