国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Some foods will leave wanting more鈥攈ere's your guide to which will fill you up.
Some foods will leave wanting more鈥攈ere's your guide to which will fill you up. (Photo: iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

The Best (And Worst) Foods to Keep You Full

Plus, a case for changing the way you think about calories

Published:  Updated: 
Some foods will leave wanting more鈥攈ere's your guide to which will fill you up.
(Photo: iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Keeping tabs on your hunger is key to successful training. If you鈥檙e pushing hard, you鈥檙e burning through more calories than usual, and you need to pay close attention to how much food you鈥檙e using to fuel those efforts to avoid an energy deficit. Similarly, if you鈥檙e toning down your training for whatever reason or trying to cut a few pounds to hit racing weight, you have to think about eating less without feeling like your energy is depleted.

But many athletes think the number of calories is all they need to measure, rather than the quality of those calories. Specifically, they should think about the satiety鈥攐r fillingness鈥攐f the foods they eat.

Satiety is the subject of . The scientists fed participants 240-calorie portions of popular foods鈥攅verything from meats and potatoes to cakes and pastas. Every 15 minutes thereafter, participants reported how hungry they felt. Two hours later, the participants could eat whatever they wanted from a breakfast buffet while scientists tracked their intake鈥攖he idea being that hungrier participants would eat more at the buffet聽and fuller ones would eat less聽despite having eaten the same number of calories beforehand. In the end, the researchers came up with a quantifiable metric to measure how full different foods鈥攆rom oats and whitefish to cake and french fries鈥攚ill make you feel. That result is known as the satiety index.

That number differed pretty dramatically between items. Foods with lots of fat or sugar (like doughnuts or croissants) didn鈥檛 keep people full for very long, whereas the more natural, unrefined alternatives (like fruits and lean proteins) delivered high satiety numbers, says Stephan Guyenet, an obesity researcher and author of . Researchers gave each food its satiety index as compared to that of white bread, which was arbitrarily set at 100 percent. The least and most filling foods, for example, were croissants and white potatoes, with scores of 47 percent and 323 percent, respectively. Compared to a serving of equal calories of white bread, croissants are roughly half as filling, and white potatoes are more than three times as filling.

Calorie density is the key factor that predicts a food鈥檚 satiety index. In the study, less calorie-dense foods tended to be more filling because participants had to eat more volume (in ounces) to reach the same number of calories. In other words, 240 calories鈥 worth of lower-calorie food took up more room in their stomachs. Those foods also tend to have more fiber, so they take longer to digest.

The second metric to consider is a food鈥檚 macronutrient profile. For example, foods higher in protein and fiber kept participants fuller for longer, while those high in fat did not.

The takeaway: If you鈥檙e having trouble cramming in calories, eat foods with a lower satiety score. You鈥檒l top off fuel reserves without feeling uncomfortably stuffed. If you鈥檙e trying to cut weight or avoid feeling hungry all the time, eat foods with a higher satiety score. They鈥檒l help control your cravings while keeping your total calories at a lower number.

We went one step further, and聽used the study鈥檚 results to create a visual guide that illustrates how full a variety of foods will make you feel. The x-axis represents ounces鈥攖he amount of each food you鈥檇 have to eat to reach the 240-calorie mark. The y-axis represents satiety index鈥攖he number the food was given in the study to illustrate how filling it is compared to a 240-calorie serving of white bread. A score below 100 means the food is less filling; anything above 100 is more filling.

The higher up and to the right that a food falls, the fuller it will keep you for longer, and vice versa for foods lower and to the left.

Bakery Products

No surprise, bakery products were the least filling of all foods studied.
No surprise, bakery products were the least filling of all foods studied. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

Croissants, cakes, and doughnuts registered as the least filling foods. They鈥檙e relatively calorie dense, high in fat, and rewarding only in the short-term.

Snacks and Confectionaries

If you're going to snack, you are best off choosing popcorn.
If you're going to snack, you are best off choosing popcorn. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

Although a smidge more filling than the bakery products, most classic snacks and candies didn鈥檛 rank high on the index. The humble Mars bar was the least satiating food in this category, while fiber-rich popcorn was the most.

Carb-Heavy Foods

Eating the right types of carbs is important.
Eating the right types of carbs is important. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

The right kind of carbs can be a great weight-loss tool: Plain boiled potatoes were the most filling food in the study. (Read our ode to the humble spud here.) Fatty fries, on the other hand, were the least filling of the category.

Protein-Heavy Foods

Protein will always beat out bread as more filling.
Protein will always beat out bread as more filling. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

Every food in this category beat out bread. Ling fish鈥攕imilar to cod鈥攚as the most filling, thanks to the large portion聽size required to hit 240 calories.

Fruits

The weight of each fruit was the main indicator of fullness.
The weight of each fruit was the main indicator of fullness. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

Volume of the 240-calorie serving determined how full each fruit made the participants feel.聽Bananas, the smallest portion, registered last, while oranges, the largest portion, were most filling.

Breakfast Cereals

Oatmeal beat even muesli by a long shot.
Oatmeal beat even muesli by a long shot. (iStock/国产吃瓜黑料)

Refined cereals tended to score lower, while basic one-ingredient, unprocessed oatmeal was the third most-filling food in the study.

Lead Photo: iStock/国产吃瓜黑料

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online