Low carb/Low Sugar portable snacks?

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I'm trying to help my roommate health up his diet. He has cholesterol and sugar problems and was told by his doctor to reduce carbs.

(Edit: his sugars are too high, but natural sugars are too low)

Previously, he's had a horrible, processed white diet (bagels, cookies, and frozen pizza). We're doing very well with meals, adding in veggies, increasing protein, swapping the processed carbs for healthier carbs, but he's insanely picky, so we're having trouble thinking up snacks to bring to work.

He claims to like NO fruits or nuts, which are such diet staples for me that I'm coming up blank. He does like watermelon, but so far we've tried apples, bananas, grapes, and oranges to no avail. It's hard to believe he doesn't like ANY fruit, but I'm not sure what to try next.

He hates peanuts, but I got him to try a pistachio, which he said was 'not bad'.

He was pretty indifferent to jerky.

I'm going to try dry roasted edamame, and maybe sunflower seeds, but he needs something filling that he can just grab and go.

Does anyone have any ideas?
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Replies

  • stkalcevich1
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    with someone that picky i am almost tempted to say ok you do it yourself and figure it out. eat cookies
  • UpEarly
    UpEarly Posts: 2,555 Member
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    Cheese?
  • forswearitssight
    forswearitssight Posts: 33 Member
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    with someone that picky i am almost tempted to say ok you do it yourself and figure it out. eat cookies

    Agreed.
  • tlblood
    tlblood Posts: 473 Member
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    popcorn
  • moglovesshoez
    moglovesshoez Posts: 83 Member
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    What about roasting the nuts with some spicy seasoning? Boiled eggs, bits of chicken or bacon. Nakd bars are my go to fruit/nut snack and the choc flavoured ones are lovely.
  • andthenwhatjen
    andthenwhatjen Posts: 30 Member
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    My first thought... tell him to grow the heck up and manage his own intake.

    Since that isnt helpful.. I am currently low carb/ lowsugar. I take string cheese, hard boiled eggs, and flavored (chocolate, cinnamon, and smoked) almonds.
  • AmelodyAngel
    AmelodyAngel Posts: 152 Member
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    Maybe yogurt, cheese, granola, carrot sticks, cucumber, baby tomatos
  • tiffanycherie
    tiffanycherie Posts: 97 Member
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    I'm not a fruit lover myself and I don't like peanuts but.... I do like apples with peanut butter, plums, cheese, sunflower seeds, greek yogurt with walnuts, hard boiled eggs
  • tycho_mx
    tycho_mx Posts: 426 Member
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    there's dozens of variations on nuts and seeds. Tell him ball players eat sunflower seeds :)
  • tennisdude2004
    tennisdude2004 Posts: 5,609 Member
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    Chicken drum sticks.
  • bcattoes
    bcattoes Posts: 17,299 Member
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    Dry roasted edamame. High protein, high fiber, low carbs, very low sugar.
  • jwelsh5
    jwelsh5 Posts: 2 Member
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    do a weekly meal prep.
    In a baggie or small container add:

    Cheese stick and a slice or two of turkey/chicken lunch meat
    1/2c. cottage cheese
    celery and peanut butter (if you havent tried pb2, do it! Much healthier than regular creamy peanut butter)
    veggies and 2tbsp. hummus
    hard boiled eggs
    SkinnyPop popcorn (measure the servings out, though. It can be addicting!)

    That's 6 different snacks he could make on whichever day and store in the fridge or pantry and "grab-n-go" when he needs to.

    You said he doesn't like nuts, but I wasn't a fan of them until I tried Blue diamond. Their habanero bbq almonds and their butter toffee almonds are really good.
  • ereck44
    ereck44 Posts: 1,170 Member
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    What doesn't he like about the fruit? the taste, texture? What about berries? Dried fruit? There are 30 different variety of apples--I like honeycrisp and Lady Alice's the best, but not Red or Yellow delicious. Also apricots are so-so, but dried are the bomb. If he likes watermelon, maybe he would like honeydew or muskmelon (the muskmelons are really delicious this year).

    Sounds like his taste buds are out of whack. Too much salt in his diet if he is eating a lot of processed foods. Pistachios have a fair amount of salt. Maybe mixed nuts with some roasted unsalted peanuts, to curb the salt. Also some cheese and crackers (whole grain). He may need to be introduced slowly to good unprocessed foods.

    Good luck. I am married to a really picky eater, also.
  • shelbyforsquares
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    Mobile, so excuse my not quoting here.

    I wasn't sure if cheese was OK because of the cholesterol problem. If it is he will definitely go for that, but he's lactose intolerant so probably should keep dairy limited.

    I've never heard of flavored almonds, will have to look for them. I'll also have to see if we can find naked bars locally to try.

    I wasn't sure about eggs, thought the yolks might be a problem for the cholesterol. Does anyone know if eggs, or just egg whites are OK?

    He doesn't know how to eat or cook. This is a new diagnosis, and they've put him on meds, so, having done my own 180, I want to help him through the transition, teach him how to read labels and do some basic cooking, but his health issues are different from the ones I had, so I'm a bit out of my element!

    Thanks for the ideas. Gives me a few other things to look into. I'm gluten/dairy free with GERD, so there are so many foods that just aren't even on my radar.
  • kconrad1712
    kconrad1712 Posts: 36 Member
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    My favorite low carb snacks are salami/prosciutto and those little cheese wedges. They are 0 or 1 carb, delicious, and portable.
  • RosieB405
    RosieB405 Posts: 150 Member
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    Unfortunately this process forces you to retrain your tastebuds and you you will learn to like things you didn't before. He will have to decide to like the taste of fruits, nuts, and veggies or enjoy the taste and side effects of medications.
  • littlefoot612
    littlefoot612 Posts: 156 Member
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    He kind of sounds like some of my home daycare kids. Either the child or his parents claim that they don't like fruit but I have yet to have one that didn't eat some kind of fruit that was put in front of them. He needs to kind of suck it up and try different kinds of fruit. There are so many fruits to chose from that I find it hard to believe he doesn't like any. He's just told himself that over and over and now he believes it.
  • shelbyforsquares
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    Will have to look into the cheese wedges. A lot said while I was replying!

    Peanut butter he hates (even my organic peanut butter, even the smell bothers him, but he does like carrots and cucumbers.

    I told him the same about apples. He definitely hates red and gala. We also bought a golden and granny smith to try, but based on the face he made over the gala (even when I added cinnamon) I don't expect great results.

    I agree that his taste buds are bound to change, and he's already noticing more energy. He does like the brown rice crackers I eat.

    Hummus I definitely plan to try, but it's dry 'desk drawer' snacks he seems to be missing most right now.
  • shelbyforsquares
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    Littlefoot6- exactly what I said! He has been trying what I put in front of him, but 6 fruits in, the 'ew' face hasn't gone away. Not sure which to try next. Maybe berries and melons?
  • ereck44
    ereck44 Posts: 1,170 Member
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    As someone who is fighting high cholesterol, I can assure that diet may not help that much if his problem is genetic high cholesterol.. Back in the day, eggs were considered the "bad guy" and now there is a total turn around and the rule of thumb is to limit the eggs. An awful product called "egg beaters" was invented--not sure if it is still around. I know a lot of people cut out the yolks due the cholesterol and high calories, but also the "good fat" is in the yolks. I eat them, limit my intake to 2 or 2.5 at the most per day, if that.

    There is a lot of new information about cholesterol---and research on it and how it affects one's arteries. Particle size of lipids is the new thing, as well as good vs. bad (HDL and LDL). The large particle size of LDL is okay, but the small particle size is a "killer" and adheres to the artery walls, inviting inflammation and damage.

    The best thing to include in one's diet is cold water fishes, like salmon and mackerel, and taking daily fish oil supplements. Also high fiber diets help decrease the cholesterol numbers. Did his physician start him on a statin?

    I myself am on a water soluble statin and have just recently had my blood drawn. I have a genetic predisposition for high cholesterol. Ironically, no one in my family, male or female has ever had heart disease and usually live well into their 90's. My grandfather's sister died recently at age 104. I have tried to explain this to my physicians, to no avail. My concern is the frigging Alzheimer's disease which is strongly exhibited in my family. Because there is a correlation between high cholesterol and Alzheimer's, I am trying to get my "numbers" to a normal level.

    Sorry about the lengthy post.