So…How Do You Kill Your Extra Calories?

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So, the long and the short of it is: I have discovered that I am obviously eating too few calories per day, because I’ve avoided eating my exercise calories and started doing that in hopes that the scale will BUDGE. (Don’t ask me why eating to lose is so hard for me to get my mind around, because I sure don’t know. The math says it’s true, LOL…)

Today I made a gross miscalculation. I had 217 calories for breakfast, 420 for lunch, a hundred for a snack, and after working out, I still have 800 calories to get rid of.

I don’t want to go buck wild, but I’d like to knock out some of them. Dinner will be relatively light, because I just worked out, and I can’t eat heavy anything after a workout (see what I mean about gross miscalculation?), so probably a chicken breast and some veg.

I know I won’t inhale all 800 tonight, and will be more mindful of eating more for breakfast and lunch so that I don’t run into this many extra again.

What healthy snacks to you guys eat to ensure you get most, if not all of your calories in?

I know that the opinions on eating all the exercise calories are split, so this is for those of you that DO. (I’ve already tried the NOT for three weeks and the results aren’t pretty, LOL…)

Thank you! :flowerforyou:

Edited to add: I am still kind of in awe of the amount of calories I CAN have each day and still expect to lose, as it’s only a few hundred calories shy of what I was eating before I got back on the wagon. I just didn’t MOVE when I was doing that.
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Replies

  • Ready2Rock206
    Ready2Rock206 Posts: 9,488 Member
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    My new favorite before gym snack - Energy Bites: http://www.gimmesomeoven.com/no-bake-energy-bites/

    Do a google search for Energy Bites - you'll find a ton of recipes - most are pretty similar. The ones I made are 189 calories each. Easy boost of calories and yummy! My son HATES eating before the gym because he gets a stomach ache but he'll eat these w/no issues.
  • Mokey41
    Mokey41 Posts: 5,769 Member
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    Depending on how you measured those exercise calories I wouldn't get too excited about eating them all back.
  • literatelier
    literatelier Posts: 209 Member
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    A few tablespoons of peanut butter will help close the gap.
  • ldworkout
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    This is a nice problem to have :) I have found that since I started exercising everyday and doing crunches I'm not that hungry and I have some calories left over (not 800 so far) but a few hundred. I like to spend them on smoothies. My favorite smoothie to make because it tastes like dessert (by diet standards) is a cacao low fat peanut butter and banana smoothie. Cacao is a superfood so you get antioxidants and improve cholesterol and give you energy. The lowfat peanut butter is a "good" fat and it is so delicious. You don't have to feel bad about enjoying it. Oh, and cacao is a mood booster, so it also makes you happy.

    Here is what is in it:
    Raw cacao powder from the health food store
    1/2 banana
    lowfat milk or almond milk
    tbsp of lowfat peanut butter
    ice

    The only issue with having this is that I usually have so much energy after I kinda want to do more exercise :)
  • slcostel
    slcostel Posts: 116 Member
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    A scoop of protein powder (the kind I use anyways) is 120 calories, mix that in a cup of 2% milk which is 100something (I don't remember the exact figure, I want to say it's also 120). It's a great after dinner treat that kills my sweet tooth and is still doing something for me. I have a hard time getting all my protein since I eat very little meat.

    So there's --let's say-- 250 calories right there that fits in a coffee cup. Cheers :drinker:
  • _AllieCat_
    _AllieCat_ Posts: 515 Member
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    I eat something healthy that I typically don;t eat often because it's higher in calories.
    For example: beans, avocado, serving of cheese, eggs, brown rice, beef, etc.

    In reality, when I have a few hundred calories left at the end of a day a grab a cold beer and call it a night .:drinker:
  • AllonsYtotheTardis
    AllonsYtotheTardis Posts: 16,947 Member
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    If I'm low on calories for the day, and also low on my fat macro, I take it as a sign that I'm meant to enjoy some cheese.
  • j75j75
    j75j75 Posts: 854 Member
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    hard-boiled eggs, almonds, walnuts
  • janeilm89
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    Barbecue popchips! Or cashews, nom nom! Or some avocado. All good stuff.
  • juliemouse83
    juliemouse83 Posts: 6,663 Member
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    Thanks, all…


    This isn’t something that happens too often, but I doubled up my workout this evening…my filler list usually consists of extra wine (which I am trying to cut down/out on), sunflower seeds (OMG, the sodium!), and popcorn. :tongue:

    Going to bookmark to refer back to, so when I make the grocery list I can grab the goodies. :)
  • BackTatJIM
    BackTatJIM Posts: 1,140 Member
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    ice cream!
  • carlybarley22
    carlybarley22 Posts: 197 Member
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    A few tablespoons of peanut butter will help close the gap.

    I was going to say the same thing! Except I'm allergic to peanut butter so I eat sunbutter.
  • darisey
    darisey Posts: 228 Member
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    Ice cream :]
  • amyljl77
    amyljl77 Posts: 43 Member
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    smashed avocado...just add a little salt and some chili powder YUM. A whole medium avocado and 7 tostitos will set you back 400 -500 calories. Healthy and yummy... I had this for lunch today and it kept me full until dinner!
  • mockchoc
    mockchoc Posts: 6,573 Member
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    Good quality dark chocolate!
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    When I need carbs, on my heavy workout days, I prefer potatoes to grain. Sometimes, I eat purple potato chips. They are lightly salted, organic and pretty good for you (no transfats and cooked in organic oil. Plus, you get all the benefits of "blue" food--proanthocyanidins). I don't eat a lot of them (I don't have a problem with "chip addiction") and they are pricey. They are actually quite satisfying. Sometimes I will eat a baked potato with cottage cheese and chives on top (or plain full-fat yogurt--mostly tastes like sour cream). Sometimes I will cook up a small batch of mashed potatoes. Mostly, I avoid the high sugar potatoes like redskins and Yukon Golds and go for Russets (baking potatoes) instead. Did you know that you can get basically all the major nutrients out of potatoes and dairy? You could probably live indefinitely on those two food items alone---survivalists take note (not that you wouldn't get right sick of them after a while though). :laugh:
  • megsmom2
    megsmom2 Posts: 2,362 Member
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    This is the reason for Mssrs Ben and Jerry....good gentlemen to know.
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    Good quality dark chocolate!

    Yes--I will usually eat that too on my big ex days. I make my own out of baker's unsweetened and dextrose (that's the industry name for glucose). That way I can control the sweetness and glucose doesn't have the same addictive properties of sucrose (it is the fructose content of sucrose that seems to be the problem in sugar addiction). One one-ounce square seems to satisfy the chocolate urge--very intense chocolate flavor. As it turns out, chocolate is quite good for you---one of the few foods that help your body to repair damaged BNA. Who knew?
  • omma_to_3
    omma_to_3 Posts: 3,265 Member
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    If you're looking for healthy options, I'd go with cheese and crackers or tablespoons of peanut butter. Or both!

    If you're up for fun I'd go with cheesecake. Or ice cream.

    Damn...I want junk food!!
  • robinsnest02
    robinsnest02 Posts: 14 Member
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    One way to knock out a lot of calories is eating avocado. 1/2 avocado (hass) has around 250 calories and takes care of some beneficial fats, protein, and caratenoids.