Does Plate Size Factor into Weight Gain? | |||||||
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Weight Loss - Weight Loss 2009 |
Written by Frank Mangano |
Monday, 27 April 2009 15:12 |
Sometimes the best way to lose weight is not what you eat for dinner, but what you eat dinner on. Unless we’re on the road, on the run, or at a ball game, all of us eat dinner on plates, right? Well, these plates have a way of tricking our brains, as depending on their size, they can make what we put on our plates seem like we’re eating like a pauper (small servings) or pied piper (large servings). I recently watched an episode of “Food Detectives” on the Food Network that tackled the question of whether or not people actually eat more if given larger plates. In other words, do large plates “entice” larger helpings, or are plates – large or small – simply decorous dishes? To determine this, researchers recruited two groups of parched participants. They were told at the study’s outset that they only wanted to get their opinions on what they thought of the food they would be eating (pasta). In actuality, the groups were part of the researchers’ analysis as to whether they would eat more or less depending on the size of their plates. The first group had the large plates. They were encouraged at the study’s outset to feel free to have seconds or thirds if they’d like and were invited to come up and help themselves from the very large bowl of pasta. Some took the researchers up on their offer, others didn’t. Bear in mind that the food served to both groups was exactly the same. The same ingredients were used. The groupings were the same (same number, same number of men to women). The bowls containing the pasta weighed the same, and both groups were given the same instructions. The only variable was plate size. One of my favorite truisms is “It’s not always what you say but how you say it.” The same principle applies to food: It’s not always what you eat, but on what you eat it.” Something as simple as a plate change can help keep creeping obesity from sneaking up on you. |
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