Can u get fat by eating 2,000 calories of raw food?
joowelz
Posts: 172 Member
Been trying to eat more natural and fewer processed food. Took up veggie and fruit smoothies. Have a question. My weight loss calorie goals are around 1750 per day. If I eat 2000 calories worth of raw fruit, veggies and nuts, would weight still gain occur? Are all calories created equal?
3
Replies
-
If it puts you in a calorie surplus yes of course you will gain weight.12
-
You'll gain on 2,000 calories if that is more energy than your body is using. "Calorie" is just a way to refer to the energy in food. All calories are equal to each other in the amount of energy your body gets from them, so in that way, yes . . . all calories are equal.
It doesn't matter if the food is cooked, raw, or a mixture. Consistently consuming more than your body needs will result in weight gain.
That said, if 1,750 is your weight loss goal, do you know how many calories you need to maintain? It's possible -- depending on how much of a deficit 1,750 is for you -- that 2,000 calories would be within your calories to maintain.7 -
Absolutely..you gain weight if you eat more than you burn.6
-
I won't, because my maintenance calories are ~2300 calories per day.
However, if you are smaller or less active than I am, then yes you could.7 -
yes, it is possible.
if 2000 cal is more than your calorie allotment, you will gain weight4 -
What is your maintenance (TDEE) calorie value? Without this number, there is no way to tell if you will be eating in a surplus at 2000 calories per day.
What can be said with the numbers you've provided is: Since the 2000 calorie figure is larger than your weight-loss calorie figure by 250 calories per day, your weight-loss will be ~½ a pound per week less than you'd have with your targeted 1750-calorie per day intake.4 -
What weighs more, five pounds of feathers or five pounds of bricks?
Which calories are more, 2000 calories of ice cream or 2000 calories of vegetables?10 -
Speaking purely in terms of weight loss, all calories are equal.
Speaking in terms of nutrition, general health, energy levels, body composition, workout performance and satiety/adherence, all calories are not equal.
If you would gain weight on 2000 calories of twinkies, pizza and beer, you'd also gain weight on 2000 calories of raw fruit, veggies and nuts. However, that's not to say that the nutritional profiles would be the same.6 -
Been trying to eat more natural and fewer processed food. Took up veggie and fruit smoothies. Have a question. My weight loss calorie goals are around 1750 per day. If I eat 2000 calories worth of raw fruit, veggies and nuts, would weight still gain occur? Are all calories created equal?
The others have addressed the calorie portion of your OP. I'd like to mention that this diet plan sounds woefully low on fat and protein. Both of which can have a considerable impact on your health.8 -
Raw foods may have a bit higher TEF (jury's kinda out still, I think), or be a bit less easy to absorb nutrients from in some cases (don't know whether that extends to calories), but there's no magic in raw food. If you overeat them, you'll gain. If there's a difference, it's not going to be big. If 2000 calories is below your maintenance, you'll keep losing. Will you lose faster than on 2000 calories of junk? Probably not enough to notice, if at all.2
-
Oh God...add another one to the debate section (rolls eyes)...
Nuts quite much so. The question is whether one can actually stomach the bulk required to reach 2,000kcals of extremely low density kcal foods (without the aid of cow stomachs transplantation...joking of course)2 -
Find your maintenance amount of calories. let's say your maintenance is 2500 calories a day. If you eat raw foods worth 2000 calories, you will lose weight. Hell, even if you eat 2400 calories a day, you will lose weight (slowly). Treat all calories the same. Doesn't mean you should constantly indulge in treats because those are high in calories but are not very nutrient dense. It's all about moderation. Calories are calories. If you're in a caloric deficit, you will lose weight. it's really that simple. I wish you luck.1
-
I can't because my maintenance is 2600 but you might depending on what yours is!0
-
Short answer is yes.
If you need 1750 to maintain and are eating 2000, you have a 250 surplus.
A typical pound of fat (453g if you use the metric system) contains 3500kcals.
So IF, and only if you are absolutely certain of your math and you know for sure that your body, between organs, muscle and fat tissue, consistently needs 1750kcal to maintain its weight, you can expect to gain 1 lbs on the first 14 days.
The more weight you gain, the higher the threshold to maintain. (Generally speaking)1 -
Not likely. If your weight loss calories are 1750, your maintenance is likely 2000 or more (unless your weight loss calories give you only a tiny deficit). It's not likely you would gain on 2000 on a raw food diet or on an exclusively cooked diet because it has little to do with foods and everything to do with calories.
If you mean 2000 calories worth of raw foods on top of other foods, then the possibility of gain becomes much more likely.
P.S: if you're looking for healthy, eating raw foods exclusively isn't it. Your diet would not provide adequate protein and would be missing several other nutrients.2 -
There's food that is better nutritionally when cooked, like tomatoes. Some foods aren't meant to be eaten raw, like potatoes, some root veg, beans and pulses, and we're not meant to exist on fruit and veg alone. We need a variety of foods for health. Smoothies are fine short term, but they're not sustainable, and they don't help you change your eating habits. You're likely to get more benefit from eating your fruit and veg than drinking them.2
-
Yes, you can gain weight from eating surplus calories of anything even 'raw' foods.2
-
Yes. Avacado, nuts, seeds. All very calorically dense.0
-
2000 is well below my NEAT calories, but it wouldn’t be enough for me. I need fat and protein, and I don’t like nuts so I’d need to get those macros from elsewhere.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K 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