Juan Rivera, MD, MHS, is a board-certified internist and cardiologist who trained at Johns Hopkins University Hospital. He specializes in the prevention, early detection, and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. He is an indisputable leader in his field in the Hispanic community, the chief medical correspondent for Univision Network and the host of the Dr. Juan show, a weekly one-hour health program on Univision. He is also an assistant professor of Medicine at Columbia University in New York. Through his concierge practice in Miami, he sees patients that include celebrities, business leaders, and athletes from around the world.
The Mojito Diet INTRODUCTION
Lose the Weight, Keep the Fun
A recent conversation with Sofia, one of my favorite patients, reminded me of many talks I’ve had with cardiology patients in the past. Sofia, a forty-nine-year-old hotel executive and the mother of three grown children, has a smile that lights up the room. My staff loves her, and she always begins our appointments by asking me about myself and my family. The world would be a better place with more people like Sofia in it.
Unfortunately, Sofia has several health problems. She takes an ACE inhibitor for high blood pressure and a statin drug for elevated cholesterol. Although she doesn’t have type 2 diabetes, her blood sugar is higher than I would like it to be. Sofia’s weight had been increasing steadily during the previous few years. During our visit she weighed in at 180 pounds—about 40 pounds over her optimal weight—which for the first time put her into the “obese” category.
Sofia rarely complains, but that day she seemed sad and frustrated. “Lately I’ve been feeling sluggish and tired,” Sofia told me. “I don’t seem to have the energy I used to have at work, and trying to keep up with my two-year-old grandson wears me out. My knees have been aching too. I feel like I’m getting old before my time.”
Comments like these are very familiar to me. As a board-certified cardiologist and internist who specializes in the prevention, early detection, and treatment of cardiovascular disease, I have many patients whose extra weight interferes with their health, their work, and their ability to enjoy their lives fully. And as the chief medical correspondent for the Univision television network, where I host my own weekly one-hour medical show, Dr. Juan, I frequently meet viewers who share their health concerns with me. So many of those who are overweight or obese, like Sofia, worry that symptoms such as shortness of breath, lack of energy, joint pains, and fatigue are warning signs of serious cardiovascular disease. Sometimes they are, but more often they’re simply the result of excess weight.
“I’ll run some tests to rule out any new medical problems,” I assured Sofia during our appointment. “But my guess is that we won’t find anything we don’t already know about.”
“Then why do you think I’m feeling so run-down?”
“Well,” I said, glancing at her chart, “you have gained about ten pounds since I last saw you. Carrying around that extra weight could be affecting your energy levels.”
Sofia smiled. “I know what you’re going to say next. I should go on a diet, right?”
I nodded. Sofia and I had had this conversation before.
“I know it’s not easy,” I said. “But if you could lose some of those extra pounds, I think you would feel better and more energetic. You’d probably lower your blood sugar. You might even be able to bring down your blood pressure and improve your cholesterol levels. And I bet your knees might even feel better.”
“I really would like to lose weight,” Sofia explained. “But whenever I look at the diet plans out there, none of them appeal to me.” Sofia said she’d heard that high-protein, low-carb diets work well, but she couldn’t bear to give up bread, rice, tortillas, and the traditional Cuban comfort foods she’d grown up with. She’d also heard about diets built around a strategy known as intermittent fasting, but she didn’t think she could handle the hunger pangs of all-day fasts.
“And alcohol!” Sofia said. “Dr. Juan, don’t tell me I can’t have a cocktail when I go to a restaurant or a party. We live in Miami, for goodness’ sake! You can’t ask me to give up my mojitos! I want to lose weight, but I also want to have fun!”
I felt myself break out into a huge smile as I reached for a folder from the stack on my desk. I handed her a copy of my new diet, and her eyes lit up when she read the title.
The Mojito Diet.
“Now that’s a diet I can follow!”
Weight Loss with a Miami Twist!
I call my weight-loss plan the Mojito Diet not only because the mojito is a popular Miami drink—a favorite of many of my patients, and an excellent reward for weight loss—but because it represents the Latin way of looking at life. The mojito is fresh and bold and effervescent, and so are Latin people. We love to gather with friends and family to celebrate and have fun. Music, dancing, food, and drink are all part of that celebration, as they are for people of many ethnic and cultural backgrounds.
The Mojito Diet makes plenty of room for the bold, flavorful, Latin-inspired foods that people in Miami and across the country associate with fun, festivities, and a hot night out on the town. The recipes in my plan include fantastic dishes that reflect the culinary traditions of Puerto Rico, Mexico, Brazil, Cuba, Spain, and other Latin cuisines, as well as foods that can best be described as Miami fusion—combining a Latin influence with a unique Miami twist. And the Mojito Diet embraces the spirit of celebration with a fitness plan built around traditional Latin dancing and other enjoyable activities that you’ll have a blast learning and doing.
The Mojito Diet embraces my philosophy of life—that celebration and joy should be a part of our lives every single day, and that making healthy choices can be a pleasure, not a punishment. Being healthy doesn’t have to mean giving up everything you enjoy, or sitting home while everyone else has fun. You can savor life’s pleasures in a healthy way. In fact, the best way I can think of to live your life to the fullest is by taking care of your health—and if you’re overweight or obese, losing weight is the best place to start celebrating your own life.
A Combination that Works
The Mojito Diet is a fourteen-day plan that succeeds because it combines a high-protein/low-carbohydrate plan, manageable and limited intermittent fasting, and the heart-protective principles of the DASH diet. In short, the Mojito Diet starts where DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) leaves off: dropping all grains and adding extra protein and fewer carbs during Week 1 (Grain Drop) and three nonconsecutive days of sixteen-hour fasting and adding back healthy amounts of whole grains during Week 2 (Clean 16 Fast). And every week, there are mojitos!
Research has shown us that higher-protein, lower-carbohydrate diets can lead to significant weight loss. But as many people who have tried them have discovered, these diets can be very difficult to stick with for more than a few weeks, because eating so much protein gets very boring. And people following high-protein diets really miss their favorite carbohydrate-rich grain-based foods, such as bread, rice, tortillas, and pasta.
What’s more, as a cardiologist, I can’t get behind any diet that sidelines the vegetables, fruit, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes that countless studies have associated with cardiovascular health and the potential prevention of a long list of diseases, including dementia and some kinds of cancer. Both the DASH eating plan, which has been shown to lower blood pressure, and the MIND diet (a combination of DASH and the Mediterranean diet), which appears to offer protection from Alzheimer’s, include many healthy foods that some low-carbohydrate diets leave off the plate. I can’t imagine turning away from foods that have been so strongly associated with good health—that’s why you’ll find them in the Mojito Diet.
In addition, we have seen that diet plans incorporating certain kinds of fasting can lead to successful weight loss as well as health benefits such as a reduction of inflammation and insulin resistance. However, fasting-based diets can be difficult to follow, because it’s hard for people to go for long periods of time without eating. That’s why I’ve created a smart, easy-to-follow sixteen-hour fasting plan—which I refer to as “functional fasting”—that offers the benefits of fasting without the difficulties.
Here’s another important roadblock that my eating plan eliminates: I live and practice preventive cardiology in Miami, where people love to party, play, dance, and spend time with family and friends. Asking them to give up the foods and drinks they enjoy, even if doing so may lengthen their lives, is a tough sell. It’s especially difficult to convince them to eliminate alcohol—not because they are alcoholics, but because they enjoy drinking alcohol socially. As you can tell from the name of my diet, I don’t believe that people have to give up alcohol in order to lose weight—in fact, I think it helps you stay motivated when you think of it as a reward.
When I designed my diet plan, I decided to include the things that do work, and to leave out the things that make diets so hard to stick with long-term. The Mojito Diet gives you everything you need for weight-loss success because it focuses on the strategies that work while skipping over the roadblocks that hold you back.
Two Weeks to Forever Weight Loss
Quite simply, my diet plan combines three straightforward strategies that not only produce weight loss and improve heart health but are simple enough that you can do them for the rest of your life.
Week 1
The first half of the Mojito Diet focuses on unleashing the weight-loss properties of protein. As you follow Grain Drop during Week 1 of my fourteen-day diet, you’ll avoid all foods that contain grains, such as bread, rice, pasta, and tortillas. Don’t worry, you’ll still have lots of fantastic foods to eat—I’ve included dozens of easy recipes for amazingly delicious grain-free breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks. Each day during Grain Drop week, you’ll enjoy:
High-protein foods—such as meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, nuts, legumes, soy, and dairy—at every meal and snack
Heart-healthy fats
Plenty of fruits and vegetables throughout the day, with a special emphasis on the high-potassium produce that helps lower blood pressure, such as bananas, sweet potatoes, citrus fruits, spinach, and many others—even white potatoes!
Week 2
During Week 2 of the Mojito Diet, you’ll follow my Clean 16 Fast, during which you’ll do three nonconsecutive days of sixteen-hour fasts. You will skip breakfast three days of the week (be sure to have your last meal before 8 p.m. the night before). These fasts are easier than they sound, starting after dinner and ending at lunchtime the next day. The Clean 16 Fast is easy to follow, and it has a positive impact on weight loss, insulin resistance, and inflammation. Each day during Clean 16 Fast week, you’ll enjoy a wide range of delicious foods, plus two to three servings a day of bread, tortillas, or other whole grain foods. Yes! Healthy grains are back.
Until you meet your weight loss goal, you’ll alternate following the Week 1 Grain Drop plan and the Week 2 Clean 16 Fast. Then you’ll move on to the next phase of the Mojito Diet: the lifetime Mojito Maintenance Plan.
Maintenance
Once you reach your goal weight, you’ll shift into my Mojito Maintenance Plan. To maintain your weight loss, you’ll follow a healthy eating plan (including grains) five days a week, Grain Drop one day a week, and Clean 16 Fast one day a week. It’s that simple.
Plus, Mojitos!
Now, the best part: twice a week during Week 1 and Week 2, and three times a week during Mojito Maintenance, you’ll toast your success by rewarding yourself with a refreshing mojito! (Or, if you’d prefer, have another kind of alcoholic beverage or a 200-calorie serving of dessert instead.) Enjoy my favorite Classic Mojito, or choose from among the other delicious mojito recipes included in the book. If you love the refreshing lime-mint taste of mojitos but would rather skip the alcohol, pour yourself a refreshing glass of my Mojito Water.
The Mojito Diet at a Glance
Week 1: Grain Drop
No grains! Cut out all breads, rice, pasta, tortillas, and other grains for one week.
Eat high-protein foods and high-fiber fruits and vegetables at every meal and snack, plus healthy fats.
Measure your food to learn about healthy portion sizes.
Reward yourself with two mojitos!
Drink plenty of water or make my special Mojito Water.
Week 2: Clean 16 Fast
Do three nonconsecutive days of sixteen-hour fasts by skipping breakfast three days of the week. (Be sure to finish your last meal before 8 p.m. the night before.)
On the Clean 16 Fast days, eat a regular lunch and dinner.
Eat grains again! Have two to three servings of whole grains each day.
Continue to eat high-protein foods, healthy fats, and high-fiber fruits and vegetables at every meal.
Don’t make up for skipped breakfast by eating more at lunch, snack, or dinner.
Continue to drink Mojito Water while you fast to fill you up and flush out toxins.
Reward yourself with two mojitos!
Week 3: Repeat Grain Drop
Week 4: Repeat Clean 16 Fast
After that, continue cycling through the Grain Drop and the Clean 16 Fast, week by week, until you reach your goal weight. Then move on to the Mojito Maintenance Plan.
The Mojito Maintenance Plan
Eat a healthy diet five days a week.
Follow the Grain Drop plan one day a week.
Follow the Clean 16 Fast and skip breakfast one day a week.
Add extra Grain Drop days if you start to regain lost weight.
Reward yourself with three mojitos!
Why Weight Loss Matters So Much to Me
If you watch Univision, America’s largest Spanish-language television network, you already know me: I’m Univision’s chief medical correspondent, and the host of Dr. Juan, a weekly one-hour health program. I also cocreated and hosted the show Strange Medicine and have appeared on other shows on Univision as well as on Telemundo, another Spanish-language network. You may also have seen me in my WebMD video series, My Abuelita Told Me, or during my appearances on Good Morning America.
I was born and raised in Puerto Rico, where I had an amazing childhood, surrounded by a tight-knit extended family of grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins who were like brothers and sisters to me. Working hard in school was the top priority in my famil...