
Although any diet that is reduced in calories will cause weight loss, a low fat diet has been found to be the best choice for weight maintenance. If you follow a low fat diet to lose weight, you don't need to learn new eating habits to maintain the weight you lost - you're already doing what you need to do.
Low Fat Diet
Low fat diets are low in caloric density. In other words, a low fat diet contains foods that are bulky and filling like whole grains, fruits, and vegetables. So, you can eat a greater quantity of these foods because they have a lower caloric value than foods containing a lot of fat. Just compare 200 Calories worth of celery versus eating 200 Calories worth of potato chips! A lower fat diet looks and feels like a lot of food, which can be satisfying, and this helps with weight control.
Last, and most important, is the fact that a low fat diet is the best choice for lowering risk of heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers - the killer diseases. It is a therapeutic diet as well as preventive - if you're not following a lower fat diet now, chances are eventually you will be advised to do so by a physician because the common risk factors for heart disease and diabetes are so prevalent. A low fat diet really is a diet for life.
How Low Can You Go?
If your diet is too low in fat, it can become quite tasteless, boring, and difficult to eat. In addition, you need at least 3% of your calories as essential fat, the fats your body can't make on its own. Unless there is a medical need, going below 20% of calories as fat won't add much benefit and takes away from the pleasure and taste of food. For most people, 25-30% of calories as fat is a very good goal. This is why most of the Personal Diets I plan have this composition. But, not all fat is alike! Read on…Fats: Not Created Equal!
Although all fats have the same number of calories per gram (9 calories per gram, the most calorically dense nutrient), the type of fats you choose make a huge difference in the effect upon the body. All fats are either converted to fuel, or if they are extra calories, will be converted to body fat as a form of storage energy. But in the process, different fats have a profoundly different effect on the arteries. This is why your Personal Diet Plan is carefully balanced, so that a majority of your fat comes from "good" fat, and so that you don't get too much "bad" fat, the kind that contributes to heart disease, high blood pressure, and atherosclerosis.
To make things simple, think of all types of food fat fitting into
3 categories: