Clean Eating - UK
Frankii_x
Posts: 238
Hi everyone,
I'm trying to find some friends on here who are into clean eating and based in the UK. It's something I'm trying to get into properly. I'm hoping for any UK clean eaters to add me for ideas etc (purely because we have the same shops) but would also love anybody else who is into clean eating who wouldn't mind helping me as this is all pretty new to me!
Frankii
I'm trying to find some friends on here who are into clean eating and based in the UK. It's something I'm trying to get into properly. I'm hoping for any UK clean eaters to add me for ideas etc (purely because we have the same shops) but would also love anybody else who is into clean eating who wouldn't mind helping me as this is all pretty new to me!
Frankii
0
Replies
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Me, Me!
I'm a UK clean eater, I'm having a week off logging but still eating clean, previous weeks are good to look at for my diary but alway looking to share meals and purchases!
I also share my actual meals (rather than the MFP food list) on Instagram
sdr_fitness_goals on IG0 -
I'm a clean eater too. I get everything from Tesco online (lots of dry beans, lentils, chickpeas, couscous etc etc etc) and I Mae me food from scratch. It's actually very easy and quick. Check out bbcgoodfood.com for ideas. I end up cooking a lot of vegetarian meals and we eat meat 1-2x per week to keep costs down. They have a healthy food section. On the website and most things take around 30 mins or less to cook.0
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Thanks for replying guys0
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Hello,
Im not based in the UK but my husband and I have both lost 30 pounds from clean eating and Im happy to share any recipes or tips about the clean eating lifestyle. Working on starting a blog about it because its been so life changing for us.0 -
I'd also like to get in on this, I'm from the UK and get very bored very quickly with clean eating. I'm not full on strict clean eating, but any meal ideas would be great as I'm not creative in the kitchen (I pretty much hate cooking!).
sdreed25 - definitely going to follow you for food ideas!0 -
OK, I really hate the term "clean eating", but if what you are really talking about is "cooking from scratch and not just opening/assembling packets and pre-made things" then I'm with you all the way. I'm just not in favour of excluding any food in its natural or minimally-processed form (i.e. butter, flour, pasta) unless advised by a medical professional following appropriate tests. As my old boss used to sa, "there's a lot more cases of people dying from NOT eating food than dying from eating food.":bigsmile:
I love to cook - its how I eneded up here in the first place:ohwell: My go to site for recipes is the bbcgoodfoood site - it has all the recipes from all their magazines and tv programmes (including Good Food, Delicious, Olive etc) and you can put in 3 ingredients and get recipe suggestions - you can then refine the results by low calories, low fat, vegetarian etc.0 -
Hi, in in the uk (west Yorkshire). I'm wanting to change my diet and I'm not sure where to start. I've been losing weight since 2012 had lost 3 stone, but recently gained 5-6lb. So any ideas on healthy 'clean' eating would be invalueble. Thanks0
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I eat clean most of the time but I also like to have a treat now and again. Processed foods are out normally for instance but now and again (less then once per month) I will have bacon. I think the term 'clean eating' has become so confusing that nobody really knows what it means. Certainly, my wife and me cooked virtually everything from scratch even soups and eat the usual fruit and veg. However, we also like Greek yogurt with honey. We also both love wine as although we are both healthy middle-aged people who do a lot of exercise we like to live.
We have a Wholefoods store in our town and they sell a wide variety of 'clean' foods and also a farm shop just a few hundred yards up the road. We do shop at Asda, Tesco etc as well though but their selection of really healthy foods is pretty limited other than fruit and veg.
Regarding exercise, I am not a bodybuilder but I do eat to lose body fat and to look lean with muscle. My wife is a powerful swimmer.
Had a quick at your website and I hope it develops into something bigger for us in this tiny island!0 -
I'm from the UK and I eat my version of "clean".
I believe my diary is open.0 -
Thanks Kelvincornish!0
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What do we mean by clean eating?0
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Hi, I know this is old post but feel free to add me. I don't really know what eating clean technically means but I don't eat much processed food and definitely no ready/dried meals. I cook loads and everything from fresh. I get basically everything from Tesco but also farmers market and butchers. I'd love to see more British food diaries to get ideas for meals.0
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Hi all,
I've been looking into this ideal as even though we hardly eat anything processed, id like to do more.... the more I hear & learn I know that processed foods are something I want to get away from :-)
Kitchenshed, I'm going to go straight to your website!0 -
Hi Charlie,
There's a lack of clean eating information in the UK because it's complete and utter claptrap. Due to us having a National Health Service, it is much harder for such practices to become commonplace because the majority of the healthcare system has to have some scientific background behind it before the budget will be spent on it.
I'm hoping they will remove your account for spamming soon.0 -
Hi Charlie,
There's a lack of clean eating information in the UK because it's complete and utter claptrap. Due to us having a National Health Service, it is much harder for such practices to become commonplace because the majority of the healthcare system has to have some scientific background behind it before the budget will be spent on it.
I'm hoping they will remove your account for spamming soon.
Whos Charlie ?0 -
I wash my hands before I eat - does that count?0
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UK clean eater (most of the time ) here! I cook all my meals from scratch and like to try out new clean recipes, feel free to add me!0
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Hi Charlie,
There's a lack of clean eating information in the UK because it's complete and utter claptrap. Due to us having a National Health Service, it is much harder for such practices to become commonplace because the majority of the healthcare system has to have some scientific background behind it before the budget will be spent on it.
I'm hoping they will remove your account for spamming soon.
Whos Charlie ?
The post has been deleted for spam. They also pulled it out of the quote I had in my post, even though I had removed the website from it.0 -
Im in UK and in the same boat! Can a group be created to allow discussions to run off from this? Recipes etc?0
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Hey, sorry for any upset. I didn't realise I couldn't offer my own website as a reference to others. It wasn't intended as spam just a resource for clean eaters in the uk. Sorry for not understanding the forum rules better!0
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Trying to eat clean tooo ????0
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Clean means something different to everyone but I consider myself a clean eater with occasional blips. I don't venture into 'diet food' territory, eat plenty of fruit and veg and home cook most meals.0
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Could someone define 'clean' for me - thanks0
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I aim to eat non processed food, not always successful, but that's the objective. Hence shouldn't really matter where someone is from, as the objective is to eat meat/fish/veggies/fruit - no labels or packaging. However, I know some labels sneak in there, I'm Irish, most of the same stuff over here as in UK. Feel free to add me - my diary is open. not been the most consistent last 2 weeks, I'm generally better.0
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Clean eating means eliminating refined, processed, and chemically-enhanced foods. The basic rules are no white sugar, no white flour, no white rice, no preservatives, etc. Almost everything has added ingredients to it nowadays. It focuses on eating whole, natural foods. Basically, if you can't find it in nature - don't eat it.
I have been a clean eater for about 4 months (giving myself a cheat meal here and there - and that's a MEAL, not a day). I feel SO much better. I personally don't include any cheese or butter in my diet (I just don't think humans are meant to consume dairy) but it is allowed in Clean Eating as long as nothing is added to it (for instance, clean eaters would get a whole block of cheese and shred it themselves, not get the pre-shredded crap).
I urge you to look at the ingredients on the things you eat every day. The lists of ingredients can cover half of the box! Clean eaters generally turn it away if there's more than 4-5 ingredients (generally rule of thumb is, if you don't know what the heck the ingredient is, your body won't either).0 -
Clean eating means eliminating refined, processed, and chemically-enhanced foods. The basic rules are no white sugar, no white flour, no white rice, no preservatives, etc. Almost everything has added ingredients to it nowadays. It focuses on eating whole, natural foods. Basically, if you can't find it in nature - don't eat it.
Do you know how they make sugar white?I have been a clean eater for about 4 months (giving myself a cheat meal here and there - and that's a MEAL, not a day). I feel SO much better. I personally don't include any cheese or butter in my diet (I just don't think humans are meant to consume dairy) but it is allowed in Clean Eating as long as nothing is added to it (for instance, clean eaters would get a whole block of cheese and shred it themselves, not get the pre-shredded crap).
So grating is a process that counts and makes something 'unclean'.
Good, at least we've got something cleared up.
So farming,
milking,
pasturising,
sterilising,
filtering,
cutting,
stirring,
cooking,
curdling,
draining,
salting,
milling,
pressing,
molding,
ripening,
storing,
taste testing,
quality control,
packaging, and whatever else goes into cheese doesn't so that's cleared up.
Just rubbing it against a piece of perfectly clean stainless steel with holes in makes it no longer 'clean'.
I'm glad we've cleared at least these processes up.I urge you to look at the ingredients on the things you eat every day. The lists of ingredients can cover half of the box! Clean eaters generally turn it away if there's more than 4-5 ingredients (generally rule of thumb is, if you don't know what the heck the ingredient is, your body won't either).
So if I make a salad and put in;
1. Tomatoes I grew in my garden
2. Lettuce (my garden)
3. Peppers (garden)
4. Carrots (gdn)
5. Cucumber ()
Then that's ok.
BUT!
if I also put in
6. Onions (from the garden)
7. Chives (garden)
IT'S NOW NOT CLEAN AND I'LL END UP OBESE!
People wonder why people mock clean eaters, as though they have no clue about what they are talking about.
It's abundantly clear that 'clean eaters' bodies know far more about basic chemistry than they do.0 -
Im in UK and in the same boat! Can a group be created to allow discussions to run off from this? Recipes etc?
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/new0 -
There's no need to be rude, I was giving information based on my personal experience and what I've read because someone asked. When I was talking about the amount of ingredients, I was talking about products you would buy pre-packaged at a store. Obviously, home-cooked meals are a completely different thing. And about the cheese thing, that's why I personally don't eat it!! I personally don't think it's clean - I just gave information based on what I've read about other clean eaters.0
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Why do people have to be so patronising? I asked a similar question about clean eating a while back and got criticised about greek yogurt of all things! I totally get the grated cheese point you were making, they add preservatives to extend shelf like and ingredients to avoid clumping. My concept of clean eating is basically avoiding anything synthetic. Cheese is fine in my book, so it butter, so is milk, so is anything that is made from natural whole ingredients. I personally try to avoid E numbers, colourings, MSG, low fat versions of foods that have no nutritional value. If greek yogurt goes against this, due to the 'process' of making it, then may the next lightning bolt strike me down!!!0
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Why do people have to be so patronising? I asked a similar question about clean eating a while back and got criticised about greek yogurt of all things! I totally get the grated cheese point you were making, they add preservatives to extend shelf like and ingredients to avoid clumping. My concept of clean eating is basically avoiding anything synthetic. Cheese is fine in my book, so it butter, so is milk, so is anything that is made from natural whole ingredients. I personally try to avoid E numbers, colourings, MSG, low fat versions of foods that have no nutritional value. If greek yogurt goes against this, due to the 'process' of making it, then may the next lightning bolt strike me down!!!
Exactly. And yes, that's what I meant by the cheese reference - at least you understood! Basically, what it comes down to, is eating what makes your body feel good, healthy, and energized. If that means having greek yogurt, then so be it! Do whatever works for you. Nobody else has to live in your body so they can take their judgment elsewhere.0
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