best breakfast for protein?
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This week I made a batch of 6 vegetable frittatas in little ramekins so that I could warm one up each day of the week - they were fantastic!
8 egg whites
4 whole eggs
Sautee mushrooms, shallots, and spinach (or whatever your fav veggies are).
Mix it into the scrambled eggs.
Pour into 6 ramekins sprayed with non-stick cooking spray. Top with Gruyere or Cheddar.
Put them in the oven at 450 degrees for about 15 minutes.
They're 212 calories and 13 g of protein each.0 -
I found a great recipe posted on here which I use at least 3 times a week....called Protein Puffycakes of Joy.
In a microwave save smoosh up a ripe banana, add 2 eggs and whisk up, add a scoop of protein powder ( I use strawberry flavored) and mix that in. Chuck in the microwave for 3 minutes.
Turn over onto a plate. I usually top mine with a couple tbsns plain greek yogurt and fresh blueberries. LOTS of protein in one puffycake of joy...0 -
Well I am trying to get back on track so it is good to remember good ideas. I usually do not like turkey bacon, but I will eat Applegate Turkey Bacon which I microwave to close to crispy. It is great in salads or with eggs easy over, or in an omelet.0
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bump0
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This week I made a batch of 6 vegetable frittatas in little ramekins so that I could warm one up each day of the week - they were fantastic!
8 egg whites
4 whole eggs
Sautee mushrooms, shallots, and spinach (or whatever your fav veggies are).
Mix it into the scrambled eggs.
Pour into 6 ramekins sprayed with non-stick cooking spray. Top with Gruyere or Cheddar.
Put them in the oven at 450 degrees for about 15 minutes.
They're 212 calories and 13 g of protein each.0 -
Dairy products are also good. Yogurt, cottage cheese, spreadable cheeses on bread.
Are dairy products still protein? I'm sorry if that sounds dumb, but it would be dumber not to ask when I don't know. Right? )
I don't know if you'd want this for breakfast, but beans are also high in protein, say if you wanted a breakfast burrito or something.
Just an FYI, although milk has protein in it, does not mean it is a portion of protein, it also has a lot of sugar.
if you want proper protein in DAIRY products, GREEK yogurt, cottage cheese, quark cheese are the only actual protein sources, beans are extremely high in starch, 1/2 cup of beans/lentils albeit great protein/iron source, only count as 1/2 portion of protein and a full serving of carbohydrates. Unless combined with quinoa, the combination equates the complete protein amino acids.
Peanuts & nut butters are also NOT a source of protein, just because they have protein in it, does not make them protein. nut butters are fat and to be limited.0 -
A nutritionist told me the best breakfast is egg whites and beans. Any kind of beans. You can use whole egss if you want. I scramble mine, add canned white beans and a little salsa for flavor. The combination of egg protein and bean protein creates a perfect protein complex which makes you eat less throughout the day! It really works. Try it!0
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A nutritionist told me the best breakfast is egg whites and beans. Any kind of beans. You can use whole egss if you want. I scramble mine, add canned white beans and a little salsa for flavor. The combination of egg protein and bean protein creates a perfect protein complex which makes you eat less throughout the day! It really works. Try it!
2 full eggs are actually a complete protein on their own... 4 egg whites become a complete protein.0 -
I have a protein shake and banana for breakfast every morning. It has 35g of protein per serving and it keeps me feeling full until lunch.0
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I've been doing hard boiled egg whites and Greek yogurt (sometimes I add a few sunflower kernels to the yogurt). I can get pretty lazy in the morning before my workout, so hard boiling eggs once a week seems to help with that!0
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2 full eggs are actually a complete protein on their own... 4 egg whites become a complete protein.
WHAT? How does whatever types or parts of protein are lacking in 2 egg whites suddenly materialize when you add two more?0 -
A broccoli omelette.0
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Lean meat, one way or another - I quite liked heated ham added to stuff I'm already having.
In the UK we get 'bacon medallions' (maybe called Canadian bacon in the US?) which can be very low in fat and not far off pure protein as far as the macros go.0 -
I usually add a half a serving of protein powder to my morning oatmeal and banana. I also found a great suggestion on the recipe forum for a cottage cheese pancake. I also add pumpkin to it for some added Vit-A. Off hand I don't recall the recipe though but I'm sure if you search cottage cheese you will find it.0
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I have 2 servings of plain steel cut oats with one serving of Fage either 0 or 2% prefer the 2% but store always seems to be out of it. Mix it together nice breakfeast about 1 hour before my run.0
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Dairy products are also good. Yogurt, cottage cheese, spreadable cheeses on bread.
Are dairy products still protein? I'm sorry if that sounds dumb, but it would be dumber not to ask when I don't know. Right? )
It's not dumb- its better to ask. And yes, dairy products can offer a good source of protein.0 -
2 full eggs are actually a complete protein on their own... 4 egg whites become a complete protein.
WHAT? How does whatever types or parts of protein are lacking in 2 egg whites suddenly materialize when you add two more?
I am not sure, but it might boil down to simple math- its not that its completely lacking, only that there isn't enough of a certain protein to be counted as complete. But when you add more, then it has enough to be complete. That would be my guess anyway.0 -
I just make a shake with chocolate milk, pb, banana and tbsp of either olive oil or coconut oil. then coffee with 1/4 cup coconut milk. Keeps me from being hungry for a minute. And if you have protein powder add that too!0
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my favorite is a veggie stuffed omelet with some cheese, a little thin sliced turkey, and of course some salsa!0
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Several of these suggestions will maybe net you the same protein as a couple eggs but will triple your calories and take out half or more of your daily sodium. Be wary of advice on forums. Punch a few things in the mfp calculator, see for yourself what different breakfasts contain. Dairy has some protein, but it also high in fat and thus calories. A breakfast burrito? Shouldn't even need to say anything. Try sticking with eggs, add vegetables. The protein shake is good too, though liquid breakfasts never keep le full for long.
Dairy comes in a lot of different fat content. I have skim milk which is high in protein, and has no fat. Greek yogurt is high in protein, and if you read the labels, there are those that are lower in fat. As with all things, they are not created equal. Read the labels, plunk some numbers in MFP to get the breakdowns. Not all fat is bad for you either. Your body requires some to function properly. A breakfast burrito is a good choice, depending what goes in it. The suggestion to make with beans is a good one. Eggs can be high in fat as well. A combo of an egg (with the yolk for the fat) plus some egg whites is a good choice. Combo it up with a carb such as whole wheat toast for a good breakfast. I started just with actually getting a breakfast in. This was a big change in itself, an over time, have cleaned it up and made it more balanced. I like my oatmeal for breakfast, often add protein powder to it, or have the combo of egg/eggwhites. And a glass of skim, no fat milk. Try some things & see what works for you!0 -
What are your goals? Are you looking to lose weight, increase muscle, lean?
Here are my few breakfast foods that are high in protein:
- Hard boiled eggs
- 8oz protein shake with unsweetened almond milk
- 1/2 cup oats (plain or with cinnamon, or a small amount of protein to give it flavor)
- low fat yogurt (1/2 cup)
- 1-2 tablespoons of walmnuts and almonds
- 1-2 tablespoons of Goji Berries (or any berries you prefer)0 -
Greek yogurt! One cup has like 140 cals and 23g of protein. I mix mine with fruit and honey.0
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weird0
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thanks for all the suggestions. My goals are to drop the extra 80-odd lbs I'm carrying, lower my body fat and to increase my stamina to be able to run for at least 30mins, and to be lean and bendy enough to try yoga and climbing.0
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Don't limit yourself to just "breakfast" food for breakfast.
I have a protein drink or greek yogurt most days. That usually gets me to an early lunch.0 -
2 full eggs are actually a complete protein on their own... 4 egg whites become a complete protein.
WHAT? How does whatever types or parts of protein are lacking in 2 egg whites suddenly materialize when you add two more?0 -
2 full eggs are actually a complete protein on their own... 4 egg whites become a complete protein.
WHAT? How does whatever types or parts of protein are lacking in 2 egg whites suddenly materialize when you add two more?
I wasn't talking about PARTS of protein, i was talking about PORTIONS of protein. And although peanut butter contains some source of protein, it still remains a fat, beans are also a good protein source however it still remains 1/2 PORTION of protein because they also have a greater source of carbohydrates. I got my information from licensed dietician at a local diet centre that doesn't push supplements or weight loss products, just proper eating. My dietician's information isn't BS, it's quite simple. When it is broken down into portions. PROTEIN, VEGETABLE, FRUITS, CARBOHYDRATES, FATS & DAIRY because having a healthy balanced diet is usually the best way to eat...
a portion of protein has about 23 grams of protein.
if milk has 8 grams how does it make it a protein??
if peanut butter has 3 grams of protein but 8 grams of fat, how is it a protein? last I checked, 3 grams isn't 23.
Oh, and people in the fitness world, training and having eating schedules for other reasons, measure out their proteins the same way I do.0
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