Ice Cream Substitute
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The_Enginerd wrote: »hollydubs85 wrote: »crystalflame wrote: »FoCoAlphaNerd wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »One thing that helped me with portions of ice cream is to go out and buy an actual 4 ounce ice cream bowl. I got a fancy looking one from Crate and Barrel that was only a couple of dollars. A serving fills the bowl, instead of swimming in a sea of sadness like it does in a cereal bowl.
I usse a coffee cup the same way, though my motivation was mostly laziness and dishes.
I just eat it right out of the measuring cup because I don't want to get another dish dirty. Is that sad?
You wouldn't get any dish dirty if you put it on a scale and just ate your serving size right out of the pint.
Or eat the whole pint. That's a serving size, right?
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »climbing_trees wrote: »Frozen banana blended with peanut butter yum! I also like to add cinnamon
I never understood this one to be honest.
1 banana = 100 calories
1 tbsp peanuts butter = 100 calories
200 calories for a 1/2 cup serving.
Ice cream = 150 calories for a 1/2 cup serving. 120 for light at slightly over 200 for rich.
How is that different? (aside from the fact that ice cream tastes better)
I think this is more about eating natural and lowering calories. Banana and peanut butter have natural ingredients, and no added sugar.
^ lol right on que ...0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »climbing_trees wrote: »Frozen banana blended with peanut butter yum! I also like to add cinnamon
I never understood this one to be honest.
1 banana = 100 calories
1 tbsp peanuts butter = 100 calories
200 calories for a 1/2 cup serving.
Ice cream = 150 calories for a 1/2 cup serving. 120 for light at slightly over 200 for rich.
How is that different? (aside from the fact that ice cream tastes better)
I think this is more about eating natural and lowering calories. Banana and peanut butter have natural ingredients, and no added sugar.
The problem with this is that most posts of this nature are looking for a replacement because ice cream takes up too much of their calorie budget. Offering something that has the same, even higher, calories does not provide a solution and does not make it a suitable replacement. Now if the question was "looking for potassium sources" this would be a great suggestion.
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FoCoAlphaNerd wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »climbing_trees wrote: »Frozen banana blended with peanut butter yum! I also like to add cinnamon
I never understood this one to be honest.
1 banana = 100 calories
1 tbsp peanuts butter = 100 calories
200 calories for a 1/2 cup serving.
Ice cream = 150 calories for a 1/2 cup serving. 120 for light at slightly over 200 for rich.
How is that different? (aside from the fact that ice cream tastes better)
because the sugar in the banana is better than the sugar in the ice cream...*sarcasm*
Don't be silly, we all know the fructose molecule is different based on its source. If it comes already in the form of fructose from a fruit it is healthy, but if it used bound into sucrose it is poison. Except it's still poison if it is fructose sitting next to glucose except um . . . wait, let me go get my flow chart.
is that what leads people to shoot up sugar????0 -
The_Enginerd wrote: »hollydubs85 wrote: »crystalflame wrote: »FoCoAlphaNerd wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »One thing that helped me with portions of ice cream is to go out and buy an actual 4 ounce ice cream bowl. I got a fancy looking one from Crate and Barrel that was only a couple of dollars. A serving fills the bowl, instead of swimming in a sea of sadness like it does in a cereal bowl.
I usse a coffee cup the same way, though my motivation was mostly laziness and dishes.
I just eat it right out of the measuring cup because I don't want to get another dish dirty. Is that sad?
You wouldn't get any dish dirty if you put it on a scale and just ate your serving size right out of the pint.
Or eat the whole pint. That's a serving size, right?
Yes and yes!! ...I may have had a pint of ice cream and a bottle of wine for dinner before. That was a good night. Ok there was more than one night. Will run for wine and ice cream.
I seriously don't know how the pint-on-food-scale thing has never occurred to me before. We'll see how manageable that is with the half-gallon I have in the fridge right now.0 -
Edy's slow churned no sugar added and Breyers no sugar added are both pretty low calorie. Just have to watch the portions!0
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I'm sure it's already been said, but you should just eat less of what you like. The low-fat substitutes like Laughing Cow or Dreyer's Slow Churn are horrid, in my opinion (they have a bizarre buttery aftertaste that makes me want to gag and I don't have a particularly picky pallet.) I like frozen yogurt, but that may not cut it for you, plus the cals are pretty close anyways.0
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I have a Magic Bullet and I throw in some frozen bananas and strawberries with milk and it comes into this frozen yogurt/ice cream consistency. It's pretty good.0
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Have y'all heard of Arctic Zero? Haven't tried it yet but I heard it's awesome sauce. 150 calories per PINT.
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OP seek help for your addiction.
A banana is NOT ice cream.
Now for ice cream gif's.
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That's a shame, I was going to give it a try tonight. Oh well, guess it's still worth a shot.
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What flavor did you try? I knew it was probably too good to be true.
I'll stick to real ice cream
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emily_stew wrote: »Less ice cream.
There is no substitute.
Ice cream isn't addictive.
Actually, research has shown that it IS addictive: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/9118768/Ice-cream-as-addictive-as-drugs-says-new-study.html
The Telegraph did the article based on research from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition:
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/early/2012/02/14/ajcn.111.027003.abstract
Quoted from the AJCN: " Conclusions: Our results provide novel evidence that frequent consumption of ice cream, independent of body fat, is related to a reduction in reward-region responsivity in humans, paralleling the tolerance observed in drug addiction."
So basically, the more icecream you eat, the more you want to eat to get the same reward; an increase of dopamine in the brain. This is addiction. Guess that means I'm an addict.
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diannethegeek wrote: »The skinny cow ice cream sandwiches are pretty good.
I'm a big fan of all the Skinny Cow products, ice cream or otherwise!0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »climbing_trees wrote: »Frozen banana blended with peanut butter yum! I also like to add cinnamon
I never understood this one to be honest.
1 banana = 100 calories
1 tbsp peanuts butter = 100 calories
200 calories for a 1/2 cup serving.
Ice cream = 150 calories for a 1/2 cup serving. 120 for light at slightly over 200 for rich.
How is that different? (aside from the fact that ice cream tastes better)
I think this is more about eating natural and lowering calories. Banana and peanut butter have natural ingredients, and no added sugar.
^ lol right on que ...
?? You think it's for a different reason? I suppose it could simply be for more potassium.0 -
Have y'all heard of Arctic Zero? Haven't tried it yet but I heard it's awesome sauce. 150 calories per PINT.
It tastes like icy cardboard. The texture isn't creamy at all. It is by far the most foul thing I've tried in an attempt to find a low-cal substitute. It was what convinced me to stop trying to find low-cal substitutes and just eat the real thing.0 -
Have y'all heard of Arctic Zero? Haven't tried it yet but I heard it's awesome sauce. 150 calories per PINT.
I tried the bars. Once. It tasted like frozen whey protein. And disappointment. Some people like it though.
I for one actually really like the Skinny Cow ice cream products. And they give me more room to hit my other macros since they have less fat and I NEVER have a problem getting enough fat from other foods I eat.0 -
I feel like Ice Cream is pretty reasonable as far as calories go.... I can usually fit it in if I want it0
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Eat the real deal as a treat or it's all you will think about. If I crave the texture more often I blend greek yogurt with fruit and freeze it for an hour and that satisfies me.0
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christyallison69 wrote: »emily_stew wrote: »Less ice cream.
There is no substitute.
Ice cream isn't addictive.
Actually, research has shown that it IS addictive: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/9118768/Ice-cream-as-addictive-as-drugs-says-new-study.html
The Telegraph did the article based on research from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition:
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/early/2012/02/14/ajcn.111.027003.abstract
Quoted from the AJCN: " Conclusions: Our results provide novel evidence that frequent consumption of ice cream, independent of body fat, is related to a reduction in reward-region responsivity in humans, paralleling the tolerance observed in drug addiction."
So basically, the more icecream you eat, the more you want to eat to get the same reward; an increase of dopamine in the brain. This is addiction. Guess that means I'm an addict.
People, please start reading the full study before linking them. This study is junk, the n value is tiny, there was no blinding, and the specific fMRI procedure they used is known to generate false data (there have been satirical studies showing brain wave function in dead animals using the same method).
More importantly, this study didn't track anything over time, or track anything in relation to a dose response mechanism. All they showed was that people who reported more food cravings had a reduced dopamine response to the milkshake they provided. Causality could actually be reversed in this case and make just as much if not more sense, i.e. people with a lower response wanted more to get the same result.
BTW, this is exactly the same dopamine response you would expect if you exposed healthy adolescents to nipple clamps. This IN NO WAY SHOWS ICE CREAM IS ADDICTIVE.0 -
TMLPatrick wrote: »I feel like Ice Cream is pretty reasonable as far as calories go.... I can usually fit it in if I want it
This is true. The 2 tablespoons I just ate of Jif Whipped Peanut Butter & Chocolate had more calories than the serving of ice cream I will eat later.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »climbing_trees wrote: »Frozen banana blended with peanut butter yum! I also like to add cinnamon
I never understood this one to be honest.
1 banana = 100 calories
1 tbsp peanuts butter = 100 calories
200 calories for a 1/2 cup serving.
Ice cream = 150 calories for a 1/2 cup serving. 120 for light at slightly over 200 for rich.
How is that different? (aside from the fact that ice cream tastes better)
I think this is more about eating natural than lowering calories. Banana and peanut butter have natural ingredients, and no added sugar.
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Have y'all heard of Arctic Zero? Haven't tried it yet but I heard it's awesome sauce. 150 calories per PINT.
It tastes like frozen cardboard. It was the one time I have ever chosen to throw ice cream out. I don't care how low the calories are, I never finished the pint. There have also been some questions raised about the accuracy of their labeling practices, but I'm sure you can google that if you want more info.
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Was Artic Zero's pint of ice cream not mentioned? This is my go to ice cream. A whole pint for only 150 calories. Sure it doesnt taste like real ice cream but it does the trick when im sitting on the couch and want to munch on something...0
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diannethegeek wrote: »Have y'all heard of Arctic Zero? Haven't tried it yet but I heard it's awesome sauce. 150 calories per PINT.
It tastes like frozen cardboard. It was the one time I have ever chosen to throw ice cream out. I don't care how low the calories are, I never finished the pint. There have also been some questions raised about the accuracy of their labeling practices, but I'm sure you can google that if you want more info.
Oh man, this stuff is awful. Same here, I'm an ice cream lover and threw this junk out.0 -
Was Artic Zero's pint of ice cream not mentioned? This is my go to ice cream. A whole pint for only 150 calories. Sure it doesnt taste like real ice cream but it does the trick when im sitting on the couch and want to munch on something...
why don't you just chew ice cubes with sugar?0
This discussion has been closed.
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