Mindless EatingMelissa Bess
Nutrition and Health Education Specialist
FNEP STAFF TRAINING ONLY, DO NOT USE WITH FNEP PARTICIPANTS
07/2007
Outline
• Introduction• Mindless margin• The forgotten food• Surveying the table-scape• Hidden persuaders around us• Re-scripting your dinner• The name game• In the mood for comfort food
Outline
• Nutritional gatekeepers• Fast food fever• Mindlessly eating better• Questions?• Fad Diets
Introduction
• We make over 200 food decisions each day!
• Food is a great pleasure in life, not something we should compromise.
• We need to shift our surroundings to work WITH our lifestyle not AGAINST it.
• The best diet is the one you don’t know you are on.
Mindless margin
• Why do we overeat foods that aren’t good?
• 2 studies:– Stale popcorn – those with larger
buckets ate 173 calories more than those with medium buckets
– Same meals, same wines. Different labels, different reactions.
Mindless margin
• 100 – 200 less calories a day would prevent weight gain in most people
• We probably won’t miss these calories
• Cutting out favorite foods = bad idea• Cutting down on how much we eat
them is do-able
Mindless margin
• Strategy #1 –– Think 20% less when you start your
meal, probably won’t miss it– For fruits and veggies = think 20%
more
The forgotten food
• Study on chicken wings – clean plate, clean table, get more, eat more.
• Orange jumpsuits in prison = weight gain because they don’t notice 1 lb a week gain
• We eat the volume we want, not the calories
• Parisians stop eating when no longer hungry, not when plate or glass is empty
The forgotten food
• Strategy #2 – See all you eat– See it before you eat it– Put snack on separate plate and leave
box in the kitchen– See it while you eat it– Leave empty glasses on table, leave
food on plates without clearing food
Surveying the table-scape
• We consume more from bigger packages, whatever the product
• We think we get more from tall, skinny glasses than short, wide glasses
• Bigger bowls = bigger servings• We eat more when there is variety
Surveying the table-scape
• Strategy #3 – Be your own table-scaper– Mini-size boxes and bowls– Use mid-size or small plates, rather
than large– Think slender with glasses– People tend to pour 30% more into a
wider glass than a slender one
Hidden persuaders around us
• Visibility – people will eat more candy from a clear dish than a white one
• Make healthy foods easy to see and less healthy foods harder to see
• Move candy dish further away, convenience = impulse
Hidden persuaders around us
• Strategy #4 – Make overeating a hassle, not a habit– Leave the serving dishes in the kitchen, put
salad and veggies on table– Put tempting foods in the back of the cabinet
or in a basement, inconvenient– Repackage jumbo sizes into smaller containers– Hide the extras from view– Reseal packages. Tape works better than a clip
Re-scripting your dinner
• Be the last to start eating• Pace yourself with slowest eater• Leave some food on your plate, helps
avoid one more serving• Think about how much you will eat
before the meal• Ask breadbasket to be taken away or
other side of table
Re-scripting your dinner
• Pick two rule: appetizer, drink, dessert – pick only two
• Best part of a dessert is the first 2 bites• Strategy #5 – Create distraction-free
eating scripts– Distract yourself before you snack– Eat snacks in only one room– Dish out how much you want before you
eat– Minimize distractions
The name game
• We taste what we think we will taste (strawberry vs. chocolate yogurt)
• Lemon jello with red food coloring, said it was cherry, no one suspected it
• Menu names and descriptions, lead to more appeal and tastier
• Presentation is key• Brand loyalty
The name game
• Strategy #6 – Create expectations that make you a better cook– Add two-words that are descriptive to
the name of the meal or food (Cajun, homemade, succulent)
– Spend time on prepping the atmosphere – soft lights, soft music, tablecloth, nice glasses, etc.
In the mood for comfort food
• Comfort food connections are subconsciously formed
Physical hunger Emotional hungerStrikes below neck (i.e. stomach growling)
Above the neck (i.e. “taste” for ice cream)
Occurs several hours after meal
Unrelated to time
Goes away when full Persists despite fullness
Eating leads to feeling of satisfaction
Eating leads to guilt and shame
In the mood for comfort food
• Strategy #7 – Make comfort foods more comforting– Don’t deprive yourself– Keep comfort foods, but in smaller
amounts.– Pair healthier foods with positive
events. Celebrate with strawberries and a small bowl of ice creams rather than a chocolate brownie sundae.
Nutritional gatekeepers
• Gatekeepers controls food decisions• Children start learning what they
like and don’t like before 4 months old, due to cues and reactions by parents
• Use positive associations with foods to make children more likely to eat them
Nutritional gatekeepers
• Strategy #8 – Crown yourself as the official gatekeeper– Be a good marketer – Offer variety– Use the half-plate rule – half the plate
should be veggies and fruits, the other half protein and starch
– Put snacks in containers and hide extras
Fast-food fever
• Healthy restaurants = free reign?• Reduced fat or low fat really better?• 10-20 rule
– Thin drinks = about 10 calories per ounce
– Thick drinks = about 20 calories per ounce
• We underestimate the calories we drink by 30%
Fast-food fever
• Strategy # 9 – Portion size me– Healthy restaurants – not everything is
always healthy, watch the extras– Think small, or share– Food companies could create packages
with pause points – i.e. Every 7th Pringle chip is colored a different color
– Adding air or water can add volume but not calories
Mindlessly eating better
• Eating better means different things to different people
• Reengineer your food environment– Food trade-offs – I can eat X if I do Y, I
can have popcorn at the movie, if I have a healthy salad for dinner, etc.
– Food policies – No 2nd helpings of X, never eat in front of the tv, only half-size desserts, etc.
Mindlessly eating better
• The power of three– Three small 100 calorie changes per
day is do-able– Takes 28 days to break a habit– Keep a log or checklist, so you don’t
forget
• The best diet is the one you don’t know you’re on
Questions?
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