It doesn’t have to be either/or. You can use both. I recently started including chia seeds in my daily milkshakes, and I really like the thickness and texture they add to the drink. They don’t have a discernible taste of their own as flax seeds do, but they are a worthy addition for both the nutritional value and the added texture.Chias are quite nutritionally dense with omega 3 fatty acids, protein and fiber. They plump in liquids making a nice fiberous paste in the stomach which leads to slow digestion and fullness. They are made up of a lot of fiber and have calcium and iron. Pretty healthy as an additive to shakes. Lot of bang for the small buck.
Chias and grains are not the same thing.
Flaxseeds have the same nutritional profile but chia seeds have more per tbsp so I go with Chia. Plus chia makes shakes thicker when you let it sit in the fridge for a bit.
Here is a good comparison of the two:
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/lif...d-or-chia-seeds-better-for-me/article4371817/
I give Chia the edge for me for the reasons above.
I like Almond milk as I am not trying to add too many sugars and vamilla unsweetened just acts as a base. 2 cups is 60 calories, 2 grams of fiber, 5g of fat and 2 grams of protein, 0 sugars.
The theory that a diet with many carbohydrates - and especially a diet with a lot of quickly absorbable carbohydrates - leads to overweight and obesity, is not new. A high carb diet allows fat cells to grow, but ensures that the rest of the body gets less energy. Says that theory. Nutritional scientists from the University of Harvard published a trial in BMJ that suggests that this theory is correct.
Carbs, insulin and body fat
The researchers wanted to test the 'carbohydrate-insulin model', which describes how a diet with a lot of carbohydrates makes humans fat.
"According to this model, the processed carbohydrates that have flooded our lives during the low-fat era have raised insulin levels, driving fat cells to store excessive calories, with fewer calories, hunger increases and metabolism slows - a recipe for weight gain", says research leader Dadid Ludwig in a press release. [sciencedaily.com November 14, 2018]
Study
The researchers experimented with a group of 120 healthy subjects aged 18-65 years. The subjects had a BMI of 25 or higher. Before the real experiment started, the subjects had lost 12 percent of their body weight by a slimming diet. In the 12 weeks that the study lasted, the subjects were given a diet that provided exactly enough kilocalories to maintain their new weight.
The researchers divided the subjects into 3 groups. They gave one group a high carb diet; 60 percent of which consisted of carbohydrates. A second group received a moderate carb diet, with 40 percent of the energy coming from carbohydrates. Finally, a third group received a low carb diet, which consisted of only 20 energy percent of carbohydrates.
In a laboratory, the researchers determined the energy consumption of the test subjects before, during and after the 12 weeks.
Results
A low carbohydrate diet reduced the concentration of triglycerides in the blood. That is about the same as the concentration of VLDL, the 'worst worst cholesterol'. At the same time, a low-carbohydrate diet increased the 'good cholesterol' HDL.
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In the low-carb group, calorie consumption increased by 200 kilocalories. In the high-carb group, calorie consumption decreased.
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"If this difference persists - and we saw no drop-off during [...] our study - the effect would translate into about a 20-pound [9.1 kilo] weight loss after three years, with no change in calorie intake", says first author Cara Ebbeling. "Our observations challenge the belief that all calories are the same to the body. Our study did not measure hunger and satiety, but other studies suggest that low-carb diets also decrease hunger, which could help with weight loss in the long term."
Insulin
Before the researchers divided the subjects into 3 diet groups, they measured the effect of a portion of glucose on their insulin levels. On the basis of this, they divided the subjects into 3 other groups: a group in which the insulin level hardly reacted to glucose, a group with a moderate response, and a group in which the insulin level rose sharply.
The stronger the insulin level responded, the stronger was the effect of a low-carbohydrate diet on calorie consumption. Click on the figure below for a larger version.
Conclusion
"Dietary composition seems to affect energy expenditure independently of body weight", the researchers write. "A low glycemic load, high fat diet might facilitate weight loss maintenance beyond the conventional focus on restricting energy intake and encouraging physical activity."
"Additional research is warranted to examine the effects of glycemic load on body weight, with control of energy intake. If metabolic benefits of reduced glycemic load diets are confirmed, development of appropriate behavioral and environmental interventions would be necessary for optimal translation to public health."
Source:
BMJ 2018;363:k4583.
I understand for those who are morbidly obese (rough words but sadly true) they have to cut down weight fast and it is all about calorie restriction but quality of calories will be more telling of success and reversing some metabolic syndrome issues.
Strict calorie quantity will get you down but strict calorie quality will get you healthy, keep you down, and make the road easier to maintain as oppsoed to quick unrealistic diets.
If you weigh 300 lbs. plus and you are forced to do 1200 calories a day, it would be foolish to think you get the same results whether you did Keto/Paleo or 1200 calories of any junk food combinations. First it is impossible to stick to 1200 calories eating empty crap. Second, you will lose weight due to caloric restriction but you will not be getting healthier on the way down or changing the bad habits that got you up.
It is not surprising that even patients who undergo bariatric surgeries who are morbidly obese are put in a ketogenic type diet since they are forced to eat in smaller quantities and need to maximize calories.
I think most people do not realize that the USDA has been behind the food pyramid for many decades which first started the movement of limiting all fats (i.e. no distinction between healthy or unhealthy) and having larger portions of grains (i.e. USDA clients). Sugar lobbies were also called out for stopping any message putting down high sugars as cause of many diet issues and obesity. Then fat free craz took over in the '90s.
My point in all of this is that caloric intake is clearly no longer the hard and fast rule in weight loss. Obviously caloric restriction will lead to weight loss on the scale but we have discussed that the scale number alone is meaningless. If you are losing water, lean body mass and fat then that is not good for the long run.
The one exception I understand is morbidly obese where the only concern is get the total mass/number down. Always easy to build back up when someone can get from 350 to 200 lbs.
No, we were not discussing that. We were discussing Taubes's misrepresentative zealotry. Just because simple carbs are unhealthy does not mean that complex carbs, with fiber, are not. Simple carbs spike insulin levels, which in turn encourage calories to be stored as fat. Complex carbs (i.e., with fiber) in moderation don't cause that kind of deleterious spike. Taubes is throwing out the baby with the bath water. And he thinks you should bathe in saturated fat.Interesting. This is exactly what I was discussing with Fred in another thread. This is what Gary Taubes talks about in "Why We Get Fat". But apparently there are bad reviews about it so it can't be true!