The world of nutrition can be a maze of confusion, leaving many of us frustrated and unsure of how to achieve our health and weight goals.
At the center of it all is calories, a word you've almost certainly heard, but may not fully understand. There is a lot of misinformation around calories, which doesn't help.
You've probably heard contradictions like "Calories are the only thing that matter for weight loss" vs. "Calories don't matter for weight loss as long as you are eating foods in xyz protocol." Or "All calories are the same, bro" vs. "Calories from spinach are in NO WAY the same as calories from Skittles."
As is the case with most things, the truth lies somewhere in the middle and a nuanced, unbiased approach is needed to better understand this subject.
In this introductory guide, we'll explore the world of calories from all angles, demystifying this often misunderstood topic. You'll discover why calories are more than just numbers on a food label, and how understanding them can be the key to unlocking your health potential. We'll explore the science behind energy balance, the language of nutrition, and a practical approach to measuring and managing your calorie intake.
By the end, you'll have a powerful framework for thinking about food and nutrition – one that can help you make informed decisions, achieve your weight goals, and improve your overall health.
Let’s start with the word, itself.
What is a calorie?
You may have heard the following:
1 calorie equals 4.184 joules
1 calorie in the context of food is really 1 kilocalorie (kCal)
1 calorie is is the amount of energy it takes to raise the temperature of one gram of water one degree
All of these are true and as you can see, calories are simply just a way to measure energy.
The word “calorie” is somewhat arbitrary.
We could just as easily use “joules” or some other unit of energy as the golden standard for food.
But for whatever reason “calories” won out as the standardized unit of measure for food quantity that most people know.
The societal implications of this are significant, as you'll soon learn.
But first, let's introduce an important topic: energy balance.
What is energy balance?
Energy balance is the relationship between your calorie intake and calorie expenditure.
When your body is in a calorie surplus (when you consume more energy than you expend), it stores the excess energy as body fat. This is how people gain weight.
The opposite is true for weight loss. When your body is in a calorie deficit (when you consume less energy than you expend), it pulls stored energy from body fat to make up the difference. This is how people lose weight.
The above two mechanisms have been scientifically proven time and again.
There will always be deniers who claim "calories don't matter for weight loss." This is simply false.
While other factors like food quality, fitness level, sleep, and light environment play a role in the body's metabolism and therefore energy balance, the amount of energy influenced by these other factors pales in comparison to your overall calorie intake from food and drink.
In other words, your calorie intake is by far the most important determining factor in whether you gain or lose weight.
Calories are a language
When you have a common basis of understanding, people can communicate on a subject.
“Calories” is now a word that commonly occurs in everyday conversations around food and dieting.
Go to any fast food or casual restaurant and you’ll find calories listed next to the menu item (this wasn’t the case 15 years ago)
More and more people understand how calories are broken down into macronutrients (protein, carbs, and fats) and are beginning to develop opinions on what a “healthy” or “unhealthy” amount of each is (more on this later)
Give a bodybuilder the breakdown of macros in a food and they will do mental math to determine total calories faster than a math nerd doing an SAT problem
At the end of the day, a “calorie" is more than just a metric. It's a language.
It's a gateway to nutritional education: something extremely valuable that isn’t taught in schools.
This word is single-handedly raising people’s awareness of food quantity. Even people who know very little about nutrition know that 10 calories is a small amount of food and 10,000 calories is a lot of food.
And this is a good thing because it’s helping them better manage their food intake, weight, and overall health.
With that, let's dive into the nitty gritty.
Macronutrient differences in calories
Whether you get a calorie from a fruit, vegetable or ice cream, you’re still ingesting the same amount of energy, so in that sense, the calories are the same.
However, there are important differences in the makeup of those calories.
The calories in food come from carbohydrates, protein, or fat, which are the three main types of macronutrients.
Protein contains 4 calories per gram
Carbohydrates (carbs) contain 4 calories per gram
Fat contains 9 calories per gram (more than twice as calorie dense than carbs and protein)
Although each calorie provides the same amount of energy, the body uses energy from different macronutrient sources in different ways.
Here is a very simplistic view of how the energy from each macronutrient is utilized:
Protein calories help to build and repair muscle
Carbohydrate calories provide energy for strenuous activity
Fat calories provide energy for mild activity and help you absorb vitamins and minerals
There’s much more to all three, but for the sake of this post, I’ll keep it high-level.
Micronutrient differences in calories
Foods also contain various micronutrients, which are more commonly known as vitamins and minerals.
Some examples are Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Magnesium, Potassium, and Zinc.
Micronutrients do not contain enough energy to be “counted” in terms of calories, but they still play an important role in your health.
Micronutrients enable your body to perform daily functions. Some are critical for survival.
A lack of micronutrients in your diet may lead to deficiencies which can result in health problems over time.
Certain foods, such as fruits and vegetables, contain more micronutrients (pound for pound) than others, such as chips and candy.
You've probably heard the former foods referred to as “healthy” and the latter referred to as “unhealthy” for this reason.
A better way to label foods
I don’t believe “healthy” and “unhealthy” are the best ways to label food because there is an inherent positive or negative connotation in these words which contributes to the bias I warned about.
Everyone’s situation is unique, so whether a food is “healthy” or “unhealthy” is context-dependent.
Is a mango healthy? For many people, yes. If you’re allergic to it, no.
Is a donut healthy? If you’re 500 pounds, probably not. If you’re a starving child, likely at least in the near-term.
I prefer to label foods as “more nutritious” or “less nutritious” based on their micronutrient density because this is a more objective way of looking at the contents of a food.
Now, let's bring the discussion back to calories and I'll share how I view calories from a practical perspective.
My practical approach to caloric consumption
My practical approach to caloric consumption consists of 3 main objectives:
Energy balance: I try to consume an appropriate amount of calories needed to achieve whatever my weight goal is at the time (gain, lose, or maintain)
Macronutrient balance: I try to target a rough breakdown of macronutrients within my calorie consumption to achieve my health and body composition goals
Micronutrient balance: I try to make sure most of my calories come from more nutritious foods so I’m getting enough vitamins and minerals to support my energy levels and long-term health
Within each of these objectives, there are numerous details I will save for another time.
But one thing cannot be ignored and that is measurement because what gets measured gets managed.
Measurement and tracking
I’ve been tracking my food intake in one form or another for over a decade so I’m well-versed in measurement.
When I first started learning about this stuff, I was a couple years removed from college and about 25 pounds overweight due to excessive eating, drinking, and inactivity. I wasn't familiar with calorie counting at the time, but I decided I needed to take action and start measuring something. So I began rating every meal I ate on a scale of 1-5 with 1 being the smallest and 5 being the largest and kept a daily tally.
It was a pretty crude system, but it worked (because awareness is half the battle). I lost about 20 pounds over the course of a few months.
After that, I was hooked on learning more about nutrition and the world of calorie counting. It was a natural extension of my affinity towards numbers and data.
Before you get started, you must understand that in the real world, you’ll never be 100% accurate in your measurement of calories. The best you can do is estimate them with a “good enough to see results” degree of accuracy, which is not difficult.
There are various smartphone apps that help you log your food and estimate the calories, macros, and to some extent micros you are consuming through these foods.
For many years, I used MyFitnessPal because it had the most comprehensive food database. Currently, I’m using Cronometer because it’s the best for tracking micronutrients, which is one of my 3 main objectives.
You don't have to track calories, macros, and micros to manage your weight and health, but your body counts these things whether you do or not.
Conclusion
If you’ve read this far, congratulations.
You now have a better understanding of calories than 95% of the population and a framework to start thinking about it in a way that can improve your life.
As you can see, this topic is pretty logical and straightforward so there's no need to get dogmatic about it.
Eat an appropriate amount and variety of nutrient-dense calories for your energy, body composition, and health requirements and you'll look and feel great.
Reply or leave a comment if you have any questions or if there’s anything you want me to go into more detail about.
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