Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Emma Grimshaw & Kate Lally

Michael Mosley shares three foods to 'avoid' if you want to lose weight

TV weight loss guru Dr Michael Mosley has shared three foods you should "avoid or minimise" if you want to lose weight.

The health expert, who is famed for creating the 5:2 and the Fast 800 eating plans, has a new podcast on BBC Sounds where he's been revealing his biggest life hacks, including snacking on nuts and the best fruit to eat if you have a sugar craving.

Dr Mosley, who also posts regular blogs, has now listed the three food groups to avoid if you want to shed some pounds quickly, as reported by Bristol Live.

READ MORE: Dr Michael Mosley says eating this snack can help you lose weight

In what will likely come as bad news to many, the three food groups are ones plenty of people consume on a regular basis. The first one is sugar, including pastries, ice creams and other desserts.

Dr Mosley said: "Cut right down on sugar, sugary treats, drinks and desserts. That includes most breakfast cereals, which are usually full of sugar, as well as most commercial smoothies."

The second food group to consider is "starchy carbs". Dr Mosley said: "Minimise or avoid starchy carbs, meaning the white stuff: bread, pasta, potatoes and white rice."

Instead, he recommended switching "to whole grains including bulgur (cracked wheat), whole rye, wholegrain barley, wild rice and buckwheat. Brown rice is OK".

He said: "Legumes such as lentils, kidney beans and chickpeas are healthy and filling, too."

Finally, "ultra" processed food and meat should also be avoided when trying to lose weight.

Dr Mosley said: "Ultra-processed foods include chicken nuggets, burgers, chips, pizzas, hotdogs, pre-packaged meals, mass-produced ice cream, sweets, crisps, energy bars, bakery goods, biscuits, margarine and pretty well anything that says 'instant'."

He added: "Processed foods and takeaways could be to blame for the UK's obesity epidemic".

Receive newsletters with the latest news, sport and what's on updates from the Liverpool ECHO by signing up here

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.