Refined carbohydrates, on the other hand, are found in packaged, processed foods, such as store-bought baked goods, crackers, pasta, and white bread.
Refined carbohydrates are made with white flour and contain little or no fiber. In fact, many products made with white flour are advertised as fortified with vitamins and minerals, because the process of turning grain into white flour strips away its fiber and nutrients. One of our South Beach Diet rules is to avoid foods labeled as “fortified.” Current evidence is that fortification with vitamins does not recreate the benefits of the natural vitamins that have been removed.
Despite the fact that good carbs are a critical part of a healthy diet, the typical American diet is filled with the bad kinds. And when we’re overweight as a result of a diet laden with bad carbs, our bodies’ ability to process
all
carbohydrates goes awry. To understand why, you need to understand the role of the hormone insulin.
Insulin, Fat, and “Fast Sugar”
All foods, even natural foods like fruits and beans, contain naturally occurring sugar in some form. But there’s a critical difference among these sugars: The body digests and absorbs them at different speeds.
When sugars from food enter the bloodstream, the pancreas produces insulin. It’s insulin’s job to move sugars out of the blood and into the cells, where they’re either used or stored for future use. Insulin is the key that “unlocks” our cells and lets sugars in.
How much insulin is required to do that job depends on the foods we eat. Foods that are broken down and absorbed into the bloodstream quickly require a lot of insulin. Those that are metabolized and enter the blood more slowly require a gradual release of insulin.
In a nutshell, the quicker sugar floods the bloodstream, the quicker insulin rises. This is bad, both for your weight and for your general health.
Beyond Weight Loss: The South Beach Diet Benefits Your Health, Too
Has your doctor has told you that you must lose weight to stave off heart disease or diabetes? Then the South Beach Diet may be the one for you.
Why? Because the Diet that’s helping millions across the nation shed their extra pounds
didn’t start out as a weight-loss diet at all
. I created the Diet to help my patients lower their levels of cholesterol and triglycerides and to lower their risk of pre-diabetes (the condition that precedes full-blown type 2 diabetes and that has been linked to risk of heart attack and stroke).
And it’s been proven to do just that.
To give just one example, one of my male patients in his midfifties had high blood pressure, high cholesterol, high triglycerides, and narrowing in his coronary arteries. His previous doctor had prescribed the usual medications. But once on the Diet, his cardiac profile quickly improved. His triglycerides, which had been over 400, fell below 100—a normal level—after just a month. He also lost 30 pounds, which he’s kept off, and no longer takes all those heart medications.
The results of the Diet have also been measured in a scientific setting. My colleagues and I conducted a study pitting the Diet against the strict “step 2” American Heart Association diet. They randomized 40 overweight volunteers to either of the diets, meaning that half went on the Heart Association program and half got the South Beach Diet. None of the subjects knew where their diet had come from.
After 12 weeks, five patients on the Heart Association diet had given up, compared with one on the South Beach plan. The South Beach patients also showed a greater decrease in waist-to-hip ratio, suggesting a true decrease in cardiac risk. Triglycerides dramatically decreased for the South Beach dieters, and their good-to-bad cholesterol ratio improved more than that of the Heart Association group. Finally, the South Beach dieters experienced a mean weight loss of 13.6 pounds, almost double the 7.5 pounds lost by the Heart Association group.
Here’s why: When glucose is absorbed slowly, the rise in blood sugar is gradual—and so is its fall, once insulin begins to work. A slow decline in blood sugar means fewer cravings later.
But when blood sugar rises quickly, the pancreas pumps out a correspondingly high level of insulin. The result? Blood sugar drops so low that it triggers new cravings. Often, we satisfy cravings by overeating (typically bad carbs like chips and candy bars), which leads to weight gain. Worse, the excess weight caused by overeating can lead to insulin resistance, the precursor to full-blown type 2 diabetes. In insulin resistance, cells ignore insulin’s signal to accept glucose from the blood. As a result, the pancreas must crank out huge amounts of insulin until eventually the exhausted organ wears out.
Those of us who have grown protruding bellies while our arms and legs stay relatively thin are likely to have the syndrome of insulin resistance or “pre-diabetes.” This occurs commonly in people with a family history of diabetes. Another sign of this syndrome is the occurrence of fatigue, weakness, headaches, irritability, shakiness, and cravings in the late morning or late afternoon. These are signs of exaggerated falls in blood sugar levels. The consumption of refined carbohydrates has unmasked this syndrome in approximately 25 percent of Americans and in the great majority of those of us who are overweight.
While eating the South Beach way will result in weight loss, it will also correct the way your body reacts to the very foods that made you heavy. It increases your body’s sensitivity to insulin, thereby decreasing the swings in blood sugar that cause us to be hungry again, too soon after we finish a meal.
This metabolic transformation occurs in three phases. The purpose of Phase 1 is to eradicate your cravings. You will accomplish this by eliminating all starches including all breads, potatoes, and rice. You will also eliminate all sugars, including all fruits and alcoholic beverages. You will enjoy strategic snacking, eating healthy snacks like nuts or low-fat cheese before your blood sugar dips too low in the late morning afternoon and/or evening. It takes much fewer calories to prevent those afternoon cravings than it does to satisfy those cravings once they hit. In Phase 1, nutrient rich vegetables and healthy salads are encouraged. You can expect to lose between 7 and 13 pounds during Phase 1.
In Phase 2, you’ll gradually add back good carbohydrates, such as whole fruits and whole grains. Here’s the principle for adding more carbs back safely: Do it gradually and attentively. The goal is to eat more carbs again while continuing to lose weight. If you add an apple and a slice of bread a day and you’re still dropping pounds, that’s great. If you try having an apple, two slices of bread, and a banana daily and notice that your weight loss has stalled, you’ve gone too far. It’s time to cut back, or try some different carbs and monitor the results. You can enjoy a glass of red or white wine with a meal; drinking wine with a meal actually helps slow digestion. In this phase, weight loss is about 1 to 2 pounds per week. You learn which carbs you can enjoy without the return of cravings.
Once you have reached your weight loss goal, it is time for Phase 3, the maintenance phase. There are no absolute restrictions here, but you have learned the “pecking order” of the important food groups. You have learned to choose brown rice instead of white rice, sweet potatoes instead of white potatoes, and pita bread rather than white bread. This is where the South Beach Diet becomes a lifestyle. (For an idea of which foods to avoid and which foods to enjoy on the South Beach Diet, see the lists on the next pages.)
In the next section, you’ll be introduced to a system that can help you limit foods that cause unhealthy, fat-producing spikes and dips in blood sugar and insulin and choose those that keep blood sugar steady, making it easier to lose weight and keep it off.
Introducing the Glycemic Index
The glycemic index (GI) is a system that ranks foods by how fast and how high they cause blood sugar to rise after eating a particular food. The GI of any particular food is always compared to a standard reference food, which is either one slice of white bread or a small amount of glucose, both of which have a numerical value of 100. The higher the glycemic index, the greater the swings in blood sugar produced. So, in general, the lower the glycemic index, the better the food choice. For mixed meals, the total glycemic index is approximately the average of the indices of the individual foods.
Generally speaking, you can think of GI in 3 ranges: “low” (55 and below), “medium” (56 to 69), and “high” (70 or above).
Foods with a low GI are converted to glucose more slowly, and so their sugars enter the bloodstream more slowly. Foods with a medium or high GI, which are converted to glucose more quickly, release their sugars into the bloodstream more rapidly. This results in a swifter rise in insulin.
Unrefined carbs often fall lower on the GI scale because they’re rich in fiber, which takes longer to digest and so results in a slow, gradual rise in blood sugar.
How about refined, bad carbs? Not surprisingly, their processed sugars enter the bloodstream quickly. This quick conversion makes blood sugar and insulin rise and fall quickly—definitely not so good.
On the South Beach Diet, you’ll tend to eat foods that fall lower on the GI, prepared or eaten in ways that allow your body to digest and absorb them more slowly. After Phase 1, the strictest phase of the Diet, you’ll reintroduce good carbohydrates with a higher GI.
While the GI is an astounding breakthrough in our understanding of how carbohydrates affect our metabolism, there are a few important things you need to know to use the system successfully. First, the GI doesn’t account for portion size. The solution: the concept of the glycemic load (GL), which takes into account a food’s GI (the quality of carbohydrate) as well as the amount (the quantity of carbohydrate) per serving. It also represents the load, or stress, placed on the pancreas from the amount of carbohydrates consumed from a particular food or meal.
For this Guide, our evaluation of each food choice is based on the glycemic index, glycemic load, and on other factors as well. We don’t include a dedicated column with a GI number for each entry because that information is not available for all of the 1,200 foods that are listed in these pages.
Phase 1
The following is a list of foods that you can feel free to enjoy (as well as foods you’ll need to avoid) when you begin Phase 1 of the South Beach Diet. These lists will help you stay on track and avoid carbohydrates that may crop up in foods where you don’t expect them.
Foods to Enjoy
BEEF
Lean cuts, such as:
Sirloin (including ground)
Tenderloin
Top round
DAIRY
1% or fat-free milk
Plain fat-free yogurt
Low-fat plain soy milk (4 g of fat or less per serving)
1% or fat-free buttermilk
POULTRY (SKINLESS)
Cornish hen
Turkey bacon (2 slices per day)
Turkey and chicken breast
SEAFOOD
All types of fish and shellfish
PORK
Boiled ham
Canadian bacon
Tenderloin
VEAL
Chop
Cutlet, leg
Top round
LUNCHMEAT
Fat-free or low-fat only
CHEESE (REDUCED FAT)
American
Cheddar
Cottage cheese, 1%, 2%, or fat-free
Cream cheese substitute, dairy-free
Feta
Mozzarella
Parmesan
Provolone
Ricotta
String
NUTS
Almonds, 15
Cashews, 15
Macadamias, 8
Peanut butter, 2 tbsps
Peanuts, 20 small
Pistachios, 30
EGGS
Whole eggs are not limited unless otherwise directed by your doctor. Use egg whites and egg substitute as desired.
TOFU
Use soft, low-fat, or lite varieties
VEGETABLES AND LEGUMES
Artichokes
Asparagus
Beans
Broccoli
Cabbage
Cauliflower
Celery
Collard greens
Cucumbers
Eggplant
Lettuce (all varieties)
Mushrooms (all varieties)
Snow peas
Spinach
Sprouts, alfalfa
Tomatoes
Turnips
Water chestnuts
Zucchini
FATS
Oil, canola
Oil, olive
SPICES AND SEASONINGS
All spices that contain no added sugar
Broth
Extracts (almond, vanilla, or others)
Horseradish sauce
I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter! spray
Pepper (black, cayenne, red, white)
SWEET TREATS (LIMIT TO 75 CALORIES PER DAY)
Candies, hard, sugar-free
Chocolate powder, no sugar added
Cocoa powder, baking type
Fudge pops, no sugar added
Gelatin, sugar-free
Gum, sugar-free
Popsicles, sugar-free
Sugar substitute
Foods to Avoid
BEEF
Brisket
Liver
Other fatty cuts
Rib steaks
POULTRY
Chicken, wings and legs
Duck
Goose
Poultry products, processed
PORK
Honey-baked ham
VEAL
Breast
CHEESE
Brie
Edam
Non reduced-fat
VEGETABLES
Beets
Corn
Potatoes, sweet
Potatoes, white
Yams
FRUIT
Avoid all fruits and fruit juices in Phase 1, including:
Apples
Apricots
Berries
Cantaloupe
Grapefruit
Peaches
Pears
STARCHES AND CARBS
Avoid all starchy food in Phase 1, including:
Bread, all types
Cereal
Matzo
Oatmeal
Pasta, all types
Pastry and baked goods, all types
Rice, all types
DAIRY
Avoid the following dairy in Phase 1:
Ice cream
Milk, whole or 2%
Soy milk, whole
Yogurt, cup-style and frozen
MISCELLANEOUS
Alcohol of any kind, including beer and wine