Egg beaters yay or nay
Replies
-
I have tried and tried, but just can't eat "eggs" from a carton, although I would like to for convenience purposes... I am referring to the whites with only ONE ingredient, and I STILL think they're "off". Sigh...0
-
I like the sausage and salsa idea. throw it all in the microwave for a great breakfast or snack. SOmetimes these forums are not all bad0
-
I prefer real eggs.0
-
I developed an egg allergy a few years ago. *sigh* I miss eggs so much. :sad: You should eat the eggs. Do it for me.
I'm going to think of you every time I eat eggs now. I'm so sad for you!0 -
Never heard of them - don't think you can buy then in the UK - what are they?0
-
Egg beaters ingredients:
Egg Whites, Less than 1%: Natural Flavor, Color (Includes Beta Carotene), Spices, Salt, Onion Powder, Vegetable Gums (Xanthan Gum, Guar Gum), Maltodextrin. Vitamins and Minerals: Calcium Sulfate, Iron (Ferric Phosphate), Vitamin E (Alpha Tocopherol Acetate), Zinc Sulfate, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B12, Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine Mononitrate), Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine Hydrochloride), Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin D3
Egg ingredients:
Egg.
ETA: Sorry, the smartass in me just couldn't help it0 -
why not just eat actual eggs?
1/4 cup of egg beaters (equivalent to one egg) is 25 calories
1 whole large egg (raw) is 74 calories.
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.0 -
What your aunt probably means is that the egg beaters are processed; so if you look at the list of ingredients, there's several processed ingredients in there. This isn't true if you just eat egg whites instead.
So whether or not you eat them depends on whether you care to eat or avoid processed foods.
This.
I prefer a real, whole egg.0 -
Nay to egg beaters.
Yay to the incredible, edible egg.
BTW, most everything is processed, it is just a matter of how it is processed and what is added during the processing.0 -
If I am having eggs as a meal I just use real eggs, yolk and all. I do however keep a carton of the french toast flavor egg creations in my fridge if I am having a craving for something and need a low calorie snack. It's like dessert!0
-
Egg beaters ingredients:
Egg Whites, Less than 1%: Natural Flavor, Color (Includes Beta Carotene), Spices, Salt, Onion Powder, Vegetable Gums (Xanthan Gum, Guar Gum), Maltodextrin. Vitamins and Minerals: Calcium Sulfate, Iron (Ferric Phosphate), Vitamin E (Alpha Tocopherol Acetate), Zinc Sulfate, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B12, Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine Mononitrate), Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine Hydrochloride), Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin D3
Egg ingredients:
Egg.
ETA: Sorry, the smartass in me just couldn't help it
Formaldehyde and acetone in eggs?! But but but they use that in nail polish and nail polish remover! *checks apples and eggs off list of edible foods*
Not srs.0 -
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
The calories saved by not eating yolks, and the calories from protein % in a meal starts to really add up when you eat like 6-7 servings of whites or beaters as part of a high protein diet.
You can eat a lot of things for those yolk calories to get the nutrition you may have "missed" by not eating them.
I'm not in the "avoid cholesterol at all costs" camp, but it does offer someone who likes eggs a way to eat them without getting a lot of dietary cholesterol.0 -
There are some available where the only ingredient is egg whites. The best before date is usually a little shorter on those, but I think the taste is better. I can't remember the brand, but I bought an egg-substitute by accident once thinking I was buying egg whites - the colour was orange and the taste was really off. Put me off of buying any pourable egg anything for a little while. Yay for random food aversions.
Anyway ... I like them, because I can bulk up my breakfast without wasting a whole bunch more eggs. I generally will use one whole egg and as much as I want of the egg white from the carton. Yummy! Add some green onion, red pepper and goat's cheese and you have a really yummy omelet!0 -
I like them for the lean protein and often have them with the 3-4 whole eggs that I eat every morning.0
-
to me eating egg beaters is like eating watery plastic and I wouldn't doubt it the chemicals they use to make them isn't to far from plastic. I would stick with real eggs....the yolk is the most nutrient dense part of it anyways.0
-
I was eating egg beaters but my aunt told me to find something else that just says egg whites. She says that egg beaters have too many added things. Does it matter?
For heavens sake, eat REAL eggs not packaged anything. YUCK and a big fat NAY to egg whites and / or egg beaters!!!0 -
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
The calories saved by not eating yolks, and the calories from protein % in a meal starts to really add up when you eat like 6-7 servings of whites or beaters as part of a high protein diet.
You can eat a lot of things for those yolk calories to get the nutrition you may have "missed" by not eating them.
I'm not in the "avoid cholesterol at all costs" camp, but it does offer someone who likes eggs a way to eat them without getting a lot of dietary cholesterol.
Dietary cholesterol has little or no bearing on the body. Actually, most people that start consuming more cholesterol through their eating end up with lower cholesterol because the liver doesn't need to make as much.
From reading some of your other posts, you seem to be outdated with your views of cholesterol and fat.
Cholesterol and fat are very, very important to have adequate intake for proper hormone balance amongst other things.0 -
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
The calories saved by not eating yolks, and the calories from protein % in a meal starts to really add up when you eat like 6-7 servings of whites or beaters as part of a high protein diet.
You can eat a lot of things for those yolk calories to get the nutrition you may have "missed" by not eating them.
I'm not in the "avoid cholesterol at all costs" camp, but it does offer someone who likes eggs a way to eat them without getting a lot of dietary cholesterol.
Dietary cholesterol has little or no bearing on the body. Actually, most people that start consuming more cholesterol through their eating end up with lower cholesterol because the liver doesn't need to make as much.
From reading some of your other posts, you seem to be outdated with your views of cholesterol and fat.
Cholesterol and fat are very, very important to have adequate intake for proper hormone balance amongst other things.
I simply brought up the fact that whites/ beaters are an option for people not wanting the cholesterol from eggs, but who like eggs. I agree that this is not a "good" reason, but it is a choice that some may feel is important.
And yolks don't really offer that much nutritionally that you couldn't get from something more nutritious by the time you eat 6-7 of them. Also the omega6/omega3 ratio is rather poor.
http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/dairy-and-egg-products/113/20 -
why not just eat actual eggs?
1/4 cup of egg beaters (equivalent to one egg) is 25 calories
1 whole large egg (raw) is 74 calories.
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
And I would say your horse is too high, but that's just my humble opinion, though.
No one ever said I, or any of the other egg substitute consumers, only ate just one egg at a time. 50 calories is one thing. 150-200 calories is another.0 -
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
The calories saved by not eating yolks, and the calories from protein % in a meal starts to really add up when you eat like 6-7 servings of whites or beaters as part of a high protein diet.
You can eat a lot of things for those yolk calories to get the nutrition you may have "missed" by not eating them.
I'm not in the "avoid cholesterol at all costs" camp, but it does offer someone who likes eggs a way to eat them without getting a lot of dietary cholesterol.
Dietary cholesterol has little or no bearing on the body. Actually, most people that start consuming more cholesterol through their eating end up with lower cholesterol because the liver doesn't need to make as much.
From reading some of your other posts, you seem to be outdated with your views of cholesterol and fat.
Cholesterol and fat are very, very important to have adequate intake for proper hormone balance amongst other things.
Strong opinions about eggs. lol0 -
NO. No eggbeaters, no chicken eggs AT ALL. Delicious fresh duck eggs for me, from my flock of Muscovies ( and one pair of Pekins, Mr. and Mrs. Aflac, who give us an egg every single day, even at -26 degrees.)0
-
I don't like the taste. If I want just egg whites I separate the eggs myself and save the yolk for something else.0
-
I'd choose egg beaters over eggs even if they were identical foods. The carton is just a lot more efficient and takes up less room in my fridge.0
-
Egg beaters ingredients:
Egg Whites, Less than 1%: Natural Flavor, Color (Includes Beta Carotene), Spices, Salt, Onion Powder, Vegetable Gums (Xanthan Gum, Guar Gum), Maltodextrin. Vitamins and Minerals: Calcium Sulfate, Iron (Ferric Phosphate), Vitamin E (Alpha Tocopherol Acetate), Zinc Sulfate, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B12, Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine Mononitrate), Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine Hydrochloride), Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin D3
Egg ingredients:
Egg.
ETA: Sorry, the smartass in me just couldn't help it
Formaldehyde and acetone in eggs?! But but but they use that in nail polish and nail polish remover! *checks apples and eggs off list of edible foods*
Not srs.
Love.0 -
I eat egg beaters (southwest style). I also eat eggs. Just depends on the meal / day.0
-
If you have high cholesterol as I do, Egg Beaters are a good choice0
-
Love egg beaters. Easy to drink out of the carton for quick protein or mix into a protein shake and blend. The taste isn't great, but the convenience makes up for it.0
-
Egg beaters ingredients:
Egg Whites, Less than 1%: Natural Flavor, Color (Includes Beta Carotene), Spices, Salt, Onion Powder, Vegetable Gums (Xanthan Gum, Guar Gum), Maltodextrin. Vitamins and Minerals: Calcium Sulfate, Iron (Ferric Phosphate), Vitamin E (Alpha Tocopherol Acetate), Zinc Sulfate, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B12, Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine Mononitrate), Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine Hydrochloride), Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin D3
Egg ingredients:
Egg.
ETA: Sorry, the smartass in me just couldn't help it
Formaldehyde and acetone in eggs?! But but but they use that in nail polish and nail polish remover! *checks apples and eggs off list of edible foods*
Not srs.
You forgot to mention the benzene and benzene derivatives (carcinogens), esters and what the he11 are terpenes?0 -
if you are really that worried about a 50 calorie difference between a food product and a food, you need to rethink your lifestyle. that's just my humble opinion though.
The calories saved by not eating yolks, and the calories from protein % in a meal starts to really add up when you eat like 6-7 servings of whites or beaters as part of a high protein diet.
You can eat a lot of things for those yolk calories to get the nutrition you may have "missed" by not eating them.
I'm not in the "avoid cholesterol at all costs" camp, but it does offer someone who likes eggs a way to eat them without getting a lot of dietary cholesterol.
Dietary cholesterol has little or no bearing on the body. Actually, most people that start consuming more cholesterol through their eating end up with lower cholesterol because the liver doesn't need to make as much.
From reading some of your other posts, you seem to be outdated with your views of cholesterol and fat.
Cholesterol and fat are very, very important to have adequate intake for proper hormone balance amongst other things.
Both the Mayo Clinic
http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/high-blood-cholesterol/in-depth/cholesterol/art-20045192
http://www.mayoclinic.org/search/search-results?q=cholesterol and eggs and the NIH: https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/heart/chol/chol_tlc.pdf
disagree with you. Both credible sources have found that on the one hand certain foods can lower cholesterol and on the other hand certain foods (eggs) can increase cholesterol, although they do stated that 4 or less a week do not seem to have a significant impact.
di0 -
Eat what you like. I love to eat egg whites in some recipes, but when it comes to just plain eggs I eat whole eggs, fried in butter. I don't really like the flavor of the beaters.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions