Oatmeal
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I love cream on porridge. That's my Christmas morning breakfast, porridge with every dried fruit, nut etc I can find, brown sugar, cinnamon, some squares of dark chocolate, and double cream.
Porridge is not a weight loss food in my world.1 -
I'm fond of Oatfit (100 calories per pouch--love the apples and cinnamon) and Trader Joe's Pumpkin Oatmeal (get it before it's gone!).
Don't really add anything--tastes yummy to me!1 -
All of them, and nearly every day (pancake Sundays).
Steel cut brought to a boil and then heat off to thicken overnight.
Flake big or small cooked that day.
Overnight oats soaked in yogurt.
Nearly always eaten with fruit (frozen blueberries, bananas, currants, and/or raisins) and Greek yogurt. You may add more sweetener but I like mine plain.
You may also dress up with nuts, vanilla, chia, peanut butter (thanks MFP) or cinnamon.1 -
cassiekimbrough104 wrote: »Just wondering do you eat a lot of oatmeal on your weight loss journey?? If so do you use old fashioned or quick oats and what do you put in it to make it taste better?
I eat 2 servings of old fashioned oats basically every day, with 2 Splenda added. Takes 2 minutes, has 300 calories, keeps me full especially when I eat a few servings of egg whites on the side.2 -
I eat a half cup (cooked) of steel cut oats for breakfast every morning. I add a quarter cup of skim milk and 12 grams of PB2 to give it more of a protein punch.1
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Oatmeal is a great way for me to get a good amount of carbs.
I blend it with water, fruits, and protein powder for a post workout shake. Another way is make a hot bowl of oatmeat and add in some honey.1 -
cassiekimbrough104 wrote: »Just wondering do you eat a lot of oatmeal on your weight loss journey?? If so do you use old fashioned or quick oats and what do you put in it to make it taste better?
Sure, I love oatmeal. I prefer steel cut oats and have cooked a week's batch in the crock pot. I sometimes add pumpkin pie spice, most times nothing at all. Just top it with fruit and almond milk and enjoy.0 -
cassiekimbrough104 wrote: »Just wondering do you eat a lot of oatmeal on your weight loss journey??
Nope ... not at all.
It's not that I don't like oatmeal, but unfortunately oatmeal has absolutely no staying power for me. I eat a bowl of it, and 30 minutes later I am ravenously hungry and cleaning out the cupboards.
My husband, on the other hand, has it every morning and it seems to work for him.
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Interesting how much people vary in how long it keeps them going, I know there are individual variations but it isn't as extreme as this with most other foods, I think.1
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I just finished a successful experiment:
Having ordered a package of vital wheat gluten, I decided to try making a yeast bread using no other flour than oat flour and the wheat gluten. I started out with:
2 cups of oat flour. Ended up with about 3.
2 tablespoons of vital wheat gluten.
1/2 teaspoon of salt (one of my aims in making my own bread is to control the sodium).
1 package of dry active yeast, mixed together with a tablespoon of sugar in a cup of warm water and left to do its thing for about 10 minutes.
To help things along with texture and flavor, I combined 1/4 cup of whole milk with 1/4 cup of olive oil. In the dry ingredients, I added another tablespoon of sugar, some ground cinnamon and some ground ginger, not too much, just a generous sprinkle of both. Then I mixed all the dry stuff up.
Added the yeast to the dry ingredients and started mixing by hand. It was really sticky, so I added more oat flour b the less-than-quarter-cup till the stuff stopped sticking to my fingers in favor of anything else. At that point, the milk and olive oil went in, along with more oat flour scatterings till the dough came together.
It kneaded quite nicely, and when I put it to bed for an hour to rise, it cooperated. Not nearly as much as wheat flour, but it was bubbly and it *felt* right. So I divided it into 14 rounds, let the oven come to 400 degrees, and covered the 14 babies up for a shorter period rise. Total bake time was around 22 minutes. The kitchen smelled nice! A good sign. When the bottom sounded hollow when tapped, I took them out.
Right now they're cooling, but I tried out one of the smaller rolls. The tops are smooth and soft. The bottoms nicely crusty. The inside looks like bread! The taste is bread-like.
At 14 rolls cut from a dough weighing in at 1lb., 10 oz., the calorie count per roll is 135. Fiber: 3 (next time I'll add some oat meal or bran after the first rise, to raise that a little). Protein: 5. Potassium: 140. Sodium: 87. Fats: Saturated: 1. Mono.: 3. No registered poly. No trans.
So a successful try and something to play with in the near future!1 -
I have old-fashioned oats nearly every morning for breakfast! Personally, I love the taste of oats (even plain), but I put frozen berries and cinnamon in mine for a little complexity.0
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Interesting trick with the oat flour and gluten. I've never seen gluten for sale, though I'm sure I could find it in health food stores. I've had success using cold porridge as a tangzhong (pre-cooked starch paste used as a softening agent in Asian style breads) and it's worked well. Adding dry oats can also give a nice flavour but sometimes makes a gummy loaf.0
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I don't like the texture of boiled oats, but I do like rolled oats 'marinated' in Greek vanilla yogurt, with strawberries and a pinch of salt. If I need extra calories I add a tablespoon of peanut butter.
However, this is a bedtime snack for me rather than breakfast - need way more protein to carbs to keep me full.0 -
CattOfTheGarage wrote: »Interesting trick with the oat flour and gluten. I've never seen gluten for sale, though I'm sure I could find it in health food stores. I've had success using cold porridge as a tangzhong (pre-cooked starch paste used as a softening agent in Asian style breads) and it's worked well. Adding dry oats can also give a nice flavour but sometimes makes a gummy loaf.
Are you sure you've never seen it? Look closely in the baking aisle. It became popular to carry it because a lot of bread machine recipes called for it.
I can't eat gluten, but on the topic of oat flour, it makes the most amazing shortbread and pancakes.0 -
I've never seen it, doesn't mean it wasn't there!
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Old fashioned, 5-6 times a week. I usually add a little real maple syrup, honey, or frozen mixed berries.1
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Just to add I've seen recipes that call for extra gluten but I've never really felt the need, with white bread it's a question of working it hard enough, with whole wheat it's a question of letting the bran soak so it gets soft enough and gives the gluten a chance to develop without shredding it. Using gluten to make a loaf with an entirely different flour is the first use I've seen for it that seems worthwhile to me. That and making fake meat, which strikes me as an interesting project.0
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30g of quick cook oats, 30g of protein powder (the not too sweet sort with nuts and chia in), 200ml milk and 10g of chocolate chips. So good.0
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Yes. Steel cut or coaches oats for me. Every day.1
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I am on weight loss 0.5kg per week. I take 30 to 40g oats muesli each morning for breakfast. Its fine.
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CattOfTheGarage wrote: »Interesting trick with the oat flour and gluten. I've never seen gluten for sale, though I'm sure I could find it in health food stores. I've had success using cold porridge as a tangzhong (pre-cooked starch paste used as a softening agent in Asian style breads) and it's worked well. Adding dry oats can also give a nice flavour but sometimes makes a gummy loaf.
Oh, that sounds interesting! I'm going to Youtube tangzhong and see what I can find (I learn recipes best from a combo of print and visual).
I ended up ordering the vital wheat gluten online, from Jet.com. I haven't seen it in GNC, which is the only health food store I'm acquainted with, but I'm sure I could find it "live" if I put some effort in it!0 -
I eat old fashioned oats 5- 6 days a week.... in fact its prepped in my fridge for the week as I type.
1/2 cup dry makes a cup, mixed with water, 1/2 banana, 1/4 tsp. of cinnamon, 1 tbsp. of chopped walnuts cooked in the microwave, yummmmmmy!!!!!
Works great for weight loss and wards off high cholesterol, and diabetes
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I can't eat oatmeal without a sprinkle of brown sugar on top!0
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I alternate between oats and sultana bran. Lots of great ideas in this thread, I'll have to try choc chips next time. I use quick oats with water and mix banana, strawberry, and rice malt syrup into mine.0
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i eat steel cut oats ..i make enough for four days so all i have to do is heat it up because it takes a while to cook. i usually have it with some sort of nuts and seeds , sometimes add some craisins and always add cinnamon .. i started putting coconut /almond milk in it and it really adds to the flavor0
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Current obsession is oatmeal (instant old fashioned, because lazy) mixed with cream cheese and blackberry jam. I also have made proats (vanilla protein shake mixed with the oats).
That said, I actually don't eat oatmeal all that often because I need a lot of it to feel full and by the time I'd done adding everything to it, it's like, 500 calories. There are a dozen other foods I'd eat for 500 calories before I'd pick oatmeal, so I really have to be craving it.1 -
I LOVE oatmeal and could eat it at every meal. I prepare it the boring way though. I microwave about a 1/2 cup full then add a little salt, sugar, low fat spray margarine and low fat milk. YUM!2
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I eat the Aldi brand packet oatmeal. The brown sugar kind. Not too fond of the other flavors. I'll add a little peanut butter or half a banana if I have one that isn't too ripe and it will fill me up for most of the morning.0
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