What 'healthy' foods did you ultimately give up on?
Replies
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I cut everything that affects your thyroid:
-Raw veggies (especially spinach, cauliflower & green smoothies)
-Soy of any kind (soybean oil, soy sauce, soy lecithin-which is in almost everything).
-Strawberries
-Peanuts & peanut butter (love PB but had to cut it)1 -
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Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.1
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So glad I'm reading about others not liking avocado. I can eat almost anything but there is just something about the flavor and texture that gets to me.0
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amusedmonkey wrote: »Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.
I like them in pudding, but I suppose if you thought they were miracle health seeds that should be forced into your diet they could seem disappointing. (I think the health benefits are overrated, as with a huge portion of these things that people seem to have been told are for health, like replacing potatoes with sweet potatoes.)
I realize I never decided there were healthy foods I had to eat that weren't already in my diet. I tried a few of them (hemp hearts, flaxseed) and decided they were fine but rarely worth the calories as they didn't add much taste, but I never thought they were important enough to work on including more. So many different foods are healthy that forcing it -- unless you are someone who struggles to get enough protein or to eat vegetables or something -- seems pointless to me.2 -
Coconut oil. I really tried to incorporate this because of all the hype, but it is the most disgusting taste for me to get used to. I tried the refined also, but I can't stand it!2
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Quinoa
Almond Butter
Brown Rice
Hemp Hearts
Artic Zero0 -
Coconut oil. I really tried to incorporate this because of all the hype, but it is the most disgusting taste for me to get used to. I tried the refined also, but I can't stand it!
Refined doesn't have any health benefits anyway (and even for the virgin coconut oil they are overrated -- I don't see any benefit to using coconut oil vs., say, olive oil or avocado oil, unless you like the taste). I love the taste personally, for cooking. The idea of eating it plain or in a beverage, no.
https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/24/ask-well-is-coconut-oil-a-healthy-fat/0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »Coconut oil. I really tried to incorporate this because of all the hype, but it is the most disgusting taste for me to get used to. I tried the refined also, but I can't stand it!
Refined doesn't have any health benefits anyway (and even for the virgin coconut oil they are overrated -- I don't see any benefit to using coconut oil vs., say, olive oil or avocado oil, unless you like the taste). I love the taste personally, for cooking. The idea of eating it plain or in a beverage, no.
https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/24/ask-well-is-coconut-oil-a-healthy-fat/
Coconut oil - I don't use it often, but when I treat myself to popcorn, if I pop it in coconut oil it tastes just like at the movies. I would have to use far more butter calories on air popped popcorn for it to taste so good - so I keep the coconut oil around.
On the opposite side, I'm thrilled with the avocado oil inclusion in "healthy" food list. Now I never liked the taste of olive oil, but can't taste anything in avocado oil so things I used to avoid (hummus, pesto etc) are now foods I occasionally prepare and enjoy - but only because I substituted avocado oil for olive oil. If avocado oil had not been trendy, I doubt I'd have tried it.
I'm always up to trying the latest fad "healthy" food. Sometimes I find a new taste winner. More often it isn't to my liking, but I'm happy to have tried.0 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »Artic Zero
That stuff is disgusting. Tried the chocolate peanut butter flavor, and it tasted like lightly chocolate flavored water. I had such high hopes too!0 -
Namely yogurt and oatmeal. I'm not fond of "goopy" textures, and I keep buying the stuff thinking eventually I might like it. Nope.0
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heatherrt06 wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »Artic Zero
That stuff is disgusting. Tried the chocolate peanut butter flavor, and it tasted like lightly chocolate flavored water. I had such high hopes too!
I think Arctic Zero is horrible too. Halo Top isn't as good as "regular ice cream" but it's waaay closer, in my opinion. Halo Top does have a bit of an odd taste but it's actually yummy unlike Arctic Zero.
Also agree with the people talking about how overhyped coconut oil has been, especially refined. I remember when I first started here on MFP a lot of my friends (not using MFP) were acting like coconut oil in everything from cookies to their hair was gonna make them magically sooooo healthy.
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Coconut water2
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singingflutelady wrote: »Coconut water
Yes to this.2 -
I *tried* health foods, but never forced myself to eat it. I decided that I hate:
coconut water
almond butter
kale
celery
pumpkin
Arctic Zero ice cream
and anything hemp or flax
I DO like Chia seeds in my yogurt or puddings and most other things.0 -
I love kale and black beans as well as most veg BUT,,,, Can not for the life of me deal with whole chunks of tofu , organ meats (other than chicken liver in small doses) or bitter greens ( like danilion or arugala chickory ) same for any sushi with raw fish I just do not like the idea or the mouthfeel .0
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Quinoa - tried two varieties, both bothered my stomach
Avocado - texture is awful and taste is weird
So for some of the other foods mentioned a lot...I hate regular oatmeal, but in the winter I do like steel cut oats, but just plain, I don't like to add anything sweet to them. Completely different texture and taste than regular oatmeal.
Sweet potatoes, I only like them once in a while and they have to be roasted with cayenne or chili pepper.
Kale, I love it... in salad but especially sauteed with garlic and a little bacon, top with lemon juice. And I use it in a variation of that sausage potato soup from Olive Garden that I make, I like the kale way better than spinach in that.0 -
Any baked dessert recipe that gloats on the description of not using flour, eggs, or butter in order to reduce the calories when those ingredients would generally be used (cakes, cookies, ect). I get if someone is gluten intolerant or something, but all that I've ever experienced with those types of recipes are waxy or cardboardy disappointment. Just give me the real stuff and I'll adjust my calories around it, thank you.4
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Coconut oil goes on my skin, NOT in my mouth!!
I also don't both with the expensive types of peanut butter or the made-in-store stuff. 10 bucks for a thing of peanut butter is pretty steep. Jif Natural Extra Chunky is good enough for me.2 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.
I've been too afraid to try chia pudding. The whole thought makes me cringe. But I often add chia seeds to grains or soups to up the fiber content. It doesn't alter the taste one bit.0 -
Coconut oil goes on my skin, NOT in my mouth!!
I also don't both with the expensive types of peanut butter or the made-in-store stuff. 10 bucks for a thing of peanut butter is pretty steep. Jif Natural Extra Chunky is good enough for me.
I will say that the Whole Foods almond butter ground in-store is pretty tasty.
Also, we got a big jar of coconut oil a year or two ago. We now only use it for our dog. She loves it and we're assuming it'll have some kind of health benefit (or at least keep her pretty happy).1 -
I can't eat quinoa - tried it once and ended up breaking out in a bunch of small red dots all over0
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Almond butter would another for me. I thought "I love almonds so I'll love almond butter." No. So tasteless after a lifetime of peanut butter.0
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I'm weird, I guess, in that I grew up not liking and never eating peanut butter. On a whim tried some "natural" (only peanuts and salt) peanut butter in my 20s and liked it. Started eating it occasionally and then I realized that almond and cashew and walnut butters existed. Since I like almonds and walnuts and cashews even better than peanuts I tried those and loved them. I go up and down in how much I eat them, but I like them all.
None of that is weird, the not liking peanut butter when I was growing up is the weird part.
I never thought of them as especially "healthy" though, in the way I think this thread means (as in I should actively try to add them to my diet), since they are pretty nutritionally similar to peanut butter and have lots of calories.0 -
Here is one to try if you ever have the opportunity: hazelnut butter (so creamy), or better yet, peanut butter mixed with hazelnut butter.
I was making peanut butter and I thought I had more peanuts than I did, and it wouldn't blend without enough nuts. I bulked it up with hazelnuts, and BOOM! It's nut butter on steroids! I have never tasted anything that delicious. That was the first and the last time I made it. While peanut butter lasts for a few weeks in the fridge for me, 1300+ calories of that concoction were gone within a day.4 -
Almond milk - back to drinking skim milk
Premier Protein shakes
All protein bars - I was eating them like candy bars and not losing weight
Arugula - too bitter1 -
Amazing how many people love Halo Top,I recently bought the new pancakes and waffles flavor thinking it might be better than the others I've tried,,nope tastes like chemicals to me1
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amusedmonkey wrote: »Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.
I love chia seeds, and same - don't eat them too often due to calorie count, but find them to be fun like you and a great source of fat.
I also genuinely like the flavor of flax meal and other things people mention hating on like kale and sweet potatoes.
For even more astonishing tidbits about my freakish taste buds, I prefer brown rice to white (I generally buy brown basmati rice) and don't mind the cooking time. I also like to use egg whites to stretch the volume in a meal made with whole eggs.1 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.
I like them in pudding, but I suppose if you thought they were miracle health seeds that should be forced into your diet they could seem disappointing. (I think the health benefits are overrated, as with a huge portion of these things that people seem to have been told are for health, like replacing potatoes with sweet potatoes.)
I realize I never decided there were healthy foods I had to eat that weren't already in my diet. I tried a few of them (hemp hearts, flaxseed) and decided they were fine but rarely worth the calories as they didn't add much taste, but I never thought they were important enough to work on including more. So many different foods are healthy that forcing it -- unless you are someone who struggles to get enough protein or to eat vegetables or something -- seems pointless to me.
It's funny, for me, either flax or chia seeds, in spite of being "fad" health foods, serve a good purpose in my diet of adding healthy fats.
I could use nuts for this purpose, but have trouble moderating them. It's easy to keep the seeds in the fridge and I don't have the same problem with moderation. I can do the same thing with them I was doing with the nuts (sprinkle them on yogurt), and get the added fat I need.
So yeah, it's a healthy bandwagon I jumped on, but they're foods that fill a niche for me and they fill it well. That I like them is just a plus.
I tried hemp hearts and liked them but decided they weren't worth the calories.0 -
GottaBurnEmAll wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »Weird how many people hate chia seeds. I like them. They're fun like mini tapioca balls. Now I don't eat them often because they are too high in calories to be worth it often (I like other things more), but I do have some fun with them from time to time.
I like them in pudding, but I suppose if you thought they were miracle health seeds that should be forced into your diet they could seem disappointing. (I think the health benefits are overrated, as with a huge portion of these things that people seem to have been told are for health, like replacing potatoes with sweet potatoes.)
I realize I never decided there were healthy foods I had to eat that weren't already in my diet. I tried a few of them (hemp hearts, flaxseed) and decided they were fine but rarely worth the calories as they didn't add much taste, but I never thought they were important enough to work on including more. So many different foods are healthy that forcing it -- unless you are someone who struggles to get enough protein or to eat vegetables or something -- seems pointless to me.
It's funny, for me, either flax or chia seeds, in spite of being "fad" health foods, serve a good purpose in my diet of adding healthy fats.
I could use nuts for this purpose, but have trouble moderating them. It's easy to keep the seeds in the fridge and I don't have the same problem with moderation. I can do the same thing with them I was doing with the nuts (sprinkle them on yogurt), and get the added fat I need.
So yeah, it's a healthy bandwagon I jumped on, but they're foods that fill a niche for me and they fill it well. That I like them is just a plus.
I tried hemp hearts and liked them but decided they weren't worth the calories.
Same. They're good in oatmeal, but too calorific to make it worth it to me.1
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