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A balanced meal to help you lose weight during intermittent fasting – the MyPlate model

We have discussed the key components of healthy eating while you’re on intermittent fasting to get the best nutrition. It is easy to talk about what you should eat while putting it into practice is totally different. How do you incorporate all these food groups to make sure you’re getting enough nutrients, yet keeping the calories limits to lose weight? In this article, I will talk about some practical advice on eating a balanced meal for weight loss during intermittent fasting.

The MyPlate Model

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends healthy dietary patterns with nutrient-dense foods including fruits and vegetables of all types, grains, dairy, protein foods, and oils. To practically balance these food groups on your plate, I recommend you use the MyPlate model designed by USDA based on the dietary guideline. The MyPlate model recommends making half of your plate fruits and vegetables of all variety, about a quarter of your plate grains, with half of them should be whole grains; a quarter your plate protein foods and vary your routine; finally, choose low-fat or fat-free dairy or alternatives. The figure below clearly indicates what MyPlate should look like.

Using such a model can not only help you incorporate the five food groups in variety but also help you to control portions and calories for weight loss.

What Should be Placed on Your Plate

Here are some practical things you can try to do in order to follow the model for healthy eating.

Fruits

Vegetables of all types

Grains

Protein foods

Dairy

Oils

Oil is also part of a healthy diet. Although it is not shown on the MyPlate model, it is added to foods on your plate. Choosing healthy oils can help your body absorb fat-soluble nutrients, reduce the risk of heart disease and improve blood lipid profile when used to replace saturated fat.

Because oils and fats provide the same calorie when eaten the same amount, it is better to have oils in moderation, enough to get its nutrition benefits without consuming too many calories when you’re trying to lose weight.

Things to limit

Apart from the five basic elements contributing to MyPlate, other important elements from the Dietary Guidelines for American and healthy lifestyle, include limits on added sugar, saturated fat, sodium, and alcoholic beverages.

Added sugar

* Sugar also commonly goes by brown sugar, corn sweetener, corn syrup, dextrose, fructose, glucose, high-fructose corn syrup, honey, invert sugar, malt syrup, maltose, raw sugar, sucrose…

Saturated fat

Examples of foods with saturated are:

Eat less saturated fat

Sodium

You don’t have to do everything below to be healthy, only a few of them can help you reduce sodium intake for general healthy eating. Only people with hypertension (high blood pressure) need to significantly reduce their sodium intake.

Alcoholic beverages

Draw your menu

I have talked you through the MyPlate model, what you should eat and what you should limit and have in moderation. It is now your turn to pick all those strategies and put them into practice by drawing your own plate and fill out what you’re going to eat in each food group. So, let’s rewind, fill half of your plate with fruits and vegetables, about a quarter with grains (preferably whole grain), and the other quarter with lean protein foods, and choose low-fat/fat-free dairy products. Simple, right? Give it a try here with the blank plate.

Summary

Reference:

https://www.myplate.gov/

https://dietaryguidelines.gov/sites/default/files/2021-03/Dietary_Guidelines_for_Americans-2020-2025.pdf

https://myplate-prod.azureedge.net/sites/default/files/2020-12/MyPlatePlanMenuTemplate.pdf


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