Egg Whites
jgbird5202
Posts: 1 Member
Hi all, I'm using an egg white carton, 200ml. Is this too much?
0
Replies
-
There is no correct amount, just a suggested serving size. How much you use of anything depends upon how much you want and how it fits into your nutrition and calorie goals for the day.4
-
They're a great low calorie way to get your protein in. I make a breakfast of about 150g of egg whites and an egg, add in about 10g of cheese with some seasoning and it's a great way to keep me full on low calories.2
-
i used 250 ml today to make a omelette with tuna for lunch it seems fine as long as it fits your macros could eat the whole tub0
-
I used to just pour in the egg white but I didn't lose weight with it that way and
I could have enjoyed something else like toast probably for less calories. Anyway the point is it's
easy to think I can have as much as I want, it's just egg whites. I now measure like this, If you take two eggs and separate the whites from the yolks then you have a good idea how much you should eat and not more. Now I have finally started losing weight again. It works for me.1 -
Egg whites don't have that many calories (5g of protein/20cal per lake 38g of liquid)2
-
Without context, no one can possibly offer any useful advice to you.4
-
I eat 3 eggwhites and 1 whole egg every morning. I separate the whites from the eggs and toss the yolk.0
-
one large egg white (no yolk) is approximately 1/4 cup. Hope that helps. I eat 3 scrambled egg whites in the mornings. I measured each white for a week. They were all about the same.0
-
I eat upwards of 3 dozen eggs a week. I have excellent health markers.
You're fine.1 -
A carton of egg whites? You are fine and perhaps better than a scoop full of protein powder!0
-
Why not just eat the whole egg?0
-
JohnnyPenso wrote: »Why not just eat the whole egg?
I'd guess it's the same reason anyone would eat egg whites.. he or she needs the protein but doesn't need the fat to hit macro goals.2 -
extra_medium wrote: »JohnnyPenso wrote: »Why not just eat the whole egg?
I'd guess it's the same reason anyone would eat egg whites.. he or she needs the protein but doesn't need the fat to hit macro goals.
Right. If you eat egg whites from a carton, you don't have any "whole egg" to eat. The yolks are separated and used elsewhere.0 -
Too much for what?? Only you can determine that. If you're making a recipe that calls for 30 ml then 200 is too much. If you're just eating breakfast then you need to determine if 200 fits your goals and calories and if it does it is not too much, if it doesn't then you either need to eat less whites or eat less of something else. You should consider your day as a whole rather than each individual food item also.0
-
Probably...or probably not.1
-
When I make and omelet, I go big or go home. One whole egg plus 300 grams of whites. Plus vegetables.
If someone wants a reason why I'm not eating whole eggs, I need to watch my fat and cholesterol intake for medical reasons. I'm also a volume eater and can get a lot more volume for less calories out of egg whites.0 -
The carton should tell you somewhere how much of the product equals one egg - on the one that I have, its two tablespoons for the egg equivalence. But of course, you dont tell us how much of the carton you are eating, or if its within your calorie budget, or anything else that would help make the responses more relevant.0
-
jgbird5202 wrote: »Hi all, I'm using an egg white carton, 200ml. Is this too much?
Too much what? In what way? Too many calories? Too much protein? How many servings of the carton are you using at once and what is the listed serving size? What are your calorie/protein goals? How do they fit into your overall diet as far as calories/macros?
The question has no context. It's like asking "How long is a piece of string?".2 -
There is no correct amount, just a suggested serving size. How much you use of anything depends upon how much you want and how it fits into your nutrition and calorie goals for the day.
^ This.
Also are you cutting, bulking, leaning out?? If you count macros it will all depend on your totals. I eat 4 servings of egg whites for breakfast and sometimes post workout. I choose egg whites over eggs because I want to save my fats for avocado or almond butter. Plus easy prep with egg whites.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions