Whole eggs, including the cholesterol-heavy yokes
Recent research has shown that for most healthy adults, eggs don't have a huge effect on blood cholesterol levels.
And if you like your breakfast eggs topped with a little red salsa, go wild. That's a points-free food now, too.
Many kinds of beans, including black, butter, navy, white, and fat-free refried beans
Beans and legumes are a categorically low-fat, high-protein source of fuel that give you lots of potassium, magnesium and filling fiber.
If you're not a bean lover, lentils are point-free too.
Caviar and shellfish
If your wallet can handle it, you can have as much caviar as you like. In fact, most fish and shellfish — like crab and lobster — are fine to eat with abandon.
According to Weight Watchers, people just don't tend to overeat seafood, so it's simply not worth measuring out into gram-specific servings. They'd rather have clients eat these types of proteins until they feel satisfied, then stop.
Most varieties of fish, including anchovies, cod, salmon, tuna, and whitefish
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBoneless, skinless chicken breasts
All berries
There's room for some no-count sweets in the plan, too. Cherries and clementines are fine as well.
In fact, any fruit is alright, including fruit cocktails, unsweetened fruit cups, and fruit salads
Dates and figs
You could even dress them up a bit with yogurt like the figs in this image, though honey and syrup are certainly not points-free.
Unsweetened, nonfat Greek yogurt and plain yogurt
Yogurt is good for your bones, can aid digestion, and carries just as much protein as meat.
The cultures in yogurt can even help you lose weight, a team of Harvard researchers found.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAlmost every ingredient in a homemade stir-fry
Those ingredients include mushrooms, carrots, peppers, pea pods, onions, and tons of other leafy veggies.
The benefits of vegetable-rich meals, long a staple of the Mediterranean diets, extend beyond your waistline. Researchers have discovered that plant-based diets are good for keeping aging brains sharp, and can reduce a person's risk of developing deadly conditions like heart disease and breast cancer.
Perhaps it's not a surprise after all that the updated Weight Watchers list includes so many wholesome foods that nutritionists champion for their ability to keep people wise, trim, and energized.
Dietitians and food scientists are increasingly pointing towards a Mediterranean, veggie and legume-rich eating plan — which is high in fiber and low in sugar and red meat — as one of the best for our health.
Whether or not you like the points model Weight Watchers uses, its guidance about eating as many fruits, veggies, and healthful proteins as we like is probably a good rule to follow.