Like many people here, I'm not doing pure calorie counting alone. While I'm not following a formal plan, I am focusing on whole foods, sticking virtuously to whole grains, keeping an eye on my macronutrients, and of course I'm already vegan. I try to stick to porridge for breakfast and soup and/or salad for lunch. It's all informal, and I don't have any lists of prohibited or compulsory foods. The flexibility of calorie counting is one of the things I really like about it, that it can be adapted to pretty much any diet.
However, I'm finding that the mere act of calorie counting is pushing me gently in certain directions. I'm eating more vegetables than before, because they fill me up for very few calories. Where previously I would sauté a courgette [zucchini] or red pepper with a handful of almonds and put it on pasta, I will now sauté a courgette and a small red onion, so that I have a bigger bowl of food in the end. To my surprise, it's not too much for me to eat. When it comes to salads, they can be practically free. I started off with a bowl of vegetable and lentil soup and a piece of wholemeal bread with almond butter for lunch, and then found that adding a salad of, say, spinach, cucumber, and a bit of olive oil, lemon juice and salt, made very little difference to the calorie count but vastly improved the lunch.
Nuts and seeds, on the other hand, I'm now sprinkling about far less lavishly than before, as they're so high in calories. They're good, I just have to use them more sparingly, and I now count how many almonds I put into a stir-fry rather than just grabbing a handful.
I'm having to be more careful with some fruits than I expected, especially bananas, which I had never realised were so high in calories. Strawberries, in contrast, might feel like a luxury but can be enjoyed in fairly generous quantities. Which is good, because my partner and I love to snuggle up in bed to watch TV last thing at night with a bowl of strawbs or grapes.
What has everyone else found?



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