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Size Matters: Your Guide to Healthy Portion Sizes

Smoothie portion size
Peter Ardito
 
Have a lot on your plate? Paring down your portions is the easiest secret to staying slim.

The Right Portion Sizes

Does squeezing into your workout tights feel like a feat of gymnastics? Before you swear off everything but baby carrots, consider this: The culprit behind weight gain may not be what you're eating, but how much. Since the late '70s, we've added 570 calories a day to our diets, and half of them can be attributed to larger portions, according to research at the University of North Carolina. "Even though today's serving sizes can be more than triple what the USDA recommends, they've become our new normal, and anything smaller can seem puny by comparison," says Lisa R. Young, PhD, RD, a FITNESS advisory board member and the author of The Portion Teller Plan. Fortunately, having strong visual aids, like the ones on these pages, can go a long way toward helping you shift your mind-set. Once you know what right-size portions look like, selecting them will become second nature. The best part? You can downsize your plate -- and your weight -- without giving up the foods you love.

Smoothies

Standard size: 22 ounces
Better-for-you size: 8 ounces

Calorie difference: 235

Even the smallest size at most smoothie shops is often double the amount you're supposed to sip. And a large can contain 40 ounces and 1,000-plus calories.

Lessen plan

Pass up the juice bar and bring your own recovery drink to the gym. "I like store-bought smoothies, such as Dannon DanActive or Oikos Organic Drinkable Greek Lowfat Yogurt," says Tanya Zuckerbrot, RD, the author of The F-Factor Diet. At home, make your own smoothie by blending three-quarters of a cup of lowfat milk with a half cup of frozen fruit and half a banana.

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sharon1841 wrote:

Make your own healthy smoothie! Half fill your blender with greens and half with fruits of your choice. Add about 16oz water, chia seeds, bee pollen and nuts (walnuts, almonds or cashews), and liquidize! Replaces one meal a day, and you get all those antioxidants in one serving!

2/28/2013 06:44:49 PM Report Abuse
aprilware7853 wrote:

To loose weight, normal eating but eating fat burning food is enough. If you follow one of the starving diet programs your body starts to store fat, as animals store food for winter. Lately I found an excellent book from nutrition expert Isabel de Los Rios. Since two months I am following it and although I eat normal portions without starving, I already lost 15 lbs. It is an amazing book and I recommend it everybody. You may find it at : http://tinyurl.com/dietsolution0

8/23/2012 07:24:59 PM Report Abuse
RunsOnCake_com wrote:

Portion control is huge! You can pretty much each anything you want - just not everything you want, and only in the right amounts. I think a good way to keep the rest of your portions in control is to amp up the vegetables. If half your plate is filled with produce, you simply aren't going to have enough room to overdo it on the other stuff.

7/16/2012 04:38:58 PM Report Abuse
Rosyrobics wrote:

Yeah but some of us don't have the I'm full off switch and keep over-filling...eat till you full? No good for someone who is never full!

6/28/2012 11:59:33 AM Report Abuse
kboss2010 wrote:

A 250ml (8.4 oz) smoothie is a standard individual-sized bottle in the UK for two of our most popular brands (Innocent and Boots) and it's the perfect size!

6/11/2012 11:43:36 AM Report Abuse
amazonjon71 wrote:

who the heck is going to drinkan 8 oz smoothie???? Live your life people, if you spend your life counting calories and measuring all your portions you are not living at all. Just eat till' your full its that simple

6/5/2012 06:36:24 PM Report Abuse
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