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Eating these 10 foods can actually make you hungrier

Toast with jam

Carb-loading at your morning meal, especially if you choose white, refined grains, will cause blood sugar to spike and dip. “Low blood sugar after a meal can easily cause hunger,” says dietitian Laura Schoenfeld. Even if you opt for wholemeal toast, you still need to pair it with protein or fat to slow its digestion. Aim to eat 85 grams of protein at breakfast. Good sources are eggs, chicken sausage, smoked fish, or a little turkey bacon.

Smoothies

Done right, breakfast smoothies can be filling and nutritious. However, many smoothies are high in sugar – from flavoured yoghurts, fruit and fruit juices, and low in satiating protein and fat, notes Schoenfeld. The key to a smoothie that lasts till lunch is to add protein (try protein powders made from peas or quinoa) and fat (nut butter, avocado, coconut oil, or milk) for staying power.

Diet soft drinks

Ever rely on diet soft drink to perk you up from a midday slump? It feels harmless because it contains zero kilojoules, but the strategy may backfire. “The research on artificial sweeteners and hunger isn’t straightforward,” says dietitian and nutritionist Marisa Moore. However, “it does appear that getting artificial sweeteners from food and drinks, like chewing gum and zero calorie beverages, may impact appetite,” she says. If you’re going to have that diet drink, pair it with a real snack, like nuts and dried fruit, to help keep hunger on an even keel.

Cereal

Cereal is a classic breakfast, but it’s also a bowl of carbs that will send your blood sugar on a wacky roller coaster ride. Instead, go for porridge, which is also technically carbs, but ones that are digested more slowly. In a study from Louisiana State University comparing the two, an oatmeal breakfast with the same kilojoules as a breakfast of cold cereal led to greater fullness and less of a desire to eat later. Oats come out on top because they contain more fibre and protein but less sugar, researchers say.

Rice cakes

This is one food that people commonly think will fill them up, but never really does. “Rice cakes are literally full of air,” Moore says, which is why they’re so not satisfying on their own. Feel free to crunch on these versatile rounds, just make sure to top them with a protein or fat – try nut butter, cheese, or avocado – for a snack that will see you through.

Muesli bars

Muesli bars have two things working against them – they’re usually high in sugar and low in protein and fibre. So post-nosh, you’ll likely be looking for another snack. “Aim to get at least 10 grams of protein in a snack if possible,” Schoenfeld says. Some good options: a container of Greek yoghurt (20 grams of protein); a half-cup of cottage cheese (12 grams of protein), or two hard-boiled eggs (12 grams of protein).

Milk chocolate

Chocolate is good for you, right? Actually, it depends on the variety. Milk chocolate, though it contains some healthful antioxidants called polyphenols from the cocoa butter, is mostly sugar. An ounce and a half can pack in 22 grams – the equivalent of nearly six teaspoons of the sweet stuff. Snack on milk chocolate and the sugar will hike your cravings for more sugar, tempting you to seek out more sweets. The wiser choice is dark chocolate, which is lower in sugar and actually somewhat filling. A study in the journal Nutrients found that eating 70 per cent dark chocolate in the morning boosted satiety, so people consumed about 730 fewer kilojoules at lunch compared to a group that ate milk chocolate. Dark chocolate is one of a handful of energy-boosting foods.

Margarita

An alcoholic drink is just going to goose your appetite – for fries and a burger, according to a 2013 study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Researchers discovered that although women didn’t consume more kilojoules on days they drank booze, their diets were worse – they ate more fatty foods. A margarita is a particularly big offender: Drinking two is the equivalent of nearly three and a half drinks, and it’s also higher in sugar and salt than most alcoholic beverages, so it can further stoke appetite.

A pasta dinner

That heaping bowl of noodles is a heaping bowl of blood sugar-spiking carbs. Try swapping regular pasta for the wholegrain kind – or try varieties made from chickpea flour, both of which contains more filling fibre. They won’t help you eat less (or help you cut kilojoules during the rest of the day), but they will keep you fuller in between meals, according to 2016 research in the journal Appetite. To make a pasta meal last longer, pile on cooked fresh vegetables to get more fibre, and add some lean protein, like turkey meatballs or white beans.

Fat-free salad dressing

Your salad doesn’t have to be sad – just go for the full fat. “Healthy fats like olive oil not only pump up the satiety factor, but they also help you absorb more nutrients like beta carotene from salad greens, carrots, and capsicum,” Moore says. Plus, it tastes better – and yummy food makes you feel more satisfied, so you’re less likely to feel deprived and dip into the carton of ice cream you have chilling in your freezer.

This article first appeared on Reader’s Digest.

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Food & Wine, Nutrition, Health, Lifestyle