Advice on sugar goals
thelandkraken
Posts: 91 Member
I’m consistently over the sugar goals MFP sets me (though usually under calories), does it matter that much? I just eat a lot of fruit and having a mango, couple of apples, satsumas, and a banana sends my sugar goal through the roof. Should I cut back on fruit?
Honestly I’d rather not, fruit helps me stay full, is delicious, and keeps me under calorie goal. But I’ve been worried about consistently being over goal.
I’m over on carbs too, though not by too much.
Honestly I’d rather not, fruit helps me stay full, is delicious, and keeps me under calorie goal. But I’ve been worried about consistently being over goal.
I’m over on carbs too, though not by too much.
1
Replies
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Maybe change to lower sugar fruits. From what I’ve been told and read, berries are the healthiest fruits lower in sugars...blueberries, raspberries, strawberries. Bananas and grapes are higher in sugars.1
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Sugar is just a subset of carbs - personally it gave me zero benefit in tracking it at all so I swapped it out to track fibre instead.
It would be a shame if tracking total sugar dissuaded you from eating fruit.5 -
A lot of people don't actually bother monitoring the sugar. If the majority of your sugar is coming from fruit, I wouldn't worry too much about it, unless you have a medical condition that warrants keeping sugar in check.
Going over on carbs is fine too, as long as you're getting the minimum RDA for Protein and Fat, you can let the rest fall where it may.
You can switch the diary view to track fibre or another micro instead of sugar if you have no reason to be tracking it.2 -
It's refined sugars and artificial sweeteners that you need to cut out or cut back on. Natural sugars are fine as long as you have no health reasons, like diabetes, that would make eating too much fruit an issue.
As long as the rest of your diet is healthy and you are within your caloric range, you should keep enjoying a variety fruits (and vegetables). FYI Berries are lower in fruit sugar and can pack some real punch when it comes to vitamins, minerals and antioxidants.
Opt for Organic where possible, especially strawberries. Strawberries (mostly from the USA) typically contain the highest levels of pesticides and herbicides of all fruits because of the way they grow (on the ground).8 -
Thanks everyone, that's comforting to know, I'll not be so worried about it now. Most of it seemed to come from my daily mango, which I'd hate to give up because it's SO TASTY and it fills me up more than anything else.
I'll stick to just looking at my calories and only start tweaking if I stop losing weight (or if a doc tells me to for some reason).4 -
I'd make sure your protein is on point and your fat is reasonable and that your fiber is at or above your goal. Also, that you are getting a good amount/variety of veg, not just fruits. If so, and if your sugar is coming mostly from nutrient dense choices like fruit, seems good.
If you were eating so much fruit that you weren't fitting in other things you need, I'd consider switching some of the fruit for veg and adding in sources of protein or healthy fats, but it doesn't sound like that's the case.3 -
The sugar you should be concerned about is added sugar. Don't worry about naturally occurring sugar from plant based foods. Unfortunately MFP cannot discern between the two.2
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Mango and banana are high sugar fruits when fully ripe. Personally I don't worry about natural sugar from fruit, although I do avoid fruit juice. I'd rather have the whole fruit, fiber and all.2
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I always eat the whole fruit, not juiced, and I do eat a lot of veg as well in my meals. I just didn't mention it because it looked like my sugar was mostly from the fruit not the veg. Thank you all for your advice, it's really helped.1
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I say as long as your fruit consumption isn't taking away from the rest of your diet...if you are eating so much that you aren't getting adequate protein, fat or a variety of foods, or unless you have a health condition where you have to watch sugar, go for it.
I am actually not a huge fan of fruit. I do have some added sugar in my diet, but also lots of vegetables, protein and grains.0 -
I would be more concerned as to whether or not that much fruit and veg is crowding out other essential nutrition like dietary fat and protein.1
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