Atkins Low Carb Diet Recipes

By Joy Mitchell

So you're going on the Atkins Diet. It's not necessarily your first diet and until you try this, you can't be certain that it will be your last dieting attempt. Everything you've attempted so far has failed you and you're on the verge of giving up dieting altogether. Naturally, this has been the case many times before and yet you've still found yourself trying diet after diet without too much remorse. Now however you live in the hope that with the Atkins low carb diet recipes that you have tucked firmly in your pocket, that you'll be able to beat your history of yo-yo dieting.

You head on home full of excitement and plans to buy that little black dress you've had your eye on now for a few months. You won't go out and buy it immediately of course, no, that would just jinx your dieting efforts, but with the help of the Atkins low carb diet recipes you shouldn't have too long to wait.

After you get home, you sit in your kitchen going through the lists of low carb diet foods you're allowed to consume, and you're wondering what you got yourself into. You have absolutely no idea how you're going to cook some of these low carb diet foods, and besides they don't sound half as appetizing as Joe's pizza from around the corner.

Despair strikes and you say good-bye to that little black dress. After all, there's no way you can live off these low carb diet foods, and you don't even think you could cook them if you did go out and purchase the ingredients. That's when inspiration strikes and you remember the Atkins low carb diet recipes that you have lying in your purse.

You had put the two things in two different compartments of your admittedly cavernous purse and had entirely forgotten about the Atkins low carb diet recipes which you had acquired earlier. Your happiness levels rise again and you can see the black dress within your grasp again. So now you sit down and make a list of the low carb diet foods that you'll need to prepare one of your very first Atkins low carb diet recipes.

The first thing you need to do though, is take all that lovely high carb food from your cupboards to the nearest shelter and make a generous donation of food. You don't care what the family thinks, they're all going to eat Atkins low carb diet recipes.

Next, you hightail it to the supermarket and buy the things off your food list which you'll need to cook the first meal of your Atkins low carb diet recipes. And on the way back, you'll stop off at the little dress shop around the corner and promise the little black dress displayed so prominently in the window, that you'll be it's owner before long, as long as you stick with those Atkins low carb diet recipes! - 30249

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The Atkins Grapefruit Diet

By Joy Mitchell

The Atkins Grapefruit diet is a diet plan, not supported by the company of Dr. Atkins, that plays on the fame of the grapefruit diet and the Atkins diet name. A closer inspection of this diet shows that it may not be everything it purports to be.

First of all, it's pretty hard to find information on the Atkins grapefruit diet plan. Clever people know that when someone is perpetrating a deception, or a con, they will often gloss over facts. This is what the Atkins grapefruit diet appears to do in an attempt to persuade people to associate it with two purportedly effective diets.

Is the Atkins Grapefruit Diet part of the Atkins Diet or endorsed by the firm of the late Dr. Atkins? The answer is no, not only is there no mention of the Atkins Grapefruit Diet on the Atkins website, but there is no fruit of at all mentioned in the list of allowed foods in the Atkins diet Induction stage.

The induction phase includes the following foodstuffs:

Fish of any species; any fowl such as turkey and chicken; any shellfish; any meat such as beef or pork; eggs prepared in any style, including fried; cheese; vegetables; herbs and spices; fats and oils; low carbohydrate beverages, including diet sodas.

Did you notice anything? No fruit is mentioned on that list. Later phases of the Atkins diet, however, do recommend limited amounts of fruits such as cantaloupe, strawberries and even lemon juice, and the pre-maintenance and maintenance phases even specifically allow limited amounts of grapefruit. But when compared to the quantity of Grapefruit recommended on the Atkins Grapefruit Diet, once more there is a disagreement.

The Atkins Grapefruit Diet recommends a cup of grapefruit juice or a cup of grapefruit sections, with 8 and 18 carbs respectively. Even the most generous phases of the Atkins diet recommends limiting grapefruit intake to less than 8 carbs per day. That's a direct contradiction of one diet with the other.

Most reasonable people would take a look at the Atkins website itself the moment they heard about the Atkins Grapefruit Diet. When they found no mention of that diet on the site, a red light would go off and an alarm bell would ring.

Generally speaking, you should remember this: any diet that recommend too heavily on one food, such as grapefruit on a grapefruit diet, is not healthy for any but very short periods. The Atkins Grapefruit Diet is not associated with the Atkins diet, and may disrupt with the results of the Atkins diet in its early stages. - 30249

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The Atkins Diet and Appetite Suppression

By Gail Jones

A very common, but nevertheless astonishing results of 'doing' the Atkins diet is appetite suppression. Many advocates of the plan report that the inter meal hunger pangs they used to experience just vanish and very quickly too. This fact makes it easier to remain on the diet and keep to lose weight. While other diets have their followers hungry between meals, the Atkins dieters receive relief from constant hunger. The Atkins diet, with its specific recommendation of foods and ingredients, has powerful appetite suppressing effects.

The first key factor is the amount of protein in the Atkins diet. Protein, much more so than carbohydrates, has the power to assuage hunger pangs. If you have ever eaten a carbohydrate dense meal and then felt hungry again a few hours later, you know that carbohydrates don't have much staying power as a hunger satisfier. Protein, on the other hand, when it is combined with a small amount of healthy fats, can keep you feeling full for much longer periods of time.

One of the most sustained appetite suppressing foods in the Atkins diet is the simple egg. Eggs are a great form of quick and easy protein. A recent study showed that having eggs for breakfast would actually keep hunger pangs at bay throughout the remainder of the day. The research concerned two groups of women. One group ate only eggs for breakfast and the other had a breakfast of buns and cream cheese.

The calorie count for both types of breakfasts was exactly the same. The participants noted down what they ate for the remainder of the day and answered questions about their hunger and satisfaction levels throughout the day. The results of the study revealed that the women who ate the eggs for breakfast felt more satisfied throughout the entire day and they ate less at each meal than those women who were in the buns group.

Eggs contain about 6 grams of protein each, which helps to even out blood sugar and produces a feeling of satisfaction. Both of these factors help to curb cravings. Egg yolks also contain lutein and xenazanthin. These nutrients have been shown to have incredible effects on eye health. So it's important to eat the whole egg, and not just the white. Eggs contain choline which is important for maintaining brain function and memory. These nutrients are just an added benefit to the appetite suppressing qualities.

Broccoli and cauliflower, two of the most suitable vegetables on the Atkins programme, also have appetite-suppressant effects. These vegetables are very bulky and they help make your stomach feel full. When your stomach feels full, it will actually create a chemical response in your brain. Your body will reduce its call for food because it believes that your stomach is full of high calorie foods. This occurs regardless of what is actually in your stomach. You can get the same results with water and psyllium husk fibre. Both broccoli and cauliflower provide bulk in your diet and are essential vegetables for the Atkins diet.

The Atkins diet focuses on eating small, protein balanced meals a few times per day. This will help maintain your blood sugar level in a stabilized state and avoid carbohydrate-induced cravings. With high carbohydrate diets, you are riding a roller-coaster of carbohydrate highs. After you have eaten, you feel great and full. Then after a few hours, you come crashing down and are hungrier than you were before eating the carbohydrates. This cycle continues ad infinitum and, over time, you will eat more and more and eventually put on weight.

The protein, fat and vegetable recipes provided by the Atkins diet put your blood sugar back in balance. They give you just enough of each sort of food, with a proper amount of carbohydrates (from the vegetables). The vegetables provide quick carbohydrate energy, and the protein gives the meal its sustainability. This combination suppresses your appetite effectively throughout the day.

The Atkins diet is really a craving control plan that helps suppress your appetite - your desire for food or calories. If you've had a problem with carbohydrate cravings before, this new way of eating ie dieting will help regulate those cravings. The more you eat on the plan, the better your cravings will be controlled and the easier it will be to follow the diet - the more you practice the diet the easier it gets, because you won't want to eat carbohydrates all the time. - 30249

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