Since this forum is still empty, I'll do the honors and get it started.
What is your best small tweaks/tips or tricks in order to improve your diet and nutrition?
I have a few that i find very useful myself, but I do realize that they might not be for everyone. I'm just a firm believer in making it simple and sustainable:
I consider "processed food" a bit differently than what's standard (I think):
I like to think of everything you do to the raw material a process, and use some broscience/brologic when considering what I eat.
Oatmeal for example, if you mix a bowl of oatmeal with milk- it's not exactly a delicacy. But it's nutritious and keeps you full for a while. It's rough and hard, it's obvious that it takes some effort to properly digest.
Now, consider overnight oats instead. It's still the same raw material, with an insignificant amount of high GI carbs added via some berries, or sugar. But if you compare the consistency - it's more or less half digested, so the effect it will have on your blood sugar and satiation is different.
Ground it up and make oatmeal flour, add an egg or two and some milk. Fry up some delicious pancakes. It just goes straight through your system and you're hungry again in no time.
Same logic applies to a bag of chips you snack on while watching a football game for example. It's high calorie and you're ready for dinner 5minutes after eating an entire bag. The equivalent in boiled potatoes would be a couple pounds of potatoes, good luck eating dinner after two pounds of potatoes
Obviously there is a major difference in the pleasure of eating these, and that's where a lot of the problem lies. Which brings me to the next one -
Try getting used to more bland tastes, bitter tastes, sour tastes etc
Tea without sugar for example, it's quite enjoyable when you get used to it - and it does help dampen cravings.
Getting used to bland tastes probably seems a bit silly, but it helps me a lot personally. I consider nutritional value over taste for most my meals, and i have some "go-to" quick fixes for when I'm lazy or low on time. I find it useful to not really enjoy most of my meals, it also makes the ones where I want to enjoy the taste even better.
I keep boiled eggs in my fridge, if i feel like grabbing as snack, I chow down a couple eggs, I don't really enjoy it at all, but it kills the craving.
Instead of ordering when I'm short or time or feeling lazy - I throw some rice in the rice cooker, fry up some ground beef/chicken slices and have a bowl or rice and meat, maybe with some ketchup or a tasty sauce. Takes 10 minutes and it's quite cheap too!
Try getting used to being hungry:
I find the notion that we have to eat x meals per day to be flawed, and in many cases it causes even more hunger. This probably isn't for everyone, but personally I find hunger negligible after a while. The feeling usually stays for quite some time, but then it kind of fades into the background once you're used to having it there.
Time your carbs:
I can't remember where I got the quote from, but - There are essential proteins, essential fats, but there are no essential carbohydrates.
Carbs definitely has a role in your diet, and I don't believe a constant state of ketosis is a good thing - it also carries with it some potential side effects. But carbs are not necessary with every meal, and definitely not in large amounts.
Carbs are fuel, and that's the role they should have. You definitely do not need 60+grams of carbs for lunch if you have an office job (people are different though, and some people feel better when eating carbs and need it to regulate blood sugar). But if you exercise for more than 45mminutes, adding some carbs during the workout will definitely help you push harder and get a better result for your time invested.
Post workout is another good time for carbs, it's actually just as, if not more important than protein in your post-workout nutrition. This is the time when your glucose storages are low. Carbohydrates stimulate insulin production, which helps transport amino acids into muscle cells for repair and growth. By including carbs in your post-workout meal or snack, you ensure that protein synthesis occurs efficiently, reducing the risk of muscle breakdown. And you refill the storages, so a decent amount of carbs you eat after exercise and for the next 4 hours are actually spent refilling and recovering - So it's a good time for that snack you crave, and a nice reward for a good workout.
More protein is "never" wrong:
Protein makes you feel full, and you also spend roughly 20% of the calories in the protein when you break it down. So it would take a lot of effort to have "too much" protein in your diet.
Fruits, juice etc:
First, I would like to point back to the first tip about processing. When you juice or mix fruits into a smoothie, you make it very easy for the body to digest - So it really isn't very optimal in my opinion, even though fruits are healthy generally speaking (I can't with certainty say that this is scientifically backed, but I believe it is).
Try to opt for more vegetables and less fruit, and when you do opt for fruits - try to go for the ones higher in fiber. For me personally, I get addicted when i keep opting for the tasty but healthy treats and it increases my general cravings.
Need to cut my post "short" for now as I have to run, will try to improve it later
(If we can edit old posts, not sure how that works here).
What is your best small tweaks/tips or tricks in order to improve your diet and nutrition?
I have a few that i find very useful myself, but I do realize that they might not be for everyone. I'm just a firm believer in making it simple and sustainable:
I consider "processed food" a bit differently than what's standard (I think):
I like to think of everything you do to the raw material a process, and use some broscience/brologic when considering what I eat.
Oatmeal for example, if you mix a bowl of oatmeal with milk- it's not exactly a delicacy. But it's nutritious and keeps you full for a while. It's rough and hard, it's obvious that it takes some effort to properly digest.
Now, consider overnight oats instead. It's still the same raw material, with an insignificant amount of high GI carbs added via some berries, or sugar. But if you compare the consistency - it's more or less half digested, so the effect it will have on your blood sugar and satiation is different.
Ground it up and make oatmeal flour, add an egg or two and some milk. Fry up some delicious pancakes. It just goes straight through your system and you're hungry again in no time.
Same logic applies to a bag of chips you snack on while watching a football game for example. It's high calorie and you're ready for dinner 5minutes after eating an entire bag. The equivalent in boiled potatoes would be a couple pounds of potatoes, good luck eating dinner after two pounds of potatoes

Obviously there is a major difference in the pleasure of eating these, and that's where a lot of the problem lies. Which brings me to the next one -
Try getting used to more bland tastes, bitter tastes, sour tastes etc
Tea without sugar for example, it's quite enjoyable when you get used to it - and it does help dampen cravings.
Getting used to bland tastes probably seems a bit silly, but it helps me a lot personally. I consider nutritional value over taste for most my meals, and i have some "go-to" quick fixes for when I'm lazy or low on time. I find it useful to not really enjoy most of my meals, it also makes the ones where I want to enjoy the taste even better.
I keep boiled eggs in my fridge, if i feel like grabbing as snack, I chow down a couple eggs, I don't really enjoy it at all, but it kills the craving.
Instead of ordering when I'm short or time or feeling lazy - I throw some rice in the rice cooker, fry up some ground beef/chicken slices and have a bowl or rice and meat, maybe with some ketchup or a tasty sauce. Takes 10 minutes and it's quite cheap too!
Try getting used to being hungry:
I find the notion that we have to eat x meals per day to be flawed, and in many cases it causes even more hunger. This probably isn't for everyone, but personally I find hunger negligible after a while. The feeling usually stays for quite some time, but then it kind of fades into the background once you're used to having it there.
Time your carbs:
I can't remember where I got the quote from, but - There are essential proteins, essential fats, but there are no essential carbohydrates.
Carbs definitely has a role in your diet, and I don't believe a constant state of ketosis is a good thing - it also carries with it some potential side effects. But carbs are not necessary with every meal, and definitely not in large amounts.
Carbs are fuel, and that's the role they should have. You definitely do not need 60+grams of carbs for lunch if you have an office job (people are different though, and some people feel better when eating carbs and need it to regulate blood sugar). But if you exercise for more than 45mminutes, adding some carbs during the workout will definitely help you push harder and get a better result for your time invested.
Post workout is another good time for carbs, it's actually just as, if not more important than protein in your post-workout nutrition. This is the time when your glucose storages are low. Carbohydrates stimulate insulin production, which helps transport amino acids into muscle cells for repair and growth. By including carbs in your post-workout meal or snack, you ensure that protein synthesis occurs efficiently, reducing the risk of muscle breakdown. And you refill the storages, so a decent amount of carbs you eat after exercise and for the next 4 hours are actually spent refilling and recovering - So it's a good time for that snack you crave, and a nice reward for a good workout.
More protein is "never" wrong:
Protein makes you feel full, and you also spend roughly 20% of the calories in the protein when you break it down. So it would take a lot of effort to have "too much" protein in your diet.
Fruits, juice etc:
First, I would like to point back to the first tip about processing. When you juice or mix fruits into a smoothie, you make it very easy for the body to digest - So it really isn't very optimal in my opinion, even though fruits are healthy generally speaking (I can't with certainty say that this is scientifically backed, but I believe it is).
Try to opt for more vegetables and less fruit, and when you do opt for fruits - try to go for the ones higher in fiber. For me personally, I get addicted when i keep opting for the tasty but healthy treats and it increases my general cravings.
Need to cut my post "short" for now as I have to run, will try to improve it later
