How do you watch your sugar intake?

Hey all. Ive been struggling with not going over my sugar intake, what foods/methods help you to keep your sugar intake low? thanks in advance :) Feel free to add me for some hefty support!! :)

Replies

  • RockingWithLJ
    RockingWithLJ Posts: 243 Member
    Log my meals for the entire day the day before, or the morning of, and stick to it. That way you can adjust your serving size to meet those needs. I can only assume you're weighing your food for accuracy? I find most packaged foods that state it is x amount of sugar but the weight is usually a little over
  • HeidiCooksSupper
    HeidiCooksSupper Posts: 3,839 Member
    Try replacing sugary treats with fruit. A serving of prunes or a snack container of mandarin oranges in juice are two of my go to fruits when I really want something sweet. For you, it could be apple sauce or a banana. Try different ones until you find what works.

    Meanwhile, sugar is hard to track effectively because there are recommended numbers for "added sugars" but not for all the other sugars we consume naturally as part of many foods. For example, milk and even celery have natural sugars. Unfortunately, the database entries and many food labels do not distinguish between the two and folks may be trying, inadvertently, to keep their added sugar numbers low while the count includes their natural sugars. For most of us, watching our carbs (mine are set to 40% of intake) while aiming toward natural sugars and keeping things with added sugar to a minimum works for keeping sugar in check.
  • sgt1372
    sgt1372 Posts: 3,997 Member
    Stopped drinking sodas entirely and stopped eating any baked goods or other heavily sugar added food/drinks except on RARE occasion.
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    Look at where your sugar is coming from. If mostly fruit, veg, and dairy, and your fiber and protein are good and you get plenty of healthy fats (fatty fish, olives/olive oil, avocado, and nuts and seeds), I would not worry about it. If a lot is from added sugar in pop, candy, or sweet baked goods or ice cream, cutting portions or amounts of those seems obvious.
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    There are certain things I don't buy because the calorie count from added sugar is unnecessarily high (especially since I don't mind splenda on most things).. Such as coffee creamer, jam/preserves, some yogurt, non-diet beverages (including fruit juices)).

    In their 'stead, I use
    *almond milk and add splenda, sometimes a sugar free flavor syrup and /or vanilla, almond extract.
    *freezer Jam using gelatin and splenda with the fruit
    *diet beverages

    Some things are worth the sugar calories for me (such as an ice cream cone), but not for the stuff on my list above.

    I also don't track sugar. I track calories, protein, fat, fiber (for a minimum not maximum on those 3).
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,226 Member
    Seconding (thirding?) the comment that it matters what your sugar sources are.

    When I was losing weight, I went over my MFP sugar goal every day, when the only added sugar I was eating was a little bit of concentrated apple juice well down the ingredient list in a single daily 30-calorie tablespoon of all-fruit spread. The rest of my sugar consumption was from no-sugar-added dairy foods (nonfat yogurt, skim milk, cheese, etc.), and whole fruit/vegetables. Once I realized that, I dropped sugar from the tracking columns in my MFP diary as irrelevant to me, and started tracking fiber instead.

    If more of your sugars are coming from high-sugar but not nutrient-dense sources, then it might make sense to try to shift more to fruits, if you still want some sweet foods (doing so helped me reduce cravings for cookies, candy and such, at an earlier point in life).

    Get enough protein, get enough healthy fats, hit your calorie goal, eat plenty of varied, colorful veggies and fruits daily, and sugar will tend to fall into its proper place, in my experience.
  • Ninebubblewaters
    Ninebubblewaters Posts: 27 Member
    I don't eat pre packaged sugary foods. Eurythatol and stevia are a God send lol! Eurythatol is most like sugar
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    I don't limit sugar. I focus on getting sufficient protein and fat while hitting my calorie goal. If I'm doing that and choosing a variety of foods that keep me satiated and meet the rest of my nutritional needs, I don't consider sugar consumption to be a relevant metric.
  • LockdownLoser23
    LockdownLoser23 Posts: 93 Member
    I don't limit sugar. I focus on getting sufficient protein and fat while hitting my calorie goal. If I'm doing that and choosing a variety of foods that keep me satiated and meet the rest of my nutritional needs, I don't consider sugar consumption to be a relevant metric.

    That's incredibly helpful, thank you! :D

    In UK they have the sugars detailed on the packaging, dunno whether the US do that. Personally I just try and keep sweet stuff out of the house best I can except for cheat day :)
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    I don't limit sugar. I focus on getting sufficient protein and fat while hitting my calorie goal. If I'm doing that and choosing a variety of foods that keep me satiated and meet the rest of my nutritional needs, I don't consider sugar consumption to be a relevant metric.

    That's incredibly helpful, thank you! :D

    In UK they have the sugars detailed on the packaging, dunno whether the US do that. Personally I just try and keep
    sweet stuff out of the house best I can except for cheat day :)

    Well, I was addressing OP and many people do find focusing on what they WANT to eat and ensuring they get enough of that to be a more helpful approach than a focus on eliminating/limiting other things. It's just another way to approach the situation.

    This. Quite a few of us that have been at this a long time take this same approach. If it has a lot of calories, but not providing something I still want to get in for the day and might come up short on (like protein/fiber/fat/stuff-with-adequate-micro-nutrients) and/or I think it'll leave me still hungry without many remaining calories, then it very likely gets nixed - otherwise fair game. (In practice, this means that many of us will wind up limiting our sugar intake on low-exercise days).
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    ritzvin wrote: »
    I don't limit sugar. I focus on getting sufficient protein and fat while hitting my calorie goal. If I'm doing that and choosing a variety of foods that keep me satiated and meet the rest of my nutritional needs, I don't consider sugar consumption to be a relevant metric.

    That's incredibly helpful, thank you! :D

    In UK they have the sugars detailed on the packaging, dunno whether the US do that. Personally I just try and keep
    sweet stuff out of the house best I can except for cheat day :)

    Well, I was addressing OP and many people do find focusing on what they WANT to eat and ensuring they get enough of that to be a more helpful approach than a focus on eliminating/limiting other things. It's just another way to approach the situation.

    This. Quite a few of us that have been at this a long time take this same approach. If it has a lot of calories, but not providing something I still want to get in for the day and might come up short on (like protein/fiber/fat/stuff-with-adequate-micro-nutrients) and/or I think it'll leave me still hungry without many remaining calories, then it very likely gets nixed - otherwise fair game. (In practice, this means that many of us will wind up limiting our sugar intake on low-exercise days).

    Exactly. It's not specifically avoiding high-sugar foods, but the practical application is that I'm mostly only having these items in small portions or on very active days. I'm not avoiding a 600-calorie slice of cake due to the sugar, I'm not choosing it most days because dedicating 600 calories to cake and still hitting my calorie goals would usually result in me being hungry for a good portion of the day (and very likely short on protein).

    But if I want a lower calorie sweet item, I'll usually have it -- a serving of chocolate, a sweetened coffee . . . things like that. 50-100 calories isn't that hard to fit in most days and it isn't going to keep me from meeting my nutritional needs.



  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Hey all. Ive been struggling with not going over my sugar intake, what foods/methods help you to keep your sugar intake low? thanks in advance :) Feel free to add me for some hefty support!! :)

    I don't...I do not eat much in the way of added sugars and most of my sugar comes from fruit and veg. MFP's default sugar target is an arbitrary 15% of total calories...there's nothing special about that and it doesn't differentiate between natural sugars and added sugars.

    If I was gulping down 40 oz big gulp sodas everyday and eating a bunch of "junk" food, I might watch it more closely...but I'm pretty sure my little bowl of cherries with my lunch has about zero to do with the obesity epidemic.
  • kgirlhart
    kgirlhart Posts: 5,165 Member
    I never pay attention to my sugar goal. I just try to hit my protein goal. Most of my sugar comes from fruit and vegetables, but I also put sugar in my coffee and I eat sweets just about every day. I just eat them in portion sizes that fit my calorie goal.