At
this point, you know that eating healthy, balanced meals and snacks all day,
every day is clutch for losing weight. But if your eating schedule is kind of
screwy, dropping pounds can still be a struggle. And that's frustrating AF.
A recent
study from Harvard University suggests that, no matter how healthy
you eat, if your mealtimes don’t jive with your circadian rhythms your blood sugar levels can jump 18 percent higher than
normal—which can ramp up levels of the fat-storing hormone insulin. No bueno.
So when
should you eat each meal and snack if you're trying to lose weight? We combed through the
research to give you a meal-by-meal rundown of how to pencil in your eats.
Here's
your plan of attack.
While
the research on whether eating breakfast spurs weight loss is mixed, data from
the National Weight Control Registry makes
a pretty strong case for the first meal of the day. According to the database,
nearly 80 percent of people who have successfully lost 30 pounds or more and
kept it off reported eating
breakfast every single day like
clockwork.
In terms
of timing the all-important morning meal, a 2015 Obesity study found that consuming a high-protein breakfast between 6:00 a.m. and 9:45 a.m. was
linked to a reduced the risk of body fat gain and less hunger throughout the
day, compared to those who waited to eat until after 10 a.m.
Breakfast 6AM to 9.45AM
“I always
suggest eating a healthy breakfast within one hour upon waking,” says Jim White, R.D., spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
After all, the longer you put off your morning meal, the longer you go without
the hunger-squashing effects of protein,
fat, and fiber.
Plus,
since you wake up in the morning in a fasted state, topping off your glycogen
stores with healthy carbs like unsweetened oatmeal will energize you, says
White. That way, you'll be more active during the first half of the day, he
says.
While
a morning snack is certainly not mandatory, especially
if your breakfast is really heavy or you don't eat until 9:45 a.m., it’s
important to remember that your body takes between two and four hours to digest
and absorb the food you eat, White says. After that, you’re fasting.
Sticking
to that window of time between breakfast and your snack will help you keep your
energy levels topped off and prevent a dip in your blood sugar, he says. And
that will keep you from going HAM at lunch. If you're looking for healthy snack
options, research presented at the 2013 Institute of Food Technologists annual
meeting found that dieters who ate a
handful of almonds for a mid-morning snack wound
up eating fewer calories over the course of the day.
Still,
it’s important to only eat a mid-morning snack when you’re legit hungry, says
registered dietitian Betsy Opyt.
Otherwise, you could wind up overdoing your calorie intake.
Lunch Before 3pm
A
2016 study in The American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition followed roughly 1,300 dieters over
the course of 28 weeks and found that people who ate earlier lunches had more
success dropping pounds. While this was only the case in people with a specific
genotype (and most of us aren’t getting tested for it), the finding’s in line
with a previous study, published in the International Journal of Obesity.
In that study, dieters lost about 25 percent less weight if they ate the bulk
of their calories after 3 p.m.
Like
your mid-morning snack, an afternoon snack two to four hours after lunch keeps
your blood sugar levels stable and prevents overeating at dinnertime, says
White.
Also,
in one University of Illinois at
Chicago study of overweight
women, those who snacked in the afternoon tended to eat
significantly more fruits and vegetables throughout the course of the day
compared to non-afternoon snackers. And that bodes well for your weight-loss efforts, as 2015 research out of Harvard Medical School shows that increased fruits and veggie
intake is tightly linked with healthier weights.
Dinner 5PM to 7PM ish
In
one Brigham Young University
study, researchers asked 29 men
to cut themselves off from the kitchen at 7 p.m. for two weeks and then eat
whenever they wanted to for another two weeks. The study authors found that the
guys ended up eating 244 fewer calories each day when they stopped eating after
the cutoff. White says these results are probably caused by the fact that
people often snack after dinner, not because the guys ate dinner any earlier.
Another recent study found that when people who usually ate
a third of their calories between 6 p.m. and midnight switched to a schedule
where they stopped eating between 7 p.m. and 9 a.m., they lost weight and slept
better. Again, it's not so much the time they ate dinner that mattered as much
as eliminating post-dinner snacking. (So if you have to eat at 8 p.m., don't
freak, just make sure you're not still making trips to the fridge after.)
The bottom
line: This timeline might help make your weight-loss journey easier, but if you
don't hit these deadlines every day, you're not doomed. "The most
important thing is that you are eating a healthy diet rich in fruits,
vegetables, and other whole, nutrient-rich foods—and that you're listening to
your hunger cues," White says. "You should be eating when you are
hungry, but not ravenous, and you should be stopping when you are satisfied,
but not completely full or still hungry.
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