Satisfied with smaller portions of favorite treats?
Whambam087
Posts: 170
Can you learn to be satisfied with smaller portion sizes of your favorite treats overtime? For instance I love icecream, and if I could be satisfied with the 1/2 cup serving that would be no problem, but it's just so hard to have the 1/2 cup and have that be it! Maybe it's because I'm so used to having bigger portions when I do indulge and I've become accustomed to that. So has anyone successfully learned how to be satisfied with less bites? Lol
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Yes. It took time though. Like, a few months. I was used to eating at least five pieces of pizza in one sitting, and for dessert I'd have 2/3 of a pint of Ben and Jerrys if not more. Less just made me feel like I didn't have enough. Now though, I have one ice cream sandwich for dessert, and I'm satisfied.
honestly though, for ice cream just by itself, I feel like it's a little disingenuous for companies to say 1/2 cup is a serving, just so they can make the calories look lower. I don't know anyone, overweight or not, who only eats a half cup of ice cream at a time. Even now, that's not enough for me - that's why I don't eat ice cream by itself - somehow eating an ice cream sandwich or a low cal ice cream bar feels more satisfying.
But to answer your question, today I felt like snacking. I ate six tortilla chips, and felt fine and satisfied. That's a quarter of the serving amount (24 chips). This from a girl who always got two egg mcmuffins for breakfast cos one just didn't feel like enough. So it's doable.0 -
I found that after measuring some of my favorite foods out in servings they just are not worth it. Have you ever measured a serving of chex mix? Its laughably small, idk anyone who eats that little. Same with Oreos, who eats 2 Oreos? But you just need to decide if the treat is really worth it or not, because certain things will satisfy me, while others just make me want more.0
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yea I think so. I've been doing this for 30 days and recently have just been totally satisfied with smaller meals and treats. I went and got ice cream with a friend and got a mini size instead of my typical medium and I ended up totally satisfied. sometimes the brain will say "give me more" but if you wait it out your full and satisfied tummy will tell your brain to shut up lol0
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I agree with all posters above. Yes you can, but it takes a while to retrain your brain and stomach as to how much you should be eating! Also, I find that when I'm dieting well.for a while some things taste too rich.0
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It depends on the food. I can eat 2 oreos, and be fine. I can eat one handful of chips and stop. Other foods are trigger foods for me, and I eat the whole package before I stop. And some foods aren't worth the calories, so I don't eat them at all.0
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It depends on the food. I can eat 2 oreos, and be fine. I can eat one handful of chips and stop. Other foods are trigger foods for me, and I eat the whole package before I stop. And some foods aren't worth the calories, so I don't eat them at all.0
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truth of the matter is I can't eat as much now anyway...so my treats are a smaller size by default.0
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I ate 1 Hershey's kiss yesterday. Just one. I felt half way proud that I just ate one (22 calories) but then I thought I would never buy these to have at home because eating one measly kiss here or there wouldn't be satisfying.
Not like I need the WHOLE bag to eat at once, that's not what I mean. Just that I am not one of these people that goes "oh cool a thimble amount of chocolate, boy gee that sure curbed that sweet craving!" :noway:0 -
Most days I am. Some days I am ravenous and have a difficult time with it.
I try to eat slowly, small bites, and really savor the flavor. It really does help me eat less. Last night it took me 4 bites to eat 1 thin mint.0 -
I can. It took a little getting used to, but now I find recommended serving sizes like 1/2 cup of ice cream or 2 Oreos a perfect amount. Lots of times, I even just have 1/2 serving - for example, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups have 1 package (2 cups) as a serving. I eat one cup, and give the other to my daughter (or someone else) and am perfectly satisfied. Sometimes, though, when I have calories left, I will have larger servings of things I enjoy eating.
I feel that thinking "who only eats <serving size amount> of <food>?" is a path to failure for some, depending on how they handle it.0 -
Absolutely! I sold myself this logic when it comes to sweets (I LOVE baked goods):
There is absolutely NO difference in taste if I have 2 or 3 bites of something VS if I eat a whole bunch of it. So I pay attention and savor each taste. Then get rid of it after 3 bites.
The difference is I feel a sense of discipline - or rather integrity toward my commitment to health, I don't have the fat feeling, guilt, or unnecessary calories to worry about. The result is I feel totally satisfied with a few bites. I don't feel like there is anything I "can't" have.
I can even do this with Key Lime Pie, which is my favorite thing on the planet!0 -
You definitely can! As the girl who hardly ever ate the correct portion size for most of my life, I measure nearly all of my snacks now and usually feel satisfied with the serving size. It just takes some time to adjust. I also find using MFP helped with the beginning stage for me. Knowing that I could add a snack I was craving more of today to the plan for tomorrow made me feel less like I needed to eat more right than minute.0
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Absolutely! For me it started with reading the labels and KNOWING what a serving actually was. And then figuring out where it was worth it to me to spend my calories and which treats wouldn't blow it for me.
A serving of Doritos is 11 chips. (140 cals)
A serving of "fun sized" snickers are two pieces! (a happy surprise - 160 cals)
A serving of my fave iced oatmeal cookies is 5 cookies. (150 cals)
A serving of mini vanilla Grandma's cookies is 9 tee-tiny cookies, or about half the little snack bag. (150 cals - this is bad, because then you have half of that little bag staring at you for the rest of the day, so I will avoid getting these from the vending machine from now on - 300 cals for the whole bag - really yummy and a nice treat, but not really worth it on a regular basis)
I have a treat pretty much every day too and I think that helps. I don't eat my treat thinking that I won't have anymore until I "deserve" it or something, so I can savor instead of scarf.0 -
It depends on the food. I can eat 2 oreos, and be fine. I can eat one handful of chips and stop. Other foods are trigger foods for me, and I eat the whole package before I stop. And some foods aren't worth the calories, so I don't eat them at all.
I totally agree with this. I can easily pass up certain treats because they're alright and don't really appeal to me, but icecream is just absolutely delicious! And because its so good I don't want to cut it out completely, I just want to be able to enjoy a reasonable portion without going overboard.0 -
Absolutely! I sold myself this logic when it comes to sweets (I LOVE baked goods):
There is absolutely NO difference in taste if I have 2 or 3 bites of something VS if I eat a whole bunch of it. So I pay attention and savor each taste. Then get rid of it after 3 bites.
The difference is I feel a sense of discipline - or rather integrity toward my commitment to health, I don't have the fat feeling, guilt, or unnecessary calories to worry about. The result is I feel totally satisfied with a few bites. I don't feel like there is anything I "can't" have.
I can even do this with Key Lime Pie, which is my favorite thing on the planet!0 -
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Can you learn to be satisfied with smaller portion sizes of your favorite treats overtime? For instance I love icecream, and if I could be satisfied with the 1/2 cup serving that would be no problem, but it's just so hard to have the 1/2 cup and have that be it! Maybe it's because I'm so used to having bigger portions when I do indulge and I've become accustomed to that. So has anyone successfully learned how to be satisfied with less bites? Lol
Yes, but it really is the way I have been for as long as I can remember. If I have something like ice cream I usually put what I want in a coffee cup and that's more than enough for me. If I order out I usually get the kid's size of ice cream depending on where I am. If I have dessert out or at home I usually share.
Sorry, I can't offer any advice on how I can only have a small portion and be satisfied with that, but I believe you can do it too0 -
Took a while, but yes. When I started I cleaned house and threw out all the junk food because I didn't trust myself. Lately I've been bringing things back in, and I'm finding that a little really does satisfy me. Yesterday I budgeted two pieces of Dove chocolate and only ate one. I was shocked to find that I didn't actually want the second one and felt good when I put it back in the bag!
What helps me is Ziploc snack bags. I refuse to pay the ridiculous price of '100 calorie snack packs' so I make my own. I buy full packages of things (this week it is Nilla wafers) and put one serving in each bag. If I eat a bag I log it - IMMEDIATELY. Usually that's enough to deter me from reaching for another bag (seeing those calories!). I also find that one little bag is actually enough. A few months ago I would have scarfed the whole box (no joke), but now a few cookies a day really does tide me over and keep me satisfied.
As far as ice cream - I make my own. And I mean the real stuff - cream, milk, eggs, and sugar. I logged the recipe in MFP to figure out a 'reasonable' calorie amount (8 servings = 231 calories). As soon as it comes out of the ice cream maker I dish it up into 8 equal portions in little Tupperware containers and stick them in the freezer. Well - 7 Tupperware. The 8th portion gets eaten immediately But real ice cream is SO rich and so thick that one little cup is plenty. And since they're individually portioned once I lick the cup I'm done. Now I get ice cream once or twice a week and still stay within my daily calories.0 -
For me I find it completely satisfying. I have ice just just about every day and 1/2 cup is plenty. I won't give up any of my favorite foods. I just make them fit (usually). If they don't fit the day I want them, then I make room for it the next day.0
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A McDonalds icecream cone is about the only way I can handle ice cream but I am not a big ice cream eater anyway. Now chips, different story but I buy the small bags and it works fo me. I don't bring trigger foods in the house like M&Ms, Hershey bars,etc.
I can live with small portions because I hate eating those low carb diets and fruits and vegetables only all the time. I guess whatever works for me but I want all foods so I have to find a way to eat in moderation. I buy a small piece of cake in the grocery rather than a whole cake.0 -
It depends on the food. I can eat 2 oreos, and be fine. I can eat one handful of chips and stop. Other foods are trigger foods for me, and I eat the whole package before I stop. And some foods aren't worth the calories, so I don't eat them at all.
I totally agree with this. I can easily pass up certain treats because they're alright and don't really appeal to me, but icecream is just absolutely delicious! And because its so good I don't want to cut it out completely, I just want to be able to enjoy a reasonable portion without going overboard.
Same with me , I could eat the 1/2 cup then half hour latter I'm Still thinking of it and tasting it , then I get another 1/2 cup thinking I can adjust, then BAM I just 1/2 cupped the 1/2 gallon gone.0 -
I'm sure if you try really hard and foster a new habit.
For me, I've decided my definition of moderation is to stay away from my trigger foods as daily habits, but when I do have them give myself free reign. I'm not at all interested in having a half cup of ice cream nightly, or two ores a day; I'd rather eat a quarter of a gallon twice a month, or a whole pack of oreos every once in awhile, and then move on.0 -
I find that I have the most difficult time with salty foods... last night at the movies I couldn't say "no" to the theater popcorn + butter.. even the small was a ton of calories. I'm thinking about starting to bring my own popcorn but being a rule follower I am nervous about "sneaking" food in. Anyone else have any ideas?
For other items I buy based on size of servings, if it isn't worth it I just don't purchase it... this way I don't have to worry about it!0 -
I find that I have the most difficult time with salty foods... last night at the movies I couldn't say "no" to the theater popcorn + butter.. even the small was a ton of calories. I'm thinking about starting to bring my own popcorn but being a rule follower I am nervous about "sneaking" food in. Anyone else have any ideas?
For other items I buy based on size of servings, if it isn't worth it I just don't purchase it... this way I don't have to worry about it!
There is so much you can do with popcorn to make it flavorful, and keep it low in calories. My wife has gotten into the habit recently of buying plain popcorn, spritzing it with butter flavored cooking spray, and topping it with all kinds of interesting seasonings.
I'm a big film fan, and I LOVE the movies. I don't eat during them much anymore, but I grew up sneaking stuff in. Paying for three kids, plus herself, at the movies was expensive enough growing up, and my mother was not about to blow her budget on the overpriced concessions (though that's how the theaters make most of their profit). She use to go down to the local dollar store, pick up a few bags of chips, or popcorn, and cookies, put them in her large purse, and we'd snack on that in the movies. If you feel wrong doing it, I understand and respect that. But it's definitely a great way to save money and control what's available to you during a film.0 -
I have found having just a little bit of my favorite item is much better for me than not having any of it at all. If I wait then I begin to crave it, and once I start craving something I have a hard time with portion control.
Created by MyFitnessPal.com - Free Calorie Counter0 -
Can you learn to be satisfied with smaller portion sizes of your favorite treats overtime? For instance I love icecream, and if I could be satisfied with the 1/2 cup serving that would be no problem, but it's just so hard to have the 1/2 cup and have that be it! Maybe it's because I'm so used to having bigger portions when I do indulge and I've become accustomed to that. So has anyone successfully learned how to be satisfied with less bites? Lol
No, I can't. That's why I try to avoid them, unless I am sure I'll not be doing much harm by eating them. I try to behave as good as I can for a longer time before allowing myself my favourite treat. For example, I only allow myself a pizza once a month, but if I have it, I'm having whatever pizza I want, with toppings, and french fries. Then the next day everything's back to normal. For particular foods I can allow myself small portions, such as cereals, snacks and so on, but if it's something that has too many calories and I can't control myself around it, I can't incorporate it within my everyday diet. I am not the best in giving opinions about this, anyway, since last Christmas I pretty much forgot about this all and ate everything I wanted for 3 weeks0 -
I found that after measuring some of my favorite foods out in servings they just are not worth it. Have you ever measured a serving of chex mix? Its laughably small, idk anyone who eats that little. Same with Oreos, who eats 2 Oreos? But you just need to decide if the treat is really worth it or not, because certain things will satisfy me, while others just make me want more.
Same here. A lot of treats just seem less appealing after I take a good look at exactly what the serving size is. Some ice creams are more than 300 cals for a 1/2 cup serving. That is a total turnoff for me now.0 -
1/2 cup is nothing. you could do what i do and find a low cal alternative? i switched to chocolate soymilk ice-cream which is lower cal and so i can eat more. there are so many alternatives to our beloved fav foods. also, maybe fatten out your fav food by mixing something with it (fruit in with the ice-cream)?0
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For those ice cream fanatics, like me, who enjoy the texture and coldness just as much as the flavor....
I've found that frozen bananas are an awesome substitute.0 -
I've absolutely become satisfied with smaller portions of my favorite "treats." For one, I don't have to juggle around a lot of other foods in my meal plan to accommodate and two, having desserts sitting on the counter for multiple days has taught me the fine art of portion control instead of binging as soon as it comes out of the oven.0
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