Negative Calories

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  • sloth3toes
    sloth3toes Posts: 2,212 Member
    Remember Olestra? I'm pretty sure if you factor in the side effects of Olestra, it could be considered to have negative calories.
  • JG762
    JG762 Posts: 571 Member
    6,000,000 Americans believe the government are actually alien insects, so yes you'll probably find people that believe foods with calories miraculously change state and become negative calories.

    I for one, welcome our new alien overlords.
  • lynn1982
    lynn1982 Posts: 1,439 Member
    After reading several posts today about negative calories, raw foods, magic calorie numbers, etc I have reached a conclusion: I will begin a roasted unicorn and raw ambrosia diet. I believe if I just eat these two items, making sure I keep them to just 1200 calories all together, don't eat them after 5:37 PM and maybe fast on full moon days I will surely lose my entire body weight and just be a being of light which is what I long to become.

    Roasted unicorn is my favourite.
  • pixelatedsun
    pixelatedsun Posts: 165 Member
    Remember Olestra? I'm pretty sure if you factor in the side effects of Olestra, it could be considered to have negative calories.

    Hahaha oh man, if anything in the WORLD has negative calories, it's most certainly Olestra. :sick:
  • mommyrunning
    mommyrunning Posts: 495 Member
    Based on what I've read it's a diet trend/sales pitch. Here is an article that explains it. Essentially the article says that no foods have been proven to be negative calorie foods.

    http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/weight-loss/expert-answers/negative-calorie-foods/faq-20058260
  • mike_ny
    mike_ny Posts: 351 Member
    It's amazing how some myths just never die, but as long as people want to believe there are short cuts to everything, then they will continue to believe in negative calories, fat burners, magical compounds, spot reduction, no effort exercises, etc...
  • tiggerhammon
    tiggerhammon Posts: 2,211 Member
    There is no such thing as a negative calorie food. The calories burned digesting is all part of your TDEE.

    Okay, so not to freak everyone out but I am totally curious to see what people have to say on this one.
    My husband says he is sure my breast milk is negative calories. Not to anyone else, of course, just to me. If I were to eat nothing else and only drink water then the more of my milk I drank, the more I would lose because of the amount of energy it takes to make it.
  • AllOutof_Bubblegum
    AllOutof_Bubblegum Posts: 3,646 Member
    This is a complete myth. There is no such thing as negative calorie foods.
  • bethanyboomstick
    bethanyboomstick Posts: 52 Member
    Here's a great video explaining why zero calorie and negative calorie foods don't exist.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiVwWaEmBhw
  • There is no such thing as a negative calorie food. The calories burned digesting is all part of your TDEE.

    Okay, so not to freak everyone out but I am totally curious to see what people have to say on this one.
    My husband says he is sure my breast milk is negative calories. Not to anyone else, of course, just to me. If I were to eat nothing else and only drink water then the more of my milk I drank, the more I would lose because of the amount of energy it takes to make it.
    In that scenario, you'd keep losing weight because your body burns calories every day. The breast milk itself isn't negative calories, it doesn't cause weight loss for the person drinking it (thank goodness, because we want our babies to put on weight, right?) but because it contains calories, and it's coming out of your body, it's coming out of your diet. If you were to do what your husband is suggesting, you would lose weight because of all the calories your body burns just existing every day - not because of supposed magical negative-calorie properties of breast milk. :)

    You can count breastfeeding as a calorie deficit while you're doing it, but the concept of negative breastfeeding calories is quite a bit different than the idea that chewing your celery burns more calories than are in the celery. You lose calories by producing breast milk, while "negative calorie foods" suggest you lose weight just by eating them.
  • Ready2Rock206
    Ready2Rock206 Posts: 9,487 Member
    Negative calorie foods is some BS someone made up to feel better about overeating. All food has calories don't fall for this nonsense.
  • tiggerhammon
    tiggerhammon Posts: 2,211 Member
    There is no such thing as a negative calorie food. The calories burned digesting is all part of your TDEE.

    Okay, so not to freak everyone out but I am totally curious to see what people have to say on this one.
    My husband says he is sure my breast milk is negative calories. Not to anyone else, of course, just to me. If I were to eat nothing else and only drink water then the more of my milk I drank, the more I would lose because of the amount of energy it takes to make it.
    In that scenario, you'd keep losing weight because your body burns calories every day. The breast milk itself isn't negative calories, it doesn't cause weight loss for the person drinking it (thank goodness, because we want our babies to put on weight, right?) but because it contains calories, and it's coming out of your body, it's coming out of your diet. If you were to do what your husband is suggesting, you would lose weight because of all the calories your body burns just existing every day - not because of supposed magical negative-calorie properties of breast milk. :)

    You can count breastfeeding as a calorie deficit while you're doing it, but the concept of negative breastfeeding calories is quite a bit different than the idea that chewing your celery burns more calories than are in the celery. You lose calories by producing breast milk, while "negative calorie foods" suggest you lose weight just by eating them.

    Right. I would burn more than I would consume though. Because every calorie came from me, if I only consumed my own milk it would be completely impossible to consume more than I burned, right? Unlike the whole eating 8,000 calories in celery you would still gain. If I consumed 8,000 calories of milk (If I could actually make 8,000 calories in milk a day) I still wouldn't gain, I would still lose. This doesn't make breast milk a negative calorie food but wouldn't it be true, for me, consuming only in a day what I make in a day, this (again, for me) would be a negative calorie food?
    Fascinating to think about. But, I could NEVER make myself do it. Haha!
  • hearthwood
    hearthwood Posts: 794 Member
    There is no such thing as a negative calorie. Watermelon has calories, the positive kind.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    There's no such thing as negative calorie foods in any amount. The amount of energy it takes to digest the food is factored into the equation when determining how many calories something has.

    Well, that's absolutely not true either.

    Don't replace one myth with another.
  • MyChocolateDiet
    MyChocolateDiet Posts: 22,281 Member
    Those are the ones that cuss all the time and don't hi five my workouts right?
  • WatchJenShrink
    WatchJenShrink Posts: 18 Member
    ...and any pizza is a personal pizza if you believe in yourself enough. :wink:
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    There is no such thing as a negative calorie food. The calories burned digesting is all part of your TDEE.

    Okay, so not to freak everyone out but I am totally curious to see what people have to say on this one.
    My husband says he is sure my breast milk is negative calories. Not to anyone else, of course, just to me. If I were to eat nothing else and only drink water then the more of my milk I drank, the more I would lose because of the amount of energy it takes to make it.

    True, energy required to make it is not actually in it, you wouldn't gain what you put forth.

    But that's not what is being talked about. That's totally different.

    Negative calories - takes 100 calories to digest something, but it only provides 80 calories in it.

    Usually high fiber items are listed, and while it's true the item has say 80 calories in it, you don't get all those calories out of the fiber part, so you actually only get 70 say. But then again, it didn't take 100 to digest it either.

    To your milk if making it wasn't part of the equation - it provides say 200 calories for 8 ozs, and it takes 8% of that energy to process it for use in the body - so you are still getting 92% of the calories from it to do something with. It does NOT take more calories to process it then it provides. It is NOT negative calories.

    The fact making milk takes more energy then it provides is not negative calories.
  • stephylynn190
    stephylynn190 Posts: 33 Member
    There is no such thing as a negative calorie food. The calories burned digesting is all part of your TDEE.

    Okay, so not to freak everyone out but I am totally curious to see what people have to say on this one.
    My husband says he is sure my breast milk is negative calories. Not to anyone else, of course, just to me. If I were to eat nothing else and only drink water then the more of my milk I drank, the more I would lose because of the amount of energy it takes to make it.
    In that scenario, you'd keep losing weight because your body burns calories every day. The breast milk itself isn't negative calories, it doesn't cause weight loss for the person drinking it (thank goodness, because we want our babies to put on weight, right?) but because it contains calories, and it's coming out of your body, it's coming out of your diet. If you were to do what your husband is suggesting, you would lose weight because of all the calories your body burns just existing every day - not because of supposed magical negative-calorie properties of breast milk. :)

    You can count breastfeeding as a calorie deficit while you're doing it, but the concept of negative breastfeeding calories is quite a bit different than the idea that chewing your celery burns more calories than are in the celery. You lose calories by producing breast milk, while "negative calorie foods" suggest you lose weight just by eating them.

    Right. I would burn more than I would consume though. Because every calorie came from me, if I only consumed my own milk it would be completely impossible to consume more than I burned, right? Unlike the whole eating 8,000 calories in celery you would still gain. If I consumed 8,000 calories of milk (If I could actually make 8,000 calories in milk a day) I still wouldn't gain, I would still lose. This doesn't make breast milk a negative calorie food but wouldn't it be true, for me, consuming only in a day what I make in a day, this (again, for me) would be a negative calorie food?
    Fascinating to think about. But, I could NEVER make myself do it. Haha!

    Mind blown. Lol :)
  • PrizePopple
    PrizePopple Posts: 3,133 Member
    Pizza is negative calorie. :bigsmile:

    So is beer. :drinker: