Craving certain foods has become almost an expected part of women’s food journey. When it’s not sugar calling your name, it’s salt. Perhaps you’re a breadaholic (*raises hand*) or, the big one, a chocoholic?
But what’s really behind our desire to go all in on specific foods? Some experts claim that our cravings reveal nutritional gaps that we’re filling in an unhealthy way. Others feel that cravings are tied more to memories of comfort food, social conditioning, and cultural practices. And there are those who believe that deep-seated emotional reasons fuel our desire to self-medicate with particular foods.
For some of us, the lure of our cravings almost borders on addiction, doesn’t it? The downside, of course, is the effect of our cravings/addiction on our health. Take sugar, for example. Like heroin and cocaine, it works the addiction and reward pathways in our brains, and just like those illegal drugs, it can lead to a plethora of illnesses, including coronary heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, and metabolic syndrome.
What to do? Let’s see where the problems lie and consider some ways to overcome them.
Craving sugar
Your desire for a sugar fix may indicate that you’re lacking particular micronutrients, trace minerals, and amino acids that you may not have heard much about.
- Chromium helps control blood sugar levels. Dietary sources of chromium include broccoli, cheese, and chicken, but you can also take chromium supplements to get more of that trace mineral.
- Phosphorus is the most abundant mineral in the body, but eating a lot of junk food can lead to a deficiency. Animal protein, dairy, nuts, grains, and veggies can reverse a phosphorus deficit.
- Sulfur is a mineral found in meat and eggs, cranberries, horseradish, cabbage, and cauliflower .
- Tryptophan is an essential amino acid found in animal protein, eggs, and cheese. It’s a precursor to serotonin, so increasing your intake of tryptophan can help rid you of sugar cravings.
- L-Glutamine, an amino acid found in animal protein, beets, spinach, and carrots, is used by the brain for fuel. It relieves sugar cravings and is great to stabilize blood sugar.
Craving chocolate
Did you know that chocolate is the #1 craved food in America? It’s a sensual feast, drawing us in with its color, texture, taste, and smell. It affects our brain, firing up our neurotransmitters and dopamine and making us feel happy as heck.
Conventional chocolate is a huge source of sugar, so it’s tied to a lack of many of the nutrients I just listed under sugar cravings. However, when you start acting like Augustus Gloop in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, it may well be that you lack magnesium. This mega mineral is deficient in almost everyone’s body. The soil where most of our crops are grown is often magnesium poor, and that deficiency is passed on to us. You can build up your magnesium stores by increasing your intake of nuts and seeds, legumes, fruits, fish, and leafy greens.
Craving salt
All the popcorn, pretzels, and chips people, raise your hands! Yep, you’re on a salt craving trip. As is the case with chocolate, pleasure-inducing chemicals in the brain get us in a happy zone and make us want to eat even more salt, but with the epidemic of high blood pressure worldwide, we have to be vigilant regarding sodium.
We need salt for innumerable body processes, and the taste is definitely addictive. We should be taking in a maximum of 2300 milligrams of sodium daily, but the truth is that we ingest more than three times that amount–8500 milligrams–daily. We need to pump those brakes on salt consumption, especially from processed and pre-packaged food.
Again, the answer is found in building up several minerals, including potassium, (salmon, roasted turkey, lean beef, sweet potato); chloride, (fatty fish and goat milk); and silicon, (whole-grain bread, brown rice, and cashews).
Craving carbs
Some of us carboholics can’t get enough starchy foods. Bread, pasta, and potatoes are on high rotation in our diets.
Much of the problem is a result of an imbalanced blood sugar level. When your blood sugar level drops, you tend to want food that will elevate it quickly, and those starchy carbs definitely do the trick. Your mood does a 180-degree turn for the better in about 20 minutes, and you feel satiated… for now. Your cells, however, may not be getting enough glucose to convert into energy, so the body continues to cry out for more carbs.
How to end this vicious cycle and deprive refined carbs of their power? Ramp up on high-protein foods that provide nitrogen, such as fresh fruits and veggies, meats, nuts, beans, and chia seeds.
Some final cravings fixes
- Stick to the PFF (protein, fat, fiber) routine. Protein balances out blood sugar levels and diminishes cravings; healthy fat makes you feel full so that you’re less likely to crave nutrient-starved food; and fiber and helps reduce candida, which tends to bolster cravings.
- Take a high-quality daily multivitamin to cover nutrient deficiencies.
- Get enough rest, sleep, and relaxation. The more rested you are, the less prone you are to succumb to cravings.
- Exercise is a great endorphin adjuster and will take your mind off of your craving.
- Smell a non-food item. Use scents like jasmine or peppermint to distract your senses.
- Indulge in a small amount of your temptation, but only if you know you can be satisfied with a wee bit of it.
- Drink more water. Your craving might be thirst in disguise!
What is you main craving? How do you keep it in check?
Novelette Morton says
Good article, Alison!
Comfort food is sometimes irresistible. However, I believe that if one is normally disciplined when it comes to eating healthy, a little indulgence won’t kill:)
Culture has a lot to do with what we eat – especially sugars and salt. When you avoid those things though you are thought to be a freak but if you are confident, you would ignore the sarcastic remarks that are sometimes made.
Alison Hector says
LOL re: sarcastic remarks. Yep, trying to eat responsibly does create a certain amount of backlash. You’re right; confidence and discipline are the key here, and knowing what these foods can really do to your body if you persist in consuming them!
Tamara says
Hmmm.. what a good question. I didn’t even have pregnancy cravings. I once read that you crave salt when you’re dehydrated, though. I always thought that was a little backwards but now it makes sense to me.
I definitely love chocolate and appreciate it, but it’s more of an emotional craving. I crave potatoes, though!!
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Alison Hector says
There definitely is a connection between salt and water. Chocolate for me, too, is an emotional craving. Potatoes, not so much! LOL
Dana says
I’m a chocoholic for sure! Pretty sure it’s emotional, although I don’t deny the sugar addiction. But I could leave a bowl of Swedish fish on the counter for months and never touch it, even if it was the only sugar available.
You mention a high quality multi-vitamin – do you have one you use and recommend?
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Alison Hector says
Yes, Dana, I currently am using Essential Nutrients from Women’s Health Network as my multi. In the past, I’ve also used Garden of Life’s Vitamin Code 50 and Wiser Women multivitamin. Both are quite good and give you a good variety of vitamins, mega minerals, micronutrients, and trace minerals.
Ceil says
Hi Alison! I do crave chocolate and sugar, so I guess I’m the ‘double-threat’. I also take Magnesium for a low blood level, so I guess this makes sense.
I know I make sugar a go-to whenever I feel bored or emotional. I have become more aware of the behavior lately, so I hope to follow that with some good sense in the eating department. It’s not easy to stop bad habits, but I know I can do it if I put my mind to it.
Thanks for this reinforcing information!
Ceil
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Alison Hector says
Hi Ceil! Sounds like you have a good plan in place for your sugar and chocolate cravings and that you’re aware of your triggers. Those are great steps toward victory over cravings. Keep it up!
Alison Hector recently posted…How to keep your food cravings in check
Kenya G. Johnson says
I’d say I probably crave salt more than sure and it effects me terrible. Sometimes I can feel myself swelling after eating almost anything that contains salt. Yet I love pretzels. I don’t keep popcorn around because I’d eat it every day. I can control the pretzels better. I’ve actually taken Chromium before to stop the sugar cravings. I never knew if it was really working or I was consciously really trying.
Alison Hector says
Try the chromium again, Kenya. With some minerals you have to keep at it for a few months before you see tangible results. How’s your water intake? Water is intricately tied to salt too.
Alison Hector recently posted…How to keep your food cravings in check