Soylent?
rickyberkey
Posts: 34 Member
Anyone using Soylent? It's not really intended as a diet product but it seems ideal for me to use as a meal replacement. The pre-mixed bottles are exactly 400 calories and my plan is to drink 2 a day and then eat one normal meal as well staying within my caloric limit. Less stress counting calories and less worrying about what to eat. It has a weird flavor but its not at all unpleasant to me and I actually have begun to crave the next one.
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What do you plan to replace these liquid meals with once you hit your goal?1
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It's people!!!!!33
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I rather like the idea of liquid meals and I may well just continue.1
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afatpersonwholikesfood wrote: »It's people!!!!!
Came here to post this6 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »afatpersonwholikesfood wrote: »It's people!!!!!
Came here to post this
Yep!3 -
gebeziseva wrote: »What do you plan to replace these liquid meals with once you hit your goal?
A lot of people use it as a meal replacement... period. So there is nothing to replace it with when the weight loss is finished. They just keep drinking the soylent. A friend of mine just drinks it because it has lots of nutrition and it's easier for them than eating regular meals.
I say go for it, see how it works. If it's working for you, stick with it.
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You might check out this episode of the Oh No Ross and Carrie podcast where they tried Soylent.
http://ohnopodcast.com/investigations/2015/6/3/ross-and-carrie-subsist-on-soylent-its-not-people-edition
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The name of this product alone is terrifying.13
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Wouldn't you just rather eat 800 calories worth of food? Soylent sounds so boring and awful... If I were going to do a meal replacement with a drink, I'd probably go drink two venti vanilla lattes or something from starbucks everyday rather than slim fast or soylent or whatever else. At least that might taste good. Practically the same thing too (calorie wise, don't know exactly how the macro/micros in soylent compare but it still wouldn't be worth it to me regardless).2
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There are some others too, Huel and Joylent are two that I have heard of.1
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I have not tried it, but Soylent seems like it would be a great option for an occasional meal replacement. It is basically maltodextrin, oat powder, and rice protein mixed with vitamins and minerals. Nutrition profile for one meal (this might be a slightly different formula than OP's):
"After sipping a whole package of powder and container of oil blend, you’ll consume 2,000 calories, 50 percent from carbohydrates, 20 percent from protein and 30 from fat, which is in sync with federal Dietary Guidelines for the average American adult."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/wellness/pros-and-cons-of-soylent/2014/09/16/09411d3c-386b-11e4-8601-97ba88884ffd_story.html
It sounds like it doesn't taste very good though. There is a Soylent subsection of Reddit where you can read a lot more about how people work with it.0 -
I have a friend who practically lives on the stuff. The new formula is actually fairly tasteless, so you end up adding things to it to flavor it. It's not bad, but I prefer to eat food. I'd use it in a pinch... *shrug*0
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I didn't particularly like the taste of Soylent. It kind of reminded me of the milk that's left over after you eat a bowl of cereal. But I can see adding stuff to it to make it taste better.0
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I made a diy version of soylent and have been using it to replace breakfasts and sometimes lunches at work. It keeps me from grabbing fast food for lunch. If it works for you, keep it up!1
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ncboiler89 wrote: »afatpersonwholikesfood wrote: »It's people!!!!!
Came here to post this
Same0 -
food < food0
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When you use the word diet you're using the wrong words and also the wrong mental approach. What your in the process of doing is a lifestyle change. Most diets fail because people get bored of them and with a diet you're sacrificing the stuff that you love. Plus the human body is made to consume solid food. You're basically talking about a liquid diet.
For this lifestyle change to work you have to educate yourself as far as food and portion size. By learning what portion sizes truely means, once you reach your goal you begin to think about everything that you eat and how it's going to affect you. At some point you're going to get
tired of drinking the liquid, what are you going to do then? That's why diets don't work.
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I have no intention of living only on Soylent but as a daily replacement for a couple of meals it is remarkable and I actually like the taste. I will continue to use it even as i eventually reach my weight goal. It is quick and easy (the pouch mix is still available but I use the pre-mixed 400 cal bottles) and the calories are easy to keep track of. Give it a try if you like but I understand that it's simply not for everyone.0
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rickyberkey wrote: »I have no intention of living only on Soylent but as a daily replacement for a couple of meals it is remarkable and I actually like the taste. I will continue to use it even as i eventually reach my weight goal. It is quick and easy (the pouch mix is still available but I use the pre-mixed 400 cal bottles) and the calories are easy to keep track of. Give it a try if you like but I understand that it's simply not for everyone.
Glad to hear that it is working for you! Thanks for the update.0 -
I prefer fewer chemicals and more whole foods. I would read the fine print to see what you are actually consuming. You are what you eat. Weight loss is a great goal. Weight loss at the expense of your health may not be a smart idea.3
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sugar, processed rice, processed wheat, multivitamin, anticaking/preservatives, goodness knows what, fake sugar, oil, oil. What's that quote from Crocodile Dundee? Well, you can live on it, but it taste like ...
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Yes, I agree that it is better to eat whole foods, chemical free foods etc. etc. etc. However we all know that most of don't do that or we wouldn't even be here talking about diet and weight loss ( ). Soylent v2.0 in the pre-mixed bottles is simply a quickly consumed alternative that you can have with you when you are in a hurry to get to work, to a meeting or whatever rather than eating from the vending machine or being lured in by all the fast food drive-through windows along my route.
files.soylent.com/pdf/soylent-nutrition-facts-2-0-en.pdf2 -
Is it not expensive? I say have a back up plan in case your income has an unexpected drop x Good luck!0
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My step dad has used this and it did nothing for him. He is the fad diet king and will try anything. He wants to have a nice body but he doesn't want to work out to help it along so he looks like what some people would call "skinny fat," if anyone understands what that means.0
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rickyberkey wrote: »Yes, I agree that it is better to eat chemical free foods
There is literally no such thing. Everything is made of chemicals. Better stay away from that scary dihydrogen monoxide! (Aka, water).5 -
Realizing that so many people like the convenience of soylent enough to not mind its boringness made me realize that not everybody takes as much pleasure in real food as I do. And that's OK. You can have more of it, I'll be eating vegetables and herbs and fruits and meats over here.0
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There are many people on these threads who use meal replacements, whether they are smoothies, protein shakes, power bars, whatever. OP was looking for comments from others who have tried the product. It would be nice if this message board was used for support instead of food shaming.2
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Indeed, I was just looking for impressions from people who had tried the product and if it was useful for their own plan. I understand that it is not for everyone and never implied that it was or should be.2
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I tried a sample bottle of Soylent once. It definitely kept me full from breakfast until lunch, but it had a powerful and strange aftertaste, sort of like drinking liquified Kix cereal.
If I were forced to be on a liquid diet for any reason, I wouldn't mind living on it, but it wouldn't be my go-to for everyday meals.
IIRC, there's a bunch of sites where people make their own variants on Soylent using multivitamins, protein powders, and other supplements, and my guess is that is more palatable since you can customize the drinks to your own tastes.0 -
[quote="questionfear;36644410"
IIRC, there's a bunch of sites where people make their own variants on Soylent using multivitamins, protein powders, and other supplements, and my guess is that is more palatable since you can customize the drinks to your own tastes. [/quote]
Yep, diy.soylent.com is the main site for diy recipes. I use the one called "People Chow", but use whole oat flour instead of masa harina. My soylent tastes like oatmeal. I love oatmeal, so it's great.1
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