A combination of factors, including hormonal changes and stress, can contribute to greater difficulty losing weight as we age. The best plan of attack when it comes to your diet is to avoid sugars, and especially added sugars, and eat more whole foods with protein, fiber, and a balance of nutrients.
In general, fruits fit into this category. But there’s one exception to that rule.
Avoid Juices
If there’s one fruit-based food nutritionists aren’t going to tell you to eat for weight loss it’s fruit juice.
Put simply: fruit juice does not have the same benefits as snacking on a simple piece of fruit.
"There's some pretty good evidence that when we drink liquid calories, like in the sugary beverages, we don't eat less food as a result," nutrition professor Jean Welsh from Emory University told Business Insider.
As it turns out, eating fruit and drinking fruit juice can have different effects on your body.
"Fruit we have pretty consistently seen is generally associated with healthy outcomes," Welsh said, adding that this could be related to the way fruit sugars are absorbed that make them less harmful.
When you make a juice at home or buy one at the store, it is the product of several fruits blended together at once — but you probably wouldn’t consume that much whole fruit at one time, which means you wouldn’t consume that much sugar at once.
In addition to the fact that juice is super high in sugar, fruit juices have been associated with a higher risk of diabetes, heart disease, and obesity. And these links have not been found in whole fruits.
If you are trying to stay healthy and lose weight, the bottom line is: it’s better to eat whole fruits and skip sweet juices.