Sweet treats????
chantellenicholson6648
Posts: 21 Member
Hello, I am new here (7 days) I am currently exercising 6 days PW and following low calorie healthy eating.
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
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Replies
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chantellenicholson6648 wrote: »Hello, I am new here (7 days) I am currently exercising 6 days PW and following low calorie healthy eating.
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
Pretty much any treat that is sweet is so because it has sugar which is a subset of carbs and I can't think of any such thing that would be high in protein.
In the context of an overall healthy and balanced diet, having a treat now and then really isn't material in the bigger picture. I eat a very healthy diet overall and have something sweet almost every evening after dinner...3 -
Something artificially sweetened. Atkins makes some sweets that are low carb but not so much high protein. There maybe some protein bars that are artificially sweetened. Sugar free puddings might be a good fit since they milk would have protein but no sugar other than what is already in the milk.1
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cwolfman13 wrote: »chantellenicholson6648 wrote: »Hello, I am new here (7 days) I am currently exercising 6 days PW and following low calorie healthy eating.
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
Pretty much any treat that is sweet is so because it has sugar which is a subset of carbs and I can't think of any such thing that would be high in protein.
In the context of an overall healthy and balanced diet, having a treat now and then really isn't material in the bigger picture. I eat a very healthy diet overall and have something sweet almost every evening after dinner...
Thanks, yes after dinner is when I want something sweet. What do you have? Are you trying to loose weight?0 -
Budget it in your calories/macros for the day and add the sweet treat as part of your sugar and or carb intake. It sounds hard, but once you get a plan/system down and start doing it you will notice that you can eat healthy and still have what you want as a treat.0
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Google recipes for protein fluff and protein sludge.
There's also a great recipe for low calorie protein cheesecake here in the recipes section.
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I haven't given up on sweets, but I keep them to 200 calories or fewer per serving. They do tend to be high in carbs, though.
For example, I make a peach sorbet that comes in at 84 calories to the 1/2-cup (or it did when I weighed out the 2.5 cups of diced peaches it called for. If I dice them smaller next time, I may fit more pieces into the cup and the weight and calories of the peaches could be different). Only 1 gram of protein, though.
I've got a peach nut pudding cake that comes in at 99 calories, 4 grams of protein/serving.
Citrus Sunshine Cake (sort of like a yellow zucchini cake with oj concentrate added) that's 133 calories and 4 grams protein
Low calorie cheesecake: 69 calories and 7 grams protein
Angel Cake pudding, 169 calories, 4 grams protein
Chewy meringue cookies (they have dried fruit and nuts in them) 72 calories and 3 grams of protein
Maple Apple cake, 140 calories and 4 grams protein
Apple Date crisps, 182 calories and 3 grams protein
Blueberry Bread Pudding with Lemon Glaze: 137 calories and 8 grams protein
Let me know if any of the above strike your fancy.1 -
Sweets with a little bit of protein could include M & M candy, chocolate milk, Snickers, & Reese's1
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To lose and maintain, you will most likely not be able to eat sweet treats every day. Yes, some people do, and it's your own choice, but it's going to be a lot less struggle if you get used to having sweet treats only occasionally. Occasionally you can eat whatever. Everyday, pay attetion to nutritional quality.
Healthy eating is not low calorie, it's an appropriate level of calories for your height, weight and activity level.
Sweets are in their nature high in sugar, aka carbs. Protein sources are typically meat/fish, eggs, dairy, beans, grains. You don't have to eat a strange diet to get enough protein, or eat low carb - a normal, balanced diet is enough for good health, weightloss and weight maintenance.2 -
I almost always save around 250 calories for the evening and have 28 grams of cashews with 14 grams of mini chocolate chips. It gives me both the sweet and salty that I want.0
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thanks, some great advice0
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estherdragonbat wrote: »I haven't given up on sweets, but I keep them to 200 calories or fewer per serving. They do tend to be high in carbs, though.
For example, I make a peach sorbet that comes in at 84 calories to the 1/2-cup (or it did when I weighed out the 2.5 cups of diced peaches it called for. If I dice them smaller next time, I may fit more pieces into the cup and the weight and calories of the peaches could be different). Only 1 gram of protein, though.
I've got a peach nut pudding cake that comes in at 99 calories, 4 grams of protein/serving.
Citrus Sunshine Cake (sort of like a yellow zucchini cake with oj concentrate added) that's 133 calories and 4 grams protein
Low calorie cheesecake: 69 calories and 7 grams protein
Angel Cake pudding, 169 calories, 4 grams protein
Chewy meringue cookies (they have dried fruit and nuts in them) 72 calories and 3 grams of protein
Maple Apple cake, 140 calories and 4 grams protein
Apple Date crisps, 182 calories and 3 grams protein
Blueberry Bread Pudding with Lemon Glaze: 137 calories and 8 grams protein
Let me know if any of the above strike your fancy.
They all sound yum. I would love to try them all (not all at once obviously) except the meringue.
Thanks for replying.
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cwolfman13 wrote: »chantellenicholson6648 wrote: »Hello, I am new here (7 days) I am currently exercising 6 days PW and following low calorie healthy eating.
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
Pretty much any treat that is sweet is so because it has sugar which is a subset of carbs and I can't think of any such thing that would be high in protein.
In the context of an overall healthy and balanced diet, having a treat now and then really isn't material in the bigger picture. I eat a very healthy diet overall and have something sweet almost every evening after dinner...
I usually have some dark chocolate...a cookie if my wife makes them, but that's more rare.
No, I'm not currently trying to lose weight, but I lost 40 Lbs 5 years ago and almost always had something for desert...if it fits your calories it's fine...sweet treats don't cause weight gain in and of themselves...0 -
Meringue nests are 51 cal. Bought from the supermarket and ready to eat. Like a lot of people I can't live without a sugary treat of some sort or other. And as chocolate doesn't really fit into my new way of eating, I found the meringue nests are sweet, low in cals and hit the spot without sending me over my daily cal allowance. They are sweet enough and big enough that 1 is enough to hit the spot at any given time without wanting to reach for more.0
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High in protein... hmm... I don't know but you could probably find recipes using protein powder online?0
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Blueberry Bread Pudding with Lemon Glaze:
8 servings
Ingredients:
(Pudding)- 4 slices (about 4 cups) whole wheat bread, cubed
- 1 cup blueberries, fresh or frozen, unthawed
- 2 cups unsweetened soymilk (note: you can use skim instead. I wanted a non-dairy version.)
- 3 egg whites
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/4 tsp lemon extract
- 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/8 tsp almond extract
(Glaze)- 1 cup water
- 3 tbsp sugar
- 1.5 tbsp lemon juice
- 4 tsp corn starch
Procedure:- Preheat oven to 350
- Lightly spray an 8" square baking pan
- Place bread cubes in pan and top with blueberies
- In a medium bowl, combine remaining pudding ingredients. Beat with fork or wire whisk until blended. Pour over bread and blueberries and let stand 10 minutes
- Bake 45 minutes. Cool on rack.
- When pudding is finished baking, combine glaze ingredients in small saucepan. Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring constantly. Cook, stirring, one minute more
- Spoon glaze over pudding. With a long-tined fork, pierce the pudding every inch or so, so some of the glaze runs down into the pudding. Chill.
Variation: If you want a light pink tint in the glaze, switch out 1 tbsp sugar with a red jelly like currant or grape. Don't use jam. (Note: I don't do this and I haven't checked how it impacts the nutrition profile.)
ETA: Source: The Vegetarian Gourmet's Easy Low-Fat Favorites by Bobbie Hinman (Surrey Books, 2002)
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chantellenicholson6648 wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »chantellenicholson6648 wrote: »Hello, I am new here (7 days) I am currently exercising 6 days PW and following low calorie healthy eating.
Any ideas for sweet treats that are high in protein and low in carbs?
I have 55 pounds to loose and am struggling to think of sweet treats.
Add me if you are in a similar position.
Thanks
Pretty much any treat that is sweet is so because it has sugar which is a subset of carbs and I can't think of any such thing that would be high in protein.
In the context of an overall healthy and balanced diet, having a treat now and then really isn't material in the bigger picture. I eat a very healthy diet overall and have something sweet almost every evening after dinner...
Thanks, yes after dinner is when I want something sweet. What do you have? Are you trying to loose weight?
You can eat anything you want as long as it fits your goals. I try to save between 150-200 calories for something sweet - an ice cream bar, or 2 squares of Ghiradelli dark chocolate, or a packet of Oreo cookie crisps.
I don't expect these treats to be high in protein, I get my protein from other sources. I don't low carb because I don't have medical issues and maintenance wouldn't be low carb anyway. All things in moderation for me.
Losing weight is about reducing calories.1 -
I eat a 45 calorie chocolate fudge bar every night. Cures my chocolate and ice cream cravings.0
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