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Flat Belly Diet
By Liz Vaccariello with Cynthia Sass, MPH, RD
Rodale (2008)



Reviewed by: Constance Brown-Riggs, MSEd, RD, CDE, CDN


Claims:

The Flat Belly Diet claims you can lose up to 15 pounds in 32 days and flatten your belly – all
without a single crunch. The editors claim the Flat Belly Diet is grounded in cutting-edge science
that has found a link between monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs) and the accumulation of
belly fat and is the safest, most satisfying way to lose weight. On the Flat Belly Diet you get to
eat satisfying, healthful foods and lose the weight you want.

Synopsis of the Diet Plan:

The Flat Belly Diet consists of two parts: a four-day anti-bloat jumpstart and the four-week
eating plan.

The jumpstart is designed to flush out fluid, reduce water retention and relieve digestive
problems. Dieters are told to avoid the salt shaker, salt-based seasonings, highly processed foods,
excess carbohydrates foods (pasta, bananas, bagels and pretzels), bulky raw foods, gassy foods
(legumes, cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, onions, peppers and citrus fruits),
chewing gum, sugar alcohols, fried food, spicy foods, carbonated drinks, alcohol, coffee, tea, hot
cocoa and acidic fruit juice. Dieters must also drink two liters daily of “sassy water”: a blend of
ginger root, cucumber, lemon and mint leaves. The jumpstart meal plan provides 1,200 calories
daily and a four-day shopping list and sample menus are provided.

The four-week eating plan has three basic rules:

• Eat 400 calories per meal.
• Never go more than four hours without eating.
• Eat a MUFA at every meal.

This phase of the diet provides 1,600 calories daily from three meals and one snack. (Men are
instructed to go to flatbellydiet.com to customize their calorie counts.) The book includes 28
sample breakfast, lunch and dinner and snack options of 400 calories each; a chart of MUFA
foods; charts listing Flat Belly meal replacements, frozen meals and fast foods; and more than 80
recipes with nutrient analysis for calories, protein, carbohydrates, total fat, saturated fat,
cholesterol, sodium and fiber.

The diet is based on a healthy, Mediterranean-style meal plan with menus and recipes provided
to support the reader. Recognizing many dieters are eating on the run, there are also options for
fast-food dining as well as meal replacements. And although the books claims “not a single
crunch required,” there is an illustrated chapter touting the health benefits of cardio, strength
training and core-focused exercises. Success stories with before-and-after pictures serve as
strong motivators for weight change. However, there are only two calorie levels provided --
1,200 calories for the jumpstart phase and 1,600 calories for weight-loss phase -- but no
adjustments for calorie levels based on gender, height, weight, activity level or any other
pertinent variables.

Nutritional Pros and Cons:

Despite having a relatively healthy eating plan, there are components of the book that are
indicative of a fad diet, including:

• The jumpstart phase requires dieters to suddenly stop consuming caffeine, which can
cause severe headaches as well as other symptoms associated with withdrawal.
• Dieters are led to believe MUFAs are the “silver bullet” for weight loss.
• The book claims to be “grounded in cutting-edge science” but the authors fail to provide
any scientific rational for “sassy water.”
• Rapid weight loss may result from being on this diet, but most of the weight will be water
weight.

Bottom Line:

Based on the Mediterranean style of eating, the diet portion of this book is healthy. For
individuals who require a 1,600-calorie plan, this book is great. Those requiring other calorie
levels will need to work with their registered dietitian to individualize the meal plan.

purchase Flat Belly Diet

Tags: book, managment, review, weight

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5 Comments

Indian Dietician Comment by Indian Dietician on May 28, 2009 at 12:07am
Well ou may gain due to wrong choices of foods which slow down your metabolism and do not give you adequate energy. The solutions lies in carefully matching the various food with your physiology and including the most suited ones in your diet
I find effective ways to counter this problem of weight loss. I recoomet to visit

http://www.lifecentury.com/services/weight-loss-diet/40.html

Dietician HealthCare
David Comment by David on May 4, 2009 at 11:21am
OMG! LOL...............Now I'd call that a Comedy Routine rather than a medically sound diet! Great job Diana! We should write up a "sassy" review of the "Fat Belly Diet."

Too much................:)
Diana Young, RD, LD/N, CDE Comment by Diana Young, RD, LD/N, CDE on May 4, 2009 at 11:19am
And here is the recipe:

Sassy Water
2 liters water (about 8 1/2 cups)
1 teaspoon freshly grated ginger
1 medium cucumber. peeled and thinly sliced
1 medium lemon thinly sliced
12 small spearmint leaves

Combine ingredients and let it stand in fridge overnight. Drink all water the next day
Diana Young, RD, LD/N, CDE Comment by Diana Young, RD, LD/N, CDE on May 4, 2009 at 11:16am
LOL, sassy water is just a name used for plain water but named after RD Cynthia Sass. I think I'll call my water "Young Water" Sounds fresh, huh?
David Comment by David on May 4, 2009 at 10:45am
This is a deal killer for me: " The book claims to be “grounded in cutting-edge science” but the authors fail to provide any scientific rational for “sassy water.”

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