Carbs for Weight Loss


Nature's Fat-Burning Breakthrough

Provided By Prevention

We Found It: Why eating carbs can help you slim down--and how to do it right!

6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Provided By Prevention

    Try: Beans
    Resistant Starch: 8 g per 1/2 cup
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Snack on chilled pinto bean dip with crudit?s
    Substitute hummus for mayo on sandwiches
    Add black beans to garden salads

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Try: Bananas (slightly green)
    Resistant Starch: 6 g per small
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Slice and mix with yogurt and oats for breakfast
    Dip in yogurt, roll in chopped nuts, and freeze as an ice-cream alternative
    Dice and toss withlemon juice, salt, sugar, and onion to make tangy banana chutney

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Try: Potatoes and yams
    Resistant Starch: 4 g per 1/2 cup
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Serve cold potato salad as a side dish
    Add chilled, chunked red potatoes to a salad
    Puree cooked white potatoes to create a chilled garlic potato soup

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Try: Barley
    Resistant Starch: 3 g per 1/2 cup
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Add to chilled lentil salad
    Mix into tuna, chicken, or tofu salad
    Sprinkle onto garden salads

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Try: Brown Rice
    Resistant Starch: 3 g per 1/2 cup
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Order brown rice sushi
    Mix chilled brown rice with fat-free milk, raisins, and cinnamon in place of cold cereal for breakfast. Add to chilled marinated cucumbers as a side dish

  • 6 Best Fat-Burning Foods

    Try: Corn
    Resistant Starch: 2 g per 1/2 cup
    Smart Servings Suggestions
    Add to a taco salad, burrito, or quesadilla
    Sprinkle into salsa
    Make fresh corn relish

Potatoes get a bad rap as little more than a waist-thickening waste of calories. But amazing new research puts spuds squarely at the center of the latest weight loss buzz, along with other unfairly maligned carbs such as corn and rice. The reason: All these foods contain resistant starch, a unique kind of fiber you'll be hearing a lot more about. In fact, experts agree that it's one of the most exciting nutrition breakthroughs they've seen in years. "Resistant starch has the potential to become the next hot nutrition trend," says Leslie Bonci, RD, author of the American Dietetic Association's Guide to Better Digestion. Indeed, more than 160 studies have examined this little known nutrient's remarkable health and weight loss benefits.



Resistant Starch: The New Power Nutrient


Although this may be the first you've heard of resistant starch, it's likely been a part of your diet most of your life. Resistant starch is a type of dietary fiber naturally found in many carbohydrate-rich foods such as potatoes, grains, and beans, particularly when these foods are cooled. It gets its name because it "resists" digestion in the body, and though this is true of many types of fiber, what makes resistant starch so special is the powerful impact it has on weight loss and overall health. As a dieter's tool it can't be beat: Not only does it increase your body's ability to burn fat, but it also fills you up and reduces overall hunger. Its health benefits are truly impressive as well. Studies show it improves blood sugar control, boosts immunity, and may even reduce your cancer risk.

Resistant starch is bulky, so it takes up space in your digestive system. And because you can't digest or absorb it, the starch never enters your bloodstream. That means it bypasses the fate of most carbohydrates, which get socked away as body fat when you eat more than you can burn. Here are two more key ways resistant starch can help you drop unwanted pounds:

It ups your calorie burn. Unlike some types of fiber, resistant starch gets fermented when it reaches the large intestine. This process creates beneficial fatty acids, including one called butyrate, which may block the body's ability to burn carbohydrates. "This can prevent the liver from using carbs as fuel and, instead, stored body fat and recently consumed fat are burned," explains Janine Higgins, PhD, nutrition research director for the University of Colorado's Adult and Pediatric General Clinical Research Center. In your body, carbohydrates are the preferred source of fuel, like gasoline that powers your car's engine. Butyrate essentially prevents some of the gas from getting into the tank, and your cells turn to fat as an alternative. One study found that replacing just 5.4% of total carbohydrate intake with resistant starch created a 20 to 30% increase in fat burning after a meal.

It shuts down hunger hormones. Animal studies have found that resistant starch prompts the body to pump out more satiety-inducing hormones. A meal with resistant starch triggers a hormonal response to shut off hunger, so you eat less. Research shows that you don't reap this benefit from other sources of fiber.

Next: How to Eat Resistant Starch

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