Red wine
l3mmmy
Posts: 7 Member
Hi all,
I've been a user of MyFitnessPal for years but never posted on the forum before so please bear with me!
I'm trying to lose about 10lbs which I have slowly gained over the last year. I start my super diet tomorrow and I'm feeling really motivated. But I have a question...
All dieting aside, currently I tend to have at least 2 glasses of red wine per night during the week. It's a bad habit which I will be stopping whilst I'm on my diet, but out of interest will cutting out my nightly couple of glasses of red wine affect my weight loss much at all?
I've heard various things about red wine such as it stops your body sorting fat etc but I also know there is about 600 calories in a bottle of wine.
What's the truth? And will cutting it out significantly affect my weight loss?
Thanks guys!
I've been a user of MyFitnessPal for years but never posted on the forum before so please bear with me!
I'm trying to lose about 10lbs which I have slowly gained over the last year. I start my super diet tomorrow and I'm feeling really motivated. But I have a question...
All dieting aside, currently I tend to have at least 2 glasses of red wine per night during the week. It's a bad habit which I will be stopping whilst I'm on my diet, but out of interest will cutting out my nightly couple of glasses of red wine affect my weight loss much at all?
I've heard various things about red wine such as it stops your body sorting fat etc but I also know there is about 600 calories in a bottle of wine.
What's the truth? And will cutting it out significantly affect my weight loss?
Thanks guys!
0
Replies
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There's about 500 calories in a bottle of the stuff, so cutting it out or limiting it to weekends would help you reach your goal.0
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If you aren't replacing those calories with food, then it'll add to your deficit. That being said, I know many people who still had 1-2 glasses regularly and lost weight, they just worked it into their calories.0
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And remember if you have a glass of wine and eat something, that something you ate goes straight into storage [fat]. The body must burn Alcohol before it can burn any other calories. Alcohol is readily available and needs no processing for the body to handle. Other foods require processing. So if you have a glass of wine and cheese and crackers for a snack, the cheese and crackers become fat. If you have wine with dinner and an apple for dessert, the dinner and the apple get stored while your body tries to use up the alcohol. Beer and nachos? Guess where the nachos go...
So Wine helping the body not store fat? How many glasses did they have before they wrote that?
Alcohol must be burned first before the body can access the other foods.2 -
Wine does not magically stop your body from storing fat.
Only marijuana does that.7 -
What's a "super diet"? You can have wine and still lose weight. I sure as hell will be having alcohol after this baby lol.2
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http://www.medicaldaily.com/red-wine-burns-fat-and-lowers-blood-pressure-plus-5-other-health-benefits-winos-321382
http://www.shape.com/weight-loss/food-weight-loss/ask-diet-doctor-red-wine-worth-calories
I recommend, as with anything, do your own research. It will be hard or damn near impossible, to get answers which all lead to a overall consensus.
You will however, educate yourself, and learn how to balance your wine with your diet.
2 -
If it fits in your daily calories goals --go for it. Or not. I find it helpful to have those extra 250 calories for food to fuel workouts, but it doesn't really matter. When I do have wine, I measure out a 5oz pour just to know what a serving looks like and try to keep it to 2 servings. Not always successful.3
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I prefer white myself. I usually have 2 glasses a night, sometimes a little more. I'm about 3 pounds from my UGW. I am not so sure about the body storing food you consume with alcohol as fat, but I maybe it's the pistachios I eat with the wine that have kept my boobs from deflating altogether.3
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Hi all,
I've been a user of MyFitnessPal for years but never posted on the forum before so please bear with me!
I'm trying to lose about 10lbs which I have slowly gained over the last year. I start my super diet tomorrow and I'm feeling really motivated. But I have a question...
All dieting aside, currently I tend to have at least 2 glasses of red wine per night during the week. It's a bad habit which I will be stopping whilst I'm on my diet, but out of interest will cutting out my nightly couple of glasses of red wine affect my weight loss much at all?
I've heard various things about red wine such as it stops your body sorting fat etc but I also know there is about 600 calories in a bottle of wine.
What's the truth? And will cutting it out significantly affect my weight loss?
Thanks guys!
Red wine is a nice cholesterol lowering top 10 "food". Just account for the calories in your glass(es) and you'll be fine as long as your daily calories total up to a deficit.1 -
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BusyRaeNOTBusty wrote: »You could cut it to 1 a night.
I can do that if I pour enough into that one glass.6 -
SingingSingleTracker wrote: »BusyRaeNOTBusty wrote: »You could cut it to 1 a night.
I can do that if I pour enough into that one glass.
Only if this is the glass :laugh:
10 -
I have a similar problem, but it's not always wine...it's beer. My boyfriend and I drink probably 3-4 times per week. I know this is a huge problem and has almost 100% contributed to my 25 lb weight gain. That and the late night eating that comes along with the beer drinking.
It's not always easy though, not to have those few drinks. Sucks!0 -
PhilHarrison1 wrote: »And remember if you have a glass of wine and eat something, that something you ate goes straight into storage [fat]. The body must burn Alcohol before it can burn any other calories. Alcohol is readily available and needs no processing for the body to handle. Other foods require processing. So if you have a glass of wine and cheese and crackers for a snack, the cheese and crackers become fat. If you have wine with dinner and an apple for dessert, the dinner and the apple get stored while your body tries to use up the alcohol. Beer and nachos? Guess where the nachos go...
So Wine helping the body not store fat? How many glasses did they have before they wrote that?
Alcohol must be burned first before the body can access the other foods.
If you're in a deficit, all the calories will get burned -- regardless of wine consumption. Your body can't store energy in a deficit, even if you are having a glass or two of wine.1 -
If you really want results with your diet then ditch alcohol for good. It dehydrates, slows metabolism and are unnecessary calories that you could consume with good food that fuels your body to do it's functions - lose weight if calories are in deficit, and keep overall health if nutrition is on point.0
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applesandtapeline wrote: »If you really want results with your diet then ditch alcohol for good. It dehydrates, slows metabolism and are unnecessary calories that you could consume with good food that fuels your body to do it's functions - lose weight if calories are in deficit, and keep overall health if nutrition is on point.
You can have results and include alcohol in your diet. This is just wrong.4 -
applesandtapeline wrote: »If you really want results with your diet then ditch alcohol for good. It dehydrates, slows metabolism and are unnecessary calories that you could consume with good food that fuels your body to do it's functions - lose weight if calories are in deficit, and keep overall health if nutrition is on point.
You can get good results from eliminating alcohol, but it isn't *required* for good results. You can still consume good food that allows your body to meet nutritional needs and have some wine. You can also maintain a deficit to lose weight (if that's your goal). Consuming alcohol and meeting nutritional needs aren't contradictory goals -- people can do both.4 -
It's empty calories at 25 calories per ounce of wine. Everyone needs to decide what is important to themselves.0
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I have seen significant improvement in my boyfriend's well-being since I started having a little wine after a rough day. YMMV.3
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Mouse_Potato wrote: »I have seen significant improvement in my boyfriend's well-being since I started having a little wine after a rough day. YMMV.
LOL.
One must weigh such options.
Do we have bloodshed or do we have wine? Good, hand me the corkscrew.
3
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