Quick Tips: Avoiding Empty Calories

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Dieting is hard. But avoiding "empty" calories helps you reach a healthy weight without feeling like you're dieting.

Your body needs a certain amount of energy each day. Energy comes from food in the form of calories. Calories let you function and keep doing your daily activities. But after your body meets its needs, it stores extra calories as fat. Most of us get plenty of calories in our diet-often too many.

Foods with empty calories have lots of calories but very few nutrients like vitamins and minerals. "Convenience foods," like packaged snacks, chips, and sodas, are common sources of empty calories. Nutrient-rich foods, on the other hand, have a lot more nutrients in relation to their calories. A few examples are vegetables, peanut butter, bran cereal with fruit, and fish.

Tips for avoiding empty calories

Replacement food and drinks
Instead of this:Choose this:

Sugar-sweetened drinks like soda, energy drinks, and sweetened coffee drinks

Water, no-sugar-added fruit juices, tea or coffee, tomato juice, and other vegetable juices

Whole milk and dairy products made from whole milk

Fat-free or 1% milk and other low-fat dairy products

High-fat meats like many cuts of beef, corned beef, pork sausage, and luncheon meats

Low-fat ground beef, turkey breast, and skinless chicken

Sugary treats like cakes, candies, and cookies

Fruits, low-fat yogurt, and treats made with less sugar

Chips, crackers, french fries, and other fried treats

Baked chips, air-popped popcorn, and whole-grain crackers

Breads made with refined flour such as white, sourdough, and ciabatta breads

Breads made with whole grains: whole wheat, rye, and sprouted wheat (They have lots of fiber.)

High-fat salad dressings

Low-fat or yogurt-based salad dressings

Tips for making the most of the calories you eat

Choose foods that have lots of nutrients. Look for foods that are high in:

  • Fiber. It's found in beans and peas. It's also in fruits, vegetables, nuts, and whole grains.
  • Potassium. It's in potatoes and bananas as well as other fruits, vegetables, and milk products.
  • Calcium. It's in milk and milk products (including yogurt and cheese). It's also in certain leafy green vegetables (broccoli, spinach, kale), beans and peas, and some nuts.
  • Vitamin D. You can find it in egg yolks, liver, saltwater fish, and vitamin D-fortified dairy products.
  • Magnesium. Sources include nuts, whole grains, dark green vegetables, seafood, and cocoa.

Credits

ByHealthwise Staff

Primary Medical ReviewerAdam Husney, MD - Family Medicine

Martin J. Gabica, MD - Family Medicine

Specialist Medical ReviewerRhonda O'Brien, MS, RD, CDE - Certified Diabetes Educator

Current as ofMay 4, 2017