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Slurp away a voracious appetite
Not only does it warm the soul, but a steaming bowl of soup is also one nutritionist's secret to calorie-control.

"Most Sundays in the winter, I make a pot of a non-cream vegetable soup to keep in my refrigerator for the week," says Joan Salge Blake, RD, and media spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. "At work, I'll eat a small container of the soup right before having the rest of my lunch, and then when I walk in the door starving, I have a mug of warm soup before dinner. It's a therapeutic, low-cal way to curb my appetite -- and research has shown that eating soup before a meal can slash the overall number of calories you consume."

Down a first-course of low-calorie soup and you might cut the total number of calories of that meal by as much as a whopping 20 percent, according to Pennsylvania State University research. Stick to soup varieties that weigh in at about 100 to 150 calories per serving.

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Get your grill on
If your outdoor grill is knee-deep in snow and you think you have to wait until the spring thaw to start cooking healthy again, Falguni Parikh, a registered dietitian at Loyola's Gottlieb Memorial Hospital in Melrose Park, Ill., has two words for you: indoor grill.

"When it's cold outside, my husband and I use our indoor grill to make chicken, veggie burgers, and grilled vegetables like eggplant. Instead of frying or using a lot of oil, we marinate the protein or vegetables in fresh herbs and just a small amount of olive oil; then we coat the cooking surface with nonstick spray, and grill. It's so easy and you get that delicious charred flavor without the fat of other cooking methods."

It's never a big shocker. As the first blasts of cold air swoop in, your clothes lose some wiggle room and your pants require a bit more muscle-power to close. Blame the dryer all you want, but there's just something about Old Man Winter that makes us sluggish, constantly hungry (for all the wrong things), a little pudgier -- and in need of some diet tips that work.

Over the winter, most of us will gain anywhere from 1 to 5 pounds of weight, according to a study in "The New England Journal of Medicine." Instead of losing that bulk by bikini season (we know, you have the best intentions), research has found that winter weight tends to stick around for good and the pounds just keep piling up each year. Before you know it, those yummy muffins -- the ones you love to bake on snow days -- turn into an all-season muffin top. No one needs that kind of armor. With these diet tips, you can break the cycle of winter "expansion."

Skip ahead to see the 7 winter diet tips nutritionists swear by now.

By the way, these are not just the usual diet tips. We pumped top nutritionists for the tricks they personally rely on to avoid packing on winter pounds. Get the inside scoop on how these peeps with degrees in healthy eating handle comfort-food cravings and feel full without getting too many calories. You'll want to pounce on these trade secrets. After all, you won't be able to hide beneath that puffy jacket for much longer.
BY NANCY RONES | SHARES
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