Good source of protein ideas?

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Replies

  • hroderick
    hroderick Posts: 756 Member
    eggs, wonderslim bars
  • viajera99
    viajera99 Posts: 252 Member
    Here's another super post with good sources of protein:

    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/926789/protein-sources/p1
  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
    edited July 2018
    hroderick wrote: »
    The price of your pickiness may be your health.

    Well thanks captain obvious.. that's why I was asking for ideas lol 😂
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    Blood sugar 101. All foods convert to glucose, and granulated sugar is about the fastest to metabolise.

    If you have a low blood sugar moment, glucose in sugar, juice, or glucotab form will bounce you back out the fastest. But it is very short acting. To stay out of the low blood sugar you need to follow up with protein.

    Whey protein is metabolised fastest
    Sugars - within minutes
    Starchy Carbs
    Protein
    Fats can take up to 12 hours to metabolise.

    That's why protein is ideal and you should have some on hand all the time. A protein bar is about perfect because it also has fast acting sugars and fats.
  • nxd10
    nxd10 Posts: 4,570 Member
    I’ve been eating boiled eggs. Good peanut or almond butter is not expensive at Trader Joe’s or Costco (those are cheap sources for nuts). I put them on celery or apples. Chicken with a bbq sauce or rub may be tasty. If you’re okay with tuna, try egg or chicken salad as well. I have been doing the whole 30 diet - which is basically paleo. And I feel so much better. I always have nuts with me. They seem expensive but you eat them by the 1/8 cup - they are super filling.
  • nowine4me
    nowine4me Posts: 3,985 Member
    edited July 2018
    There are a gazillion bars that meet your requirement and are cheap. Try them all
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,093 Member
    FL_Hiker wrote: »
    hroderick wrote: »
    The price of your pickiness may be your health.

    Well thanks captain obvious.. that's why I was asking for ideas lol 😂

    I think he may have been getting at the point that you might revisit all these decisions about foods you don't like and won't eat. Maybe something prepared a different way or maybe give some things more of a chance. You aren't leaving many good protein sources as possibilities.

    Especially when price is also an issue.

    In many decision-making situations, if you have three or more criteria, you're going to need to decide which criteria are most important for you.

    his is similar to the problem frequently seen on these boards, that you can eat nutritionally dense foods cheaply, and you can eat nutritionally dense foods that are convenient (usually this means they take little prep or work on your part, but in your case it means that it needs to be portable), and you can eat convenient food cheaply, but it's much more challenging to eat nutritionally dense food cheaply and without any prep/cooking. And you're adding in a fourth criteria list of food aversions that right off the bat cover almost the entire field of foods that meet your first criterion of protein-dense (no meat, no beans, some resistance on tuna, no greek yogurt, no cottage cheese, no protein powders).

    I think somebody suggested hard-boiled eggs, which is cheap and portable, but aside from needing four eggs to get close to 30 g of protein, it will also "cost" close to 300 kcal. I don't think OP ever said directly how many cals are available for this mid-morning snack, but that might be too much. What about one or two whole eggs smushed up with four egg whites and some mustard/cayenne/hot sauce for deviled egg salad? You could eat it in a lettuce wrap. That would run through a dozen eggs every two days (although you could repurpose the extra egg yolks in some other dish, or maybe mix into scrambled eggs for someone else in the house), which, if you buy conventional eggs, would work out to about a dollar a day in my neck of the woods.
  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
    I'm going with the tuna and chicken idea. Thanks everyone
  • OHammykins
    OHammykins Posts: 97 Member
    edited July 2018
    What about one or two whole eggs smushed up with four egg whites and some mustard/cayenne/hot sauce for deviled egg salad? You could eat it in a lettuce wrap.

    That sounds delicious! :o
  • ExRelaySprinter
    ExRelaySprinter Posts: 874 Member
    Some great ideas here.
  • MadisonMolly2017
    MadisonMolly2017 Posts: 11,152 Member
    @RaeBeeBaby Thank you! I’ll check that out!
  • WilmaValley
    WilmaValley Posts: 1,092 Member
    Great ideas, needed this too!!!
  • cyncm
    cyncm Posts: 36 Member
    One of my favorite protein snacks is a couple of Yves veggie dogs.