How to Cut Snacking After Dinner!?
jaydutchie
Posts: 11 Member
So, I’m a generally good eater throughout the day. I always get a healthy breakfast—eggs, toast (sometimes with half an avocado if I’m feeling fancy) and a turkey/veggie sausage. I don’t snack throughout the day. And I don’t have a problem with overeating at meals. My problem is at the end of the day, after working and treating my body well—I like to have a snack and just relax after dinner. So I have popcorn or chips or something like that. How do I cut those cravings? I think it’s more out of habit than actual hunger. Any thoughts? Thanks!
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Replies
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Are these snacks causing you to go over your calorie goal? If you have the calories for a snack after dinner, and if your snacking doesn't cause other problems (such as trouble sleeping), then go ahead and have your snack.14
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I can't see it being a problem unless you can't control how much you are eating, causing you to eat more than your caloric goal. Why not include the snack in your planning for the day, and enjoy?7
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If your late night snacking isn't taking you over your calories for the day by a significant amount then there's really no reason it should be a problem, at least weight loss wise.
If it is making your blow out your calorie target by enough calories to negatively impact your results then you probably have two options.
1. Find a way to stop your snacking at night.
2. Find a way to fit your night snacks in your daily calories
Both will give you the same results so just take some time to think about it and pick the one that you think will be easiest for you.5 -
Change your evening route. You are snacking because it is a habit; so change your habits.
Are you eating while you're watching tv? Turn off the tv. Go to the bedroom and read a book. Go out for a walk. Take a bubble bath. Paint your nails (definitely can't snack after that!).
Go to bed earlier. Even if you don't think you can fall asleep earlier -- Do your entire evening routine (pajamas, brush your teeth, etc.) before sitting down on the couch. That way, if the snacking urge hits -- you can just go directly to bed.5 -
When I start wanting to eat I do a hot cup of tea and sip on it. Then I brush my teeth. Once I brush my teeth I’m done.1
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you can save calories and keep the snack
or try brushing your teeth right after dinner and putting a big annoying sign on the pantry3 -
As the others said, if you're within your calories, it's not an issue.
If you just want to quit the habit, in general, log into the Late Night Snacking thread. I'm on the app, so can't post a link. Logging into that thread has kept me from snacking for over 100 days now.
Good luck!3 -
Safe calories to snack at night. I have a bowl of cereal EVERY NIGHT at around 8pm. I plan for it. I leave about 300 calories for after dinner. Losing .5lb to 1 lb a week since early September, 8lbs left to go.
Snacking isn't bad if you plan for them and fit them in.6 -
I leave room for a night snack. I don't always eat it, but I leave 100-150 cals in case i want a snack.2
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savagecorey2 wrote: »When I start wanting to eat I do a hot cup of tea and sip on it. Then I brush my teeth. Once I brush my teeth I’m done.
Same for me, with the brushing/flossing. I generally eat dinner and then if I'm having something sweet I eat it within 1 hour usually. So my teeth are clean and kitchen is "closed" by like 7 pm.
I'm careful not to go too low on calories so I'm rarely feeling legitimate hunger after that, anyway.
I think it helps that my husband, despite being an evening snacker, goes for things I don't care about like chips, pretzels, or protein PB mixture. If he was snacking on tacos, ice cream or chocolate, I'd be in trouble.3 -
i always have a bedtime snack. luckily for me, i love double chocolate chunk quest bars, sometimes with a kroger version of a sugar free fudgecycle (the kroger ones are yummier), so i get that last 20 grams of protein before bed.2
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Thank you guys! I like the brushing teeth idea and maybe opt for a protein heavier snack. I usually don’t go over my calorie limit but it’s definitely a bad habit that I wanna kick.1
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seltzermint555 wrote: »savagecorey2 wrote: »When I start wanting to eat I do a hot cup of tea and sip on it. Then I brush my teeth. Once I brush my teeth I’m done.
Same for me, with the brushing/flossing. I generally eat dinner and then if I'm having something sweet I eat it within 1 hour usually. So my teeth are clean and kitchen is "closed" by like 7 pm.
I'm careful not to go too low on calories so I'm rarely feeling legitimate hunger after that, anyway.
I think it helps that my husband, despite being an evening snacker, goes for things I don't care about like chips, pretzels, or protein PB mixture. If he was snacking on tacos, ice cream or chocolate, I'd be in trouble.
Agreed with the above too! I have an issue with snacking after 8:00 p.m. sometimes i save my calories for an actual snack post dinner but most of the time i am just bored and looking for something to do so I snack. Because of this i've tried to implement that my kitchen is closed post 8:00 p.m. unless there is something specific that i know is built in to my day. It has helped me break through my plateau finally!2 -
In that scenario, I'd just budget calories for that snack.
I'm the opposite - I feel the need to eat often thru the day. So I typically have a small breakfast/small lunch/small second lunch. I also eat a late dinner which factors into that I suppose.jaydutchie wrote: »So, I’m a generally good eater throughout the day. I always get a healthy breakfast—eggs, toast (sometimes with half an avocado if I’m feeling fancy) and a turkey/veggie sausage. I don’t snack throughout the day. And I don’t have a problem with overeating at meals. My problem is at the end of the day, after working and treating my body well—I like to have a snack and just relax after dinner. So I have popcorn or chips or something like that. How do I cut those cravings? I think it’s more out of habit than actual hunger. Any thoughts? Thanks!
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jaydutchie wrote: »Thank you guys! I like the brushing teeth idea and maybe opt for a protein heavier snack. I usually don’t go over my calorie limit but it’s definitely a bad habit that I wanna kick.
If it's just a habit you don't want, the easiest way would simply be to eliminate the availability from the house. People and most things tend to follow the path of least resistance. It's easier to snack on something that's there vs having to leave the house just to buy a single serving of chips/popcorn. It may not affect your overall calorie goal to have snacks, but dietary habits are learned, which means they can also be retrained.1 -
Usually it's easiest to break a habit by replacing it with another habit. In this kind of scenario, a non-food/drink habit would be best, and some have been suggested above.
Another thought is to take up an absorbing new hobby or resume an old one, especially something that requires clean hands (sketching, needlework, playing a musical instrument . . . .) or creates dirty ones (gardening, painting, carpentry . . . .).
If you want to or are willing to stay within a realm that includes some food/drink, something like a cup of special relaxing herb tea can be a good ritual.4 -
Typically, my calories are gone after dinner
So, I chew minty sugar free gum. It really helps signal to my brain that my eating window is over for the day. Really curbs my cravings for snacks, usually 😉2 -
This is why I do a loose intermittent fasting (I know not so popular on this board). I really like my nighttime glass of wine or dessert and my mid afternoon latte. So I eat -
12pm Brunch
3pm Latte
7pm Dinner
9pm Wine and/or snack
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I tried to cut the after dinner snack out completely the first week, and it just made me irritable lol...I like my snack 😁 Now I plan for it. I pre log so I always make sure I have calories left over for my snack. Instead of chips or ice cream like I used to have, now I have something smaller, like tonight I had some (12 lol) black olives and a string cheese because it’s not that I’m hungry, just the habit. If it fits in the calories, there’s nothing bad about an after dinner snack.5
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That's a habit I've worked on too. After dinner I was frequently eating when not hungry, and I finish my calories at dinner. Since I was snacking to relax I just make sure I replace the behavior with something else to relax. Also I drink water. I say to myself- hey I'm doing this to relax now instead of eating after dinner. Instead of saying to yourself - don't eat, don't eat, don't eat- you could say - DO relax some other way. (Watch tv, chat w/ a friend, art/ creativity, go for a walk, relaxing bath, etc.)1
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jaydutchie wrote: »Thank you guys! I like the brushing teeth idea and maybe opt for a protein heavier snack. I usually don’t go over my calorie limit but it’s definitely a bad habit that I wanna kick.
Out of curiosity what makes you think that after dinner snacking is a bad habit? What do you see as the downside or negative consequence of consuming a part of your daily calorie target later in the day?5 -
Intermittent fasting is how I cured my nighttime snacking habit. I was a habitual snacker in the wee hours and I'm quite sure 95 % of my excess tonnage was consumed between 9 pm and 3 am. It was hard to imagine ever conquering it, because it wasn't based on hunger but just flat-out chip, queso, Oreo, Kitkat, and Combo craving. When my wife and I started dieting, nighttime snacking remained a problem so we had a "do over" and got on the IF train. We resolved to eat all our calories between 11 am and 7 pm and for some reason that just took hold and we've never looked back.
I think the difference between zero calories and 1 calorie after dinner is fairly huge. Once you have that first calorie, it's very easy to make excuses for the next hundred. But zero means zero, and you get used to it. A couple/few weeks of IF and my hunger at night and then my interest in food at night pretty much disappeared, and now I never eat anything after dinner. This allows me to have much larger dinners without worrying about calorie budgeting for afterwards; I can (and do) use every single remaining calorie for dinner and desert, which is a nice plus.7 -
jaydutchie wrote: »Thank you guys! I like the brushing teeth idea and maybe opt for a protein heavier snack. I usually don’t go over my calorie limit but it’s definitely a bad habit that I wanna kick.
Out of curiosity what makes you think that after dinner snacking is a bad habit? What do you see as the downside or negative consequence of consuming a part of your daily calorie target later in the day?
I'm curious too. For me, stopping late-night snacking resolved some reflux issues. Not sure if there's another reason it'd be necessary if it doesn't cause you to go over calorie goal.
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If you enjoy the snacking and are not over cals, I don't see any reason to worry about it.
Personally, I much prefer eating my cals at meals, so made a decision to do so. Cutting out late night snacking was more about not snacking in general, which I prefer, and that I tend to eat dinner late anyway.
Deciding the structure you prefer for your meals/snacks and then sticking to it will work, whatever the schedule chosen, IMO (I have nothing against IF, but it's hardly unique in being helpful for this). If mindless evening snacking is just a bad habit, maybe try to replace it with something else -- I used to have herbal tea in the evening which substituted for a desire to snack at times.4 -
I personally cannot sleep on an empty stomach, I know for others it’s the opposite. Because of this I have my largest meal of the day at 7-8pm and usually have a treat or snack after just before bed. I’m in maintenance so it did not hinder my goals.
If it is affecting your goals though than I have two basic suggestions
1. Restructure how your calories are consumed during the day so that you save some for your night snacking
2. Maybe eat dinner later closer to bed so there isn’t a large time window between your last meal and sleep to snack during5 -
I’ve developed a tea habit in the evening. For me it’s part of the winding down process that helps signal that bedtime is coming, and it’s something that I can keep up when I’m traveling for work. Something very satisfying about the ritual of sitting down with a hot beverage and a tv show or a book.
I’ve never been an evening snacker, but sometimes will have treats which my tea. I’ve been into the the brookside açaí dark chocolate things..or crack berries as I call them. They are easy to portion and satisfy my want for a snack.
So I guess I’m with the others that say find a substitute ritual/habit to replace the snacking with. Plenty of non food ones available, such as hand intensive hobbies that can be picked up and set down without a lot of effort (knitting, paracord item making, etc.), light activity (dish washing, counter cleaning, mail sorting/shredding).
I find that it’s the mindless activities that are the dangerous ones, internet surfing, tv watching, game playing.
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I like to keep a few calories for a small snack, like a serving of low-cal ice cream or a small bowl of popcorn. If I'm out of calories and fighting an urge, then I do something to busy my hands like work on my art or play a video game.0
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I grew up with chips being a nightly routine. Nowadays I reach for a perrier.2
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jaydutchie wrote: »Thank you guys! I like the brushing teeth idea and maybe opt for a protein heavier snack. I usually don’t go over my calorie limit but it’s definitely a bad habit that I wanna kick.
Why do you think this is such a bad habit? I snack on popcorn after dinner when my wife and I are watching t.v. before bed...I don't see anything wrong with it at all. If it's not taking you over your calorie targets, I don't see the issue. Having some popcorn after dinner isn't treating your body badly.2 -
This was also my struggle. For me it was non-stop evening snacking. I stopped buying chips and things I didn't control very well and substituted with cheese and crackers and fruit. I always plan for 1 large snack in the evening 2-3 hours after dinner and fit it into my calories. Knowing I have 1 big snack in the evening greatly helped me stop the constant evening snacking.3
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