Health & Wellness
5 Realistic Guide to Weight Loss on Ghanaian Foods
Let me tell you about my friend Akua. She loves banku. Loves it. But last year, a “fitness influencer” on Instagram told her banku was the enemy.
So she quit. She started eating lettuce and drinking green smoothies. Two weeks later, she was miserable, broke from buying imported “diet foods,” and back at the chop bar ordering extra shito.
Here is the truth they don’t tell you: You can lose weight without saying goodbye to fufu, kenkey, or your mother’s groundnut soup. The problem is rarely the food itself. It is how we eat it, when we eat it, and what we add to it.
Here are five practical ways to shed the kilos while keeping your plate proudly Ghanaian.
1. Shrink the Banku, Not the Soup
The main issue with fufu, banku, and kenkey is not that they are evil. It is the portion size. Two large balls of banku can pack over 500 calories before you even touch the fish. The fix is simple: eat one ball instead of two. Keep the soup, keep the meat, but cut the swallow in half. Your stomach will adjust in two weeks, and you will still enjoy the meal. You just won’t need to unbutton your trousers afterward.
2. Give Your Fish the Grilling Treatment
Fried fish is delicious. Nobody is denying that. But when you dip that tilapia in hot oil, you are adding calories that do nothing for you except sit on your waistline. Grilled fish gives you all the protein, all the taste, and none of the extra oil. Next time you order kenkey, ask for grilled fish instead of fried. Your body will notice the difference even if your taste buds barely do.
3. Meet Your New Best Friend: Kofi Brokeman
Roasted plantain with groundnuts—affectionately called “Kofi Brokeman”—might be the smartest weight loss food on the planet. It is high in fiber, which helps you feel full. It gives you sustained energy without the crash. And because it is roasted, not fried, you skip all that oil. A hundred grams gives you about eight percent of your daily fiber needs. Eat it in the afternoon when the 3 p.m. slump hits. It beats anything from the provision shop.
Read Also: Three Amazing Things That Happen When You Introduce Vegetables to Your Diet
4. Watch the Liquid Calories
Sobolo is healthy. We know this. But the Sobolo they sell in sachets on the street? That thing is sugar with a little hibiscus flavor. Same with packaged fruit juices and even some of our beloved malt drinks. These liquids add sugar directly to your system without making you feel full. You drank 300 calories, and you are hungry again in an hour. Drink water, drink your Sobolo homemade with little or no sugar, and watch the belly respond.
5. Eat Your Beans and Keep Quiet
Gobɛ—gari and beans—is actually a weight loss powerhouse. The beans are loaded with protein and soluble fiber. That fiber forms a gel in your stomach, slowing everything down. You feel full for hours. One large study found that people who ate beans regularly had a 23 percent lower risk of increased belly fat. The key is to go easy on the oil and the sugar. Eat it for what it is: real food that sticks with you.
Conclusion
Nobody is asking you to abandon your culture. The healthiest people in the world eat their traditional foods. They just eat them in the right amounts, prepared the right way. Start with one of these changes this week. Not all five. Just one. Let your body adjust. And watch what happens.
Health & Wellness
The Health Risks Men Ignore Until It’s Too Late
Many men will spend hours researching the right phone, car, or investment opportunity. Yet when it comes to their own health, a surprising number adopt a wait-and-see approach.
The problem is that the body rarely sends an invitation before something goes wrong.
Across the world, men continue to face shorter life expectancies than women, and one reason often sits in plain sight: many are less likely to seek routine medical care.
The image of the tough, self-reliant man who pushes through discomfort remains deeply embedded in many cultures, including across Africa. Unfortunately, that same mindset can turn manageable health concerns into serious conditions.
The Silent Cost of Avoiding Check-Ups
High blood pressure has earned the nickname “the silent killer” because it can develop without obvious symptoms. The same can be said for elevated cholesterol, blood sugar problems, and several forms of cancer. By the time warning signs appear, valuable treatment time may already have been lost.
In Ghana, as in many countries, conversations about health often happen after illness strikes. Preventive care receives far less attention. Yet a simple annual check-up can provide critical information about blood pressure, weight, blood sugar levels, and overall organ function.
These appointments are not just for older adults. Younger men increasingly face lifestyle-related risks linked to sedentary work, poor sleep, stress, and processed diets.
A New Definition of Strength
The modern health movement is quietly redefining what strength looks like. It is not only measured by how much weight a person can lift in the gym. It is also reflected in the willingness to schedule a screening, discuss mental health concerns, or seek medical advice before a problem becomes urgent.
Health professionals are also encouraging men to treat mental wellness with the same seriousness as physical fitness. Stress, anxiety, and depression can affect energy levels, relationships, concentration, and even heart health.
The Small Habit That Changes Everything
Good health rarely comes from one dramatic decision. It grows from small actions repeated consistently: a balanced meal, a daily walk, seven hours of sleep, and a routine doctor’s visit.
The strongest health strategy is often the simplest one—don’t wait until something hurts before paying attention to your body. Prevention may not feel urgent today, but it can shape the quality of life enjoyed for decades to come.
Health & Wellness
The Real Reason You’re Always Hungry Might Surprise You
Most people assume hunger is simple: your body needs food, so you eat. But what if that afternoon craving for biscuits, that extra bowl of rice at dinner, or the late-night raid on the fridge has less to do with hunger and more to do with what happened hours earlier?
Many of the habits that quietly shape our eating patterns happen long before we sit down at the table.
The Hidden Triggers Behind Extra Calories
Imagine a typical weekday. You stay up late finishing work, wake up tired, skip breakfast or grab something quick, and spend most of the day rushing between tasks. By mid-afternoon, your body begins demanding energy.
This is where sleep enters the story. A poorly rested body often seeks quick rewards, making sugary, salty, and high-calorie foods feel especially appealing. It’s not necessarily a lack of discipline. Your body is trying to compensate for fatigue.
Food quality matters too. A meal built mostly around refined carbohydrates and fats may fill the stomach briefly but leave the body searching for satisfaction soon after.
By contrast, meals rich in protein, vegetables, beans, fish, eggs, and fibre-rich foods tend to keep hunger at bay for longer.
Across Ghana and beyond, traditional meals that combine vegetables, legumes, and lean proteins often offer a more satisfying balance than heavily processed convenience foods.
When Thirst and Exercise Complicate the Picture
Hunger can also be a case of mistaken identity.
Many people move through the day mildly dehydrated, particularly in hot climates. The body sends a signal that feels urgent, but instead of reaching for water, we reach for food. The result is extra calories when what we really needed was hydration.
Exercise adds another twist. Physical activity is essential for health, yet intense training sessions can increase appetite. After a demanding workout, people sometimes consume far more energy than they burned, convinced they are simply replacing what was lost.
Listening Beyond the Stomach
The next time hunger strikes unexpectedly, pause before blaming your willpower. Ask a different question: Have I slept enough? Have I had water today? Did my last meal actually satisfy me?
Sometimes the solution to overeating isn’t eating less. It’s giving the body what it was asking for all along.
Health & Wellness
The Health Metric We’ve Been Overlooking: Muscle
For decades, the bathroom scale has been treated as the ultimate measure of health. A lower number was celebrated, while a higher one often sparked concern.
But a growing body of research is shifting attention away from weight and toward something far more important: muscle.
The question many health experts are now asking is surprisingly simple: how strong are you?
The Silent Loss That Starts Earlier Than You Think
Most people associate muscle loss with old age, but it often begins much earlier. From our thirties onward, adults naturally start losing muscle mass unless they actively work to maintain it. The process is gradual, making it easy to miss.
A person may weigh the same for years yet quietly lose strength. Climbing stairs becomes more tiring. Carrying groceries feels heavier. Getting up from a low chair takes a little more effort than it once did.
These changes are often dismissed as a normal part of ageing, but they can have long-term consequences.
Muscle plays a critical role in how the body functions. It helps regulate blood sugar, supports healthy metabolism, protects joints, and contributes to balance and mobility. Strong muscles also reduce the risk of falls and injuries, particularly later in life.
A Shift in Fitness Priorities
Across the world, fitness culture is beginning to evolve. Instead of focusing solely on shrinking waistlines, more people are embracing activities that build strength.
In Ghana, this shift is becoming increasingly visible. Public parks, community fitness groups, and neighbourhood gyms are attracting people of all ages who want to feel stronger rather than simply lighter. Resistance bands, bodyweight exercises, and basic strength training are no longer reserved for athletes.
The goal is practical fitness.
Can you lift a suitcase into an overhead compartment? Carry a child without strain? Walk long distances comfortably? These everyday abilities often reveal more about health than a number on a scale.
Building a Future-Proof Body
The strongest argument for building muscle has little to do with appearance. It is about preserving independence.
The ability to move freely, recover from illness, and remain active in later years depends heavily on maintaining strength throughout adulthood. Every squat, brisk walk, or resistance workout is an investment in that future.
Perhaps the healthiest question is no longer “How much do I weigh?” but “What can my body do?”
The answer may say far more about long-term wellbeing than the scale ever could.
-
Ghana News1 day agoPresident Mahama Calls for International Roadmap on Reparatory Justice at Accra Summit
-
Ghana News1 day agoToday’s Newspaper Headlines: Friday, June 19, 2026
-
Ghana News1 day agoMahama Pushes Centering Enslaved Women’s Stories in Reparations, Young Lawyer Dies Celebrating Black Stars Win and Other Big Stories in Ghana Today
-
Business1 day ago100 Years of Trade: How a 14-Year-Old Indian Store Boy Built Ghana’s Largest Retail Empire
-
Health & Wellness2 days agoThe Real Reason You’re Always Hungry Might Surprise You
-
Commentary1 day agoReflections on Ghana And the Future it Deserves | By Simone Giger, Swiss Ambassador to Ghana
-
Festivals & Events2 days agoBuilding Tomorrow: Ghana Futures Dialogue Brings Visionaries Together
-
Fashion & Style2 days agoWhy Classic Footwear Is Making a Stylish Comeback
