It has fruits, veggies, yogurt, and protein powder. Your breakfast smoothie is healthy, isnโt it?
Take a second look. More often than not, smoothies are packed with sugar and too many calories, threatening to sabotage your fitness efforts.
Many people love starting their day with a tasty, nutrient-packed smoothie. However, getting lost in the hype and not paying attention to portions can result in a smoothie that can easily account for a third to half your daily calorie needs.
Too Much of a Good Thing
Adding too many โhealthyโ add-ons like protein powder, nuts, nut butter, seeds, oils, avocado, supplement powders, and the like can amp up the calorie count. Itโs especially easy to overdo it when you pour your smoothie into a bowl and add toppings like granola, coconut, cacao nibs, and more fruit. Remember, โsuperfoodโ does necessarily equal โlow-calorie.โ
Another common mistake is using too much fruit. The fruit has many essential vitamins and minerals, but the sugar can add up quickly. Aim for just one cup of fruit to keep portions in check. One thing you can be liberal with, though? Those leafy greens. Youโll get a lot fewer calories but tons of nutrients.
Your Portions Are Off
If itโs on the skimpier side, that morning smoothie might leave your stomach growling in an hour, setting you up for grazing all morning or overeating at lunch. Another common mistake: overestimating your calorie burn and downing a post-workout โsnackโ smoothie that exceeds your needs.
Think of it this way: Would you eat a banana and a mango and a kale salad and a container of yogurt and a big spoonful of peanut butter, and a tablespoon each of hemp, chia, and flaxseed in one sitting just to tide yourself over for an hour or two? If yes, then you must have a freakishly high metabolism. If not, rethink the size of your snack.
Falling for โNaturalโ and โLow-Fatโ Labels
Healthier-sounding sweeteners like agave nectar and coconut sugar still add caloriesโDitto for low-fat versions of things like yogurt and ice cream. Even though honey and maple syrup may have some health benefits, they still provide calories. Foods with buzzwords like โnatural,โ โorganic,โ and โgluten-freeโ may also not be objectively healthy choices.
Keep in mind that artificial sweeteners may cause GI discomfort. Plus, they condition our taste buds to expect super-sweet flavors which are very concentrated. Dumping a heaping scoop of stevia into your smoothie isnโt doing your body any favors. With all of these sweeteners, a little goes a long way.
Too Much Sugar
Added sugars in flavored yogurt, non-dairy kinds of milk, and some protein powders are common contributors to excess calories. Again, you want to look at how much fruit youโre adding. Though itโs true that the sugar in fruit is naturally occurring fructose, too much in one go is still a lot for the body to handle. Using juice as a smoothie base is also a no-go for this reason.
Not Enough Protein
Though the fiber in fruits and veggies makes a smoothie more filling than juice, you still need some protein to slow digestion and help you stay satisfied longer. Make your smoothie with milk or yogurt as the base, or give silken tofu a shot. You can also add protein powder, nuts, or nut butter using water or nondairy milk as the base.
Getting Into a Rut
Predictability may help some people stay on track, but others find it reduces their motivation over time as they get bored. If your a.m. smoothie starts to look more like morning sludge, chances are itโs time to switch things up. Donโt be afraid to try new flavor and texture combinations. Worst-case scenario, you dump it out and start over.
Assuming Sipping = Chewing
Research has shown that our brain may not register that weโve consumed a mealโs worth of nutrients when we drink a smoothie instead of sitting down to a plate of food. Pay attention to the cues your body gives you, and if needed, take a step back and look at what youโre putting in that smoothie to see if you can make it more filling without overdoing the calories.
Rather than having a smoothie daily, you can also try mixing it up and having solid food. Noting a difference in your satisfaction level might give you clues about how you should fit smoothies into your diet.