Alternative for Bread
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My trainer recommended ezekiel bread. You can find it in the frozen section. Just put in the toaster for a few seconds to get it soft. It's natural, low calorie and has a lot of fiber.
http://www.eatthis.com/ezekiel-bread
This. Ezekiel bread is highly nutritious and there are several varieties!0 -
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WASA is my alternative to bread - sourdough whole grain crispbread by WASA @ 35 calories per slice.0
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Just gonna leave this here..........
Yes. This (great pic - and nice batch of breads!). If it's lowered sodium you want, it is very easy to bake your own. Some salt is needed, otherwise, the result tastes like cardboard. But you can crank it way down compared to commercial loaves.
I use a "no knead" method that requires about 10 minutes of easy work in an approx 3-hour start-from-scratch to finished-loaf-cooling cycle. I make a variety of types, and they're all about 1/3 the sodium of the comparable commercial brands and flavors I used to buy. Further, the homemade bread is more satisfying, so I actually eat less of it (by cutting thinner slices than I specify in the MFP recipe builder portion size determination, for a double dividend on macro counts). In addition to removing things such as sodium and less-desirable ingredients (really, bread can be nothing but flour, yeast, salt, water) you can ADD things you may want, such as whey or other protein, seeds/nuts/fruit/grains (I add items such as wheat germ, rolled oats, etc.) and more (e.g., herbs such as rosemary). You're in total control.0 -
I won't quote that picture of the bread a fifth time on this page, but HOLY DELICIOUSNESS, BATMAN!!!!!2
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I hand bake bread without any salt at all. Typically whole meal bread from flour made at a local sixteenth century stone mill. The salt is only there to put the brakes on the yeast and is what makes fluffy French style breads. The yeast all dies off when you put the loaf in the oven to cook anyway. I have a great cookbook that has bread recipes from all around the world. Another bread that has no salt is traditional naan bread. Also German rye bread. There are also a whole host of quick breads that do not use yeast or flour.
I suggest you get a bread cookbook and start baking bread with no salt.0 -
Oops do not use yeast or salt....did not mean to write yeast or flour. Sorry0
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MotherOfSharpei wrote: »One slice of bread to cut back. Or wrap your lunch meat in a slice of cheese.
He's substituting bread because of it's "high" sodium content. Cheese is going to be far higher in sodium as @missh1967 already pointed out.
Use your coldcuts on a nice salad.....but make the dressing yourself because pre-made are generally high sodium.
Hold on, bread has too much sodium for his cold cuts. Am I the only one who sees the irony here? Cold cuts have a LOT of sodium.
Anyway, not sure about the sodium level but there are a bunch of brands that make low carb/high protein tortillas nowadays.1 -
MotherOfSharpei wrote: »One slice of bread to cut back. Or wrap your lunch meat in a slice of cheese.
He's substituting bread because of it's "high" sodium content. Cheese is going to be far higher in sodium as @missh1967 already pointed out.
Use your coldcuts on a nice salad.....but make the dressing yourself because pre-made are generally high sodium.
Hold on, bread has too much sodium for his cold cuts. Am I the only one who sees the irony here? Cold cuts have a LOT of sodium.
Anyway, not sure about the sodium level but there are a bunch of brands that make low carb/high protein tortillas nowadays.
Most of these people are just looking to get their life complicated and are looking for bread subs for whatever reason. Most just guess they cant have gluten etc. This person things a TEASPOON of salt in a loaf of bread is a lot, yet cheese and cold cuts are fine. Makes sense to me.
Whole-loaf eaters!
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MotherOfSharpei wrote: »One slice of bread to cut back. Or wrap your lunch meat in a slice of cheese.
He's substituting bread because of it's "high" sodium content. Cheese is going to be far higher in sodium as @missh1967 already pointed out.
Use your coldcuts on a nice salad.....but make the dressing yourself because pre-made are generally high sodium.
Hold on, bread has too much sodium for his cold cuts. Am I the only one who sees the irony here? Cold cuts have a LOT of sodium.
Anyway, not sure about the sodium level but there are a bunch of brands that make low carb/high protein tortillas nowadays.
I can't say for certain "low sodium" cold cuts don't exist (I've never seen them myself)......I was giving OP the benefit of the doubt.0
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