Is eating 3-4 slices of bread will harm my weight loss???
Replies
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kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.0 -
No, it won't. It may contribute to water fluctuations though.
Eating more calories then you need will effect your weight loss.0 -
I think you have to observe what your body does when you eat bread -- can you stick to your calorie macros, do you feel full and satiated, do you crave more? Bread doesn't work for me at all, because when I eat bread it doesn't fill me up, and I find it very hard to stick to my calorie macros for weight loss. It also interferes with my digestion when I do my runs (its pretty funny because on my GPS mapping, I print out my route, I can see my detours into the bushes for a bathroom break when I eat bread). Anyway, a little trial and error and you can figure out what works best for you -- weight wise and health wise.
Very wise words here. It's all individual.0 -
samiamorisseau wrote: »The bread I eat is whole grain whole wheat.
I eat toast for breakfast and sandwiches for lunch
I know it's loads with carbs o(╥﹏╥)o
But I personally think carbs keep me full than proteins.
But at least I'm eating healthy
I try doing the low carb diet for a faster weight loss but it was too difficult for me since I'm a vegetarian and meat is the only food with 0 carbs.
I wish carbs never slow weight loss T^T
As pretty much everyone here said, carbs and protein are the same. The calories are what count. Personally, I find that if I eat a lunch without both, carbs and protein, I get hungry very quickly. I make sure to include carbs in every lunch.0 -
the carbs wouldnt stop me.
the calories would0 -
samiamorisseau wrote: »Weight loss is about eating fewer calories than you burn.
You do not have to eat a low carb diet to lose weight.
If the bread you eat fits in your calorie goal then there is no problem eating it.
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
These are not people to take weight loss advice from.
You actually can eat whatever you want and lose weight as long as you have a calorie deficit.
You actually don't have to exercise at all to lose weight if you don't eat more calories than you burn in your daily activities.
Does the bread you eat fit your calorie goal? If it doesn't then cut back or exercise more.0 -
Honey, how old are you? You seem very young and depending on your age, you may have specific dietary guidelines you should follow to get appropriate nutrition.0
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Carbs don't slow weight loss; it's about calories.
Not strictly true. It's not simply about calories in / calories out.
Many people are becoming insulin resistant over time and they will definitely see a dramatic difference in adopting a low carb strategy. If you're interested in this stuff I highly recommend reading Gary Taube's excellent book Why we get Fat and what to do about it0 -
As long as you are staying within your calories you will be fine
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Carbs don't slow weight loss; it's about calories.
Not strictly true. It's not simply about calories in / calories out.
It pretty much is. Health and nutrition are more complicated (although not as complicated as some make them), but for weight loss eat less than maintenance.Many people are becoming insulin resistant over time and they will definitely see a dramatic difference in adopting a low carb strategy.
OP said nothing about being IR, and plenty of people who are don't need to do low carb.
Why oh why do the low carb folks have to evangelize? It's tiresome.If you're interested in this stuff I highly recommend reading Gary Taube's excellent book Why we get Fat and what to do about it
I've read Taubes, as well as criticism of his arguments, and don't find him nearly as compelling as you seem to.0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.
Yes, bread is something I have eaten on its own. Additionally, I find a meal consisting of bread, protein, fat, and veggies less filling than one consisting of a different type of starch and all the rest.0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »Carbs don't slow weight loss; it's about calories.
Not strictly true. It's not simply about calories in / calories out.
Many people are becoming insulin resistant over time and they will definitely see a dramatic difference in adopting a low carb strategy. If you're interested in this stuff I highly recommend reading Gary Taube's excellent book Why we get Fat and what to do about it
I think Taubes is full of woo
http://weightology.net/gary-taubes/what-gary-taubes-can-learn-from-evolutionary-theory-an-open-challenge-to-his-hypothesis.html/
https://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/gary-taubes-and-the-cause-of-obesity/
http://www.weightymatters.ca/2011/01/book-review-gary-taubes-why-we-get-fat.html
http://2lbsofstarch.com/2015/05/20/gary-taubes-vs-alan-aragon-epic-debate/0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.
Yes, bread is something I have eaten on its own. Additionally, I find a meal consisting of bread, protein, fat, and veggies less filling than one consisting of a different type of starch and all the rest.
That's going to be personal, though. If OP has trouble staying satisfied she can experiment with changing up her diet.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.
Yes, bread is something I have eaten on its own. Additionally, I find a meal consisting of bread, protein, fat, and veggies less filling than one consisting of a different type of starch and all the rest.
Really? Eat bread on it's own? Like you just have a Brioche bun for a snack or something?0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.
Yes, bread is something I have eaten on its own. Additionally, I find a meal consisting of bread, protein, fat, and veggies less filling than one consisting of a different type of starch and all the rest.
Really? Eat bread on it's own? Like you just have a Brioche bun for a snack or something?
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samiamorisseau wrote: »
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
A person can lose weight eating nothing but Twinkies... as long as they keep their calories in check. (Obviously a Twinkie diet is far, Far, FAR, and away NOT a healthy diet.)0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »lithezebra wrote: »When I was eating bread, I cut back to one slice, or two for a sandwich, at most. Yes, it's the calories that count, but eating protein first, and not filling up with carbs, helps me stop eating sooner. Bread is just too easy and too delicious, to me. I'll eat bread when I should be eating vegetables and meat. You could be getting more nutritious carbs by eating beans, nuts, and whole whole grains (not flour) like quinoa.
Yes, I don't find bread especially filling when compared to foods like legumes, which is a staple for all the healthy vegetarians I know.
I don't find bread especially filling on its own, but I'd never eat it on its own. (I am not that into bread, so also won't overeat it anyway. I do find some sandwiches or pasta with vegetables and lean protein perfectly filling.)
I always find it odd how people talk about foods as if they weren't normally eaten in combination with other foods. A good meal is typically a mix of protein, fat, and carbs.
Yes, bread is something I have eaten on its own. Additionally, I find a meal consisting of bread, protein, fat, and veggies less filling than one consisting of a different type of starch and all the rest.
Really? Eat bread on it's own? Like you just have a Brioche bun for a snack or something?
For me it was freshly baked bread.
I just looked at a diary where someone had a plain english muffin for a snack.0 -
@PeachyCarol and other vegetarians - what are your thoughts on spending lots of calories on bread?0
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LyndseyLovesToLift wrote: »samiamorisseau wrote: »Weight loss is about eating fewer calories than you burn.
You do not have to eat a low carb diet to lose weight.
If the bread you eat fits in your calorie goal then there is no problem eating it.
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
1. People are stupid. Stop listening to them.
2. You don't have to do hours of exercise. It's calories in vs. calories out. Each gram of carbs has 4 calories, each gram of protein has 4 calories, and each gram of fat has 9 calories. A calorie is a calorie. Eat all the carbs you want, as long as you're within your calorie goal.
3. Why can you only do 30 minutes of walking?samiamorisseau wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »drdocument wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »While I agree that getting enough protein is important, few (if any) people need 45% of their calories to be protein. That is far above the medical recommendation.
Well, mine is set at 40%, not 45%, and I know I am on the upper end of varying opinion. And I rarely get that much. I work out 3 times per week, and my goal is to get about 1 gram of protein per day per pound of body weight, remembering that the body does not store protein and can only process about 10 grams per hour, so I have 5 or 6 "mini-meals" throughout the day. But it works for me. After losing 30+ pounds (using MFP) I am at target weight, BP=109/60, resting heart rate ~40 and about 10% body fat.
What do you mean by "the body does not store protein"? Calories from protein will be stored as fat if you overeat, the same as calories from fat and most carbs will.
I never knew protein will get stored as fat~
So proteins are same as carbs they both get stored as fat??
Extra calories will be stored as fat. It doesn't matter if they're calories from protein, fat, or carbs. If you eat more calories than your body uses, you'll gain fat. Period. Simple.
Isn't 30 minutes of exercise enough to lose weight
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samiamorisseau wrote: »LyndseyLovesToLift wrote: »samiamorisseau wrote: »Weight loss is about eating fewer calories than you burn.
You do not have to eat a low carb diet to lose weight.
If the bread you eat fits in your calorie goal then there is no problem eating it.
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
1. People are stupid. Stop listening to them.
2. You don't have to do hours of exercise. It's calories in vs. calories out. Each gram of carbs has 4 calories, each gram of protein has 4 calories, and each gram of fat has 9 calories. A calorie is a calorie. Eat all the carbs you want, as long as you're within your calorie goal.
3. Why can you only do 30 minutes of walking?samiamorisseau wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »drdocument wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »While I agree that getting enough protein is important, few (if any) people need 45% of their calories to be protein. That is far above the medical recommendation.
Well, mine is set at 40%, not 45%, and I know I am on the upper end of varying opinion. And I rarely get that much. I work out 3 times per week, and my goal is to get about 1 gram of protein per day per pound of body weight, remembering that the body does not store protein and can only process about 10 grams per hour, so I have 5 or 6 "mini-meals" throughout the day. But it works for me. After losing 30+ pounds (using MFP) I am at target weight, BP=109/60, resting heart rate ~40 and about 10% body fat.
What do you mean by "the body does not store protein"? Calories from protein will be stored as fat if you overeat, the same as calories from fat and most carbs will.
I never knew protein will get stored as fat~
So proteins are same as carbs they both get stored as fat??
Extra calories will be stored as fat. It doesn't matter if they're calories from protein, fat, or carbs. If you eat more calories than your body uses, you'll gain fat. Period. Simple.
Isn't 30 minutes of exercise enough to lose weight
You can lose weight without exercise.0 -
I know losing weight without excersize is possible, but is losing weight based on excersize without diet is possible?!!0
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samira8080 wrote: »I know losing weight without excersize is possible, but is losing weight based on excersize without diet is possible?!!
Hey Samira... how many profiles do you have?0 -
Besides getting adequate nutrition, I mainly pay attention to calories. I eat bread regularly, but I switched to sandwich thins for sandwiches because I wanted to spend my calories in other ways. Like chocolate and wine. I've been at maintenance for over three years and I've eaten plenty of delicious fresh bread (and butter) and made quite a few grilled cheese sandwiches with fresh sourdough bread.
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samira8080 wrote: »I know losing weight without excersize is possible, but is losing weight based on excersize without diet is possible?!!
If you're consistently eating less calories than you use in a day, then you'll lose weight. You can't eat more than you burn and expect weight loss.0 -
samira8080 wrote: »I know losing weight without excersize is possible, but is losing weight based on excersize without diet is possible?!!
Sure, I've lost weight by ramping up my exercise and not counting a single calorie. I was eating a lot of high volume/lower calorie foods those days. Now that I am cooking higher calorie foods for other people, I prefer to weigh and log my food.
I've also gained weight by going from an active job to a sedentary job and not changing what I ate.0 -
samiamorisseau wrote: »LyndseyLovesToLift wrote: »samiamorisseau wrote: »Weight loss is about eating fewer calories than you burn.
You do not have to eat a low carb diet to lose weight.
If the bread you eat fits in your calorie goal then there is no problem eating it.
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
1. People are stupid. Stop listening to them.
2. You don't have to do hours of exercise. It's calories in vs. calories out. Each gram of carbs has 4 calories, each gram of protein has 4 calories, and each gram of fat has 9 calories. A calorie is a calorie. Eat all the carbs you want, as long as you're within your calorie goal.
3. Why can you only do 30 minutes of walking?samiamorisseau wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »drdocument wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »While I agree that getting enough protein is important, few (if any) people need 45% of their calories to be protein. That is far above the medical recommendation.
Well, mine is set at 40%, not 45%, and I know I am on the upper end of varying opinion. And I rarely get that much. I work out 3 times per week, and my goal is to get about 1 gram of protein per day per pound of body weight, remembering that the body does not store protein and can only process about 10 grams per hour, so I have 5 or 6 "mini-meals" throughout the day. But it works for me. After losing 30+ pounds (using MFP) I am at target weight, BP=109/60, resting heart rate ~40 and about 10% body fat.
What do you mean by "the body does not store protein"? Calories from protein will be stored as fat if you overeat, the same as calories from fat and most carbs will.
I never knew protein will get stored as fat~
So proteins are same as carbs they both get stored as fat??
Extra calories will be stored as fat. It doesn't matter if they're calories from protein, fat, or carbs. If you eat more calories than your body uses, you'll gain fat. Period. Simple.
Isn't 30 minutes of exercise enough to lose weight
MFP says someone my height and weight will burn 153 calories by walking 30 minutes, and because MFP calorie burn estimates are inflated, the real number is about half that. That's not a lot of calories. One large egg has 74 calories.
Walking 30 minutes is definitely better than nothing, especially if you do it every day. Why are you limited to 30 minutes? Because of time or because that is all your body can handle right now?0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »@PeachyCarol and other vegetarians - what are your thoughts on spending lots of calories on bread?
My thoughts are... do what works for you. If you find it satiating and it fits your goals? Go for it.
Me personally? I have celiac disease and gluten free bread is not as satisfying and gluten-containing bread. I do, on occasion, like a poached egg on toast, but don't eat bread by itself because gluten free bread isn't all that great.
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PeachyCarol wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »@PeachyCarol and other vegetarians - what are your thoughts on spending lots of calories on bread?
My thoughts are... do what works for you. If you find it satiating and it fits your goals? Go for it.
Me personally? I have celiac disease and gluten free bread is not as satisfying and gluten-containing bread. I do, on occasion, like a poached egg on toast, but don't eat bread by itself because gluten free bread isn't all that great.
You aren't joking about the gluten free bread...yuck.0 -
PeachyCarol wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »@PeachyCarol and other vegetarians - what are your thoughts on spending lots of calories on bread?
My thoughts are... do what works for you. If you find it satiating and it fits your goals? Go for it.
Me personally? I have celiac disease and gluten free bread is not as satisfying and gluten-containing bread. I do, on occasion, like a poached egg on toast, but don't eat bread by itself because gluten free bread isn't all that great.
That's right, you don't eat gluten.
I was thinking it would be hard for a vegetarian to get enough protein if they were spending a lot of calories on bread.
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Protranser wrote: »samiamorisseau wrote: »LyndseyLovesToLift wrote: »samiamorisseau wrote: »Weight loss is about eating fewer calories than you burn.
You do not have to eat a low carb diet to lose weight.
If the bread you eat fits in your calorie goal then there is no problem eating it.
People are telling me I won't lose weight because I'm eating too much carbs~
If I'm eating 200-290 carbs they say I'm going to have to do hours of exercise which I would die
I can only do 30 mins of walking
1. People are stupid. Stop listening to them.
2. You don't have to do hours of exercise. It's calories in vs. calories out. Each gram of carbs has 4 calories, each gram of protein has 4 calories, and each gram of fat has 9 calories. A calorie is a calorie. Eat all the carbs you want, as long as you're within your calorie goal.
3. Why can you only do 30 minutes of walking?samiamorisseau wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »drdocument wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »While I agree that getting enough protein is important, few (if any) people need 45% of their calories to be protein. That is far above the medical recommendation.
Well, mine is set at 40%, not 45%, and I know I am on the upper end of varying opinion. And I rarely get that much. I work out 3 times per week, and my goal is to get about 1 gram of protein per day per pound of body weight, remembering that the body does not store protein and can only process about 10 grams per hour, so I have 5 or 6 "mini-meals" throughout the day. But it works for me. After losing 30+ pounds (using MFP) I am at target weight, BP=109/60, resting heart rate ~40 and about 10% body fat.
What do you mean by "the body does not store protein"? Calories from protein will be stored as fat if you overeat, the same as calories from fat and most carbs will.
I never knew protein will get stored as fat~
So proteins are same as carbs they both get stored as fat??
Extra calories will be stored as fat. It doesn't matter if they're calories from protein, fat, or carbs. If you eat more calories than your body uses, you'll gain fat. Period. Simple.
Isn't 30 minutes of exercise enough to lose weight
You can lose weight without exercise.
But don't you have go low carb on the days to not exercise??
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