Eating too much sugar is bad for
your health. You've heard it before. Excessive consumption can increase your
risk for obesity, heart disease and a host of other health complications.
The World Health Organization
recommends the average adult consume no more than 25 grams of sugar a day, but
exceeding this is all too easy. A single 12-ounce can of Coca-Cola, for instance,
packs 39 grams of the stuff. And added sugar sneaks into unsuspecting edibles,
like hamburgers and "healthy" Greek yogurts.
Cutting back on your sugar intake
is a smart choice, but it's tough to know where to start. If you're looking to
taper off, start with a few of the tweaks below. Introduce them to your
everyday routine, and eventually they'll turn into a habit.
1. Make over your morning coffee.
2. Quit your soda habit.
Diet or regular, drinking any
kind of pop promotes weight gain and amplifies sugar cravings. We've mentioned
that a standard can of Coke contains 39 grams of sugar, enough to fill a
person's daily recommended intake and then some. And even though the diet kind
has no sugar marked on its label, it won't do any good in the war against
sugar. According to a study published in the Yale Journal of Biology and
Medicine, the artificial sweeteners in these drinks lead people to overeat, or
overcompensate, for the lack of calories contained in the beverages. Artificial
sweeteners don't offer the same hunger-dampening biological rewards that
natural sweeteners do, causing the drinker to seek out something caloric. The
sweetness in both diet and non-diet soda prompts side effects similar to
addiction, making drinkers crave more sugar.
3. Snack on something healthy
before food shopping.
Researchers from Cornell
University found that snacking on something nutritious before supermarket
shopping, like an apple, can actually encourage shoppers to purchase 25 percent
more fruits and vegetables than they normally would. Fewer sugary items in your
cart means there will be fewer sugary items at home, and fewer sugary items in
your belly.
4. Shop the perimeter of the
grocery store.
Now that you've had your apple,
stick to the outer aisles of the supermarket, where conventional stores place
the produce, meat and seafood departments -- the foods you should focus on. If
you avoid the aisles that contain shelves of near-irresistible sugary sweets,
you'll be less likely to buy them.
5. Find a new favorite condiment.
Ketchup is a miracle flavor, but
one of the reasons we all love it so much could be because it contains a whole
lot of sugar. The sad reality is that dousing your fries in the red stuff is
comparable to pouring a couple sugar packets on top. If you're already eating
fries, consider switching to a condiment with less sugar -- like mustard or
vinegar -- instead.
6. Drink more water.
Are you sure you're hungry?
Thirst and dehydration can often disguise themselves as hunger. To determine
whether you're actually hungry or simply thirsty, drink a cup of water and wait
a moment. If you're feeling good, your body was probably trying to tell you it
was parched.
7. Eat the grape, not the raisin.
When given the choice, choose
fresh over dried fruit. Dried fruit boasts many of the same benefits of its
plumper counterparts, but removing a food's water content concentrates the
amount of sugar and calories per serving. A cup of grapes, for instance,
contains 15 grams of sugar and around 60 calories. A cup of raisins contains 98
grams of sugar and nearly 500 calories.
8. Make your own salad dressing.
Even if they taste savory,
bottled salad dressings typically contain lots of sugar. Two tablespoons of
Kraft's Tuscan House Italian dressing, for example, contains two grams. This
seems pretty minuscule, but chances are you'll be dousing your greens in a
serving way over two measly tablespoons. Making your own dressing at home is
incredibly easy -- and cheap! -- and will help you control how much sugar
you're ingesting when you're eating something as healthy-seeming as a salad.
Courtesy of: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/29/quit-sugar-easy-simple-you-can-do-it_n_7686862.html
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