green smoothie
ForCharlotte
Posts: 42 Member
I'm thinking I'm going to try doing green smoothies for lunches. that's the time when I'm most likely to grab junk food so I'm hoping this might be a better choice. I'm not talking every meal of every day just lunch. was wondering if anyone else drinks these. thoughts? recipe ideas? opinions?
0
Replies
-
I would like to add green smoothies to my diet....I will, I just have a hard time with how they look. I'll just close my eyes.0
-
I do that for most lunches (and I usually have some leftover for snacks). My office is next to the house, so it makes it easier to do it mid-day, and I can generally blend and then take it to the computer, so it's a quick lunch to boot.
1) Vitamix (or similar). I don't recommend juicing as it's a PAIN to clean and you lose a lot with it.
2) I use either water or unsweetened almond milk. Choose your liquid wisely as it can introduce all kinds of nasty into that good juice.
3) I mix it up based on what I have around and the season. We have a large garden, so I toss in whatever I'm growing if in the summer. In the winter, it depends on what I can find that's fresh from the store. But I always (always) use two main solids as a base, and that's apples and bananas. Apples for the sweet, and bananas to thicken some (and sweet if ripe). If you don't like banana, consider avocado. I use avocado for blending my own tomato soup (in the vitamix [or similar]) as it thickens it and makes it creamy. I expect it would do the same for a smoothie.
Sample recipe:
* 2 cups unsweetened almond milk
* 2 apples
* 2 bananas
* 3 cups (roughly) spinach
* 2 cups kale
* a couple collard green leaves
* watercress if I have it
* goji berries if I have them
I had some lettuce yesterday that I knew I wouldn't get around to eating as a salad so I tossed that in. Basically, toss in your liquid and fill to the top with greens. Blend quickly just to break it down to make room for the rest. Add cored apple, whole bananas, and whatever else you want. I'll then add two double handfulls of ice - very important as warm green juice is pretty nasty. Toss on the juice setting and I run it through twice to break it down fully. By blending the greens first I don't have to use the tamper.
I'll include a carrot (just toss in whole), have used beet (again, whole), broccoli, blueberries, strawberries, almonds (whole - they grind up very fine in the vitamix), and just used up my last bit of rainbow chard. It makes quite a bit, but I'll drink 1/2 of it for lunch and then toss the rest in a jar and have it as juice for snacks. As you change ingredients, you change taste, so you don't get bored. I've even tossed in a handful of peanuts (not too many - strong flavor).
Bonus: Strawberry smoothie
* 2 cups of almond milk
* 1 back of O Organic Strawberries
* 2 bananas
* if strawberries are sweet, no need to sweeten, but if not so much, I'll toss in a bit of stevia
Killer snack for the family. Lost 50 lbs since doing that, my bp has dropped from 160/98 to 115/65, my cholesterol was 137 last month, and I'm not sick of it. Figure you're getting exactly the same as if you'd eaten it, but you're actually able to absorb more of the good stuff, and it doesn't upset your stomach (NO upset from doing it this way!). It's also not concentrating the calories since you're still getting the entire package, just broken down extra.0 -
Btw - when I look at what I'm tossing in there I try to keep nutrient density in mind. Example: Iceberg lettuce - not much value, so I won't waste my time. Trade it out with something better. Since it's blended, texture isn't as big of a concern. I wouldn't sit down and eat a bunch of collard greens. I can't stand them raw or cooked. But blended -- it's pretty good. Goji berries are kind of bitter, but in the smoothie the muted bitter plays well with the sweet of the apple. It improves the overall taste.
I'm not a big Fuhrman nut (good info, but comes across as a used diet salesman sometimes), but his food scores have been handy: http://www.drfuhrman.com/library/andi-food-scores.aspx. Despite my not being a vegetarian, I like Dr. Campbell and Dr. Esselstyn. I took a plant-based nutrition cert program from Cornell and Dr. Campbell was the main lecturer/prof. I've certainly changed how/what meat I eat following that. Check some of their stuff for recommended foods too. I'd count them as very reliable.0 -
I make a green smoothie nearly every day, usually as a snack between breakfast and lunch or lunch and dinner.
My liquid of choice is usually coconut water: you get added flavor with far fewer calories than something like orange juice, for example. I use about three cups of baby spinach, or sometimes kale if I happen to have it, a banana, and then usually some kind of frozen fruit. Trader Joe's has really good prices on decent sized bags of organic frozen fruit like mango, pineapple, tropical blends that have banana and strawberries, etc. Or, if we happen to find something like pineapple or mango on sale, we'll chop it up and pop it in the freezer ourselves. I just find it to be a great way to keep your smoothies cold without adding ice, but that's just my personal preference.
You can also play around with things like chia seed, hemp hearts, flax seeds, all super good for you and hidden in a smoothie is a great way to get them into your diet.0 -
Yeah - forgot about flax seed meal! Great thing to add.
One of my favorite non-smoothie snacks is to toss some strawberries into a pot with a little bit of water and steam them down, add a half cup of whole oats, some flax seed meal (adds a nutty flavor and thickens), and maybe a bit of stevia if the strawberries aren't ideal. Add water as needed. Let that sit for a few and eat. Great oatmeal that's mostly fruit-based. The cooking does mess with the C in the berries some, but there's still a ton of good in there. That's a snack - not meal. Toss in a few raisins or dried cranberries if you want to change it up some.
I'll toss flax seed meal and chia seeds into soups too. Good stuff.0 -
Thank you, love to share more green smoothie recipes.....especially if they are low calorie and healthy0
-
I've been starting them as well and would like to start incorporating them more daily. I've made spinach, banana, pineapple, blueberry with either water or almond milk and tossed in some flax seeds or green powder. They aren't pretty but do taste good. For Christmas I bought a Nutribullet off of eBay. I do have a VitaMix but it doesn't always make it as smooth as I'd like.
BTW: It took my system a bit to adjust to it - but then I also was having more salads.0 -
Sipping on mine now. Mmmm.0
-
wow thanks so much for the info guys it's just what i needed to know. I'm gonna stop by the store on my way home after class and try to start today! hopefully i can get part the look of it haha0
-
-
so i just made one and as long as i don't look at it it isn't actually too bad. i just did spinach, apple and banana with a little water and ice and yeah i think this is something i can keep up with. my husband is staring at me like i just grew a second head though lol haha0
-
I would like to add green smoothies to my diet....I will, I just have a hard time with how they look. I'll just close my eyes.
usually works for most of the ladies0 -
My favourite go to green smoothie is plain and simple aka delicious!
2 handfuls spinach
1 banana ( I prefer it not frozen)
1/2 cup frozen blueberries
1 cup water
Blend till smooth0 -
Hi! Thanks for the recipes and tips! How do you calculate your calories with the smoothies?0
-
One more modification that you might like. Add yogurt (vanilla is what I tried). I really liked it, but haven't used it regularly as I cut most dairy out. It was very good though. If yogurt is part of your diet, I'd give it a shot and play around with volume.
For calculating calories, it's pretty easy. Just enter what you put in individually. You're not taking anything away from the food, so if you add 2 cups of spinach, then record 2 cups of spinach. That's it. If you find a few recipes that you like, just save them so you don't have to keep selecting the individual items.0 -
this is what i eat for breakfast most days before i leave the house:
-1 cup unsweetened almond milk (usually vanilla flavoured--i choose this over coconut due to the added calcium)
-1/2 frozen banana
-1 cup frozen berry mix (whatever giant bag is on sale at time of purchase)
-1 scoop whey protein (also usually vanilla flavoured)
-a couple handfuls of greens (spinach, kale, broccoli, whatever)
works out to about 275-300 calories
i found myself getting hungry sooner than seemed reasonable, so now i have a small handfull of almonds when i get to the office. the delicious fat seems to hold me until lunch.0 -
100 days of Real Food website had some good recipes, even have a beginner's recipe that I may try for breakfast on the weekends0
-
I have a green smoothie daily for breakfast and have for years. It keeps me full until lunch and I look forward to it every day! Here is my basic recipe that serves 2:
1 c. almond milk
1 c. greek yogurt
4 c. (or more) greens (spinach/kale/collard greens)
1 wedge cabbage
10 baby carrots
1 two-inch slice zucchini
1 two-inch slice yellow squash
1 banana
1 c. frozen pineapple
1 c. frozen strawberries
1 c. frozen raspberry/blueberry/blackberry blend
If you are new to green smoothies, start with less greens and gradually increase as you get used to it. You need a GOOD blender. I have a Vitamix but my daughter has Blendtec and it's also good. It's important to blend your liquids and greens first, then add the fruit and blend again. You can get more greens this way. I add the liquid and pack the blender FULL of greens, but once blended, it's only a little more than 1/2 the blender.
I add other things sometimes too --- chia seeds, flax seed, other fruits/veggies as I have them. Sometimes I add honey if I taste it and it's not as sweet as I would like. I buy all my frozen fruits/berries at Costco -- they are the least expensive around.0 -
Not a bad idea, I would add apples and pineapples, maybe strawberries for some sweetness0
-
I am getting an Optimum blender next weekend and plan on doing lots of green smoothies!0
-
If you're having a smoothie as a meal, I'd suggest adding a decent serve of protein and good fats to help make it "last". If I just had fruit and vegetables I'd be starving in about 2 minutes....
When I had smoothies (don't anymore, eat enough vegies and chewing your cals is better than drinking them), my "formula" was 3-4 cups greens, 1 piece or 1/2 cup fruit, a serve of protein and a good fat - 1/2 an avo, a couple tablespoons nut butter, coconut (milk, oil, butter) etc..0 -
Just one more thing that I sometimes add if my food combo isn't as sweet as I'd like it to be (though I almost always use some sort of sweet fruit which takes care of it). I grow stevia plants in my garden and then dry the leaves in the fall. You can grow it year-round indoors too, and it's pretty easy to grow and store. Toss a little bit of that in there. Just an idea. It's not a frequent thing, but I'll do that if I'm out of apple, or if I'm making a frozen dessert in the blender where I'd expect it to be sweeter than a drink.0
-
I have a smoothie every morning for breakfast
I use 4 cups of leafy greens
2 cups water
2-3 cups fruit
2 tbsp. chia
2 tbsp. flax powder
1 tsp maca powder
and sometimes I add coconut oil
This keeps me full till and weighs in around 300-375 cals
I recommend green smoothie girl .com or her book green smoothie diet
Robyn Openshaw is pretty awesome0 -
3/4 cup unsweetened original almond milk
1 scoop of whey protein powder
2 tbsp. of peanut butter
1/2 or 1 banana
2 or more cups of spinach
2 cups ice
I feel obligated to give source. Drew Manning
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iP0UvwowCx00 -
Green smoothies have been a pretty fun part of my diet for a couple of years. right now my favorite is this:
One bahana
1/2 cup organic vanilla soy milk
1 cup water
one apple
big handful of baby spinach
few ice cubes
1-3 pitted dates to make it super sweet
So tastey.....might go make one right now0 -
I started making green smoothies in the past week. I've begun trying to replace a meal a day with the green smoothie instead of a meal. This is what I put:
- 1000mg Spirulina
- 1 spoonful Nutiva Organic Hemp Protein Hi Fiber
- 1 Banana
- 1 Celery stalk
- 1/2 apple
- 1/2 a lemon
- 2 large handful of kale
- small handful of walnuts
- 1 tablespoon of honey
- 1/2 cup of water
I loves it, though I think I need to rethink it since I tend to get hungry again after a couple hours even if Ive had two cups of it...0 -
bump0
-
I have a smoothie of chia seed, protein powder, blueberries and either kale or spinach every morning. I use the nutribullet. This is a great breakfast as I rush out the door. If you want the smoothie for lunch, you can make it in the morning and take it in a cooler in your car. That works really well for me!0
-
I really need to give this a try!0
-
I love green smoothies and have been making them for 4-5 years but tend to avoid them when I'm trying to lose weight. It's pretty easy to slurp down 300-500 calories in a minute or two. I get a lot more satiety out of eating a meal instead.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K 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
- 421 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
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions