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Portion control is a hugely important factor with regards to your body weight and when you want to lose a few kilos or drop a dress size or two.

Eat too much, and your weight will go up. Eat just the right amount, and your weight will go down. Eat too little, and you run the risk of stunting your weight loss completely and causing your body to become malnourished. So how exactly do you get the balance right?

The modern, western diet is filled to the brim with huge portions. Whether we’re taking away, eating out, or cooking for ourselves, the amount of food on our plates has continued to grow over the past decades

Part of the problem lies in our ingrained attitude towards food and consumption. From a very young age, we are encouraged to eat everything that we are served and to clear our plates, so to speak. I’m sure many people can recall family dinners where there was no dessert if dinner wasn’t completely finished.

While enjoying our food and having a healthy attitude to what we are served is important, we often grow up confused as to exactly how much we actually need to eat.

It doesn’t help that when faced with a full plate, we often end up eating everything on offer, simply because when we are faced with food and begin eating, we find it very difficult to assess the actual portions included.

Tips for portion control

Generally, to keep your body healthy and functioning at its optimum level, you need to have a number of portions of foods from different food groups every day to make sure that you’re getting your entire daily recommended intake of vitamins and nutrients.

The guidelines are: at least 5 or more fruit & vegetable portions per day and ideally you should try to eat at least 2 pieces of fruit and 4 pieces of vegetables, 4 wholegrain carbohydrate portions per day, 3 protein/dairy portions per day, and 3 fat portions per day.

A portion of fruit & vegetables is usually counted as a large handful. A portion of potato (225g) should be the size of a computer mouse, a portion of spaghetti should be about 1.5cm or less in diameter, a small portion of shaped pasta should be a small, heaped handful, around 40g, and a portion of cooked rice (150g) should be roughly the size of a small tuna tin.

Portions of protein, such as chicken, beef, pork etc should be trimmed of all fat and should be around the size of the palm of your hand. Portions of dairy should be kept small, to a 250ml glass if you’re drinking milk and in 50-100g pots if eating yoghurt.

Portions of cheese, however, shouldn’t be any bigger than the size of a matchbox (28g). Fat portions, such as oil, should usually not exceed more than 1 tbsp of heart healthy fat at a time.

Although that sounds like a lot of portion sizes to remember, there are some ways to make things easier for yourself. For example, some people serve their food on smaller plates to the rest of their family, so they won’t be tempted to fill the plate up with food, whilst others keep portion servers to hand, such as a clean, washed tuna tin to pack rice into or a spaghetti measurer in the cupboard to work out exactly how much spaghetti to cook.

You may prefer just to weigh your food, then once you’ve done it a few times, you’ll know your portion sizes off by heart. It’s all about finding a method that works for you – and once you’ve found that method, stick with it.

You can also purchase a portion control plate which helps you to set portion sizes and helps you to measure out what need for need for each meal.

  • i agree it is so had to reverse what has been trained to your brain for so long, I often find myself finishing my dinner just because it is what you do even if I feel that I don’t need to.

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  • i think the old school you must finish everything on your plate needs to be un-introduced. I think that forced alot of childrent o eat when they plain and simply werent hungry! We in this country eat wayyyy too much! Its so easy to get carried away though. Great article thankyou

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  • Where my family are from (seychelles) the big heavy meal is not dinner, it’s lunch. We believe that having something large and heavy to eat at night isn’t too good. So we tend to have very light meals at night. We don’t snack through out the day, but we also do not consume much sugar or fatty foods. We eat a lot of fish and greens. I think people concentrate a lot of fat content in their diet and completely forget about the evil sugar. I’m not saying don’t have sugar, but cut it down somewhat.

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  • That portion control plate looks brilliant. I used to use a smaller side-serve plate, but then found with pregnancy I would spend most of the night having seconds and thirds so I went back to normal size. I do plan to use a smaller plate if/when I can find it in between moving house *sigh*

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  • I switched to a smaller plate a few months back, as I heard this helped with portion control. I was sceptical and thought it would make no difference, I would just be hungry and go back for seconds. I was wrong, I know eat off my smaller plate and eat a lot less than I used to. I have also done this with my older children and they dont realise they are eating smaller meals than before. (I did this as I realised I was feeding them too much).

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  • Cutting out Sugar and grain will have a massive effect on your weight loss, without having to worry so much about your portion size.

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  • I have heard that the med sized square plates make your portions look bigger so you think you are eating more – anyone else heard that or is it a myth???

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  • I juice fruit and veggies to make sure I get my daily amounts.

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  • Dinner (at night time) is my biggest downfall. I know I eat too much then. then go to bed a few hours later, it’s not good.

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  • Great information especially on the cheese. Ive never really understood the portion for dairy sliced. Thanks for this really helpful

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  • I really need to learn how to implement portion control. I always got in trouble growing up if i didn’t finish everything on my plate, so even if i’m full now, i always finish what is there

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  • Our best portion is the helping of green salad on every plate. we dont tend to put as much meat on our plates with cooked vegies our meals are now much healthier.

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  • We found trying to reduce portion sizes difficult in our house at first because, though beautiful, our crockery was just oversized. Since we pushed that to the back of the cupboard for special occasions and bought new, smaller bowls and plates for every day use, portion control has become much easier. Though unfortunately a portion of chocolate ice cream, no matter how small, is still a portion of chocolate ice cream and still isn’t healthy 🙁

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  • Portion control not only helps your waist line, it also helps save money because your buy less food.

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  • ever since I have changed to the paleo lifestyle I no longer feel like I need to over indulge

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  • I just had someone criticise me on the weekend because I said I don’t care if people in my family don’t finish what’s on their plate, as its fine by me if they’re not hungry and don’t want dinner. Its funny the way different families do things.

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  • Great article. The only time I’m tempted to over indulge is when someone else has done the cooking.

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  • I was always brought up to eat everything that was placed in front of me. Its been really hard to break that cycle and I did try at one stage by only eating off dinner plates. Well that didn’t work either as I was going back for seconds and thirds. Now I full a normal dinner plate with heaps of fresh leafy greens and just a little bit of the heavier stuff. This way I’m filling up on healthy and low cal stuff, feel full and still eat everything off my plate!

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  • very well said – portion control is the key. But i do feel that as kids we are told to eat everything that is seved and that mentality does not change as we grow up and as adults we do overeat….

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  • I have a real problem with cheese portions, Love my cheese, I would probably eat 3 portions in one go. Considering I don’t drink milk tho, I look to cheese for a lot of my calcium intake, so I feel a little less guilty then.

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