Lighten up your mayo.
Going from 90 calories per tablespoon to 15 is a significant reduction, and when it comes to losing weight over the long term, these are the kinds of changes that really add up.
Try bacon of Canadian descent.
Swapping your bacon is an excellent example of how you don’t have to completely abandon your dietary preferences to get big benefits.
Replace your sour cream topping with Greek yogurt.
Two tablespoons (1 ounce) of nonfat Greek yogurt has only 24 calories and no fat, compared to 50 calories and 5 grams of fat for sour cream, 140 calories and 16 grams of fat for margarine, and 200 calories with 23 grams of fat for butter.
Freshen your salads with lime.
Moooooove to lower-fat dairy products.
Whole milk contains almost 4 percent fat, and 1
cup of whole milk has 156 calories, 9 grams of total fat, and 34
milligrams of cholesterol. Low-fat, 1 percent milk has 54 fewer
calories, 7 grams less fat, 22 milligrams less cholesterol, the same
amount of calcium, and more vitamin A per cup. Nonfat, or skim milk, has only 86 calories per cup.
Every opportunity you take to use reduced fat or nonfat dairy
products in place of the full fat versions takes calories out of your
daily diet. Taking calories out of your diet without completely
eliminating an entire group of foods is an opportunity you shouldn’t
miss. Even if you don’t think you can make the leap straight to nonfat,
there are perfectly delicious reduced fat options, and every little bit
makes a difference.
Try baked chips and salsa instead of fried chips and dip.
Substituting baked chips cuts the calories and
fat significantly. You save 20 to 30 calories per ounce, and 3 to 5
grams of fat by switching to the baked variety. And, if you adopt salsa
as your dipping favorite, you lose 80 percent of the calories, and all
of the fat from the dip, too.
Spice it up.
Fat adds flavor to food, and one reason you
like higher-fat foods is for the flavor. But, you can add incredible
flavor with no calories and no fat by adding spices. And, you can add
spices to anything, especially where your first thought might be to add
butter and salt.
When you need your next chocolate fix, try nonfat, sugar-free chocolate pudding instead.
If you’re feeling especially frisky, stir a tablespoon of peanut butter into your pudding, and you still save 100 calories, 10 grams of fat, and 15 grams of carbohydrate compared to the milk chocolate bar.
Try roasted garlic spread.
One tablespoon of roasted garlic is only 12 calories, with no fat, saturated fat, or sodium. Compared to a tablespoon of margarine, roasted garlic saves you 58 calories, 8 grams of total fat, and 100 milligrams of sodium. And, eating garlic does have some beneficial effects on heart health, specifically lowering blood pressure and helping to prevent atherosclerosis.
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