Eat Carbs, Lose Weight: Really? Really!
When we talk about the right kind of carbs, we mean "resistant starch." Hundreds of studies conducted at respected universities and research centers have shown resistant starch helps you eat less, burn more calories, feel more energized and less stressed, and lower cholesterol.
Sound too good to be true? Here, from our friends at Health.com, are eight evidence-based reasons you must get carbs back in your life if you are ever to achieve that coveted sleek, slim look.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Eating Carbs Makes You Thin For Life
That's the equivalent of several stuffed baked potatoes (a food we bet you've been afraid to eat for decades).
Most low-carb diets limit you to fewer than 30% of total calories from carbs and sometimes contain as few as 30 grams of carbohydrates a day.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Fill You Up
Research done at the University of Surrey in the United Kingdom found that consuming resistant starch in one meal caused study participants to consume 10% fewer calories (roughly 150 to 200 calories for the average woman) during the next day, because they felt less hungry.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Curb Your Hunger
The fiber and resistant starch fill them up and satisfy them while allowing them to eat the foods they crave. These good-news carbs also raise levels of satiety hormones that tell the brain to flip a switch that stifles hunger and turns up metabolism.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Control Blood Sugar and Diabetes
Eat the carbs you want, but you need to combine them so that they don't cause a spike in your blood sugar. Instead of eating white rice, switch to brown and combine it with beans, corn, or other high resistant starch foods that keep your blood sugar more balanced than low-carb diets.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Speed Up Metabolism
These fatty acids help preserve muscle mass - and that stokes your metabolism, helping you lose weight faster.
Researchers set out to fatten up two groups of rats, feeding one group food that was low in resistant starch. A second group was fed resistant starch-packed food. The rats fed the low resistant starch chow gained fat while losing muscle mass. Rats that ate the high resistant starch meals preserved their muscle mass, keeping their metabolism moving.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Blast Belly Fat
When scientists fed rats a diet rich in resistant starch, it increased the activity of fat-burning enzymes and decreased the activity of fat-storing enzymes. This means that the belly-fat cells were less likely to soak up and store calories as fat.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Keep You Satisfied
Foods high in resistant starch flip on every single fullness trigger in the body. They release fullness hormones in the intestine and make your cells more sensitive to insulin.
By increasing your consumption of filling foods and releasing satiety hormones, you'll minimize your hunger and cravings.
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs
Carbs Make You Feel Good About You!
More from Health.com: 10 Fat-Burning Carbs