Best time to eat a chocolate/sweet treat
sharonlep
Posts: 50 Member
I'm terrible for night time binging once I start on anything dessert - sweet like, so I'm trying not to eat any kind of dessert or choc treats and just having a tea or a LF hot choc drinks instead, but, I still want to try and eat the odd sweet treat.
I read somewhere that eating a sweet treat around 4pm or 5pm (that's also exactly when I start loosing my willpower and good intentions for the day!) is a better time to eat sweet foods.
Has this helped anyone else stop their nightly sweetctooth cravings and late afternoon hunger/willpower problems?
I read somewhere that eating a sweet treat around 4pm or 5pm (that's also exactly when I start loosing my willpower and good intentions for the day!) is a better time to eat sweet foods.
Has this helped anyone else stop their nightly sweetctooth cravings and late afternoon hunger/willpower problems?
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Replies
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I usually save it for right before bed as sort of a reward for the day. Lately its been a skinny cow ice cream sandwich9
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for health/weight loss it doesn't matter what time.
only other issue would be if it impacts your sleep if you eat it too late.5 -
The only difference timing will make will be related to your own willpower/cravings/desire to eat more sweet things. That's an extremely personal aspect though and isn't generalizable. I personally eat sweet things throughout the day, but I make sure they fit in my calories and thus limit how many sweet things I eat. Today, for example, I had a piece of essentially lemon pound cake with berries in it for breakfast after rowing (I typically have potatoes and eggs or squash and black beans but I wanted to switch it up), had a biscotti in the afternoon, and will have a few madeleines after dinner. That is in addition to the other things I'll be eating/have eaten today.6
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Whenever you want one, as long as it isn't so many so often that you average more than maintenance calories, or drive out overall adequate nutrition. It'll be fine.7
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Is the theory behind that time that you are eating something sweet before your evening meal? If so, it makes sense.
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For me personally I find I do better if I eat sweets after I’ve already had a meal. If I’m actually hungry I end up binging on more than I had planned. If I’m already satisfied from the meal I am more able to stick to my planned portion size.0
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Thanks for your thoughts on this. I think it is more psychological to me probably. If I'm on a sugar binge it doesn't matter how full I am from my evening meal.
So trying to train myself not to have desserts every night might work better.0 -
Timing only matters if it makes a difference for you. You could try eating it right before bed because you'll be less tempted to overeat when you're asleep. You could also try having it first thing in the morning before breakfast if breakfast mentally signals the beginning of your eating day, so the sweets may possibly feel like part of yesterday and not have a continuity pull.0
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I just eat a bite of dark chocolate (26 calories) whenever I want one. I also put cacao powder (20 calories) in oatmeal, Greek yogurt, and coffee. Cacao powder turns anything into chocolate. A giant bowl of basically chocolate pudding made from Greek yogurt with berries satisfies my sweet tooth.3
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Whenever I know I have the calories available to fit it into the day. This is easiest to determine towards the end of the day, after dinner. It is nice finishing the day with that special treat as the last thing you eat.1
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I eat chocolate any time of day as long as it fits within my calorie budget. If it doesn't fit in and I really really want it - I make sure I do some extra exercise so I can have it. So I'm still eating Tim Tams and chocolate. It's just a matter of figuring out if it's worth the additional exercise if it's outside my budget. I usually have it in the evening so it feels like dessert.1
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I am not someone who can eat packaged sweets moderately. One package is one serving. So I just don't start...for me it's the only way. It's the first one I have to stay away from.
I do have Greek yogurt and fruit with some walnuts after dinner, or I'll have popcorn with a teaspoon of sugar sprinkled on it. Those don't trigger me for some reason. I just stopped buying foods that I can't stop eating - and there's a whole long list of them. I know if I buy them - - the package is one serving.
I've tried to be a moderate eater. It's not something I can make work.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-happiness-project/201210/are-you-abstainer-or-moderator6 -
emmamcgarity wrote: »For me personally I find I do better if I eat sweets after I’ve already had a meal. If I’m actually hungry I end up binging on more than I had planned. If I’m already satisfied from the meal I am more able to stick to my planned portion size.
This is me too. While I was losing I very often had a 100-250 cal dessert immediately after dinner. (I didn't eat after that since I don't eat between meals and dessert was in essence an extension of dinner in my mind. Also, I have dinner late.)
I'll add that if I am counting or tracking or eating mindfully that sets limits, since overeating for me is typically not something uncontrollable, but deciding, eh, today I can overeat or whatever in the moment, which I tend to do much more when not doing something (which need not be logging but can be) to keep myself accountable to me.
But I'm sure it's different for some others, so OP, just experiment and see.0 -
This sounds like me, too. I do have to watch what kind of snacks I have. Chips, candy, cookies are much harder for me to moderate. I can do a protein bar and coffee. Seems to be working at the moment.1
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cmriverside wrote: »I am not someone who can eat packaged sweets moderately. One package is one serving. So I just don't start...for me it's the only way. It's the first one I have to stay away from.
I do have Greek yogurt and fruit with some walnuts after dinner, or I'll have popcorn with a teaspoon of sugar sprinkled on it. Those don't trigger me for some reason. I just stopped buying foods that I can't stop eating - and there's a whole long list of them. I know if I buy them - - the package is one serving.
I've tried to be a moderate eater. It's not something I can make work.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-happiness-project/201210/are-you-abstainer-or-moderator
I'm typically fine with sweets, except for Red Vines (not Twizzlers, which I think are awful). Thankfully there's at least one store near me that sells them in the smaller packages with all of 240 calories.1 -
emmamcgarity wrote: »For me personally I find I do better if I eat sweets after I’ve already had a meal. If I’m actually hungry I end up binging on more than I had planned. If I’m already satisfied from the meal I am more able to stick to my planned portion size.
This is me too. While I was losing I very often had a 100-250 cal dessert immediately after dinner. (I didn't eat after that since I don't eat between meals and dessert was in essence an extension of dinner in my mind. Also, I have dinner late.)
I'll add that if I am counting or tracking or eating mindfully that sets limits, since overeating for me is typically not something uncontrollable, but deciding, eh, today I can overeat or whatever in the moment, which I tend to do much more when not doing something (which need not be logging but can be) to keep myself accountable to me.
But I'm sure it's different for some others, so OP, just experiment and see.
Me too ! I find having my sweet thing when I am hungry is lovely, but doesnt do much for hunger which makes me a little dissatisfied with what I have eaten. So I have it after a meal, usually in the evening, but it has been known after breakfast.....1 -
I crave sweets at night so I like to keep the bite size five chocolates in my night stand. They are pre-wrapped portion controlled for me and I don’t have to give up my nightly treat before bed3
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Sweets leading to binging is something that probably isn't caused by the time of day but something more about relationship with food. Reward, boredom, shame, emotion.. those types and other examples.3
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When I was starting out, I set a time limit for when I was allowed to eat. I had to stop at 8 pm. That helped a lot initially, and it wasn't forever. I no longer get the late night munchies, unless I'm PMSing.1
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The 4 pm tea break, with the tea. Still a long time until dinner, and annoying things to deal with.1
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emmamcgarity wrote: »For me personally I find I do better if I eat sweets after I’ve already had a meal. If I’m actually hungry I end up binging on more than I had planned. If I’m already satisfied from the meal I am more able to stick to my planned portion size.
Ditto, and for me it's better to do this after dinner, rather than lunch.1 -
I sometimes eat a couple, but they fit in my goals. For example, my afternoon/pre workout snack was a frozen banana, frozen cherries, chocolate whey protein powder, oat milk, and a few walnut pieces on top for crunch. It was like ice cream but also 2 servings of fruit and like 20g of protein. Then just now I had an aero chocolate mousse for 93 calories that was a nice sweet treat to the end of the day.
It sounds like it's psychological so maybe see if you can re-train your mind to not consider sweet treats off limits, which means you're mentally restricting. Then if you have something you go into the all or nothing mentality and go wild. I sometimes overindulge in social situations, but I don't tend to binge at home any more because I tell myself I can always have more later if I want because it's allowed.3 -
I did two things to help the sweet binge.
1. I set a time limit for dessert. I could not eat chocolate until dessert-o-clock, which was at 8:30pm. If I didn't want it at that time (still full from dinner), I didn't have it.
2. I stopped buying larger desserts or things that could go stale (cake, brownies, etc), and started buying smaller wrapped sweets. Things I could eat for less calories, and that were already portioned out, instead of having to cut a slice.4 -
Thanks again all.
Staticsplint...your message really hit home to me. Because I've been allowing myself almost daily treats, I do feel a lot more calmer and in control. Makes total sense I'd binge if I've previously deprived myself as much as possible from having treats.2
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