In the first part of this, we explored primarily vegetables that take more calories to digest than the item contains. This part focuses on fruit. They weren’t lying when they said that people should eat more fruit and vegetables in their diets, even if a person prefers to eat a lot of meat. Many of the fruits in this list can be used to enhance the flavor of meat, in fact.
One thing that you might notice is that all of these fruits are high in water content, most are high in fiber, and most contain antioxidants. This is a commonality among fruits that are negative calorie. It also helps when the fruits are kinds that most people enjoy. Which do you especially like?
#1 Cucumbers
#2 Cranberries
Cranberries may indeed have 50 calories per cup, but they are actually negative calorie fruits. These are commonly made into cranberry sauce late in the year, in which case the calories do add up because sugar is usually added since cranberries are tart. Still, cranberry juice is especially healthy, particularly for kidney health. Cranberries are also high in vitamin C and manganese. The GLI for cranberries is 2. Incidentally, it is easy to make a healthier alternative to store-bought cranberry sauce.
#3 Apples
It might surprise people, considering how sweet many apples are, that apples are on the list of negative calorie foods. However, apples contain a lot of dietary fiber, which means that the digestive system needs to burn more calories in order to digest them. Apples are also a good source of vitamin C and potassium.
#4 Watermelon
It should come as no surprise that watermelon is a negative calorie food. It has a very large water content. Watermelon also contains a good amount of vitamins A and C, plus several antioxidants. And yes, it is true; watermelons are technically berries. Incidentally, it makes no difference if the watermelons are seeded or seedless, they are still good for you. The GLI for watermelon is 3.
#5 Blueberries
#6 Oranges
#7 Strawberries
#8 Cantaloupe
#9 Raspberries
#10 Pineapple
Pineapple is negative calorie, very high in vitamin C, very high in manganese, high in copper, high in dietary fiber, high in antioxidants, and raw pineapple contains substances that ease joint pain and swelling. This means that it isn't just delicious and healthy, it is great for diabetics, people on diets, and people suffering from arthritis. If that isn't enough, pineapple is also high in Omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin B6.
Yes we had cucumber sandwiches growing up. I love them soaked in vinegar too.
I like them in vinegar, too. When our cucumbers start producing, I often make them that way and have a bowlful in the fridge almost constantly, for people to munch on. I call them refrigerator pickled cucumbers, though they aren’t actually pickled.
We would also eat them with our meal.
Don’t think I have ever tried one! I’ve seen these sandwiches all over media though
Cucumbers are interesting in another way, too. They actually lower body temperature a little, so eating some on a hot day can help relieve the heat and it isn’t a person’s imagination that does it.
since I started with my health ins plain & have been going to the docs
& seen what I weighed at the start I was stunned cause I never thought
I could get over weight like I was, NOW I have stopped eating most the
“YUMMY” foods & went on a strict diet of nothing BUT fruits & veggies
& eat one meal a day the rest of the day I eat my fruits & veggies & have
my 1 meal at night which is something like a bowl of grits or oatmeal or rice
something that will just kill the hunger.
For a very long time, I’ve advocated a balanced diet plan. It helps people get to their ideal weight and stay there. The balanced diet is 40% of the daily calories from carbohydrates, 30% from fats, and 30% from protein. Most people, particularly in the US, eat double the amount of carbs that they should have and half the amount of protein. The most common result is weight gain and a feeling of not being totally well, a lack of energy, memory issues, sleep issues, heart, stomach, and kidney problems, and so on.
What surprises many people is that of dietary choices, vegans and vegetarians are more likely to be overweight than any other group. According to the CDC, over 70% of vegetarians are overweight. A big reason is that a lot of foods that vegetarians can eat are very high in carbs and low in protein. This is especially true for most grains; wheat, oats, barley, rye, rice, and corn.