What IS a healthy balanced diet for weight loss?

Written by Catherine Saxelby on Wednesday, 16 September 2020.
Tagged: balanced diet, diet meals, healthy cooking, healthy eating, meal kits, nutrition, weight loss

What IS a healthy balanced diet for weight loss?
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Healthy weight loss happens when you lose weight slowly and steadily (around 1 kg or 2 pounds weight loss a week). Your goal is to lose weight while still getting your essential nutrients but from smaller portions. You certainly don’t want to be tired with no energy! That’s why you need regular healthy meals and snacks on hand to ensure your vitamins, minerals, omega-3s and fibre needs can be easily met. There is a new range of healthy weight loss meals available and it’s one that I’d like to recommend. With these ready meals, you’ll say goodbye to meal planning, shopping, meal preparation and cooking.

This post is sponsored by Chefgood 

7 keys to outsourcing meals to keeping yourself on a healthy balanced diet 

1. Never skip meals

Eat regular meals each day such as those from Chefgood in the Slim and Trim range.  And you can if you have them ready in the fridge. They’re handy if you’re time poor, say if you juggle two jobs, are studying and working with little spare time, or have small children to look after, or run a busy household. In fact, these are useful for anyone who has a busy lifestyle.

2. Eat balanced meals with an ideal combo of protein, fat and carbs

You want to eat as much nutritious, tasty food for as few kilojoules as possible. This is called a nutrient-dense diet. No food has to be eliminated entirely, but minimal quantities of all fats, refined carbohydrates such as white rice, sugar, and alcohol are a must. All the Slim and Trim Meals are balanced making life easier for you - they have a blend of protein plus healthy fats and good carbs with minimal amounts of the ‘baddies’. There is no need to buy meals that ban carbs or ban dairy or are all raw. A little of what you need works. For long term results, it’s wise to eat ‘everything in moderation’.   

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3. High in protein for longer satiety

Aim for at least 25 grams of protein in a meal, especially after you exercise. Protein may help with appetite control, greater fat loss, less muscle loss, a boost to thermic effect (that feeling of warmth after a meal) and lessening of cravings. This 25 grams translates to: 

A 100 gram can of tuna or salmon

Or

1 glass of milk PLUS 2 eggs in a smoothie

Or

1 plain hamburger PLUS an egg.

Meat is the best source of protein, having almost three times as much protein as eggs, fresh milk, yoghurt, tofu and legumes. Meat is worth eating if you wish to raise your protein intake significantly (and its animal proteins are closer to those of humans). Fish and poultry match beef and lamb in protein content. Cheese is a little lower but still an excellent protein source.

Plant-powered proteins from grain or legumes (lentils, peas, beans, tofu) offer protein too. Think hummus, lentils, kidney beans, brown rice, pearl barley, pesto and tahini. 

4.  Be prepared.

Meal preparation is key to staying on track with healthy eating, but not everyone has the time which is where ready-made fresh nutritious meals come in handy.

 What's more you won’t become bored on a Chefgood weight loss journey, which is important. There's a lot of variety with a new menu every week. These healthy meals are made fresh and delivered to your door in thermally-controlled packaging. 

5. Eat solid foods that encourages chewing

Limit any kilojoules – whether from juice or a smoothie - in liquid form. Swap juices and fizzy drinks for water. I often say ‘Don’t drink juice – eat the fruit whole and drink water.’ Solid foods help slow down consumption.

6. Eat slowly and chew each mouthful

Stretch each meal out to last 15 minutes so that the brain’s appetite-control centre registers you are full. Put your fork or spoon down between mouthfuls.

7. Think longer than three days

Your excess weight won’t disappear in three days (despite the promises made by fad diets), but it will over three weeks. Aim for small, gradual losses, and you won’t trigger your body’s natural ‘famine/starvation’ response, which really serves to preserve your fat stores for lean times. You want something you can stick to over the long term such as outsourcing ready-made meals. 

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The bottom line

Use my 7 fundamentals of weight loss to help you shed those excess kilos. Eat healthy, nutrient-dense, portion appropriate, ready meals (not shakes). Why not order calorie controlled meals to try at home so you get used to the right portion size and the right ratios? Fresh, pre-made meals with no artificial additives have great appeal as people become increasingly health conscious. You can start with five to see how you like them. They’re also handy if you’re time poor and can strengthen your resolve when you would normally just order a non-healthy, kilojoule-dense take-away. If you enjoy losing weight the healthy way and living a healthy lifestyle, then try these.

Catherine Saxelby About the author

About the Author

 

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Catherine Saxelby's My Nutritionary

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Catherine Saxelby has the answers! She is an accredited nutritionist, blogger and award-winning author. Her award-winning book My Nutritionary will help you cut through the jargon. Do you know your MCTs from your LCTs? How about sterols from stanols? What’s the difference between glucose and dextrose? Or probiotics and prebiotics? What additive is number 330? How safe is acesulfame K? If you find yourself confused by food labels, grab your copy of Catherine Saxelby’s comprehensive guide My Nutritionary NOW!