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There definitely some atkins
diet rules you have to follow when on the atkins diet.
These atkins diet rules will lead you to sustained
success.
The Atkins Diet Rules
• Have three meals a day or up to six mini-meals, depending
on how you feel. Do not skip meals or go more than six waking hours
without eating.
• Eat liberally of combinations of fat and protein in the
form of poultry, fish, shellfish, eggs and red meat, as well as
pure, natural fat in the form of butter, mayonnaise, olive oil,
safflower, sunflower and other vegetable oils (preferably expeller-pressed
or cold-pressed).
• Eat no more than 20 grams a day of carbohydrate, most of
which must come in the form of salad greens and other vegetables.
You can eat approximately three loosely packed cups of salad, or
two cups of salad plus one cup of other vegetables (see Acceptable
Foods).
• Eat absolutely no fruit, bread, pasta, grains, starchy
vegetables or dairy products other than cheese, cream or butter.
Do not eat nuts or seeds in the first two weeks. Foods that combine
protein and carbohydrates, such as chickpeas, kidney beans and other
legumes, are not permitted at this time.
• Eat nothing that isn't on the Acceptable Foods list. And
that means absolutely nothing. Your "just this one taste won't
hurt" rationalization is the kiss of failure during this phase
of Atkins.
• Adjust the quantity you eat to suit your appetite, especially
as it decreases. When you're hungry, eat the amount that makes you
feel satisfied, but not stuffed. When you're not hungry, eat a small
controlled carbohydrate snack to accompany your nutritional supplements.
• Don't assume any food is low in carbohydrate—instead,
read labels. Check the carb count (it's on every package) or use
a carbohydrate gram counter.
• Eat out as often as you wish but be on guard for hidden
carbs in gravies, sauces and dressings. Gravy is often made with
flour or cornstarch, and sugar is sometimes an ingredient in salad
dressing. Xanthin gum, from your health food store, thickens gravy
perfectly without carbs.
• Avoid foods or drinks sweetened with aspartame. Instead,
use sucralose (Splenda) or saccharin. Be sure to count each packet
of any of these as 1 gram of carbs.
• Avoid coffee, tea and soft drinks that contain caffeine.
Excessive caffeine has been shown to cause low blood sugar, which
can make you crave sugar.
• Drink at least eight 8-ounce glasses of water each day
to hydrate your body, avoid constipation and flush out the by-products
of burning fat.
• If you are constipated, mix a tablespoon or more of psyllium
husks in a cup or more of water and drink daily. Or mix ground flaxseed
into a shake or sprinkle wheat bran on a salad or vegetables.
• At a minimum, take a good daily multivitamin with minerals,
including potassium, magnesium and calcium, but without iron.
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