People who favor lower-calorie
foods may eat a lot over the course of a day,
but they end up consuming relatively few calories
and a healthy dose of nutrients, according to
a recent study published.
Using dietary information
from 7,500 U.S. adults, researchers found that
those who reported eating plenty of fruits, vegetables,
fiber-rich grains and other lower-calorie foods
typically ate a larger amount of food than their
peers who favored richer fare.
Yet they ate several hundred fewer calories a
day, while consuming more calcium, iron, potassium
and vitamins A, C, B6 and folate.
In fact, these diners ate fewer calories without
cutting out any major food group, the study authors
report in the Journal of the American Dietetic
Association. By volume, they ate more from most
of the main food groups, compared with study participants
who had a taste for sugary, fattier foods.
The difference is that the former group often
chose foods with low calorie "density," which
refers to the number of calories a food has ounce
for ounce. A pound of carrots, for instance, carries
far fewer calories than a pound of chocolate.
In general, foods that have a high amount of
water and/or fiber, such as fruits and vegetables,
also have a low calorie density. Water and fiber
add to a food's bulk, but contribute few or no
calories.
Sugar, fat and flour, on the other hand, pack
on the calories, and calorie-dense foods include
chips and other snack foods, nuts, sweets and
processed or fatty meats.
So while study participants who filled their
diets with low-cal fare ate more food by weight,
they ingested fewer calories -- an average of
425 fewer among men, and 250 fewer among women.
What's more, they also filled up on nutrients,
according to the study authors, led by Dr. Jenny
H. Ledikwe of Pennsylvania State University in
State College.
"These analyses further demonstrate the beneficial
effects of a low-energy-density diet," they write.
People can lessen their diet's calorie density,
the researchers note, by slipping more fruits
and vegetables into the mix -- starting a meal
with a large salad, for instance, or filling their
dinner plates with a larger portion of vegetables
and a little less meat. Or, they can have that
large slice of pizza, but go light on the cheese
and heavy on the vegetables.
Low-fat dairy foods, fiber-rich whole grains
and lean meat or meat substitutes are also good
choices, according to Ledikwe and her colleagues.
Some past research has suggested that cutting
calorie density is a better diet strategy than
portion control, since it allows people to eat
the same or a greater amount of food by volume.
Experiments have shown that when diners see a
full plate, they may not even notice the missing
calories.
SOURCE: Journal of the American Dietetic Association,
August 2006.