Vegetarian Protein Options
nbkp2ge
Posts: 39 Member
Dear MFP
I am a vegetarian and I understand what I need to have when it comes to Good Carbs and Good Fats. However when it comes to protein I'm finding this really diificult being a vegetarian.
Any suggestions how I can get my daily intake of protein?
Thank You:flowerforyou:
I am a vegetarian and I understand what I need to have when it comes to Good Carbs and Good Fats. However when it comes to protein I'm finding this really diificult being a vegetarian.
Any suggestions how I can get my daily intake of protein?
Thank You:flowerforyou:
0
Replies
-
Have you tried quorn products they are apparently good for protein.
Just went to look at my diary and there is 15g of protein in 100g of quorn mince0 -
Hi
Hemp Protein powder is one option, you can also find protein in Tofu, Soya, Quinoa, beans, lentils, nuts and seeds.
0 -
Mushrooms, green veg, greek yoghurt, cottage cheese.
Do you eat fish and/or seafood..lots of protein in these0 -
Cottage cheese, quorn, torfu, chick peas, lentils, soya milk, almond milk, soya beans, nuts, seeds, broccoli, spinach:-)0
-
Dear MFP
I am a vegetarian and I understand what I need to have when it comes to Good Carbs and Good Fats. However when it comes to protein I'm finding this really diificult being a vegetarian.
Any suggestions how I can get my daily intake of protein?
Thank You:flowerforyou:
I've been a vegetarian for 16 yrs (vegan for 1). Great sources are lentils, beans/legumes, quinoa, tofu, seitan, tempeh, soy beans, nuts, seeds, raw almond butter and peanut butter (PB2 rocks). Also cottage cheese, soy milk, yogurt (silk makes a great vegan dairy free yogurt). You can make your own burgers out of the lentils and beans or buy ready made patties from Boca and Morning Star. Other brands that are great who make some tasty ready made food is Quorn, Light Life, Tofurkey. Vegetarian/vegan cheese brands are Teese, Daiya and Go Veggie. There are others but I prefer these. Then there's protein powders (hemp, rice, soy, pea). I love to go between Sun Warrior, warrior blend vanilla and Optimum Nutrition 100% soy vanilla bean. Both have about 120 cals/less than 2 grams of fat/less than 2 grams of carbs and over 20 grams of protein. Biggest thing is getting in the pros without going over the carbs. Hope this helps!
-Felicia0 -
Awesome...Thanks guys....this is really helpful
Exactly the information I was looking for.
Thank You All x0 -
Morning Star makes a variety of vegetarian foods. Most have good amounts of protein0
-
i normally make a batch of quorn "chicken pieces" with veg! that and greek yoghurt!0
-
Thanks Tony1307 I'll definately take a look at that!!!
tillymush - how do you make quorn chicken pieces? or do you buy it from the supermarket?
I've seen the quorn products around in the supermarket but wasn't sure if it was healthy...or processed!!!0 -
When I was vegan, I was a really big fan of the Vega brand and would often make smoothies with their vanilla chai protein powder: http://myvega.com/. they also make bars!0
-
some of the foods listed here aren't very high in protein; quinoa has complete protein, but only 6 grams per serving, and mushrooms are negligible. eggs (egg beaters, egg whites and whole eggs) are high in protein, greek yogurt is packed with it, and don't forget low fat cheese and other dairy. soy offers complete protein, but softer tofu has less of... well, everything than firm tofus.
my hubby and son say gardein burgers and morningstar farms sausages and riblets are delish. some quorn products are pretty tasty. i also like non-fat milk, bluebonnet protein isolate chocolate powder and unsweetened solgar whey to go vanilla that i sweeten with stevia.
btw, i'm lazy - i just through quorn or morningstar farms chicken pieces on a plate and microwave them0 -
In addition to what's already been mentioned, there is seitan. It has 75g protein per 100 grams.
and tempeh has 31g protein per serving.0 -
As a Vegan for 15 years I always find this question quite bizarre. You have got to try really hard NOT to get enough protein. A normal balanced Vegan or Vegetarian Diet should get you plenty of protein with no problems yes if your heavily exercising you may wish to supplement it with some protein powder but generally it shouldn't be hard. There's beans especially soya 100g of brocolli has around 4g of protein, Brown rice half a cup has around 3g. A serving of porridge outs around 5g and so much more easily avilable protein in your food Protein's everywhere. Also don't worry about complete proteins because people don't eat like that we get our protein from various sources which easily supply all the essential amino acids
Don't over complicate it you do not need special foods as a Vegan or Vegetarian to get plenty of protein0 -
Excellent Guys...Thank You so much for taking the time out to respond to my question.0
-
0
-
That's very useful Thank You HeartOnFire!!!0
-
Beans. Or supplement with a shake or bar0
-
Protein bar
Protein shake
Hemp protein powder
Black beans
Navy beans
White beans
Kidney beans
Chick peas
Greek yogurt
Broccoli
Spinach
Quinoa0 -
You should check out the vegan line 'gardein'. They're really good!
I love the fishless filet, and the chick'n sliders.0 -
I've been a vegetarian for about 3 years, I had a hard time at first getting enough protein but I'm getting better at it...cottage cheese, cheese, morning star, Boca and gardein products, eggs, beans and of course protein shakes with milk. ..I can't stand tofu so I have to figure stuff out...luckily there can also be protein in breads, pastas and such so they can add to the total in the end0
-
This content has been removed.
-
rice protein powder
seitan (don't be afraid of gluten)
lentils
get creative and make stuff0 -
mung bean fettucine (25g per serving) - I make and awesome vegan mac n cheese sauce for this, Sun Warrior Blend protein powder (20g per scoop)....0
-
Excellent!!!! Thanks Guys...:flowerforyou:0
-
As a Vegan for 15 years I always find this question quite bizarre. You have got to try really hard NOT to get enough protein. A normal balanced Vegan or Vegetarian Diet should get you plenty of protein with no problems yes if your heavily exercising you may wish to supplement it with some protein powder but generally it shouldn't be hard. There's beans especially soya 100g of brocolli has around 4g of protein, Brown rice half a cup has around 3g. A serving of porridge outs around 5g and so much more easily avilable protein in your food Protein's everywhere. Also don't worry about complete proteins because people don't eat like that we get our protein from various sources which easily supply all the essential amino acids
Don't over complicate it you do not need special foods as a Vegan or Vegetarian to get plenty of protein
For an average, inactive person, yes. But if your goal is fitness, athletics, etc - I wish you best of luck to get anywhere near 100 g of protein per day (edit: without specifically trying, which OP is doing), which would be considered *low* for an athlete.
http://examine.com/faq/how-much-protein-do-i-need-every-day.html0 -
I'm vegan, and Garden of Life raw protein powder is great for me, I use it whenever i need a bit more protein to get in for the day, especially after a workout (which is supposedly the best time to get in your protein).0
-
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/926789-protein-sources
HAHAHHA. I just saw where I answered this in August. I think OP got her answers guys. :happy:0 -
As a Vegan for 15 years I always find this question quite bizarre. You have got to try really hard NOT to get enough protein. A normal balanced Vegan or Vegetarian Diet should get you plenty of protein with no problems yes if your heavily exercising you may wish to supplement it with some protein powder but generally it shouldn't be hard. There's beans especially soya 100g of brocolli has around 4g of protein, Brown rice half a cup has around 3g. A serving of porridge outs around 5g and so much more easily avilable protein in your food Protein's everywhere. Also don't worry about complete proteins because people don't eat like that we get our protein from various sources which easily supply all the essential amino acids
Don't over complicate it you do not need special foods as a Vegan or Vegetarian to get plenty of protein
For an average, inactive person, yes. But if your goal is fitness, athletics, etc - I wish you best of luck to get anywhere near 100 g of protein per day (edit: without specifically trying, which OP is doing), which would be considered *low* for an athlete.
http://examine.com/faq/how-much-protein-do-i-need-every-day.html
I have a hard time with getting 100+ grams a day. I end up with protein drinks just because I am lifting heavy so I needz a lot of protein.0 -
As a Vegan for 15 years I always find this question quite bizarre. You have got to try really hard NOT to get enough protein. A normal balanced Vegan or Vegetarian Diet should get you plenty of protein with no problems yes if your heavily exercising you may wish to supplement it with some protein powder but generally it shouldn't be hard. There's beans especially soya 100g of brocolli has around 4g of protein, Brown rice half a cup has around 3g. A serving of porridge outs around 5g and so much more easily avilable protein in your food Protein's everywhere. Also don't worry about complete proteins because people don't eat like that we get our protein from various sources which easily supply all the essential amino acids
Don't over complicate it you do not need special foods as a Vegan or Vegetarian to get plenty of protein
For an average, inactive person, yes. But if your goal is fitness, athletics, etc - I wish you best of luck to get anywhere near 100 g of protein per day (edit: without specifically trying, which OP is doing), which would be considered *low* for an athlete.
http://examine.com/faq/how-much-protein-do-i-need-every-day.html
There is a lot of over pushing of protein which seems to have filtered down from a lot of body building sources and leapt upon by the dieting and supplement industry as a Marketing gimic for the gulible. Just because your on a diet and have suddenly decided to go to the gym twice a week does not suddenly mean you need ridiculous amounts of protein. There seems to be the prevalence especially on MFP that you need enough Protein for an Elephant. Protein is important as is your overall diet people just need to put it into perspective and not automatically believe all the hype.
I have no problems with Protein powders etc. i use them myself as they are a convenient thing especially after long runs. People though really need to put their protein requirements into a real time perspective.0 -
Thanks!!!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 423 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions