What You Need
How much energy our bodies use daily depends upon three major factors:
Calorie Sources
Our bodies extract energy from four sources in foods:
Fat receives so much attention because it is the quickest way to rack up the calories in your daily caloric intake. Compare the calorie values of these basic foods:
Many foods are combinations of fat, carbohydrates, protein and water. Being aware of these caloric breakdowns helps us understand why some foods are low in calories while others are high. For example, a food like cabbage, which is mostly water and a little carbohydrate, contributes only 20 calories per cup. On the other hand, a piece of apple pie that contains large amounts of fat and sugar, contributes about 400 calories.
Losing Weight
Every pound of stored body fat represents about 3,500 calories. If everyday
for a week you use 500 calories more than you take in, you'll use up one pound
of fat (500 calories x 7 days = 3,500 calories = 1 pound body fat). Doubling
your efforts to eat less and exercise more would create a 1,000 calorie deficit
per day. That leads to two pounds of fat lost in a week. This may not sound
like much, but if you think of it over the long haul, instead of next month's
class reunion, one to two pounds a week could add up to 50 to 100 pounds less
a year from now.
Eating less fat is an effective way to shift your energy balance to your benefit, but beware! Not long ago, eating less fat meant avoiding potato chips, premium ice cream and greasy snack crackers. Today we can buy fat-free and reduced-fat versions of all of these. Watch out for the trap of eating more because you think a food has less fat. A handful of regular potato chips provides 120 calories. A handful and a half of fat-free potato chips also provides 120 calories.
The bottom line is energy balance.
If you consume more calories on average than your body uses, the
extra energy (no matter what the source) becomes body fat. An extra 100 calories
a day over a year becomes 10 pounds of fat!