peanut butter
wanttoloseweight4
Posts: 253
any thoughts? how often do you eat it? is it ok to have one serving everyday? what are everyones thoughts? looking for something healthy but also good for a sweet tooth!
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Replies
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It's pretty high in fat - I guess it depends what you are replacing! It's better for you than more processed food I guess... better than chocolate spread, anyhow!0
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any thoughts? how often do you eat it? is it ok to have one serving everyday? what are everyones thoughts? looking for something healthy but also good for a sweet tooth!
if you can incorporate it into your daily calories.
My way to judge an intake of food and if its wroth it is.
"Is this worth 1/10 of my daily calories?"
Do you crave it enough? will it make you happy?
Will you suffer from hunger?
It is very much up to the individual. There is also no such thing as healthy fats. there is a single bad fat which is Partially hydrogenated oil(NOT FULLY) aka transfat0 -
yeah i have a sweet tooth im at 1200 calories and am trying to find a way to actually get to 1200 calories and eat something for my sweet tooth but i dunno how good peanut butter would be i would only have one serving a day with like apples or something!0
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thoughts?
any trans fat debate (natural vs. those with hydrogen oils added) is discussing something so inconsequential that it is not even worth considering so get what YOU like the taste of better.0 -
any thoughts? how often do you eat it? is it ok to have one serving everyday? what are everyones thoughts? looking for something healthy but also good for a sweet tooth!
Try PB2...much less calories and tastes exactly the same. But if your macros allow it..eat the real stuff as much as you want, its a healthy source of fat.0 -
Do you like the taste of peanut butter?
Would you like a serving of peanut butter?
Will a serving of peanut butter fit into your cal/macros for the day?
^ As simple as that. If you answered yes to all of the above, EAT THE PEANUT BUTTER.0 -
Do you like the taste of peanut butter?
Would you like a serving of peanut butter?
Will a serving of peanut butter fit into your cal/macros for the day?
^ As simple as that. If you answered yes to all of the above, EAT THE PEANUT BUTTER.
^^ This. Eat the peanut butter. I would.0 -
I eat a serving of peanut butter every day, it helps keep my calorie intake up. Just remember a serving is only 2 tbsp. Also keep in mind most peanut butter has added sugar and stuff. Stick with all natural no added anything peanut butter. It actually tastes way better and is much healthier.0
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Check out PB2....peanut butter in powder form, it's totally AWESOME!!! :happy:0
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thanks guys macros? how do i find that out is it on my page?0
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Peanut butter is both delicious and healthy...lots of good fats. It is calorie dense and a little goes a long way, so it can be difficult sometimes to fit it in when you're eating at a deficit but totally worth getting it in there IMHO...but then again I love the stuff.
I don't have it everyday, but probably 3-4 times per week...the other days I usually have some mixed nuts or there are a couple different trail mixes I've concocted to mix it up a bit.0 -
Check out PB2....peanut butter in powder form, it's totally AWESOME!!! :happy:
sounds good! how would i use the powder form? like sprinkle it over something?0 -
I eat peanut butter.
But eat more Almond Butter!0 -
I eat peanut butter every single day!
It is a good high protein, low carb snack for me!0 -
Just remember a 2 Tbsp serving is about the size of a ping-pong ball.0
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i have almond butter and i love it its soooooo good! i think ill try to eat that to!0
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I eat peanut butter every single day!
It is a good high protein, low carb snack for me!
yeah i need something to up my calorie intake and i think it would be good for me0 -
What a great source of essential fatty acids for you skin, hair, estrogen, and heart0
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I ate 1200 calories worth of peanut butter last night.
Stayed within my calories, too.
SUCCESS.0 -
Do you like the taste of peanut butter?
Would you like a serving of peanut butter?
Will a serving of peanut butter fit into your cal/macros for the day?
^ As simple as that. If you answered yes to all of the above, EAT THE PEANUT BUTTER.
Exactly.0 -
ok seems like everyone is for it! i will put it in my diet!0
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I eat peanut butter every day. EVERY day! That and almonds, almond butter,etc. which I put in my oatmeal. It's delicious. No need to debate any further. Fats are NOT the enemy but instead they are your friends in weight loss. Eat peanut butter FTW!!!
Here's an interesting article on eating fat to burn fat so that you can "embrace the savory goodness" in a guiltless manner:
http://athlete.io/4739/eat-fat-burn-fat/
Eat Fat. Burn Fat.
March 15, 2013 By DH Kiefer
In my early days of spreading my crazy dieting Gospel—we’re talking over ten years ago now—I’d get bombarded with one question over and over, and it’s one people still sling my way: Do you need to eat fat to burn fat?
This, of course, makes no sense. Eating fat to burn fat? We are what we eat, so if we eat fat, we’ll get fat, not lean. It’s straight-up logic, right? Logic, however, only helps us find the next question to answer, because in the real world, human logic fails more times than it correctly predicts. Take Einstein, for instance. His seminal work, from General Relativity to pioneering discoveries in quantum mechanics, seems totally illogical, yet it’s how the world works.
If you think just a little bit harder—and I recommend this practice highly to the world of bodybuilding diet gurus—then stripping fat from the diet to burn fat is stupidity at its finest. The body is an adaptive organism that regulates hormone secretion and enzyme production based on the food you ingest. Ingest carbs all the time, and your body will build all the machinery necessary to burn carbs efficiently and store the overage just as effectively. Eat nothing but protein, and the body becomes efficient at breaking long protein chains into simpler fractions for energy—including muscle tissue. Eat mostly fat and, well…you figure it out.
MCT
As an example of eating-fat-to-burn-fat, let’s look at medium-chain triglyceride ingestion. Medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) reside in vast abundance in coconut fat, and are somewhat short chains of carbons (all fats are long carbon chains). The common mix is normally C8:0, C10:0, and C12:0. The ‘C’ represents carbon, the first number is the quantity of carbon atoms, and the second number is the amount of unsaturation. These little guys are pure saturated fat, but with a surprising property: most ingested fat takes three or more hours before the body can access it for fuel or storage. MCT absorbs quickly and is available immediately.
When the body can access fat immediately, it burns it. MCT oil ingestion triggers ketone production—which is not easy to do with diet alone. Ketones help fuel the cells of the nervous system—as well as other tissue in the body—when quick energy is needed from fat molecules. MCT also can represent the idea of a negative caloric load. In Obesity Research and in the International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders, researchers demonstrated that by simply adding MCT oil to the diet, it increased fatty acid oxidation. Eating fat, they found, burns fat.
There’s more to this story, though. Many studies—especially ones quoted by governmental agencies—show that eating a diet high in fat, accompanied by a lot of carbohydrates, results in massive fat gain, not fat loss. It evidently takes more than just eating fat to burn fat. It also requires avoiding carbs.
LPL and HSL
Carbs, as we know, trigger insulin release. Insulin does one thing incredibly well: it makes body tissue grow. If that tissue is muscle, awesome. Most of the time, however, it’s fat. Not so awesome. Insulin does this via several mechanisms, but two of the most important are insulin’s regulation of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL).
Think of LPL as equivalent to the glucose-transporter (GLUT) system—the one that Carb Back-Loading manipulates for retardedly effective fat loss and simultaneous muscle gain. GLUT pulls sugar into fat and muscle cells to either be used as energy or stored—as fat in fat cells and glycogen in muscle cells. LPL pulls fatty acids into fat and muscle cells for storage or energy, respectively. Like the GLUT, LPL is also highly regulated by insulin, but only in fat cells. When insulin levels rise, LPL concentration skyrockets in fat cells, allowing them to pull in massive amounts of fat to store. It’s a good thing there’s usually sugar around at the same time, because the sugar that gets pulled in with the fat forms glycerine molecules—the backbone of triglycerides, the creamy filling of fat cells. Fat cells, you’ll notice, are a lot like Twinkies.
Insulin has the opposite effect of LPL in muscle cells, however. When insulin levels rise, they decrease concentration and function of LPL in the muscle. This has one direct consequence: your muscles literally can’t burn any of the fat floating around in your system. They’re forced to depend on carbs. Where does all that extra fat go? Yep, your miniature Twinkie storage system.
A group of scientists even published a review of the metabolic downside of carbs at breakfast time in the British Journal of Nutrition. One thing they observed, with people eating a breakfast full of carbs, is that muscles have a hard time burning fat for the rest of the day. The culprit? LPL is turned off in muscle tissue with insulin around—and it skyrockets in fat cells.
Okay, if we can’t eat carbs, then what about an all protein diet—or at least a heavy protein diet like all those famous physique prep coaches use? Eating nothing but protein should be the holy grail, but it’s not. Although lots of studies explore how well high-protein diets (extremely high protein) preserve muscle tissue and accelerate fat loss, they’re only examining obese populations. If you want to get ripped, this becomes a problem because there’s another lipase player on the field: hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL).
HSL is responsible for getting fat back out of fat cells by breaking triglycerides down into fatty acids that can mobilize out of fat cells and get used for energy elsewhere. Insulin shuts off HSL in fat cells at the same time it shuts off LPL in muscle cells, so this all makes total sense: Why release fat from the fat cells if the muscles can’t burn it? Large influxes of amino acids, however, can also cause insulin release—and some can do so independently, like the branched-chain amino acid leucine.
Aside from the insulin problems, the amino acids themselves can shut down HSL activity. Cytotechnology researchers recently discovered that the sulfated amino acids (methionine, cystine, and cysteine) shut down HSL activity all by themselves, with no insulin needed. With all this downregulated, inactive HSL, it becomes difficult to get fat out of fat cells.
These ultra-low fat and ultra-low carb diets, however, work for pre-contest prep. Where’s the discrepancy? Well, why do you think people pop fat-burners like they’re Pez pre-contest? Because it’s necessary to make the high-protein lipolytic. Stimulating the beta-andrenergic pathway in fat cells (the same pathway adrenaline stimulates) forces HSL activity to turn back on in fat cells, increasing fat burning in muscles. This has consequences, though. Over time, the body becomes insensitive to adrenal compounds, nullifying the effect. These diets essentially have to rely on a ton of chemicals to fix the problems they create in the first place.
It’s simple. When you eat predominantly fat, your body doesn’t like to store it, so it burns the **** out of it. Whenever you try one of the other two routes (ultra-low fat, or ultra-low fat and carb), you need chemical assistance to make things work. By the way, did I mention that ultra-low carb diets stimulate LPL activity in muscles while decreasing LPL activity and sparking HSL activity in fat cells? I guess I just did, so there you go.
This is where The Carb Nite Solution comes into play. Eating all fat is great—it even downregulates the enzymes necessary to turn carbs into fat—because it makes you burn fat. If you stay ultra-low carb for too long, however, metabolism starts to drop off and fat burning slows. Carb Nite addresses this beautifully. By eating carbs one night per week (note, one night), you can stoke all your fat burning processes without gaining fat. It’s quite elegant in its simplicity and power.
So, after all this science, do you need to eat fat to burn fat? Definitely, irrefutably, yes.0 -
DAILY. With Meat.0
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Protein + fat + a soft kiss from an angel = heavenly treat.
I have told my wife that every meal I eat should be composed of both bacon and peanut butter.0 -
I have a serving of it at least once a day...sometimes twice...as long as it fits into my macros and calories im good to go0
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thanks guys macros? how do i find that out is it on my page?
Click the Food tab, then click "Settings" in the lower tab ribbon, and choose which nutrients to track. Carbs, Fat, Protein and Sodium are useful. I wouldn't bother with the others as the food diary doesn't include them for most foods, so it's not going to be accurate.
You can see how you're doing at the bottom of your food diary if you're using the website. I don't know if it's possible to see them on smartphone apps. I aim to finish a day over with protein and under with the others.
I love salty peanut butter, but can't stand it with even a trace of sugar or honey in it. I guess it's a case of what you were brought up with.0 -
thanks guys macros? how do i find that out is it on my page?
When you are on the MY HOME tab:
- click Goals (under my home)
- click the green button CHANGE GOALS
- click the Custom bubble
- click the green button CONTINUE
It will display all your macros and calorie goals plus all the other ones you want displayed on your food diary
You can adjust it or leave it as MFP has it set.
And peanut butter is awesome! I agree with some of the other posters, the natural stuff is great0 -
I either use pb2 (which is fine) BUT if im reallllyyyy craving the pure/ true stuff, I measure it out in teaspoon/ half spoon portions unless its within my macros to indulge in the whole 2tbsp portion. Sometimes just a little drop of it spread out thinly is enough and sometimes I end up with a larger serving. See if that helps.
Plus its probably just a phase perhaps you crave it because your body needs more fats or sugars. I go through food phases all the time - I was into radishes for a bit, then lost interest (i was craving crunchy and just cut out pretzels), I eat a lot of tofu dogs for a while then lost interest (craving for salty but not cheese stick or beef jerky), baby carrots, hummus, etc. you get the picture. I think we go through phases and are stuck on alternatives and if that keeps us on track then its fine.
OOh I forgot to add the time I was really into avocado and hearts of palm lol0 -
Everyday0
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I eat peanut butter.
But eat more Almond Butter!
YESSS. I bought a huge bottle of that thing from Costco, almost half the price compared to at Walmart. :happy:0
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