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SOUTH BEACH DIET ATTRACTING VEGETARIANS

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This was on the news yesterday here in San Diego; I recall some

members asking about weight loss. Take it for what it's worth.

 

HEALTH: SOUTH BEACH DIET ATTRACTING VEGETARIANS

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(06-16-2004) - The South Beach Diet is known for producing svelte

bikini-clad bodies on its namesake sands, but now the diet's promise

to melt away belly fat is drawing an unlikely group into the low-carb

craze: vegetarians.

 

For years low-carb and vegetarian diets have been on opposite ends of

the eating spectrum - when an Atkins dieter orders a bunless burger, a

vegetarian orders a burgerless bun.

 

But Dr. Arthur Agatston, a Miami Beach cardiologist who created the

South Beach Diet, said he developed a vegetarian version of his plan

long before it became a best-selling book and diet to the stars.

 

Now about 4,000 vegetarians use his diet's Web site, which offers

meatless meal plans and recipes. Vegetarian Times magazine featured

the diet in its January edition. And vegetarians inundate Agatston

with calls when he appears on radio and talk shows.

 

" I have been surprised that so many vegetarians have called, " he said.

 

He isn't the only one.

 

" I get, 'What do you mean? Isn't that low carb? How do you do low carb

and be a vegetarian?' " said Deborah Pavek, a 42-year-old vegetarian in

Salt Lake City who lost 13 pounds after nearly two months on the diet.

 

David Patlak, a 6-foot-5 retired Coast Guard officer who has kept off

50 pounds on Agatston's plan, said: " People are shocked that I'm this

tall and I'm a vegetarian. Then they're even more shocked when I say

I'm on the South Beach Diet. "

 

Part of the allure may be that South Beach allows more carbs -

followers prefer to call it a modified-carb plan instead low carb -

than some other diets.

 

" I haven't done Atkins because I don't eat meat and there's no way I

could eat all that tofu, " said Jann Marks, 45, of the Chicago suburb

of Darien. She's lost 15 pounds on the South Beach Diet.

 

So what does a South Beach vegetarian eat?

 

Lots of vegetables, beans, legumes and soy products. Fruit and whole

grain foods - like whole wheat pasta and old-fashioned oatmeal - are

allowed in moderation in the second and third phases of the diet.

 

If the vegetarian eats eggs and dairy products, those are allowed too

- as long as dairy is low-fat.

 

Here's how it works: The first phase is the most restrictive, cutting

out all fruit, bread, pasta, rice, potatoes and baked goods. It lasts

for two weeks and promises eight to 13 pounds of weight loss.

 

Vegetarians might not see such dramatic weight loss in the first

phase, said South Beach dietitian Marie Almon, because they are eating

more carbohydrates than meat eaters.

 

In the second phase, dieters lose one to two pounds a week and slowly

reintroduce fruit and high fiber, complex carbohydrates to their diet.

 

Once dieters reach their ideal weight, they move to phase three. At

this point, they should naturally make healthy food choices, and

eating a few bites of dessert is OK.

 

Dawn Jackson, a dietitian and spokeswoman for the American Dietetic

Association, said the South Beach Diet is generally healthy - even for

vegetarians - because it helps people make better food choices.

 

But she offers two suggestions: Don't follow the first phase, which

she says is too restrictive, and, don't read the book. She said the

diet causes weight loss because it is a low-calorie plan, not because

of sugar intake, as the book says.

 

" Most of the time, for a vegetarian, the best bet is to take their

current diet and just make modifications to it, " Jackson said.

 

Vegetarians might be turning toward the popular diet because, like

other Americans, many are getting fatter.

 

" It is more in the era of processed carbs that people say they're a

vegetarian and they're still overweight, " Agatston said. " People

thought they could have all the rice they wanted. "

 

Rice isn't the only problem.

 

" Ice cream is vegetarian, " said Lynne Forti, 41, of Middleboro, Mass.,

who dropped 10 pounds in two months on the South Beach Diet. " There's

a lot of things that are vegetarian that aren't necessarily good for you. "

 

For the 48-year-old Patlak, who lives a mostly vegetarian lifestyle

but occasionally eats South Beach's famous stone crabs, a family

history of obesity and a sugar-filled diet contributed to his weight

ballooning to 300 pounds.

 

" We were just eating sugar, " Patlak said of him and his wife,

Maryanne. " Whether it was in root vegetables, whether it was in vegan

chocolate, or it was in vegan desserts. "

 

Now he says he's replaced the root vegetables with green leafy

vegetables, and the vegan deserts with a homemade yogurt-based pudding.

 

" I really lost the weight and kept losing it, " Patlak said.

 

He said the diet gave him the confidence and motivation to make other

changes in his life, and now he's running for Congress in South

Florida as a Democrat seeking to challenge incumbent Ileana

Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican.

 

" I don't know if I'd be running for Congress if it weren't for this

diet, " he said.

 

Pavek said she gained 45 pounds in three years after she moving from

New York to Salt Lake City, where she found a candy jar on every desk

at her new office.

 

The South Beach Diet helped her replace pasta and crusty french bread

in favor of big salads, veggie burgers wrapped in low-carb tortillas

and snacks of peanut butter with apples or celery.

 

" I walked into work one Friday and I was in a pair of jeans I had not

been able to fit into for the last three years, " said Pavek, a quality

assurance analyst at a technology company.

 

Marks said the diet helped her pay attention to what she was eating

and she's easily adapting to whole-wheat bread and bunless veggie burgers.

 

" It's very easy, it's very possible, " Marks said, " and I'm not eating

a ton of tofu. "

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Hi Guys,

 

Just my 2 cents. I have done Veg South Beach diet, list 11 lbs in

about 2 months, so it does work. My main problem was I got way too

into processed flours and sugar, and this plan kind of detoxes you

back into a whole foods lifestyle...

 

There is a SBD cookbook with several good recipes in it. SBD isn't

really so much LOW carb as it is pro-GOOD carbs.

 

, " Jim " <jdsears669>

wrote:

> This was on the news yesterday here in San Diego; I recall some

> members asking about weight loss. Take it for what it's worth.

>

> HEALTH: SOUTH BEACH DIET ATTRACTING VEGETARIANS

> Printer-friendly version

>

> (06-16-2004) - The South Beach Diet is known for producing svelte

> bikini-clad bodies on its namesake sands, but now the diet's promise

> to melt away belly fat is drawing an unlikely group into the low-

carb

> craze: vegetarians.

>

> For years low-carb and vegetarian diets have been on opposite ends

of

> the eating spectrum - when an Atkins dieter orders a bunless

burger, a

> vegetarian orders a burgerless bun.

>

> But Dr. Arthur Agatston, a Miami Beach cardiologist who created the

> South Beach Diet, said he developed a vegetarian version of his plan

> long before it became a best-selling book and diet to the stars.

>

> Now about 4,000 vegetarians use his diet's Web site, which offers

> meatless meal plans and recipes. Vegetarian Times magazine featured

> the diet in its January edition. And vegetarians inundate Agatston

> with calls when he appears on radio and talk shows.

>

> " I have been surprised that so many vegetarians have called, " he

said.

>

> He isn't the only one.

>

> " I get, 'What do you mean? Isn't that low carb? How do you do low

carb

> and be a vegetarian?' " said Deborah Pavek, a 42-year-old vegetarian

in

> Salt Lake City who lost 13 pounds after nearly two months on the

diet.

>

> David Patlak, a 6-foot-5 retired Coast Guard officer who has kept

off

> 50 pounds on Agatston's plan, said: " People are shocked that I'm

this

> tall and I'm a vegetarian. Then they're even more shocked when I say

> I'm on the South Beach Diet. "

>

> Part of the allure may be that South Beach allows more carbs -

> followers prefer to call it a modified-carb plan instead low carb -

> than some other diets.

>

> " I haven't done Atkins because I don't eat meat and there's no way I

> could eat all that tofu, " said Jann Marks, 45, of the Chicago suburb

> of Darien. She's lost 15 pounds on the South Beach Diet.

>

> So what does a South Beach vegetarian eat?

>

> Lots of vegetables, beans, legumes and soy products. Fruit and whole

> grain foods - like whole wheat pasta and old-fashioned oatmeal - are

> allowed in moderation in the second and third phases of the diet.

>

> If the vegetarian eats eggs and dairy products, those are allowed

too

> - as long as dairy is low-fat.

>

> Here's how it works: The first phase is the most restrictive,

cutting

> out all fruit, bread, pasta, rice, potatoes and baked goods. It

lasts

> for two weeks and promises eight to 13 pounds of weight loss.

>

> Vegetarians might not see such dramatic weight loss in the first

> phase, said South Beach dietitian Marie Almon, because they are

eating

> more carbohydrates than meat eaters.

>

> In the second phase, dieters lose one to two pounds a week and

slowly

> reintroduce fruit and high fiber, complex carbohydrates to their

diet.

>

> Once dieters reach their ideal weight, they move to phase three. At

> this point, they should naturally make healthy food choices, and

> eating a few bites of dessert is OK.

>

> Dawn Jackson, a dietitian and spokeswoman for the American Dietetic

> Association, said the South Beach Diet is generally healthy - even

for

> vegetarians - because it helps people make better food choices.

>

> But she offers two suggestions: Don't follow the first phase, which

> she says is too restrictive, and, don't read the book. She said the

> diet causes weight loss because it is a low-calorie plan, not

because

> of sugar intake, as the book says.

>

> " Most of the time, for a vegetarian, the best bet is to take their

> current diet and just make modifications to it, " Jackson said.

>

> Vegetarians might be turning toward the popular diet because, like

> other Americans, many are getting fatter.

>

> " It is more in the era of processed carbs that people say they're a

> vegetarian and they're still overweight, " Agatston said. " People

> thought they could have all the rice they wanted. "

>

> Rice isn't the only problem.

>

> " Ice cream is vegetarian, " said Lynne Forti, 41, of Middleboro,

Mass.,

> who dropped 10 pounds in two months on the South Beach

Diet. " There's

> a lot of things that are vegetarian that aren't necessarily good

for you. "

>

> For the 48-year-old Patlak, who lives a mostly vegetarian lifestyle

> but occasionally eats South Beach's famous stone crabs, a family

> history of obesity and a sugar-filled diet contributed to his weight

> ballooning to 300 pounds.

>

> " We were just eating sugar, " Patlak said of him and his wife,

> Maryanne. " Whether it was in root vegetables, whether it was in

vegan

> chocolate, or it was in vegan desserts. "

>

> Now he says he's replaced the root vegetables with green leafy

> vegetables, and the vegan deserts with a homemade yogurt-based

pudding.

>

> " I really lost the weight and kept losing it, " Patlak said.

>

> He said the diet gave him the confidence and motivation to make

other

> changes in his life, and now he's running for Congress in South

> Florida as a Democrat seeking to challenge incumbent Ileana

> Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican.

>

> " I don't know if I'd be running for Congress if it weren't for this

> diet, " he said.

>

> Pavek said she gained 45 pounds in three years after she moving from

> New York to Salt Lake City, where she found a candy jar on every

desk

> at her new office.

>

> The South Beach Diet helped her replace pasta and crusty french

bread

> in favor of big salads, veggie burgers wrapped in low-carb tortillas

> and snacks of peanut butter with apples or celery.

>

> " I walked into work one Friday and I was in a pair of jeans I had

not

> been able to fit into for the last three years, " said Pavek, a

quality

> assurance analyst at a technology company.

>

> Marks said the diet helped her pay attention to what she was eating

> and she's easily adapting to whole-wheat bread and bunless veggie

burgers.

>

> " It's very easy, it's very possible, " Marks said, " and I'm not

eating

> a ton of tofu. "

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