What does your low carb meals look like??
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Full of great ideas, bumpty-bump for newbies.0
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LizinLowell wrote: »Filet mignon with Roquefort mousse, had them hold the mashed potatoes
You had me at Roquefort + mousse. Holy chit
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AlexandraCarlyle wrote: »Steph_Maks wrote: »@AlexandraCarlyle I think it still depends on whomever entered the nutritional information into MFP originally.
If it was someone in north america, then odds are the carb numbers are total, including fibre. If the person was from the UK or perhaps other parts of europe, then odds are the carbs are net, with fibre separate. That's on an item-by-item basis, so overall if you're filling your food diary with items from all over the place, I think the answer is, nobody knows?
Though if you're in the UK and the food items you're entering are all predominantly based in the UK then I would think your results are going to be mostly the UK style of counting, with carbs being net. That's just a guess though.
Yes, I suppose what I'm relying on is guesswork.... The food items I'm entering are from the MFP database for the most part. I don't get to decide where they come from... Mostly, because I use fresh stuff or home-made things, the contents tend to be 'generic'
And even if they did come from the UK, how the database works out the carbs, net or otherwise, is not under my control, either.What @Steph_Maks said. How could you possibly know unless the entry happens to read something like USDA.On another topic I am wondering what you could possibly eat that would be so high fiber yet so low in carbs. Without pondering too long, every food I think of that is high fiber is also generally high carb or at least highish carb. Vegetables, Fruit, legumes, nuts. Seeds.Help me out here @AlexandraCarlyle. If not from a bottle of some sort of supplement, how are you getting so much fiber and so low carb? Have you had days where you hit the fiber goal without going over 15 carbs? What did you eat? I can see 25 carbs and 15 fiber possibly but not the opposite. I'm clearly drawing a blank.
You and me both. I can't explain it either. I can't set a carb AND fibre tally. I tried but the system won't let me. I haven't opted for a subscription, if that's what's stopping me....
@AlexandraCarlyle Fat Secret (www.fatsecret.com) is one of the sites I find to be reliable. I don't remember if there is a way to get UK values, but otherwise, by default, it counts the US way, with fiber included in the carb number... I like that it's really simple to calculation portions - and to get less common info like other nutrients.0 -
KnitOrMiss wrote: »
@KnitOrMiss - Sorry I just saw this comment from you from FEBRUARY lol.
I got the recipe from here, but I used pepper jack cheese instead of cheddar
@bjwoodzy Well, luckily I'm still here, and I hadn't gotten wacky enough to go look for myself, so this was a welcome response! Goodness, I'm lazy, though!0 -
Here are a few of my keto meals and snacks. Features a lot of romaine lettuce, spinach, meat, cream and eggs.
I do not know what this glorious looking dish of some creamy sauce, broccoli, mushrooms, and zoodles is, but I would absolutely love to know, @nadiaha
It looks like some kind of variation of stroganoff ... maybe without the beef??
Or are those clams? Like some kind of chowder? Either way, you have me primed for lunch!0 -
They look an awful lot like Mussels, to me..... *licks lips*.....0
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AlexandraCarlyle wrote: »They look an awful lot like Mussels, to me..... *licks lips*.....
@AlexandraCarlyle - I've never eaten Mussels, so that would explain a lot of why there was not a recognition for me. I grew up US American "white trash" food assistance type foods...then as a broke adult without much food options, etc. I'm just now getting to where I can overcome food aversion enough to try new foods. It's amazing what eating low carb did for my palate.0 -
@KnitOrMiss you're so right - not so much in my case, because I have always had very eclectic and diverse tastes - I'll try anything once! - but my H has been astonished at the foods he now finds tasty and appealing. He would often refuse to eat some foods because he had an aversion to them, but now finds them a welcome addition to his meals.
I will say many foods fall into the category of 'acquired taste' and maybe mussels may be one of those.
Certain foods also fit the 'you'll either love it or hate it'.... and again, shellfish don't appeal to all....
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Where can I find some recipes to all these delicious recipes?
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My girlfriend and I are both keto and we eat a lot of grilled meats. You get so much "free" flavor from the grill without having to add sauces or spices. The broccoli is just olive oil, salt and pepper. On the grill are pork ribs, pork steak, ribeyes, italian sausages and "dinosaur eggs" (jalapeno, cheddar cheese, and sausage wrapped in bacon). Ribeye always medium rare.
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Where can I find some recipes to all these delicious recipes?
@mfr0125 try our Recipes group: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/112055-the-low-carb-high-fat-recipes-group-lchf1 -
My low carb meals are fairly straightforward and consist of meat and green veg. I have been doing IF for the last week to break a stall so dinner is typically my main meal for the day. Here's some snaps of my dinners lately.
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Where can I find some recipes to all these delicious recipes?
The "stickies" at the top of the page. Click on "Start here Launch Pad". Scroll down to recipes and click There are numerous websites listed with low carb/keto recipes totaling hundreds if not thousands of recipes. Have fun!1 -
I grew my own ginger plants this year, from a store-bought rhyzome, which had one or two green growing sprouts on it. People: Until you've tried your own home-grown ginger, you haven't LIVED!! OMG it's so good - crunchy, with a good peppery bite but not overpowering - it's an experience!
I froze a meaty salmon fillet for 24 hours, then removed it from the freezer, and while still semi-frozen firm, sliced it very finely, laid it on kitchen paper to get rid of the excess moisture, then laid it on a dish. I dug up a piece of new ginger root, rinsed it, peeled it with the edge of a teaspoon (it barely needed scraping at all) sliced it very finely all over the fish slices and then used a simple dressing of soy sauce, lemon juice and sesame oil.
Heaven.
(ETA: No pics. My phone is totally FU. You'll just have to go by the descriptions for a while - sorry! )2 -
Y'all!!!! This is amazing!! I found the recipe last night on The Keto Dad's FB page and decided today I would try it out. His called for berries of your choice, but I opted for a cream cheese filling. This is a before I cooked and after I cooked pic. 2NC and so good! Great for a quick breakfast or snack!3 -
I think my meals are not so photogenic. I had two chicken leg quarters tonight with a cup of steamed kale and a quarter cup of sautéed broccoli. It may not have looked like much, but it was tasty...3
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mrslmartin1001 wrote: »Y'all!!!! This is amazing!! I found the recipe last night on The Keto Dad's FB page and decided today I would try it out. His called for berries of your choice, but I opted for a cream cheese filling. This is a before I cooked and after I cooked pic. 2NC and so good! Great for a quick breakfast or snack!
could you pst the recipe please...?0 -
AlexandraCarlyle wrote: »People: Until you've tried your own home-grown ginger, you haven't LIVED!! OMG it's so good - crunchy, with a good peppery bite but not overpowering - it's an experience! sorry! )
@AlexandraCarlyle I love ginger....How long did it take to grow a root large enough to use?0 -
AlexandraCarlyle wrote: »People: Until you've tried your own home-grown ginger, you haven't LIVED!! OMG it's so good - crunchy, with a good peppery bite but not overpowering - it's an experience! sorry! )
@AlexandraCarlyle I love ginger....How long did it take to grow a root large enough to use?
In all, about 3 months, maybe 3-and-a-half....
I had an ordinary store-bought piece of ginger that had a couple of good, green bulbil/sprouts on it, and filled a good, large pot with free-draining, good-quality compost, with a bit more grit thrown in for good measure. I cut the Ginger into pieces, each one with a side-shoot and let the cut side dry out for a day, then laid them about one-third buried, on top of the compost. Pretty soon, the shoots got longer. And longer. And longer, (!) until i had a couple of good, longs sprouts each about 3 foot high.... This took a couple of weeks.
TbH, I just let the ginger do its thing on my kitchen windowsill (it faces east, first-floor apartment) which got good daylight/sunshine until about 11am. It doesn't like hot, constant sunshine, and I watered it whenever the compost felt light, but not bone dry.
Once you see the rhyzomes have spread across the top of the pot, and you've grown 5 or 6 good long shoots from them, you can cut bits off, and use as required, leaving the remainder to carry on spreading.... I also use the stiff, green shoots to make tea, or give rice a subtle ginger flavour, without too much punch. You can add the shoot (cut into lengths, leaves removed) to stews and casseroles, or water for vegetables, too. The leaves also make a nice tea.
So it is a bit of a wait, but honestly worth it!
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