After finding out that some people on CR go as high as 1900 kcal per day, I'd like to look have a look at some statistics.
Not just 'some': nearly all
real CR practitioners (who actually weigh and measure their food) report numbers up there, with the exception of a few tiny, largely sedentary women:
The CR subjects designed their diets to consume a balance of foods that supply more than 100% of the Recommended Daily Intake (RDI) for all of the essential nutrients, while minimizing energy content (1,112-1,958 kcal/day). They eat a wide variety of vegetables, fruits, nuts, dairy products, egg whites, wheat and soy proteins, and meat (≈26% of calories from protein, ≈28% from fat, and ≈46% from complex carbohydrates). All of CR group strictly avoid processed foods containing trans fatty acids and high glycemic foods (e.g., refined carbohydrates, desserts, snacks, and soft drinks). (1)
But that range is very skewed by a single female subject with the 1100 Cal diet: she's one a' them tiny, older, almost inactive women -- AND that number is a bit low because it doesn't represent her most typical long-term pattern, which includes weekly unmeasured restaurant meals. When you look at the average and standard deviation, even including her as an outlier, you see:
The CR subjects ate a nutritionally balanced diet (4) (at least 100% of the Recommended daily intake for each nutrient) providing approximately 1,671 ± 294 kcal/day (p = 0.0001 vs. WD group), approximately 23% protein, (p = 0.0001 vs. WD group), approximately 49% complex carbohydrates, approximately 28% fat, approximately 6% saturated fat. (2)
These numbers seem low because most people have no damned idea how much food they're eating, and believe they're eating much less: studies on this have found most people underreport by about 30%, with overweight people being more prone to misremember, misunderstand, or misrepresent their intake (4-7).
If you're on CR, please answer the poll and explain why you've chosen this calorie range. Also note how long you've been doing CR so far.
1860; ten years. My Calorie intake has been as high as 2000 and as low as 1800. I don't let myself drop below 115 lbs, so I keep my Calories as low as possible while maintaingn my light cardio and resistance exercise without overshooting this; I have no really good scientific justification for this particular cutoff -- I'm just too damned skinny already

.
Personally, I only started a few days ago on 1400 (30% of RDA seemed like a good starting point) and am planning to adjust it accordingly depending on how I feel.
If your CR diet is good, you can feel full, initially, on very low Calories -- especially if you're at all overweight. If you're losing more than a pound and a half of so of weight a week and are doing resistance training (and if you're NOT doing resistance training, get your ass in gear), you should slow down before you either hurt yourself (eg, (3)),
nix your CR bennies, or drive yourself nuts with hunger when your fat loss starts to run out and your body starts screaming for food, leaving you to go off the program (as has, anecdotally, happened to many, many people who've started CR too fast).
-Michael
1. Fontana L, Meyer TE, Klein S, Holloszy JO.
Long-term calorie restriction is highly effective in reducing the risk for atherosclerosis in humans.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Apr 27;101(17):6659-63. Epub 2004 Apr 19.
PMID: 15096581 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
2. Meyer TE, Kovács SJ, Ehsani AA, Klein S, Holloszy JO, Fontana L.
Long-term caloric restriction ameliorates the decline in diastolic function in humans.
J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006 Jan 17;47(2):398-402.
PMID: 16412867 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
3. Arguin H, Bouchard DR, Labonté M, Carpentier A, Ardilouze JL, Dionne IJ, Brochu M.
Correlation between the rate of weight loss and changes in body composition in obese postmenopausal women after 5 weeks: a pilot study.
Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2008 Apr;33(2):347-55.
PMID: 18347690
4. : Schatzkin A, Kipnis V, Carroll RJ, Midthune D, Subar AF, Bingham S, Schoeller DA, Troiano RP, Freedman LS.
Free Full Text
A comparison of a food frequency questionnaire with a 24-hour recall for use in an epidemiological cohort study: results from the biomarker-based Observing Protein and Energy Nutrition (OPEN) study.
Int J Epidemiol. 2003 Dec;32(6):1054-62.
PMID: 14681273 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
5. Gnardellis C, Boulou C, Trichopoulou A.
Abstract
Magnitude, determinants and impact of under-reporting of energy intake in a cohort study in Greece.
Public Health Nutr. 1998 Jun;1(2):131-7.
PMID: 10933410 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
6. Lichtman SW, Pisarska K, Berman ER, Pestone M, Dowling H, Offenbacher E, Weisel H, Heshka S, Matthews DE, Heymsfield SB.
Abstract
Discrepancy between self-reported and actual caloric intake and exercise in obese subjects.
N Engl J Med. 1992 Dec 31;327(27):1893-8.
PMID: 1454084 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
7. Mahabir S, Baer DJ, Giffen C, Subar A, Campbell W, Hartman TJ, Clevidence B,
Albanes D, Taylor PR.
Calorie intake misreporting by diet record and food frequency questionnaire
compared to doubly labeled water among postmenopausal women.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 2005 Dec 14; [Epub ahead of print]
PMID: 16391574
-Michael