Super simple diet trick THAT ISN'T SPAM!
SnuggleSmacks
Posts: 3,731 Member
So, I was reading Greatist.com and came across this article:
http://greatist.com/health/cut-calories-switching-smaller-plates
It's basically about using smaller plates to cut portion sizes while still feeling satisfied. I had read an actual study recently which drew the same conclusions. And here's a video on "portion distortion" which demonstrates the theory:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lfdvjlm1V7k
So, I started eating my meals on salad plates, and it does seem to work, even when I'm aware of the illusion. My hot ham and cheese pita and sweet potato fries seemed enormous on the salad plate, after seeming disappointingly small on the baking sheet, and I'm actually having trouble finishing it.
I have small rice bowls from China which I've started using for ice cream, and an actual serving does not seem to swim in a giant vacant sea of loneliness. Now I'm considering buying a new set of dishes with this in mind (I've needed a new set for a long time, as I have a hodgepodge of 3 different sets.)
Have you guys tried this? Does it seem to work for you?
http://greatist.com/health/cut-calories-switching-smaller-plates
It's basically about using smaller plates to cut portion sizes while still feeling satisfied. I had read an actual study recently which drew the same conclusions. And here's a video on "portion distortion" which demonstrates the theory:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lfdvjlm1V7k
So, I started eating my meals on salad plates, and it does seem to work, even when I'm aware of the illusion. My hot ham and cheese pita and sweet potato fries seemed enormous on the salad plate, after seeming disappointingly small on the baking sheet, and I'm actually having trouble finishing it.
I have small rice bowls from China which I've started using for ice cream, and an actual serving does not seem to swim in a giant vacant sea of loneliness. Now I'm considering buying a new set of dishes with this in mind (I've needed a new set for a long time, as I have a hodgepodge of 3 different sets.)
Have you guys tried this? Does it seem to work for you?
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Replies
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I totally agred with this. I use a small plate too. My food doesn't look so lonely on my plate.0
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My Chinese rice bowls are in the dishwasher, so I used a very fancy porcelain tea cup for my ice cream.
Even better. Plus it felt all special.
I'm definitely buying new, smaller dishes.0 -
I have been doing this for a number of years. It does work. When I use larger plates, I find I fill them on 'auto pilot', not because I'm hungry for all that I've put on there. By using the smaller plate, I eat a smaller portion automatically (even though I've also weighed and measured it. ha) and if I'm truly still hungry, I can have seconds as needed. Rarely do I ever need the 'seconds'.0
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I do this all the time! I was always that girl that needed to fill my plate! That was my portion.... So the smaller plates makes portion control seem non-existent for the most part!0
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I'm trying to find the study I read. It was actually about how across all cultures, age groups and genders, we have a tendency to finish the food on our plates, even if we're already full. It was less about the small plate thing than it was about cleaning your plate, whatever the size...but obviously that ties in.
I used to work for Replacements Ltd. (the larges redistributer of discontinued china, silver, crystal, etc.) and I have a small collection of interesting dishes from those days. I think I'll start collecting again with this in mind.
Eating ice cream from a fancy porcelain cup was quite a pleasure!0 -
We switched from bigger square plates to smaller round plates and smaller bowls. It really has made a difference for my husband and for me.0
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My boyfriend laughed the first time he saw me do this, but it really does work. I use mugs when I eat cereal, which keeps it closer to one serving than a bowl ever could and a salad plate makes me feel like my dinner is a heaping serving instead of a cup of whatever it is I'm eating.0
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I found that the fancy 6 oz. teacups make a 1/2 cup serving of ice cream look huge. Definitely doing that again!
I also tried this in reverse. I have a very nice stoneware bowl that I specifically use for salads. It's the size of a small serving bowl, so it's quite large for salads. I definitely should never put ice cream in it.0 -
I have small rice bowls from China which I've started using for ice cream, and an actual serving does not seem to swim in a giant vacant sea of loneliness. Now I'm considering buying a new set of dishes with this in mind (I've needed a new set for a long time, as I have a hodgepodge of 3 different sets.)
This had me laughing. SO true. This is why I use either a condiment bowl or a cappuccino cup for my ice cream servings. Otherwise it's a little anti-climatic.0 -
Stowing the 13" plates that most people use today is a great step. Using 9" plates for meals is something I've done for years now and attribute it to helping keep my weight and "hunger" in check.
Common logic will tell you smaller portions means less calories. But some people can't "leave" food on a full plate so they continue to "clean it off". So it would make sense to use smaller plates if this is how they think.
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Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Careful... you could spark a new diet trend, similar to the "five bite diet" where you can eat whatever you want as long as it fits on a little plate. Pass the french fries and gelato!0
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im 47 years of age and started menopause a little early and I find it very hard to lose weight.. any suggestions? I work out 5-6 days a week. im very frustrated as I never had this problem before.0
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this was on the local news about a month ago actually, they took 2 random groups of people and let them eat at a buffet. one group used smaller plates, and the items on the buffet were put in order of healthiest to least healthy, and the line started at the healthy end. the second group had larger plates and the line started at the unhealthy end. the first group ate like 600 less calories on average for the meal than the second group0
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It does work. We have this cheap little plastic ramekins that we've adopted for eating everything out of. Everything seems bigger out of them!0
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I'm so glad I'm not the only one using rice bowls for ice cream :drinker:0
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I went out and bought 8 half cup bowls just for ice cream. Having a single serving in a cereal bowl is disappointing. I also eat it with a tiny dessert spoon.0
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On a similar note, there's a suggestion I've read somewhere (not sure if trialled scientifically or not) that getting dark-coloured plates influences the food you put on them -- classically we use light plates so pasta, potatoes, etc. tend to be less visible so we load more of them on out plates, whereas with dark plates they stand out more so we put less, and vegetables 'blend in' better so we put more.0
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I use a smaller plate sometimes, but even with a larger plate I've learned to let the white space show. When I was eating ice cream I used to eat it out of a coffe mug with a dessert spoon (tiny with long handle). That helped as well. Haven't had ice cream in months though.0
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I've tried and I don't think it makes a difference for me. We have really big square plates so I'm used to seeing a lot of white space on them and I generally have a large salad with dinner so it doesn't fit on little plates with the rest of my food.0
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I have tiny Ikea bowls that are perfect for cereal and ice cream.0
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