nginx wrote:
I have a question to all you nutritionists! What should I eat in the afternoon, between lunch and dinner? Even if I'm hungry at noon, I can't eat enough for lunch to not get me hungry hours before dinner time. Maybe also because when I'm hungry before noon, I usually already eat between 11 and 11:30.
Until now I ate mostly sweet pastry, donuts or something like that; or I just drank 1.5l soda. But that's not what is good for me, so do you have any tipps? What do you eat in the afternoon?
I personally go for a bowl of muesli with some fruit or I microwave some mixed frozen veg.
Based on what you've said I would recommend some fruit that you enjoy mixed in with a plain cereal, make sure it's low on sugar and fat.
The thing with sugar and fat is that alongside their other negative effects they don't fill you up as much for their calorie value as carbs and protein.
Fibre is fantastic as it is indigestible (no calories!) and yet helps fill you up, so if you can get yourself to have at least some veg that definitely helps with hunger.
Simpler, non processed food almost always tend to fit these criteria well, as well as being cheaper generally.
I highly recommend you cut any drinks with calories, that obviously includes soda but also includes things a lot of people consider healthy such as fruit juices.
The main reasons for doing so is explained here:
http://scoobysworkshop.com/lose-fat-the-easy-way/
Make sure to drink lots of water, it helps fill you up as well as a whole host of other benefits.
It can be an acquired taste to some people but it is well worth it the long run, force your self to drink some with each of your meals.
It's hard to have too much but I gauge based on when my pee goes colorless.
Scooby's Workshop is generally a great resource for fitness and nutrition info. It's completely free and has great nutrition and fitness info from a pretty swell guy still fit and muscular in his 50s.
"But we missed the point the whole way along. It was a musical thing, and you were supposed to sing, or to dance, while the music was being played." - Alan Watts