Protein Shakes as meal replacement.

Hello, I want to know why people say you cant use protein shakes as a meal replacement?

My plan: Drink Maximuscle Cyclone protein milkshakes mixed with fat free milk. Works out at 400 calories each. Drinking 4 per day 1600 calories. I will continue exercise as usual.

People say this wont work. If I am taking a vitamin and having such high levels of protein wont it keep my muscle while burning fat?

Anyone can shed some light on this without just saying "you cant do that". I would love to have some actual reasoning behind it and a bit of science if available.

Thanks guys. I already did my first day and it was fine. Also dont want to be rude but please dont tell me to just eat a balanced diet, I struggle with appetite and dont control food very well but with milkshakes its much more simple to control.

Replies

  • Shuuma
    Shuuma Posts: 465 Member
    I do this. Usually for my breakfast or morning snack because it's quick and easy and I workout in the morning so I'm ready for some protein replenishment by the time I'm heading out the door to work.

    I make sure I eat every couple of hours, though, and it keeps my metabolism much more even.

    My personal experience is that if I use MFP to log my entire day's food intake, I can just follow it and eat well, keep my sugar regulated, and keep my metabolism firing.

    I think one a day is sufficient, maybe two if you're trying to bulk up, but nothing beats lots of good veggies and lean protein. If you are working for a specific goal, consulting a professional nutritionist might be the best bet to see if you can use the shakes to replace your meals. You may want to check and see how much sugar and other things you don't necessarily want are in the shakes, too, to help guide your decision.

    Here's what most of my days are like and this works well for me--I am also someone that struggles to control food, so all these things are easy portions.

    Morning: coffee, creamer, a little sugar, a Special K Protein Meal bar
    Morning snack: Protein shake
    Lunch: Turkey chili (or something similar I can make a lot in a crock pot and freeze into two-cup portions for work)
    Afternoon Snack: Special K popcorn chips or Dannon Oikos yogurt
    Dinner: Pasta with veggies and chicken or turkey or something similar. (Frozen Tilapia filets take a couple of minutes to fix in a skillet with some rice.)
    Evening snack: Orville Redenbacher's 100-calorie single serve popcorn.

    All of these things are great tasting, easy to make, and don't take a lot of planning other than at the store. Also, these are just my own things that work and mostly my opinions. ;-)

    Good Luck!
  • uconnwinsnc
    uconnwinsnc Posts: 1,054 Member
    You're going to get the worst poops of your life. Have fun!
  • rgugs13
    rgugs13 Posts: 197 Member
    Protein shakes don't generally have complete nutrition, so even with a vitamin, you would likely be missing out on very important nutrients. Your body can also only process so much protein at a time, so if you take too much at once, you are just wasting money on your powders. I occasionally replace a meal with a protein shake, but I also add psyllium husk and a powder called Amazing Grass to try to make it more complete. I only mix mine with water. I have done that twice a day, but I find real food to be more satisfying. You may lose weight doing that, and quickly, but it isn't sustainable. You can't keep doing that the rest of your life, and it won't teach you anything about healthy foods, portions, or how to cope with real life situations like going out to eat or holidays or birthday parties. Your money would be better spent meeting with a nutritionist and learning about how to eat the correct types of food in the correct portions, or get on one of those meal delivery services where you at least eat real food. If you are worried about portions, measure everything out and put it together the night before and pre enter it into MFP, so all you have to do is eat it the next day. I've done that before, and it is great, but I found it not sustainable. This time around, I am eye balling everything and entering as I eat. I go over sometimes, but I am learning as I go, and losing weight. I wish it would just fall off, but I didn't gain it all in a month, and I won't lose it all in a month.

    Here is a handy portion guide I use for reference.

    http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/9b/81/46/9b8146beca3d28ba897bb09b48dd0336.jpg
  • megsmom2
    megsmom2 Posts: 2,362 Member
    Micronutrients. Vitamins. Fiber
    Also..food. its what's for dinner.
  • candiceh3
    candiceh3 Posts: 379 Member
    FIBRE

    Oh man... you are going to be passing bricks.
  • jmkmomm
    jmkmomm Posts: 3,247 Member
    I feel what I am learning here on MFP is a lifestyle. If you drink 4 protein shakes a day and lose the weight you want, after you lose your weight what have you gained as far as knowledge of what to eat.
  • Kate814
    Kate814 Posts: 145
    If you're eating under your maintenance you will lose weight, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's healthy. Your body needs more than protein to function. Any diet you begin should include enough proteins, carbs, and fats for your body to work properly. As simply as possible, without enough of these nutrients your body will not work how it suppose to. The other issue is that multivitamins are not an appropriate substitute for whole foods when it comes to getting enough vitamins and minerals.
  • unFATuated
    unFATuated Posts: 204 Member
    I use protein shakes purely as a way to boost my protein intake, as I don't eat enough foods (through my own dislikes mostly) which naturally contain protein. I don't even use them as a meal replacement, just in addition to what I eat.

    You *can* do it, but I doubt it's going to be good for you. I understand your logic (easier to control than food) and yes, you probably will lose weight by doing this. But there's a lot of stuff in protein shakes that probably aren't great to consume day-in and day-out. Artificial sweeteners, other additives. It will probably mess with your stomach, you may get some digestive issues. Lack of fibre might make you constipated, or it might go the other way entirely (ewww). Your body will not take the same nutrients from a vitamin pill as from the foods in which they naturally occur, and I don't think there are many vitamin pills which contain every micronutrient your body needs. And what are you going to do once you've reached your goal? The problem is still going to be there at the end. You won't learn control over your eating unless you're eating. If you seriously have food issues, look at seeing a counsellor/therapist about it. You will need to learn how to eat properly because you will not be able to exist on protein shakes for the rest of your life.
  • LisaAvasNana
    LisaAvasNana Posts: 82 Member
    I'm doing the Herbalife shakes right now. I do two a day and most days I get a balanced meal for my third along with two snacks. I also take a multivitamin with every meal. Taking vitamins in smaller doses is easier on you, keeps them in your system. Drinking lots of water helps too. I'm finding that when I was mapping out my day with regular food I was losing weight better. I'm not done tweeking my plan yet plus I was on medical for 3 months and couldn't exercise. I LOVE the shakes! My coach did tell me that for the third meal you need to make it a balanced one no matter which meal it is . Later when you lose your weight you go down to one shake a day. It is a good idea to eat a balanced meal and MFP helps with the planning. I love this site. Good Luck.
  • SLLRunner
    SLLRunner Posts: 12,942 Member
    Why do you want to drink all your calories? There is a difference between having one protein shake a day and eating balanced meals the rest of the day.

    There is also a difference between 1600 calories of food and 1600 calories of protein shakes. The protein shakes will keep you in the bathroom really often whereas real food will keep you there less often.

    However, you can do what you want. I'm not going to tell you that you can't, though I can't support you in this.