Blog

How to maintain your healthy weight whilst enjoying chocolate!

Delicious chocolate no weight gain
Ilona Madden - RightFood4U - Nutrition Programmes - Bray Wicklow Dublin

Written by Ilona Madden

March 19, 2021

I confess I am a chocoholic. There are very few days when I don’t eat some form of chocolate – or probably rather something containing cacao.

You might think that enjoying chocolate every day is something to feel guilty about and fear that chocolate is something you will have to give up when you work with a Nutritional Therapist.

Chocolate is actually a nutritional powerhouse and in this blog post, you’ll discover how you CAN eat chocolate every day (if you want to!) and maintain a healthy weight.

And no, you do not have to compensate eating chocolate with tons of exercise and hours on the treadmill!

What’s the catch?

There is no catch and I’m not trying to sell you a magic pill either.

Filling up your plate with goodness around your chocolate-y moments is the key!

1.Keep your plate as colourful as possible.

Eat the rainbow! One of the simplest ways is to look out to have at least 3 different colours on your plate with each meal. With a variety of vegetables, you are not only getting plenty of nutrients, but you are also getting fibre to keep you fuller for longer (and stop the cravings) and you are feeding your gut bacteria – who will keep your gut healthy, look after your energy and also keep you happy.

2. Add good sources of protein and healthy fats to each meal – and even your chocolate-y snacks.

This will help keep you fuller for longer, reduce cravings and add nutrients.

3. Cook from scratch!

You can prepare your chocolate treats yourself and you know the ingredients! Many shop-bought products contain additives that are addictive, making it hard to stop overeating.

4. Reduce overall sugar consumption.

The less sugar you eat, the less you crave it and then you won’t miss it! The more sugar you eat, the more you need to eat to get the “sugar-fix” and to activate your “happy hormone” Dopamine. If you know you are going to have a chocolate treat or dessert, avoid having sugar from other sources where possible.

5. Become Food Label savvy:

Check the labels for Carbohydrates, of which are sugar, and if it’s more than 20g/100g – leave it. The sugar content varies hugely – even with the same cocoa content in dark chocolate. So you can get 2 70% Dark Choc, and one contains over 40g/100g and the other only around 10g/100g!

6. Eat mindfully!

Make eating chocolate an occasion. Choose how much you want to eat, put it on a plate or bowl. Let the chocolate melt in your mouth, well before you swallow it. The brain receives the “pleasure” signals much sooner that way.

7. Choose dark chocolate containing nuts.

Or have your dark chocolate with a few Brazil nuts. You can also create your own chocolate-covered Brazil nuts, by dipping the nuts in melted chocolate.

8. Try some unusual chocolate snack recipes!

There are plenty of delicious recipes available that contain a bit of chocolate (which will help your choc cravings) but are also very nutritious and filling. Some of my favourites are: Cookie Dough Blondies, Chocolate-Hazelnut-Cheesecake, Sweet potato brownies, Keto Brownies, Chocolate Seed Soldiers (with dried fruit and seeds and a chocolate/coconut topping). See recipes on this page 

9. Quality of chocolate.

As with anything you eat, it is always important to look at the quality. Support a small local chocolatier, you might pay a little more, but you will also make sure to enjoy it a little more.

10. Be creative!

You can add a few raw cocoa nibs to your breakfast granola, you can enjoy a hot chocolate with raw cocoa powder and coconut milk, you can add some raw cocoa powder to your green smoothie, you can add raw cocoa powder to your healthy ice cream (see recipe below!). If you have any further tips, I’d love to hear them.

As you can see, it is all about balance and making better choices. So, don’t worry, I’m certainly not going to tell you to give up chocolate for life!

On the contrary, I will be here to Listen to you, to give Advice, to Support you and if need be I can help with functional Testing, to help you create results that will LAST.

 

You May Also Like:

What I wish I knew at 25 years

What I wish I knew at 25 years

Our younger selves don’t always want advice. But if you’re over 60 like me, and you’ve learned some hard truths the long way around—share them. Not to lecture, but to gently offer what we wish someone had told us.

After all, wouldn’t it be wonderful to help someone you love to build a life full of health and happiness, and avoid unnecessary struggles?

Do you want to know the secret to never having a “senior moment”?

Do you want to know the secret to never having a “senior moment”?

It’s very simple actually, a good healthy wholefood diet and some supplementation if you are not getting it from food, also supports a healthy brain. Or the other way round, if you are feeding your body junk food, it is going to affect your brain as well.

Don’t blame “age” if you forget things, blame the food you are eating, or the foods that you are NOT eating.

Would you write a letter to your future self?

Would you write a letter to your future self?

Could writing a letter to your future self actually “manifest” your goal or your dream?

Let’s say you are contemplating joining a gym, and in your letter, you write down why you are thinking about it, what is holding you back, or why you are having doubts about it. Or you could describe how unfit you feel. Or maybe your GP told you to strengthen your bones with weight-bearing exercises. You are writing all this down, and you KNOW in a year you will be reading it.

How will you feel if you didn’t start going to the gym? Will you feel regret? Will you feel more unfit? Would you wish you had started?
And how will you feel if you did start going to the gym and you could already notice an improvement in your strength and flexibility, and muscle tone? Would that not feel amazing? And you possibly also feel “what was all that worry about that I could make a fool of myself in the class?”