Quote:
Originally Posted by mariamherrera
I never go over my calorie budget by eating fruit, i always stay with in. but my question is how many servings is recommended per day? I tend to have 4-5 all with in calorie limit of course. and a few people have told me i need to cut back to only 2 and only eat fruit in the morning. for me I find that when i crave something sweet i can eat a few chunks of pineapple or a few grapes or slices of apple and my craving to eat something sweet is satisfied and in my opinion It would be more healthy to eat the fruit then some cookies.
If your weight is going in the direction you want it to, you're feeling good, and in general, overall eating a wide variety of foods, and aren't experiencing hunger and/or fatigue spikes in reaction to some foods - you're good to go. Even the food pyramid is meant to be a guideline for healthy eating, not a set of food commandments set in stone.
I follow an exchange plan (where each exchange contains about the same number of calories). For example mine is 2 dairy (90 cal), 2 fruit (70 cal), 2 starch (80 cal) 3 fat (45 cal) 6 protein (60 cal), and 4 veggie (25 cal), and then 8 servings of "flex" exchanges that I can "spend" on any food as long as the contain about 60 - 80 calories each.
I LIKE exchange plans, and also I tend toward vitamin absorption issues, so I think exchange plans make more sense for me (for me, not for everyone), because it reminds me to get in foods I sometimes would otherwise forget.
But those 8 "flex" exchanges mean that some days I might have a very fruit-heavy diet (I could, in theory use them all on fruit, having 10 fruit servings a day - and I've done that before - though usually there are some potty issues to contend with).
There are no hard and fast rules here. If you're feeling good, losing weight, and not having hunger issues - don't worry about what other people tell you that you need to be doing.
There's a book
The 80/10/10 Diet by Dr. Douglas N. Graham that argues (somewhat persuasively) that humans may have evolved as primarily (and almost exclusively) eating fruit, and just a bit of greens.
I personally, think that humans can thrive on many different diets. Native Eskimo (eating a traditional diet, and living a traditional lifestyle) did very well on a mostly meat and fat diet (with only small amounts of fruits, vegetables and herbs available only a small portion of the year).
Listening to diet advice is a bit like the Aesop's fable about the man, his son and the donkey
http://www.bartleby.com/17/1/62.html
In essence, the moral being that there are a lot of opinions out there, and you can't please everyone.