I always remember a Chinese friend of mine talking about people's perception of her weight both here in Australia and back in her homeland of China. Here, people are always saying, "You are too skinny! Put on some weight!" In China, she is normal.
Sadly though, the Western diet of high sugar and fatty foods, along with massive amounts of food lacking in nutrition, is infiltrating China. And as this happens, the obesity levels are also rising. However to the rest of us, we picture our local Chinese restaurant and wonder how they managed to stay thin on all of that food!

In a quest to show the Western world why the Chinese were so slim, Chinese food expert Lorraine Clissold has written a book called Why the Chinese Don't Count Calories. Here are some of the highlights:
1. Stop counting calories
The Chinese don't have a word for "calories". They view food as nourishment, not potential weight gain, and I love that. When you take this attitude, it means your meals are filled with nutritious foods instead of thinking a Diet Coke and a chocolate bar could be lunch.
2. Think of vegetables as dishes
I was away recently and was finding it hard to get vegetables with my meals. So I headed to a Chinese restaurant and got a plate full of broccoli stir-fried with garlic - it was heaven!
You may also notice that at a Chinese restaurant, the vegetables aren't tucked away as side orders. They are very much a part of the main event, and along with your meat dishes, you will always order vegetable dishes.
3. Eat until you are full
It should be quite simple. You sit down, eat until you are full (which used to mean until you were satisfied) then you do the same at your next meal. Unfortunately, in the Western world, we have confused ourselves. Firstly, we think full is the point where we are completely stuffed. Then, on top of that, we are too busy worrying about feeling guilty or eating light, which means we tend to skip our proper meals in favour of snacking on other foods.
4. Take liquid food
The Chinese tend to add a liquid course like soup into their meals, instead of drinking throughout their meals.
5. Bring yin and yang into your kitchen
There is a wonderful balance of foods eaten in Chinese, especially since more variety is eaten as all the meals are shared. Yin foods cool the body and tend to be wet and moist, while the yang foods heat it up and are usually dry and crisp ingredients. Each meal will have the perfect combination of these foods.
6. Use food to keep fit
Food was always used to benefit our health, but once again, this idea is being replaced by pills and potions from the drug companies. Garlic as an antibiotic, honey and lemon for your throat, beetroot for healthy blood, psyllium for constipation...nature still provides us with incredibly effective medications. The Chinese are very aware of this, and use their food to ensure the body is balanced and healthy.
7. Drink green tea
Green tea is a wonderful antioxidant, and also eliminates toxins from the body. The Chinese drink it using real tea leaves in a pot, and when they want more, they simply fill up the pot with more hot water without changing the leaves. Much more cost effective, and it also ensures you aren't overdosing on the caffeine.
8. Take restorative exercise
Exercise is very much a part of life in China, but they aren't slugging it out in the gym. Tai Chi, gentle walking and just a general expectation that one should be able to squat and move as you get older means the Chinese stay fit without the need for aerobics.
Comments
21 August 2008 - 11:07am — pepispouch
I love Chinese food but unfortunately the chinese food we get here is NOTHING like authentic Chinese that you find in China! They add too many sauces here to make it more palatable to suit Western tastes. In China however, they have plates of vegies etc just as described in this article. If I'm out for lunch at a Chinese restaurant or takeaway in a food court somewhere, I love getting their bowls of noodle soups which are packed with vegies, various meats or seafood and some noodles.
As for the squatting, I remember reading somewhere that the human body is designed to squat rather than sit but as we grow, we become more 'lazy' and tend to sit more, we lose the flexibility to squat. You only have to look at toddlers to see how much they squat to realise that it's something we lose as we get older.
20 August 2008 - 8:12am — Katten
Can anyone guess what I feel like eating now??
It is so simple yet such a great idea.
Over the last year I have gradually been using more vegies to bulk things out and only a small amount of chicken/meat ect, so this article makes perfect sense to me.
We have asian neighbours who have market gardens at the far back corner of our property and when I read that last bit about exercise they came to mind as I often see the older women squatting and sometimes while still squatting they walk ( like a duck) alone a row of vegetables and weed or pick the fruit. I have often marvelled at the agility of these frail looking women and to be honest have to admit that I wished I could do that too.
i really need to get into that gentle art of exercise, who knows one day I too might be able to sqaut and walk at the same time
20 August 2008 - 1:47am — Kellie
That must be why I love chinese so much
At home however we usually have 3/4 plate of vegies and the other 1/4 is meat. Unless of course it was spag bol, then its more meat than pasta and the pasta usually got mixed in the meat sauce anyway.
19 August 2008 - 11:13am — sus-123
In the western diet, we have a few veges to compliment the meat - but in the asian diet, it's a few bits of meat to cmpliment the veges. The asian diet has some very healthy contributes.
Sus
19 August 2008 - 4:21am — Nick
i love eating chinese food but view it as unhealthy- so much sauce goes into it. but i do notice that there are so many vegies in the meals, i always get a vegie dish when i get chinese.
19 August 2008 - 4:05am — maree
Great artical .Green tea is so good for you.
19 August 2008 - 3:56am — Gail
Great article. It all makes perfect sense.