Science-backed · Non-restrictive · Practical
Why burgers is easy to overeat
If burgers disappears faster than you intended, that is usually physiology plus design—not a moral failure. Add-ons (bacon, sauce, extra patty) stack reward without increasing chewing time much.
Why this food can override “just a little”
Add-ons (bacon, sauce, extra patty) stack reward without increasing chewing time much. When chewing is easy and reward is high, your brain may not receive a clear “stop” signal at the same moment your mouth wants to continue.
Why your brain reaches for it in the first place
Burgers combine fat, salt, umami, and soft bun starch—an all-in-one reward package. They are also a social default food.
Hunger vs craving
Sometimes you are eating quickly because you are undereating earlier. Sometimes it is cue-driven pleasure seeking. Check both honestly—kindness speeds up learning.
What to do right now
Serve a portion you chose beforehand, add protein or fibre alongside, slow down, and remove the package from reach. Environmental friction matters more than lectures.
Science-minded habits that change the arc
Choose the simplest build you still enjoy, and add a veg side to slow the meal and widen satiety signals. More broadly, adequate meals, sleep, and fewer “always open” snack containers change intake for most people more than motivation posters.
Decode cravings without another diet
CraveShift uses food science and neuroscience to explain why you want what you want—and offers smart pairings that satisfy without a shame spiral. Built by PhD researchers.
FAQs
Related pages
- Why certain foods are hard to stop eating
- Cravings by food — science-based guides for specific foods
- Problems and patterns — practical guides
- Compare — side-by-side craving and eating guides
- Why bread is easy to overeat
- Why cake is easy to overeat
- Why you crave burgers (and what to do next)
- Why ultra-processed foods hook the brain (without calling you weak)
- ultra-processed foods vs minimally processed foods: what is the difference?