diet versions of stuff
tartansheep
Posts: 122 Member
what are your opinions on the value of diet Coke, diet cereal (special K or whatever), low-calorie jelly (like the 10 calorie Hartley's jelly), as compared to the real thing?
same goes for skimmed milk and that kind of stuff.
worth it or not?
same goes for skimmed milk and that kind of stuff.
worth it or not?
0
Replies
-
Depends on my overall day. I'd rather not go diet because I need the macros and non-diet tastes delicious, but if I haven't the calories to spare for the day I will definitely go for diet items like soda or low cal skim milk.0
-
I tend to prefer some "diet" versions over the regular, but not because they are diet. I prefer skim or 1% milk, i always buy the pure fruit/no sugar jam, and i like Special K now and then. But i generally don't buy the diet stuff where one thing is replaced with something else, like sugar free pudding with extra salt and fat, or things loaded in aspartame, etc. I'd rather eat a smaller portion of the regular food in those instances.
Diet Pepsi is probably the big exception to that rule for me. If i'm going to drink a soft drink, i try to make sure it's diet (and the truth is i really like diet pepsi). These days i rarely have it though.0 -
0/0 would not bang
Seriously though. No. It's pretty much all gross.0 -
Diet coke is amazing. I actually hate the taste of regular coke. I would never drink cola if it had calories.
I have had ice cream of all varieties and I have to say I like Market Pantry brand (America) Low Fat ice cream better than even ben and jerry's. It's so creamy. One serving is 120 calories or thereabouts, vs Turkey Hill/Ben&Jerry's is a smaller serving size and 230-260 cals per serving.
The key is to weigh solids. If diet foods taste as good or better to you than regular ones, go nuts. Just don't go overboard. I follow "a calorie is a calorie." Don't use "It's low fat!" as an excuse to eat away your deficit.
That said, I would never try to low-fat or diet anything like pizza or soft cheese.0 -
For me it depends on how it got to be the "diet" version of the original. So for example, I'm all for skim milk, but I try to limit my intake of foods made with artificial sweeteners (partly because I don't think a ton of artificial sweetener is good for the human body and part because I don't usually like the taste). Does that make sense?0
-
Oh, I do drink 2% milk. Well, technically I just pour it on my cereal because drinking a glass of milk is disgusting. Ew. I hate milk.0
-
aspartame ? what's wrong with it?0
-
It really depends on what it is.
Diet beverages don't bother me because I don't mind artificial sweeteners. Neither does skim milk, as nothing gets added to it to replace the fat.
Many low-fat cheeses are simply terrible, so I opt for regular cheeses that have a strong flavor so I can be happy with a smaller portion.
Many other "diet" or "light" items replace the fat with either sugar or salt in order to give it flavor or texture. In most of those cases, you'd be better off eating the real thing but in a smaller quantity.0 -
I tend to not go for the diet versions of stuff, because I don't like the taste, so it isn't something that will last. I love Diet Coke for mixers, though. I also don't like to eat low-fat dairy, so skimmed milk isn't on my radar. Fat makes my stomach/brain happy!
If you like how they taste (compared to the original), then go for it. If you aren't a fan, then have smaller portions of the non-diet stuff.
Some people don't like the diet versions of food/drink because aspartame, or the fact that they're (usually) higher in something else to make up for the low-fat/low-carb/lower calorie. But, like taste, that's a personal choice.0 -
I think a lower calorie food is worth it if it still tastes good and is filling. If it's lower calorie, but it doesn't fill you up, then there is no point in eating it. In other words, there is no point in eating a 100 calorie snack that doesn't fill you up at all and doesn't taste good when you can eat half of a regular calorie snack that tastes good. What difference does it make. But if that 100 calorie snack will fill you up, then it's a good deal because losing weight is about calories, but at the same time, it's hard to stick to it if you're hungry.
Just for me, I tend to eat 100 calorie kellog pastry crisps as sort of a candy bar replacement. I find them filling and they taste good. A regular candy bar is like 200 - 300 calories.0 -
Depends on the item... I sometimes do calorie savers such as light sourcream or cheese made with 2% milk but I rarely if ever go for low-carb or sweet things that have 0 calories or very low calories (e.g., salad dressing, lite yogurts, low-carb bread, etc.). I think they taste really gross. The artificial sweeteners they add tend to taste bitter and fake. I'd rather just eat a smaller amount of the real thing or skip it all together than save calories on something that tastes like garbage.0
-
who needs the diet stuff usually they are packed full of additional chemicals and tons of sugar (or sugar alternatives).......you are better off just eating the normal stuff...............btw not to judge but who still drinks soda??? ITS MORE ABOUT NUTRIENTS NOT CALORIES AS MUCH0
-
I love coke zero. I will never give it up. I don't really give a crap about the artificial whatever crap they put in it, my one can a day, five days a week habit isn't going to kill me anytime soon.
As for other things. Meh. If, like OP said, there's a low calorie jelly...I dunno if I care enough to switch to the low cal? I've gotten good at not need a jelly or a sauce or a butter on most of my food so I'm ok there, I think.0 -
Some I do some I don't. Depends on the individual product. Diet soda I highly prefer over regular and have forever just because the regular tastes like syrup. For cooking I will often use the lower calories stuff (rarely go fat free) but or eating on its own usually not. For example I might use low fat sour cream in making a dip, but will use the full fat version on my tacos.0
-
This content has been removed.
-
It really depends on what it is.
Diet beverages don't bother me because I don't mind artificial sweeteners. Neither does skim milk, as nothing gets added to it to replace the fat.
Many low-fat cheeses are simply terrible, so I opt for regular cheeses that have a strong flavor so I can be happy with a smaller portion.
Many other "diet" or "light" items replace the fat with either sugar or salt in order to give it flavor or texture. In most of those cases, you'd be better off eating the real thing but in a smaller quantity.
This^0 -
Diet soda - yes.
Diet cheese - ewwww!0 -
In before the fearmongering "diet soda is bad for you" people.
I drink a can of Diet Dr. Pepper every evening. It used to be I hated the taste of diet, but I've gotten used to it so I can give up the 150+ calories of regular I was drinking.
Other than that, I prefer full fat versions. Oh, this also!Oh, I do drink 2% milk. Well, technically I just pour it on my cereal because drinking a glass of milk is disgusting. Ew. I hate milk.0 -
Instead of diet versions of things, I try to just eat low calorie foods that are naturally low calorie. I'd rather not replace calories with chemicals. Anything that naturally would have more calories/fat/sugar and is advertised as diet/lowfat/sugar free is usually full of chemicals and extremely processed to get it the way it is. There's a ton of stuff you can have for around 100 calories - veggie sticks and hummus, a piece of fruit, a hard boiled egg, some nuts, an ounce of cheese, etc.0
-
I prefer the flavour of skim milk and I'm happy with half-fat mayonnaise and 0%-2% greek yogurt. The peanut butter I buy is made of only ground peanuts (so no added salt or sugar). I enjoy baking and have spent a lot of time tweaking recipes so they are lower sugar (I find a lot of recipes in American cook-books use more salt and/or sugar than I like, but baking is as much chemistry as anything else so it takes some effort to "fix" them). I don't mess with the fats in baking though, in that way lies ruin!
So, basically, if I like the flavour of "diet" stuff, then I go for it, but if it the trade-off is low cal/low flavour vs. high cal/high flavour, I'll just have a little less of the good stuff.0 -
It depends on the item in question.
Things like Hartleys Jelly or Ice Pops or diet coke don't bother me because well...theres chemicals in the normal versions too so it's just a tide over.
I don't do half fat cheese, yoghurt, ice cream or anything of which the main component of taste is fat and sugar. Because taking the fat out takes the flavour out and I'd rather have a tiny bit of the real stuff, rather than 4 portions of the less tasty.
That said I never drink whole milk because the texture is way too thick.0 -
I love diet coke and diet drinks, I honestly cannot taste the difference. I do eat some "healthy" cereals, sometimes I find that they have more calories than the sugary kind but I really love special K strawberry. It just taste great to me. I don't buy products based on if they are low fat or a "healthy" alternative. But I will try the lower calorie options and if I like them. If I don't I work in the regular foods into my goals for the day.
I don't buy "low fat " versions of dressings like ranch or blue cheese etc. or mayonnaise because they taste like crap to me, I do love the low fat yogurts though and low fat milk. it all depends on taste for me.0 -
I'm also a diet soda fan, more for the taste.
I also agree that for most fat free items, the lack of taste just isn't worth it. Plus fat is filling - so although it has more calories, it'll stick with me longer than low/fat free.
Start comparing labels. As others pointed out, there's usually a higher amount of sugar or sodium in low/fat free items than in the normal versions. Plus in many cases, the calories aren't that much different per serving.0 -
I prefer low-fat cottage cheese over regular because of the taste and consistency. I dunno....I'm picky about it...I can't stand runny cottage cheese, lol. I also perfer diet soda over regular because the sugary stuff makes my teeth gross and my breath nasty.0
-
I drink diet soda, because regular makes my teeth feel gross. I eat regular ice cream, but I save the higher calorie stuff for my cardio days. If I don't have room, I just don't have a full serving. Sometimes it's just a spoonful (weighed out). Fat free cottage cheese and Greek yogurt are my usual, sometimes fat free cheese, but usually just the lighter stuff. I'll substitute one for the other depending on my macros for the day.0
-
I find "diet" versions of most things to be ****ing horrible. Beyond that, most are more heavily processed with other additives, sugar, artificial sweeteners, etc that I just don't really need...plus, again...they are offensive to my palate.
If I want a soda, I will opt for a regular soda (preferably cane sugar...tastes better)...if I want ice cream I'm going to have ice cream...etc, etc, etc. My lifestyle is such that this kind of "junk" is pretty rare so I don't feel the need to have substitutes for them...and again, most are pretty offensive to the palate.0 -
I agree with others that it depends. How bad do you want it? The real version is almost always better than the diet alternative. I say almost because as many people here might already know Diet Coke from McDonalds is its own drink all by itself. Yup, there is no other version of a drink like it. Coke has formulated a special version of Diet Coke just for Mickey Ds and IMO I think it not only tastes pretty damn good, but is kind of addicting.
Lets use one of my favorite calorie dense foods I like to eat as an example.... Reeses Peanut Butter Cups. The mini Reeses cups that are made with sugar alcohols give me stomach issues. So hmm should I eat 4 of those when I could just eat one Reeses cup? Sure. If I want 4 pieces of candy that KINDA tastes like the real thing but not really and then deal with explosive diarrhea afterward. Then the answer is yes.
So see, it all kinda depends.0 -
I prefer low-fat cottage cheese over regular because of the taste and consistency. I dunno....I'm picky about it...I can't stand runny cottage cheese, lol. I also perfer diet soda over regular because the sugary stuff makes my teeth gross and my breath nasty.
We were typing at the same time!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions