breakfast
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I eat oatmeal with fresh fruit, i switch the fruits I use.
Or scrambled egg on top of avocado spread on toast is delicious0 -
I had 3 eggs cooked in 1/4 Tbsp of butter, topped with 1/4 avocado and 4 pieces of Canadian bacon. I am at 99 pounds gone so far with 6 more pounds to go0
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Great job Vistarr1!!!
Butter and bacon may not be a good way to start. False hope it seems to good to be true. But if u eat bad im the am it's not as bad as one thinks. It kicks metabolism up.
Maybe he/she should try 3 egg white (i season with black pepper & granulated garlic), 2 pieces thin and crispy turkey bacon, 1 piece of toast.
Use fat free feta or mozzarella and cut up bacon and make omelet, or put on wheat English muffin and make a breakfast sandwich.
Running late back up is. Bran flakes, raisins, small handful raw almonds, with light Silk vanilla Soy Milk
Works great for me.0 -
I like to have Special K cereal! I know that cereal isn't exactly the best thing to eat (carbs and sugar, anyone?) but it's the only way I can reach my daily iron goal...plus, with skim milk it's only about 150 calories, and you get one full cup in a serving, unlike lots of other cereals!
Some other things I like are:
- Siggi's Skyr (Icelandic yogurt) with 1/4 cup homemade granola (240 calories)
- 3 egg white omelet with spinach, red bell pepper, garlic, and 2 tbsp shredded cheese (150 calories)
- 2 slices whole wheat bread with 1 tbsp nut butter (250 calories)
- French toast made with 2 slices whole wheat bread, egg whites, skim milk, and served with 1/2 cup fresh berries (260 calories)
- 1 hard boiled egg with 1 slice whole wheat bread and 1/2 banana (230 calories)
- 1 apple with 1 tbsp nut butter and sprinkled with granola (200 calories)
- Thomas's light english muffin with 2 egg whites, 2oz turkey, 1 slice of tomato, spinach, and 1 tbsp cheddar cheese (250 calories)
- Fruit smoothie with 1/2 cup skim milk, 1/2 frozen banana, 1/4 cup blueberries, and 1/2 cup blackberries, with 4oz turkey on the side (240 calories)
Hope this helps! Good luck0 -
Post night shift breakfast today will be a full tin of creamed rice pudding flavoured with Cadburys fudge hot chocolate powder.
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Depends whether I eat at work or at home. I work at a private school that serves breakfast for teachers/faculty every morning. It's awesome. There's eggs, bacon, home fries, yogurt, granola, fresh fruit, bagels, coffee cake, etc.
If I eat at work, I usually grab bacon, home fries, and fruit.
If I eat at home, egg whites with Al Fresco chicken sausage with an English muffin or 1/2 of a bagel.0 -
Whoa!!! That person does not follow current recommendations from the ADA / CDC.
The suggested amounts for both carbs & fat are outside the healthy amounts.
I'm curious to know where she got her nutrition training / degree / certification. Pretty sure they'd like to know that someone they certified is giving out bad/wrong/dangerous information.
Also, depending on where she got her training/certification to put out a shingle as a personal trainer, she might be prohibited from giving nutritional advice, so that organization should also be alerted to her actions. (Or is she even certified?)
I'm pretty sure the 30/30/40 plan comes from IIFYM (if it fits your macros). It's pretty common around bodybuilding folks. Personally I think it's ridiculous and outside what I'm willing to follow, but there are people who'd recommend it.
@kozinskey Why is it ridiculous? Most people deprive themselves of food they enjoy when they "diet." THAT is ridiculous.
IIFYM believes in incorporating foods you love into your diet, all while hitting your carb/protein/fat and calorie goal. It's sustainable, can be followed throughout one's life and has been proven to be successful.
FYI, it's not just common around bodybuilding folks. It's common for the average Joe.0 -
abarriere wrote:My calorie goal is 1780 + I give myself 200 per day when I work out (5 days per week). Weightloss has been pretty steady so far. (only started in January on here and with personal trainer). She recommended I eat 30% carbs, 30% protein and 40% fat, with higher protein and less carbs on personal training days.
The suggested amounts for both carbs & fat are outside the healthy amounts.
I'm curious to know where she got her nutrition training / degree / certification. Pretty sure they'd like to know that someone they certified is giving out bad/wrong/dangerous information.
Also, depending on where she got her training/certification to put out a shingle as a personal trainer, she might be prohibited from giving nutritional advice, so that organization should also be alerted to her actions. (Or is she even certified?)
Here's a post I did about realistic goal setting, including weight, calories, & macros.
Here's a table from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition which explains the healthy ranges:
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/88/1/1/T1.expansion.html
carbs, 45 - 65% of calories (4 cal per gram)
fat, 20 - 35% of calories (9 cal per gram)
protein, 10 - 35% of calories (4 cal per gram)
So for your goal:
carbs: 801 - 1157 cals, 200 - 289 grams
fat: 356 - 623 cals, 40 - 69 grams
protein: 178 - 623 cals, 45 - 156 grams
You do realize that just because a person gets 40% of their calories from fat doesn't mean it is unhealthy, right? Just like eating 30% carbs isn't unhealthy.
If I ate 45-65% carbs, my blood sugar would be all over the place and I would not be satiated. Some individuals cannot get more than 15% of their calories from carbs due to medical conditions. Over 10% of the American population has diabetes. I can assure you no endocrinologist or dietitian who specializes in diabetes management puts their patients on a 45-65% carb diet.
I know REGISTERED dietitians who recommend a diet to certain individuals that is 70% fat, 20% protein, and 10% carbs. This is mainly for folks who follow a Keto diet.
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1/2 cup oatmeal w/a tsp of agave syrup cooked 1/4 fresh apple or pear, 1/2 grapefruit, coffee with 1/4 c plain soy milk, 6 oz cherry chia kombucha. I take calcium w/vitamin D and a multi vitamin supplement.0
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I'm useless in the morning so I put oats with milk and assorted fresh or dried fruit (like apple pieces with some cinnamon) in the fridge and the next morning sprinkle on some flaxseed, chia powder or crunched up banana chips to give it a bit of bite. I take it into work for when I'm actually hungry, which is usually about 10am instead of first thing in the morning.0
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Vistarr1 you look great!! congradulations to you! very inspiring to!0
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