Oatmeal, UGH!
Replies
-
You could add some apple butter. Look it up, apple butter, while not actually being butter, is the bomb.0
-
I just choke it down plain.
Sometimes in the winter my wife makes it in the crockpot... that is good stuff.0 -
My fave is to use Old Fashioned Oatmeal (not that Quick stuff) and then put 1 cup in bowl with a handful of blueberries and a few tsp of Cinnamon, add water to the texture you prefer, stir and then microwave, on my microwave it's 1:55. Stir, add 1/2 cup of skim milk and enjoy. Cooking blueberries in adds sweetness and the cinnamon adds flavor. I eat this most days for breakfast.0
-
Applesauce! Seriously, it makes it so sweet so easily. Cook your oatmeal, throw some raisins in towards the end of cooking. Then stir in cinnamon and applesauce to taste. SOOOO yummy!0
-
i cook up a weeks worth of oatmeal at a time and keep it in the fridge - just the basic. I add all my flavoring in the morning - depending on my mood.
Any way i seem to like any flavor better if i add it after i heat it up - not cooking with the add in flavor. Tried just throwing in the fruit and things after it is cooked - less blending of flavors.
Oddly one day i had two pieces of turkey bacon left in the fridge so i heated it up, chopped it into small pieces and added -- suddenly loved the spark of saltyness! i have also tried with a sausage link. i know - wierd but it worked0 -
You soft cook an egg so it's still just a little runny, put it on your cooked oatmeal and pierce it so it runs; mix with salt and pepper and some parmesean. It's AWESOME!
mind. blown.
How do you "soft cook" an egg?
Add egg (in shell) to boiling water .... cook 3 minutes.0 -
Raw Honey, Agava, Raisins, Raw Sugar, Nuts, Cranberries, Cinnamon :flowerforyou:
^^This is pretty much what I do, with a couple of variations. Raw honey, a pinch of salt, raisins, craisins, walnuts, cinnamon, a hint of nutmeg, and a hint of ginger. Soooo good. Just don't overdo on the honey because that will add a ton of calories back in and completely defeat the purpose of eliminating the cereal.0 -
bump0
-
Raw Honey, Agava, Raisins, Raw Sugar, Nuts, Cranberries, Cinnamon :flowerforyou:
^^This is pretty much what I do, with a couple of variations. Raw honey, a pinch of salt, raisins, craisins, walnuts, cinnamon, a hint of nutmeg, and a hint of ginger. Soooo good. Just don't overdo on the honey because that will add a ton of calories back in and completely defeat the purpose of eliminating the cereal.
You can also add some diced apples or mashed banana in place of the rasins and craisins.
Oh, and try using skim milk instead of water. It gives the oatmeal a much creamier texture.0 -
I make it with milk instead of water and use steel cut oats. That way I don't end up with wall paper paste/glue. I also decided right at the beginning that I would use honey or syrup as a sweetener. Prefer to take the calorie hit at breakfast and cut back a bit later if I have to.
Yeah, the oatmeal that I get is steel cut (although this is the first time I have ever heard of it....not sure what that means). I am trying to get away from milk, as in my opinion that is cheating :laugh: . I am going to be trying out new seasonings and fruit. My preferred calorie intake is heaviest at dinner (allowing me to splurge in meats), moderate at breakfast, and lighest at lunch (usually having a Protein bar for my workouts).
A little bit of milk is not cheating. Especially if you use skim milk. Milk has some very good nutritional value.
Steel cut oats are more or less what the grain looks like before it has been rolled out flat. I actually prefer steel cut to old fashioned rolled oats because the rolled stuff tends to get mushy and pasty if you don't eat it fast enough. Steel cut has more of a nutty, chewy texture/taste.0 -
I like my oatmeal with
Plain yogurt
Flax seed meal
Stevia or honey
Ground cinnamon
Cranraisins or Raisins0 -
I make it with milk instead of water and use steel cut oats. That way I don't end up with wall paper paste/glue. I also decided right at the beginning that I would use honey or syrup as a sweetener. Prefer to take the calorie hit at breakfast and cut back a bit later if I have to.
Yeah, the oatmeal that I get is steel cut (although this is the first time I have ever heard of it....not sure what that means). I am trying to get away from milk, as in my opinion that is cheating :laugh: . I am going to be trying out new seasonings and fruit. My preferred calorie intake is heaviest at dinner (allowing me to splurge in meats), moderate at breakfast, and lighest at lunch (usually having a Protein bar for my workouts).
Steel cut oats have been "cut" as opposed to "rolled." Sometimes instant, usually not. These keep a coarse almost chewy texture.
Instant oats are steamed & then rolled really thin
Rolled (old fashioned) are steamed & then rolled (but thicker) .... these retain some texture.0 -
I add Truvia sweetener, cinnamon, 1/8c golden raisins, 1/8c blueberries and 1/8c walnuts to about a cup of cooked oatmeal. It's 320 calories.0
-
I usually eat the Steel Cut Oatmeal for breakfast with a tablespoon of peanut butter and fruit - either a banana, apple, or pear. Sometimes I'll add a teaspoon of sugar and blueberries or peach instead of the peanut butter and banana.0
-
Didn't read this thread, but no bake cookies with peanut butter, oats, cottage cheese, and honey are AMAZING. I made these this weekend, my best batch yet:
Whole Foods - Rolled Oats, 4 Cup (75 g)
Optimum Nutrition - Gold Standard 100% Whey Protein - Double Rich Chocolate, 4 rounded scoop (30.4g)
Peanut Butter & Co - Dark Chocolate Dreams Peanut Butter, 10 tbsp.
Wegman's - Clover Honey, 5 tbsp (I'll prob decrease this next time, this batch was borderline too sweet)
Kroger - Fat Free Cottage Cheese, 1 cup
Microwave honey and peanut butter to soften. Mix, add cottage cheese, add in oats, protein powder, whatever you want. Press into a casserole dish and refrigerate, cut into bars after an hour so. Alternatively, refrigerate the batter for an hour or so and then roll into balls. Either way, store in the fridge.
Made 20, each one is 150 cal, 5g fat, 10g protein, 18g carbs, 1g fiber (In the past, I've added psyllium husk powder to up fiber. May do that again next time. Also delicious with sunflower seeds, flax, or whatever you want. Textured vegetable protein was also great)
I know it's not oatmeal, technically, but so good! And you can make them and eat them over the next couple weeks. I've experimented a lot with these, and it's always good. When I add too much dry stuff, I use it as granola in yogurt. If it's gooey (the recipe above is kinda gooey), I just eat it as is.0 -
Teaspoonful (or so) per serving of Instant sugar free pudding mix really sweetens the oatmeal. Add coffee instead of water for moisture combined with chocolate flavor pudding mix. Chocolate protien powder would probably work also. Bananas or PB for other added flavors...0
-
I LOVE oatmeal. I don't know why, but I do.
My favorites:
Cinnamon & raisins
Cinnamon & sliced apple
Banana (makes it sweet, but doesn't add a ton of flavor)
Strawberries
and then there's my absolute favorite:
banana, 1.5T cocoa powder, 1/4t vanilla extract, 1 pkt stevia, 5-10 choc. chips
(recipe courtesy chocolatecoveredkatie.com, approx 350 calories per serving)
Yes! That last recipe is sooo good!!! And sometimes instead of vanilla extract, I'll use vanilla powder. So good!0 -
If you like no bake cookies.... peanut butter and a small amount of sugar free hot cocoa mix. Yummmmm. My kids think they have been extra good when they get this treat! Little do they know...0
-
bump - good ideas here.0
-
I like to sprinkle a few chocolate chips in mine0
-
I love refrigerator oatmeal. I use 3/4 Almond milk unsweetened, 1/2 cup oatmeal, 1 scoop chocolate Kroger whey/soy protein powder mix, 1 tbs PB2 Peanut butter. Shake or stir put in fridge over night. Eat cold in the morning, yummy!!!! and filling!!!!0
-
I like adding a tablespoon ful of peanut butter. The added protein also helps you feel full longer.0
-
Some of my favorite ways to flavor it are
2 tablespoons unsweetened apple sauce and 1 tsp cinnamon
a few pecans broken up and 1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla extract and almond slivers
1 tablespoon peanut butter
1 tablespoon alond butter and 1 tsp cinnamon0 -
It's a slippery slope for someone like me... If I start looking at food as something to enjoy, rather than something to fuel my day I will eat crap. Thats what happens to me. I know oatmeal is filling and healthy so I eat it plain.
If I add honey, BS, nuts, fruit and pulled pork to it it is now all of a sudden a 300-400 calorie breakfast. I days like today where I burned 1000 calories at the gym, I double up on my elmers glue tasking oatmeal0 -
Didn't read this thread, but no bake cookies with peanut butter, oats, cottage cheese, and honey are AMAZING. I made these this weekend, my best batch yet:
Whole Foods - Rolled Oats, 4 Cup (75 g)
Optimum Nutrition - Gold Standard 100% Whey Protein - Double Rich Chocolate, 4 rounded scoop (30.4g)
Peanut Butter & Co - Dark Chocolate Dreams Peanut Butter, 10 tbsp.
Wegman's - Clover Honey, 5 tbsp (I'll prob decrease this next time, this batch was borderline too sweet)
Kroger - Fat Free Cottage Cheese, 1 cup
Microwave honey and peanut butter to soften. Mix, add cottage cheese, add in oats, protein powder, whatever you want. Press into a casserole dish and refrigerate, cut into bars after an hour so. Alternatively, refrigerate the batter for an hour or so and then roll into balls. Either way, store in the fridge.
Made 20, each one is 150 cal, 5g fat, 10g protein, 18g carbs, 1g fiber (In the past, I've added psyllium husk powder to up fiber. May do that again next time. Also delicious with sunflower seeds, flax, or whatever you want. Textured vegetable protein was also great)
I know it's not oatmeal, technically, but so good! And you can make them and eat them over the next couple weeks. I've experimented a lot with these, and it's always good. When I add too much dry stuff, I use it as granola in yogurt. If it's gooey (the recipe above is kinda gooey), I just eat it as is.
Hello! Going to be making these for sure! Question- the protein powder- is that 30.4 g total for 4 scoops or each scoop is 30g? (I'm guessing each scoop based on my protein but you never know!)0 -
As someone else suggested try the refrigerator oatmeal. I do not really like oatmeal and I really enjoy this. I make the blueberry version with 2 packets of Splenda. Also you do not have to use the mason jars. I have been making mine in the 2 cup round Glad Ware bowls. You have to stir it instead of shaking the jar.0
-
Almond Milk
Dried Fruit
Fresh Fruit (berries, banana, apple)
Nut or Fruit Butters
Pecans, Walnuts, granola, cashews, etc
Raisins
Shredded Coconut
Nutmeg, Cinnamon, Cloves
Yogurt
Maple Syrup0 -
BUMP0
-
I make my oatmeal with milk and add a teaspoon of brown sugar when it's done. The horror.0
-
I eat oatmeal almost every day: Half a cup rolled oats, a table spoon each of ground cinnamon and chia seeds and 2 tablespoons ground flaxseed meal. I add the cinnamon and a tablespoon of coconut oil to the water first and then add the dry ingredients. Five minutes later breakfast is ready. Only 298 calories, but a whopping 18 grams of fiber.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K 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
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions