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A Piping Hot Classic
By Terry Dunkle, Diet Power CEO and Editor-in-Chief
Every year, I get spam from websites
telling me how to navigate Halloween, Thanksgiving, and
Christmas without gaining weight. To me, this makes as much
sense as being told how to attend a Super Bowl without
watching the game. How can a holiday be a holiday if you can't
overeat?
The fact is, overeating on holidays isn't a
bad thing; it may actually be good for your diet in the
long run. Reason:
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A 10-pound turkey (after cooking, without the neck and the giblets) sets you back only 9440 calories.
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Although starving yourself will make you feel righteous for a day, eventually your pride will turn
to resentment. And when overweight people feel resentful, they
often eat to "get even." (This usually happens the day after
the holiday, when plenty of
leftovers are lurking.)
So, while the food police are telling you to
"serve portions on a small plate, to make them appear larger"
(hey, are you that stupid?) and "chew thoroughly and
slowly" (on mashed potatoes?), we're going to give you the
straight dope.
8 Rules for Healthful Overeating
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If you're going to overindulge, at least know by
how much. Continue recording your meals in
Diet Power's Food Log. (If you don't have Diet Power, you
can
download a free 15-day trial of the software right now.) That way, at least you'll know how
many calories to work off after the madness subsides.
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Save up beforehand. If your diet calls
for 1800 calories today, cut back to 1300 and you'll be 500
ahead on the Big Day.
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Realize that even if you gorge yourself, you
can't gain much in a single day. Your stomach holds only about
40 fluid ounces. If you stuff it three times with
average food (40 calories per ounce), you'll eat
4800 calories. That's less than 3000 calories above
maintenance for most people—which means you won't even gain
a pound. (The scales may say two or three pounds, but
this will be largely water retention and digestive overload,
which are temporary.)
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Remember this happy thought: The more you eat,
the faster you burn calories. When your body sees an excess of
fuel coming in, it automatically makes the furnace less
efficient so that it burns fuel more rapidly. This
self-regulating system ensures that whenever you suddenly
increase your eating, the amount of fat you put on will never
quite equal your calorie increase.
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Get some exercise. A brisk one-hour walk
will burn off 200 to 300 calories—and make you expend
calories a bit faster afterwards, too.
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Concentrate on the lower-fat goodies, which
fill you up at a lower calorie cost. (A gram of fat contains 9
calories, versus 4 calories per gram of protein or
carbohydrate.) Eat candy corn, not chocolate. Take the skin off the turkey, eat the white
meat instead of the dark, choose the cherry pie over the
Boston cream, and gobble all the mashed potatoes and cranberry
sauce you want. (Eat a ton of celery—it's 90
percent water and only 7 calories per stalk.)
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Watch the booze. Because alcohol contains
7 calories per gram, a 6-ounce glass of bourdeaux or
chardonnay will set you back more than 120 calories, and a
typical 4-ounce martini will hit you with twice that many.
Drinking too much may also lead you to eat more than you would
otherwise.
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On the morning after, don't feel
guilty; just get back on the wagon. You've had your fun,
just like everyone else, and now you can resume your quest
knowing that you didn't miss a thing.
Happy holidays!
Comment on This Article.
(Reader opinions help us do better.)
$100 Quiz: Who Works Hardest?
Answer the question below to enter our quiz sweepstakes. One $100 winner is announced every quarter in Piping Hot and on our online quiz page—generally in October, January, April, and July. You must check the page to claim any prize you've won-we do not email winners. (To read the official rules, click here.) Who burns the most calories per minute?
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A. Baker
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C. Bartender
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E. Bookbinder
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B. Bricklayer
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D. Bus driver
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F. Butcher
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To answer the quiz…
…please do not reply to this email—your entry won't count. Instead, send just one response to this special email address: quiz@dietpower.com. (Sorry, you'll be disqualified if you answer a quiz more than once.)
We'll announce the winner in the next issue of this newsletter. (The winner of our previous quiz is announced below.)
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You Said It: Customer Mail
(Diet Power doesn't pay for testimonials. We're Not That Kind of Company™) |
This section features emails from Diet Power users and excerpts from the Diet Power Forums, where you can meet other dieters, trade recipes and advice, and get technical or emotional support.
Another Complaint About Our Coral Calcium Article
The Feds &
anybody trying to discredit coral calcium & it's true wonders are just
jelous & aparently in some way getting there toes steped on!! after all
the pharmasutical companies, anybody making a fourtune in the medical
field, Doctors, Hospitals, funeral polars, our own Goverment ect. ect....
Depend on sick & dieing to keep their wallets lined. Trere are plenty
motives to condem something that is as powerfull as coral calcium as well
as anyone permoting it. It is a sick world we live in!!
—Name withheld.
Editor's note: It sure is.
Free to All
I have
found Diet Power's
nutrition news extremely helpful with regard to my health issues
(cancer and GERD) as well as for some of my friends.
In my experience of many years of searching the medical
literature, it is the most easy-to-use resource for selected health issues
from up-to-the-date research taken from MedLine and other authoritative
medical sources. I only wish it were available to everyone, not just to
people who have purchased Diet Power's health and dietary software.
—Charlene D. Long, Salem, Mass..
Editor's note: Thanks, Charlene. Actually, Diet Power's weekly nutrition news is
free to anyone, not just buyers of our software. But if you own our software, you receive the news
daily. (To get a free trial of Diet Power, click here.)
(Got a gripe? Suggestion? Compliment? Email webmaster@dietpower.com.)

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Congratulations, Wendy Olsen! |
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You've won $100 for entering our quarterly quiz sweepstakes. (Click here to claim your prize.) Here is the quiz question we posted:
Which of these six statements about cholesterol are false? |
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- You can have high cholesterol even if you never eat foods containing it.
- Eggs and bacon are especially rich sources of cholesterol.
- High cholesterol can make you prone to heart disease.
- If you run short of cholesterol, you will die.
- All of the above.
- None of the above.
The correct answer is F—None of the above. All statements are true.
Thanks, Wendy—and thanks to everyone else who participated. Good luck with this quarter's quiz!
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To read the latest nutrition news, selected by our national-award-winning editorial team, visit Diet Power's weekly news page or click the Food Log button (shown at right) at the top of our software's Home Screen. |
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Copyright ©1992-2007 by Diet Power, Inc., 7 Kilian Drive, Danbury, CT 06811, USA. All rights reserved. The names Diet Power and Piping Hot are trademarks of Diet Power, Inc. The information in this newsletter is meant to increase your awareness of the importance of nutrition to health. It is not meant to substitute for the advice of a health professional.
Last Modified: 10/4/07 |