Ready to lose weight, improve your energy levels, and feel great – all without gluten?
There’s often a lot of confusion about starting a gluten free diet. Most people, when they’re interested in eating gluten free, look up “gluten”, find out that’s it’s contained in wheat, and they figure all they need to do is avoid wheat in their diet. Then they hear that gluten might be in other grains as well, and that it can be a “hidden” ingredient in some foods, so they end up confused as to what they can and cannot eat.
Compounding the issue is the prevalence of gluten free food products that are starting to appear in grocery stores more and more frequently. Are these boxed flour mixes and frozen dinners healthier than a whole foods diet that happens to contain gluten?
So if you’ve heard about the gluten free diet in the news, or a friend mentioned that they’re trying it out, or you read that Miley Cyrus is now gluten free, where do you start? Do you just avoid wheat and eat everything else like normal? Are processed foods bad? Are there any other ingredients that you need to look out for besides wheat?
I think the answer to these questions is contained in the reason that you’re thinking about going gluten free. Let’s take a look at 4 different ways to eat gluten free, and see which one will work for you.
Quick note: For the purposes of this article, “diet” doesn’t necessarily refer to a weight loss diet. It simply means an overall way of eating.
SAD minus gluten
This diet doesn’t have a particular name, but it’s what most people try at first when they go gluten free. The SAD, or Standard American Diet, generally consists of 50% carbohydrate, 15% protein, and 35% fat. When people decide to go gluten free, they often unconsciously stick to these amounts, and simply replace gluten-containing carbs with new gluten free carb sources.
Is this a healthy diet? Well, the answer is “It depends.” It depends on your particular situation and your health.
If you’ve just been diagnosed with celiac disease or a similar gluten intolerance, removing gluten from your diet is, hands down, the best (and first) thing that you can do is to improve your diet and overall health. In this case, eating the “SAD minus gluten” diet is not a bad choice, especially as you’re getting your feet under you on the whole GF thing.
(That’s not to say that you should try to eat tons of carbs and nothing else when you go GF. Check out our guide to your first week of eating gluten free to get some ideas of healthy, whole food meal ideas to try out.)
Once you’ve been gluten free for a while, and seen improvements in your health, you may be inspired to continue to improve your health through other dietary changes. Removing common allergens such as milk, soy, and corn are often a reasonable next step. Some of the diets mentioned below may be good choices too.
Can I Lose Weight On A Gluten Free Diet?
If you’re trying a gluten free diet to lose weight, and you keep eating the same number of calories, and the same amounts of carbs, fat, and protein that you ate before, you’re almost certainly not going to lose weight. Removing gluten from your diet is not a magical potion for weight-loss. In fact, we can attest that you can gain quite a bit of weight if you have daily access to delicious home-made gluten free biscuits, pizza, cakes, etc.
That being said, there are weight-loss diets that are gluten free. If you’re looking to increase your energy levels, lose weight, or generally improve your health, then I recommend starting with one of the three diets below.
Slow Carb Diet
Popularized by Tim Ferris in The 4-Hour Body, the Slow Carb Diet is designed to help you lose weight. The rules of the diet are pretty simple:
- Rule #1: Avoid “white†starchy carbohydrates (or those that can be white). This means all bread, pasta, rice, potatoes, and grains. If you have to ask, don’t eat it.
- Rule #2: Eat the same few meals over and over again, especially for breakfast and lunch. You already do this; you’re just picking new default meals.
- Rule #3: Don’t drink calories. Exception: 1-2 glasses of dry red wine per night is allowed.
- Rule #4: Don’t eat fruit. (Fructose –> glycerol phosphate –> more bodyfat, more or less.) Avocado and tomatoes are excepted.
- Rule #5: Take one day off per week and go nuts. Eat anything that you want (except gluten, if you have a medical reason to avoid it). I choose and recommend Saturday.
Mary and I did the Slow Carb Diet for several months last year and had great results. We both lost significant amounts of weight, and actually enjoyed the diet. The thing that I love most about the SCD is that it is naturally gluten free six days of the week, and the only time you have to watch what you eat (in terms of gluten) is Cheat Day.
If you’ve been wondering why our Cooking School has so many “not good for your” recipes, Cheat Day is the explanation =)
Primal/Paleo Diet
Mary and I are currently on a 30-day trial of the Primal diet, and things are going great. I have a lot more energy when I eat low-carb, and I don’t crave more food a few hours after eating like I used to.
The rules of the Primal diet are somewhat more complicated than the Slow Carb Diet, as it encompasses more than just the diet. Sleep, exercise, and play are also addressed. As far as what you eat, the Primal diet focuses on meat, vegetables, moderate amounts of fruit, and nuts. All grains, dairy, legumes, and refined carbs are out. If you’re interested in reading more about this diet and why it works (which is really, really interesting), then this book
would be a good place to start.
The Warrior Diet
The Warrior Diet is similar to the Primal diet, but with one major change: You only eat once a day. You fast all day (although you can eat some fruit during the day if you’re really hungry), and then eat a huge meal at night.
Ori Hofmekler, the man behind the Warrior Diet, recommends a Paleo diet approach to the foods that you eat – i.e., meats, veggies, and fruit. He also says to focus on protein and fat for your big meal, and finish up with carbs if you’re still hungry.
I wouldn’t recommend that you go straight from the Standard American Diet to this one. Fasting for most of the day is very hard and painful if your body is used to receiving grain and sugar based meals on a regular basis. Now that we’ve been eating Slow Carb/Paleo for 20 months, we can comfortably fast long enough to do the Warrior Diet, and we do follow that plan on days where we are not terribly hungry or when it’s just not convenient to eat gluten free.
Summing It All Up
A gluten free diet, though it can improve your health if you have celiac or some other wheat/gluten allergy or intolerance, will not necessarily result in weight-loss. Some people will lose weight; others will not.
However, there are weight-loss diets that are inherently gluten free. These weight-loss diets are ideal for those who need to be gluten free and lose weight. There is also plenty of anecdotal evidence that these diets will improve other aspects of your health. To make it even better, these diets are all enjoyable and do not focus on calorie restrictions. You’ll probably experience carb cravings, but you shouldn’t actually be hungry. Sounds pretty good, doesn’t it?
What has your experience been with weight loss or gain on a gluten free diet? Are you currently eating one of the three weight-loss diets mentioned above? What do you think of them? Let us know in the comments.
I want to start out by mentioning that SCD, in my experience, refers to the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. But it’s probably that some acronyms have more than one meaning. The SCD I’m referring to was developed by Elaine Gottschall for children with Celiac Disease. She based it on the original Celiac Diet developed by Drs Sidney V and Merrill P. Haas and published in 1951. The main premise is to only eat carbohydrates that are or are broken down into a single sugar: monosaccarides. These types of carbohydrates are easier or maybe easiest to digest. If your stomach’s lining is really compromised from poor nutrition/ nutrition absorbtion, it is thought that this diet will heal the stomach and it’s absorption ability. It takes about a year or two for this to happen and not every doctor I’ve met has thought it was a good diet. But it’s not meant to be a “for life” diet. And, to me, it seemed very healthy but then I don’t have a degree in nutrition. At the time when I went on the diet, I was at a point where I couldn’t eat anything with out bringing on digestion problems (not a fun way to lose weight!) and after I started the diet, I was able to eat a lot better and stopped losing weight.
My personal experience with Celiac disease is on going in that I was diagnosed with it in 2005. My, then, doctor hoped that it would help improve my fibromyalsia/chronic fatigue symptoms which were so bad that I couldn’t hold down a full-time job. It didn’t help with that but I stayed on it because when I asked him if I definitely had Celiac disease, he said yes and that I probably was born with it. I did have fewer celiac type symptoms but this year, in my continuing search for good health, I’m seeing specialists in rheumatoid arthritis and allergies, who work together in one practice. After re-doing some celiac blood tests they said, I don’t have Celiac disease. Their feeling is that I have a problem digesting processed carbohydrates and not a wheat allergy. Have you heard anyone else with a similar experience? Of course, since I’ve been gluten-free for so long I can’t go back to it right away and my doctors want me to try lowering my processed carbohydrate intake to see if my energy improves so they haven’t suggested re-introducing wheat. I am beginning to have more energy but am not sure if it’s the low amount of processed carbs or the magnesium powder I started taking nightly. The energy increase seemed to happen after starting the powder.
So, that’s my story but I’m not sure if it’s helpful to anyone. But I’d love to hear if anyone has had a similar situation.
I was diagnosed with coeliac disease 20 months ago and have been gluten free ever since – with no lapses! It takes a long time for your body to repair the damage caused by gluten so you have to be patient. I put on about 14 lbs weight but I was far too thin so this was a good thing – apart from having to replace a lot of my trousers.
Not what I wanted to hear- gaining weight- just found out through blood work I have this great disease and will have to be glutin free – go in for biopsy in a few days-…. Sounds like cutting most carbs is a key thing… The down side.. Two growing kids and a husband…..
This is an excellent article!! Thank you.
I have been having problems with gluten, getting dizzy and exhausted. I actually had to give it up. I went gluten free a little less than 3 months ago. I have lost 30 pounds, so far. My digestion which wasn’t too good due to the gluten, now seems to be improving.
For me, this has been the one downfall to being gluten free…weight gain. I was on the thinner side, or didn’t have a lot of “meat” on my bones, prior to going gluten free ( I now know it was because my body wasn’t absorbing the calories and nutrients it needed). Well, now that I have been gf for over 5 years, my body is now absorbing all the calories and nutrients it needs, and I have put on weight (or meat!!). While I feel the best (intestinally) that I have felt my whole life, the weight that I have gained is frustrating! People will probably laugh at me, because it’s only 10 – 15 pounds, but when you have been thin for most of your life, it’s hard!! I used to be able to eat everything, now I just look at that piece of cake, and it goes right to my hips!!! UGH!!