How does rice contribute to weight gain?

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Replies

  • SnuggleSmacks
    SnuggleSmacks Posts: 3,731 Member
    No, but the sushi from lunch had a lot of rice. The McRib is full of chemicals in its bread that is well known to counteract the negative made-up effects of white rice. So I am all good now :D

    If I don't like McRibs, or anything else at McDonald's, can I get these magic made-up negative white rice effect counteracting chemicals in the form of a capsule?


    Or a caramel sundae. That's the one thing on the McDonald's menu I will eat.
  • fearlessleader104
    fearlessleader104 Posts: 723 Member
    I heard from highly respectable sources in the scientific community that the only other way would be to rub a sumo wrestler's leg right after he eats 5 bowls of rice.
  • tennisdude2004
    tennisdude2004 Posts: 5,609 Member
    ana3067 wrote: »
    It doesn't. Caloric surplus contributes to weight gain.
    She stopped eating rice = she lowered her caloric intake
    or
    she stopped eating rice = she reduced her water retention and thus reduced her bloat.

    This.

    Although if you can live without rice (or you can reduce the amount you eat of it) - it's a quick and easy way to reduce your cal intake and helps towards a deficit! It's a food you can drop without having an impact on you Micro nutrients!



  • libbydoodle11
    libbydoodle11 Posts: 1,351 Member
    gcdn wrote: »
    Guys,I need some help here.I was talking to my Aunty who lost a huge amount of weight (app 20-30kg).But anyway she told me she stopped eating rice,especially white rice and now resorted to a fist size portion of white basmati rice.She said once she starts eating rice,she'll grow horizontally.Bread doesn't cause the same effect tho. Well,this is new to me and I've searched all over google but couldn't find anything related to this.Personally,I too stopped eating rice but I don't grow horizontally like she does.Even after months of not eating rice,I can down one full plate of rice without any bad effects.Any ideas guys?


    I eat rice almost daily and I am not growing in anyway. I think just eating at a calorie deficit is the answer to losing weight. Of course, there are many dietary alternations one can make. Choose the combinations that work best for you.
  • skinny0000
    skinny0000 Posts: 90 Member
    It has calories.
  • GoneGirl50
    GoneGirl50 Posts: 65 Member
    I just copied an article excerpt from the thread "good news for people who like to eat fat". It's a study done at Ohio state, and just published this week:

    "looking at palmitoleic acid, however, the scientists found that it consistently decreased on the high-fat/low-carb diet in all participants. The fatty acid then showed a step-wise increase in concentration in the blood as carbs were progressively added to the diet. Elevated levels of palmitoleic acid in the blood have been linked to obesity and higher risk for inflammation, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance, metabolic syndrome, type-2 diabetes, heart disease and prostate cancer.

    The study does not address what happens to palmitoleic acid levels when high carbs are combined with a diet high in saturated fat. Instead, Volek hoped to identify the carb-intake point at which participants began to store fat.

    “That turned out to be highly variable,” he said. “Everyone showed increased palmitoleic acid levels as carbs increased, but values varied widely between individuals, especially at the highest carb intake. This is consistent with the idea that people vary widely in their tolerance to carbohydrates.”

    Participants’ existing health risks were not a factor in the study because everyone ate the exact same diet for 18 weeks. Their bodies’ responses to the food were the focus of the work."

    http://news.osu.edu/news/2014/11/21/study-doubling-saturated-fat-in-the-diet-does-not-increase-saturated-fat-in-blood/
  • nuvimi
    nuvimi Posts: 103 Member
    If one eats rice to grow horizontally, what does one eat to grow vertically?
  • I really cant imagine rice being fattening, it is the easiest to digest grain. maybe white rice because it is more refined/ without its husk? I eat sweet-brown rice a lot and don't gain weight, but I cant eat bread very well.
    peoples metabolisms and genetics are different though,
  • 999tigger
    999tigger Posts: 5,235 Member
    edited November 2014
    ana3067 wrote: »
    It doesn't. Caloric surplus contributes to weight gain.
    She stopped eating rice = she lowered her caloric intake
    or
    she stopped eating rice = she reduced her water retention and thus reduced her bloat.

    What she said. I was reading about rice again today. Besides food safety, then didnt notice anything special other than white rice isnt as good as wild rice. I have cut rice right back because I used to cook such a large portion of it, but have moved on now. She probbaly just needs protion control , certainly havent heard about anything special, sounds a bit like people know person x can eat whatever they want and it never affects them....

    Doubt the mcrib is that great a quality of meat either.
  • Kalikel
    Kalikel Posts: 9,603 Member
    A lot of people think that if something works for them, it will work for everyone else.

    Your aunt may have had a problem with rice. If eating rice caused her to want more and more rice, she may have eliminated it and found life to be much easier and weight much easier to lose. If she's one of those folks who think that everyone else is exactly like them, she may naturally assume that her solutions will work for everyone.

    But everyone is different. You have to find what works for you. :)

  • It doesn't impact weight gain. Too many calories does.
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