In almost every village in Nigeria, Mushrooms can be found, especially in the southern part of the country where oil palm trees are mostly located. Mushrooms provide valuable nutrients, including fiber, niacin, pantothenic acid, riboflavin, selenium and copper. They are also low in both calories and energy density, making them a good way to fill up without going over your daily calorie limit. This allows you to lose weight and fat without feeling deprived.
You can eat quite a few mushrooms without consuming many calories. A cup of raw sliced white mushrooms has just 15 calories, a cup of grilled sliced portabella mushrooms has 35 calories and a cup of cooked sliced shiitake mushrooms has 81 calories. Cooking mushrooms increases their volume, which is why a cup of cooked mushrooms has more calories than a cup of raw mushrooms.
Foods low in energy density, like mushrooms, have relatively few calories per gram, making them very diet-friendly. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, it is the volume of food you put in your stomach that fills you up, not the number of calories. So if you fill up on foods low in energy density, you can eat fewer calories per meal and lose weight without feeling hungry between meals. Without exercise, however, about 25 percent of each pound you lose will come from muscle instead of fat.
Switch out some of the meat in each of your meals with mushrooms, and you'll probably achieve better weight- and fat-loss results. A study published in "Appetite" found that people who substituted mushrooms for red meat consumed fewer calories and lost more weight and body fat than those who followed the control diet.