Zero Sugar Diet
kelsberry92
Posts: 9 Member
Hey all. Recently I read the Zero Sugar Diet book. It's basically eating fruits, veggies and whole grains. So only natural sugar for 14 days and then after that your food must have more fiber than sugar to eat it. I plan to stick with it as it is easy. Anyone else ever tried this? I hope it makes me feel good like they say.
Kels
Kels
0
Replies
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Since fruits and veggies have sugar, sometimes lots of it, and natural sugars are still sugar, I'm assuming this would be more aptly named the Zero Added Processed Sugar Diet. I do limit added sugar and eat high fiber, though I don't follow any prescribed plan. I think this keeps my waistline and colon happier.
Edit: I don't just eat plants though. I eat animal products too, so I guess maybe not so much like what you describe.4 -
If it works for you, great.
I'm not familiar with it, and I hate to nitpick, but
"that your food must have more fiber than sugar to eat it"
This would mean you couldn't eat most fruit... If, for example, we take 100g of apple, it contains 10g of sugar and 2.4g of fiber...
7 -
I guess I should have said for added sugars, not natural. You are supposed to limit fruits though.1
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Eating only foods that have more fiber than sugar seems pointless to me. Just looking at some things I ate recently that would exclude, they include: turnips, cabbage, green beans, onions, cottage cheese, fennel, cauliflower, blueberries and all other fruit, summer squash, winter squash, eggs, carrots, mushrooms, broccolini.
But if you enjoy it, go for it. I just wouldn't think of it as a plan based on what's healthy, just maybe some kind of dieting technique.7 -
I simply avoid processes sugars in my day-to-day diet and don't think about it beyond that. I think maybe limiting all sugar is a bit extreme (I like sugar in my cupcakes) but a low sugar diet is defiantly good for you.0
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kelsberry92 wrote: »Hey all. Recently I read the Zero Sugar Diet book. It's basically eating fruits, veggies and whole grains. So only natural sugar for 14 days and then after that your food must have more fiber than sugar to eat it. I plan to stick with it as it is easy. Anyone else ever tried this? I hope it makes me feel good like they say.
Kels
Zero Sugar Diet book. It's basically eating fruits...
Fruit is full of sugar? I'm confused....5 -
I did it. It really helped me cut my sweet tooth significantly. I also lost a bunch of weigh as a side benefit since I wasn't shoving cookies, cupcakes, candy, and a ton of coffee creamer in my mouth all day long. I pretty much stick to the principles and make sure the fiber is higher than the added sugars and I've had continued success.
For several of the others here you are correct that the appropriate title should be "Zero Added Sugar Diet". The book is based on the new food labels that are supposed to say total sugar and then also show how much of the sugar is added and the fiber has to be higher than the added sugar. Animal products are not excluded she just didn't mention them. He encourages ALL fruits and veggies but also guides towards ones that have the most nutritional punch such as choosing raspberries over banana.
It really is a lifestyle change and a sustainable one as he gives a HUGE list of products that are free from added sugars such as protein bars, certain protein powders, crackers, dressings, as well as how to enjoy alcohol while keeping added sugars in check and eat out. In all of his books (I did the Abs diet as well and still use some of the principles and recipes) he encourages small treats such as 70% dark chocolate and red wine as well as "cheat meals" to avoid deprivation.1 -
I am doing a low sugar diet. I've quit trying to do a no sugar diet. Anything with over 3 grams of added sugar is out. All natural sugar is in. Everyone is different, but I personally feel awesome doing this. I can't eat any candy or junk food as an added rule to make sure I don't get reckless.1
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TheCupcakeCounter wrote: »I did it. It really helped me cut my sweet tooth significantly. I also lost a bunch of weigh as a side benefit since I wasn't shoving cookies, cupcakes, candy, and a ton of coffee creamer in my mouth all day long. I pretty much stick to the principles and make sure the fiber is higher than the added sugars and I've had continued success.
For several of the others here you are correct that the appropriate title should be "Zero Added Sugar Diet". The book is based on the new food labels that are supposed to say total sugar and then also show how much of the sugar is added and the fiber has to be higher than the added sugar. Animal products are not excluded she just didn't mention them. He encourages ALL fruits and veggies but also guides towards ones that have the most nutritional punch such as choosing raspberries over banana.
It really is a lifestyle change and a sustainable one as he gives a HUGE list of products that are free from added sugars such as protein bars, certain protein powders, crackers, dressings, as well as how to enjoy alcohol while keeping added sugars in check and eat out. In all of his books (I did the Abs diet as well and still use some of the principles and recipes) he encourages small treats such as 70% dark chocolate and red wine as well as "cheat meals" to avoid deprivation.
I don't understand this. You both seem to be saying that it's NO added sugar and also sugar in general (from any food) must be lower than fiber, but as I pointed out that second rule eliminates basically all fruit and a whole lot of vegetables and some other healthy foods (like eggs, dairy).
I don't see the point. I limit "junk food" and rarely eat packaged products that include added sugar (other than a few things I know has plenty, like ice cream, which I simply eat in moderation), but sugar is in many many healthful foods, and its not bad just because there's more sugar than fiber. Sugar is not bad for you -- I actually like getting lots of sugar when it's from vegetables and some fruit, as it's a sign I'm eating the number of vegetables I like to be eating.
Oh, I should mention that sweet tooth wasn't my issue, but emotional eating (to some extent with sweet stuff, since it was often available) was, and for that I cut out added sugar entirely (and sometimes go back to it by cutting out sweets -- doing this as part of my Lent), so I get it being beneficial although I wouldn't do a special program for it or buy a book. I just don't see why one would cut out all foods with more sugar than fiber.
I also didn't find I felt differently than when just following a healthful, balanced diet or that it was impossible to do follow a good diet without cutting out added sugar.1 -
menotyou56 wrote: »kelsberry92 wrote: »Hey all. Recently I read the Zero Sugar Diet book. It's basically eating fruits, veggies and whole grains. So only natural sugar for 14 days and then after that your food must have more fiber than sugar to eat it. I plan to stick with it as it is easy. Anyone else ever tried this? I hope it makes me feel good like they say.
Kels
Zero Sugar Diet book. It's basically eating fruits...
Fruit is full of sugar? I'm confused....
How so?0 -
kelsberry92 wrote: »I guess I should have said for added sugars, not natural. You are supposed to limit fruits though.
There is not really any difference between added sugars and natural sugars though.3 -
I've discovered that other people telling me what I can't eat doesn't work for me. I've decided I need to limit baked goods because they don't provide enough satiety.
I've found some trigger foods that I need to eliminate. These all do have added sugar, but are also high in fat.4 -
I have discovered that sugar (especially processed/added--baked goods, candy, etc.) tends to trigger my reflux, so I eat a lower sugar/low carb diet. However, I'd hate to rule out veggies based on sugar to fiber ratio. I don't eat a ton of fruit (about 1 serving a day and 4-5 of vegetables) but while I really minimize the added sugar and grains because of how they affect my body, I keep an eye on macros for the whole meal and the whole day rather than for an individual food.0
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kshama2001 wrote: »I've discovered that other people telling me what I can't eat doesn't work for me. I've decided I need to limit baked goods because they don't provide enough satiety.
I've found some trigger foods that I need to eliminate. These all do have added sugar, but are also high in fat.
I think there is a huge difference between learning the impact different foods have on our own energy, satiety, digestion, etc and avoiding/limiting them accordingly and adopting someone else's list.
The first is prudent behavior, I imagine it's practiced by most (if not all) people who manage to lose weight and successfully maintain it.
The second . . . I just don't see the point. Though if it works for someone, they should do it.2
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