Holidays on keto
ariel1116
Posts: 555 Member
Hey I just started the keto lifestyle this week so far so good. I decide to be on keto because I’m borderline diabetic and had gestational diabetes with both my pregnancies. I am nervous about next week being Halloween. candy is my weakness! And in general the holidays coming up what do you guys plan to make for Thanksgiving and Christmas or will it be a cheat day?
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Focus on the meat. Eat less of the other stuff.2
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Thanksgiving we are going out to dinner. I've decided if the mashed potatoes or stuffing look really good (doubtful with restaurant versions), I might have a couple bites. If other people have pie, maybe steal a bite. I really don't want to reverse my progress.3
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I make a crustless lemon whip (0 carbs) and cheesecake (don't eat crust or make with chopped almonds)
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Make a batch of sweet fat bombs, and make them into bite sized pieces (my favorite fat bomb recipe is supposed to be 2 ounces, but I make them in an ice cube tray, and it comes out to .5 ounces each)...that way you can pop one into your mouth when the craving hits. Keep track of how many of the little devils you eat, though.
I have squared with the upcoming holidays, and have decided that if I really want "X", then I should have half a portion, or share with someone, on that day. The day after Tgiving or Xmas, though, I am back on track. Indulging in all those things is what got my pant size where it is lol! Make a plan and stick to it...don't let Auntie So And So talk you into that double portion of mac n cheese, or Granny's sweet potato pie do you in! I am also going to the gym on the holidays, in the morning before the festivities begin, just to help me out a bit!6 -
Fortunately Halloween is a non issue for me-no kids, no grandchildren, no trick or treaters, no excuse to have candy in the house. Good luck though. I love candy.
Christmas and Thanksgiving Day I'll have a bit of whatever looks tasty but not too much. It's not a cheat day. It is part of my plan. I've been doing it for 6 years: 1 year in weight loss and 5 years in maintenance. This may not be true for others but I have found the more I say, "I can't" the more I'm likely to resent and falter later. YMMV. No foods are off limits to me on "special occasions" which are few throughout the year.
My mantra at food fests remains: STEP AWAY FROM the FOOD. There is no reason to hover over a food table if I'm not eating. It is only a temptation. If everyone happens to be hovering around the food (which is often the case), I keep it at arms length. I'll place what I want on my plate and either eat it as my meal or "pick at it" throughout the evening. Step away from the food. Step away from the food. Step away from the food....7 -
I eat more food on those days but try to keep the foods on plan. If I eat much of the foods that are off plan, I can get derailed for a few days (or weeks or months - been there, done that).
It's pretty individual though.2 -
@kpk54 that is a great mantra. (and i am in the same boat of loving candy. with lots of kids at home…though i did ok last year on strictly CICO and watching how much i ate rather than worrying about carbs; hopefully i do ok this year with wanting to watch carbs than strictly calories).
tonight will be rough for me to remember to STEP AWAY FROM the FOOD; we have a church halloween party that is a chili cook-off _and_ a huge dessert table. thank you for the mantra to keep in mind1 -
I use choc peanut butter balls to keep me in recovery from my reeses cup problem.
One scoop of choc protein powder added to peanut butter and roll into small balls and freeze.
I like them better than candy since they don't trigger me or make me feel sick.4 -
Well my son is now sick with hand foot and mouth disease so it looks like I won’t have to deal with the Halloween candy temptation! I did buy him his own bag of lollipops since he can’t trick or treat but that’s not a temptation for me.2
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During the first 2 months of keto in trying to get to the fat adapted stage I'd suggest being strict with the diet if being fat adapted is your goal. Once that happens if there are a few times a year that you enjoy special foods on holidays go for it in moderation. I think you will see that long term that stuff will be in front of you and there is zero desire for it regardless.1
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I white-knuckled through Halloween (the remains of which are still resident in our office kitchen). Re Thanksgiving, I plan to enjoy roasted turkey skin for the first time in YEARS. I'll be skipping the mashed potatoes. I was never a fan anyway. I plan to make my own stuffing from a recipe on the Charlie Foundation site. I recommend their TG recipes for anyone wanting to keep it true w/o feeling deprived or out of sync w/fellow diners. I make a killer spaghetti squash gratin that has been a staple on my TG table for eons. And it is Keto. Who'd a thunk it? My tradition has always been to hit the gym or trail hard on TG morning to front-load my calorie burn. No changes there. I think the key to this will be to plan, plan, plan. There's plenty of time!2
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During the first 2 months of keto in trying to get to the fat adapted stage I'd suggest being strict with the diet if being fat adapted is your goal. Once that happens if there are a few times a year that you enjoy special foods on holidays go for it in moderation. I think you will see that long term that stuff will be in front of you and there is zero desire for it regardless.
I’ve stuck with keto and keeping 20-25 carbs a day since I started. The situations like the holidays coming up are something I am dreading going through
, since I have no idea what eating a normal, much less thanksgiving dinner is gonna he like. As far as I know, I haven’t had enough carbs to leave ketosis in any major way in months.
What’s it like eating a normal food meal after getting fat adapted? Do you get sick? Food coma? Do you have to wait months again to get fat adapted again? I’ve been really curious how long it takes to lose fat adaption as well.
If it’s just out of keto for a few days until you burn off the hundreds of carbs from turkey day, that’d be fine. This part of keto is what causes me stress, since it feels like I am flying blind. The friend that got me into keto quit after a week or two.. meanwhile I am 115 days in, solo.4 -
CentaurusSoter wrote: »During the first 2 months of keto in trying to get to the fat adapted stage I'd suggest being strict with the diet if being fat adapted is your goal. Once that happens if there are a few times a year that you enjoy special foods on holidays go for it in moderation. I think you will see that long term that stuff will be in front of you and there is zero desire for it regardless.
I’ve stuck with keto and keeping 20-25 carbs a day since I started. The situations like the holidays coming up are something I am dreading going through
, since I have no idea what eating a normal, much less thanksgiving dinner is gonna he like. As far as I know, I haven’t had enough carbs to leave ketosis in any major way in months.
What’s it like eating a normal food meal after getting fat adapted? Do you get sick? Food coma? Do you have to wait months again to get fat adapted again? I’ve been really curious how long it takes to lose fat adaption as well.
If it’s just out of keto for a few days until you burn off the hundreds of carbs from turkey day, that’d be fine. This part of keto is what causes me stress, since it feels like I am flying blind. The friend that got me into keto quit after a week or two.. meanwhile I am 115 days in, solo.
That depends.
Some people find they get gastric upset and food coma after they do a cheat meal. Some have one or the other. A few have neither.
You will be out of ketosis if you eat enough carbs. If you've been in ketosis 4-6 weeks, you are likely fat adapted. Adaptation, once gained, isn't that easily lost. The metabolic machinery has been built. It doesn't disappear. Once you've depleted glycogen stores and maintain keto-level carbs again, you'll go back into ketosis. It may take a few days to feel like you're back in the saddle again, but ketosis is ketosis as far as your body is concerned. I haven't heard a definitive answer on how long it takes to lose adaptation, but I'm 100% certain 1 or 2 days isn't enough to cause that. ( I would be interested in the info if anyone else has heard better on the subject.)
Water weight will come on due to glycogen replenishment. It can take as little as 2 days to as much as a week for your body to shed that. It's just water. It will leave.
Remember to keep up with your salt when you're back on track. Some people can get a bit of a mini-keto flu from bouncing out and then back in.
HTH.4 -
I'm undecided about how things will go for me on Thanksgiving, but Christmas isn't much of an issue because I have a small family so we usually do something simple that day. The main goal is to avoid my mother in law's cakes and pies that she makes regardless of the holiday. I may partake in some dressing (we don't do stuffing where I'm from ) but that will probably be the biggest issue. Like others said, I'm going to focus on meats, not nibble or snack in between meals, and try to get carbs from vegetables like peas, beans, and corn, not from potatoes and bread. I'm interested to see how we all do and how we feel the day after haha.0
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CentaurusSoter wrote: »During the first 2 months of keto in trying to get to the fat adapted stage I'd suggest being strict with the diet if being fat adapted is your goal. Once that happens if there are a few times a year that you enjoy special foods on holidays go for it in moderation. I think you will see that long term that stuff will be in front of you and there is zero desire for it regardless.
I’ve stuck with keto and keeping 20-25 carbs a day since I started. The situations like the holidays coming up are something I am dreading going through
, since I have no idea what eating a normal, much less thanksgiving dinner is gonna he like. As far as I know, I haven’t had enough carbs to leave ketosis in any major way in months.
What’s it like eating a normal food meal after getting fat adapted? Do you get sick? Food coma? Do you have to wait months again to get fat adapted again? I’ve been really curious how long it takes to lose fat adaption as well.
If it’s just out of keto for a few days until you burn off the hundreds of carbs from turkey day, that’d be fine. This part of keto is what causes me stress, since it feels like I am flying blind. The friend that got me into keto quit after a week or two.. meanwhile I am 115 days in, solo.
Many will splurge a bit on carbs during the holidays but a keto'er's splurge is often different than someone who eats higher carb. I might have a tablespoon or two of mashed potatoes or a couple of bites of roasted potatoes. I'll eat some mashed carrots and turnips. I make my stuffing sausage heavy so I have a bit of that too. I'll use some gravy for flavour, same with cranberries, but it's just enough to smear on my turkey - no gravy puddle. I may have a small slide of pie, with whipped cream (no icecream) but I'm more likely to make my own LCHF dessert and have a larger piece instead.
I will often feel an energy slump if I have too many carbs, and my appetite is up for a few days afterwards. I will often gain a couple of pounds, but as mentioned earlier, it's just water and is gone the next week - no biggie.
If I eat way too many carbs, especially in refined carbs, my stomach may feel off for a few days and my BMs tend towards constipation or the runs. I may get a headache (could be due to electrolytes or swinging BG), not sleep as well, and my arthritis may act up - that can last a good couple of weeks so I try not to hit that point.
If you go for a brisk walk after the meal, that will go a ways towards minimizing your BG rise.
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CentaurusSoter wrote: »During the first 2 months of keto in trying to get to the fat adapted stage I'd suggest being strict with the diet if being fat adapted is your goal. Once that happens if there are a few times a year that you enjoy special foods on holidays go for it in moderation. I think you will see that long term that stuff will be in front of you and there is zero desire for it regardless.
I’ve stuck with keto and keeping 20-25 carbs a day since I started. The situations like the holidays coming up are something I am dreading going through
, since I have no idea what eating a normal, much less thanksgiving dinner is gonna he like. As far as I know, I haven’t had enough carbs to leave ketosis in any major way in months.
What’s it like eating a normal food meal after getting fat adapted? Do you get sick? Food coma? Do you have to wait months again to get fat adapted again? I’ve been really curious how long it takes to lose fat adaption as well.
If it’s just out of keto for a few days until you burn off the hundreds of carbs from turkey day, that’d be fine. This part of keto is what causes me stress, since it feels like I am flying blind. The friend that got me into keto quit after a week or two.. meanwhile I am 115 days in, solo.
You may feel the effects as all that breakdown of sugar hits the blood but that should be over in a few hours. I've just found that for me I have zero desire for the carby stuff any more. If I do take in higher carbs its usually right before a workouts so more like instant fuel.
Once you are fat adapted you can take in higher amounts of carbs without major issues.1 -
I think I will be okay with the holiday meals themselves, but have been dreaming of Christmas cookies lately. If there are lots of those around I might be in trouble. Good news for Thanksgiving is there is an early morning boot camp class I can take to preempt the calories and one on Black Friday to burn some off as well.1
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I usually do the Thanksgiving Turkey Trot 10K as a preemptive first strike.1
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baconslave wrote: »CentaurusSoter wrote: »edited for space
That depends.
Some people find they get gastric upset and food coma after they do a cheat meal. Some have one or the other. A few have neither.
You will be out of ketosis if you eat enough carbs. If you've been in ketosis 4-6 weeks, you are likely fat adapted. Adaptation, once gained, isn't that easily lost. The metabolic machinery has been built. It doesn't disappear. Once you've depleted glycogen stores and maintain keto-level carbs again, you'll go back into ketosis. It may take a few days to feel like you're back in the saddle again, but ketosis is ketosis as far as your body is concerned. I haven't heard a definitive answer on how long it takes to lose adaptation, but I'm 100% certain 1 or 2 days isn't enough to cause that. ( I would be interested in the info if anyone else has heard better on the subject.)
Water weight will come on due to glycogen replenishment. It can take as little as 2 days to as much as a week for your body to shed that. It's just water. It will leave.
Remember to keep up with your salt when you're back on track. Some people can get a bit of a mini-keto flu from bouncing out and then back in.
HTH.
Still, the idea that I can leave ketosis, have a t-day meal, and get back to it in a week or so, and stay fat adapted, is really good news. I'm going on 4 months (120 days soon in keto) so hopefully my system is fully converted and good to stay for the long term. I was only concerned as I couldn't find any information on how long you can keep fat adaptation before reverting. There is a ton of info out there, but so much is focused on people that do keto for a week or two, or is introductory focused, and then like many people, the info seems to just dry up for those that are a few months in or more.CentaurusSoter wrote: »edited for space
Many will splurge a bit on carbs during the holidays but a keto'er's splurge is often different than someone who eats higher carb. I might have a tablespoon or two of mashed potatoes or a couple of bites of roasted potatoes. I'll eat some mashed carrots and turnips. I make my stuffing sausage heavy so I have a bit of that too. I'll use some gravy for flavour, same with cranberries, but it's just enough to smear on my turkey - no gravy puddle. I may have a small slide of pie, with whipped cream (no icecream) but I'm more likely to make my own LCHF dessert and have a larger piece instead.
I will often feel an energy slump if I have too many carbs, and my appetite is up for a few days afterwards. I will often gain a couple of pounds, but as mentioned earlier, it's just water and is gone the next week - no biggie.
If I eat way too many carbs, especially in refined carbs, my stomach may feel off for a few days and my BMs tend towards constipation or the runs. I may get a headache (could be due to electrolytes or swinging BG), not sleep as well, and my arthritis may act up - that can last a good couple of weeks so I try not to hit that point.
If you go for a brisk walk after the meal, that will go a ways towards minimizing your BG rise.CentaurusSoter wrote: »edited for space
You may feel the effects as all that breakdown of sugar hits the blood but that should be over in a few hours. I've just found that for me I have zero desire for the carby stuff any more. If I do take in higher carbs its usually right before a workouts so more like instant fuel.
Once you are fat adapted you can take in higher amounts of carbs without major issues.
Blood sugar issues and worrying about being nearly 180kg are one of the reasons I went keto. It's nice not having crashes anymore. It's weird still to get some fat/protein when feeling hungry and in need of fuel to people that haven't gone through this before.
Thanks all of y'all for this information. It's really some of the critical stuff I needed to know. I'm probably gonna stick to a low carb day or stick to a keto diet. I dunno. If I was a year in, I wouldn't be so worried. The fact I should be able to recover within a week is really good to know though. My main goal is to find ways to be normal within my dietary constraints. I figure if I don't have some ability to adapt to the situation, I won't stay with this long term. I know I wouldn't have stuck with this for this long if I hadn't figured out some of that already. Not having carb cravings anymore really makes a difference.3 -
Monday is the first holiday celebration at work, and it's potluck...I'm making keto cheesecake (almond crust and splenda sweetener) and I will totally avoid any non-keto offerings. I may only be eating cheesecake, who knows!2
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CentaurusSoter wrote: »baconslave wrote: »CentaurusSoter wrote: »edited for space
That depends.
Some people find they get gastric upset and food coma after they do a cheat meal. Some have one or the other. A few have neither.
You will be out of ketosis if you eat enough carbs. If you've been in ketosis 4-6 weeks, you are likely fat adapted. Adaptation, once gained, isn't that easily lost. The metabolic machinery has been built. It doesn't disappear. Once you've depleted glycogen stores and maintain keto-level carbs again, you'll go back into ketosis. It may take a few days to feel like you're back in the saddle again, but ketosis is ketosis as far as your body is concerned. I haven't heard a definitive answer on how long it takes to lose adaptation, but I'm 100% certain 1 or 2 days isn't enough to cause that. ( I would be interested in the info if anyone else has heard better on the subject.)
Water weight will come on due to glycogen replenishment. It can take as little as 2 days to as much as a week for your body to shed that. It's just water. It will leave.
Remember to keep up with your salt when you're back on track. Some people can get a bit of a mini-keto flu from bouncing out and then back in.
HTH.
Still, the idea that I can leave ketosis, have a t-day meal, and get back to it in a week or so, and stay fat adapted, is really good news. I'm going on 4 months (120 days soon in keto) so hopefully my system is fully converted and good to stay for the long term. I was only concerned as I couldn't find any information on how long you can keep fat adaptation before reverting. There is a ton of info out there, but so much is focused on people that do keto for a week or two, or is introductory focused, and then like many people, the info seems to just dry up for those that are a few months in or more.
...
Thanks all of y'all for this information. It's really some of the critical stuff I needed to know. I'm probably gonna stick to a low carb day or stick to a keto diet. I dunno. If I was a year in, I wouldn't be so worried. The fact I should be able to recover within a week is really good to know though. My main goal is to find ways to be normal within my dietary constraints. I figure if I don't have some ability to adapt to the situation, I won't stay with this long term. I know I wouldn't have stuck with this for this long if I hadn't figured out some of that already. Not having carb cravings anymore really makes a difference.
I think you are good regarding adaptation with that length if time under your belt.
I'm not sure anyone really knows how long it takes to lose adaptation. But since it's a long and intensive process to develop at the cellular level, it stands to reason that it's not going to *poof* disappear in a day or 2. Probably not even a week or 2. I haven't been keto (just LCHF or low-carb) for well over a year and I still have my version of decreased appetite, decreased craving, ability to go longer periods and not be hangry, and etc. I can still slip into keto easy-peasy. I probably do dip into ketosis on my lower carb days that I exercise heavily and I still perform well.
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That was my same question. But thanks to everyone who gave out great ideas1
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My mom's diabetic, and I've been keto for over a year. We have low-carb Thanksgiving.
Last year I made an almond flour based stuffing. This year I'll do a yeasted Carbquik bread for it.
Instead of mashed potatoes, it's roasted cauliflower, turnips, and garlic, pureed with parmesan cheese (it's actually better than any mashed potatoes we've ever had).
I'll make a low carb pumpkin pie, using erythritol or maybe Truvia baking blend. Pie crust will be a mix of Carbquik and almond flour I think.
I think for a veg we're doing Brussels sprouts and carrots.CentaurusSoter wrote: »What’s it like eating a normal food meal after getting fat adapted? Do you get sick? Food coma? Do you have to wait months again to get fat adapted again? I’ve been really curious how long it takes to lose fat adaption as well.
I'd avoid heavily sugary foods. After being keto from September to July, mom and I went out for the 4th. We don't get out much, so we splurged on Cold Stone, and split a brownie sundae. I think I ate something like 75g of carbs in one sitting, most of it sugar. I felt an immediate sugar high, which was not pleasant.
The next day I was so dizzy and sick I had trouble walking.
Having said that, I have an issue with binge eating potato chips when severely depressed (like 5 servings in one sitting), and for the most part have not experienced such ill effects, other than a blood sugar crash once.3 -
Keto pumpkin pie for Tgiving (a lot of recipes online). Remember one meal or one bad day of eating is not even a blip on the radar as long as it’s not the norm.3
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I'm very lucky, I go to a very small Thanksgiving gathering with a very understanding chef! She won't bug me if I don't taste everything, and has already asked me what I'm planning on eating/ avoiding. But if I imagine going to a larger celebration, I'd probably stick to a nice serving of meat, some green beans or other keto friendly veggies, and maybe one bite each of some stuffing and mashed potatoes. After that, I'd already be full, so I'd stop eating. Sometimes easier said than done, but it does seem easier now that I've been eating this way for over 10 months!1
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Alice_in_VVonderland wrote: »My mom's diabetic, and I've been keto for over a year. We have low-carb Thanksgiving.
I'd avoid heavily sugary foods. After being keto from September to July, mom and I went out for the 4th. We don't get out much, so we splurged on Cold Stone, and split a brownie sundae. I think I ate something like 75g of carbs in one sitting, most of it sugar. I felt an immediate sugar high, which was not pleasant.
The next day I was so dizzy and sick I had trouble walking.
Having said that, I have an issue with binge eating potato chips when severely depressed (like 5 servings in one sitting), and for the most part have not experienced such ill effects, other than a blood sugar crash once.
Quest protein chips are pretty dang good. I haven't had chips in ages. These hit the spot. Sort of taste like a goldfish cracker in consistency, with a decent nacho cheese taste. I was never a chip person, but a bag of these really helps me feel normal, and normal is something I can do for years and years, which is my goal.
I decided I'd push my carb limit relatively high yesterday. 77 net/ 92 total. I dunno if it was enough to kick me from ketosis, but I feel totally keto-normal today. Dunno if 17 miles on the bike negated the potential carb kick.. but if this is me sans ketosis, it's something I can handle. This feels like keto any other day. Maybe I can just handle higher carbs in a pinch. I've no idea. But I feel fine.
I ended up making up a menu that I think will be good, but still under 100g of carbs, for my turkeyday. Just gonna enjoy the holiday and then keep on keepin' on.
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Will have to check those chips out. Thanks for mentioning them. If you did 17 miles you were likely ok especially if it was around the meals. Carbs are like instant fuel so as long as you are quickly using them all good. The last two days I've had family in town and eating higher on the carbs end at times having to eat out but between Crossfit in the early AM and 7 miles of walking a day at the theme parks the blood sugar has been better than perfect.2
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Will have to check those chips out. Thanks for mentioning them. If you did 17 miles you were likely ok especially if it was around the meals. Carbs are like instant fuel so as long as you are quickly using them all good. The last two days I've had family in town and eating higher on the carbs end at times having to eat out but between Crossfit in the early AM and 7 miles of walking a day at the theme parks the blood sugar has been better than perfect.
Yeah I think the activity portion was the key. I was still on the bike busting my butt for these 2 days of carbs. It was a noticeable difference on my ride today.. felt like crap around mile 11. For me, Keto biking is more like a slow burn that just keeps on going. Just endurance for days. This felt like carb exhaustion. Will enjoy being back to my normal keto routine tomorrow.
Regardless, I figured I've shown myself what having a carb-normal day can be. With decent portions, it's not too terrible. Gonna see what the next week is like in recovery, if I have any. Will enjoy a normal-ish turkeyday meal.2 -
Quest chips are really good for when you want crunch. Similar texture to asian rice crackers. I like the Cheese Wisps too but can only eat a few (not a bad thing!)1
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I have not been as hungry since starting keto as I have been today. I constantly have felt hungry all day.. Ravenous as times.. I've eaten a ton of protein and fat.. but carbs and sugar I think are the culprit. Can't wait to get back to keto-normal tomorrow/saturday. I feel like I used to, where 3,000-4,000 calories of food would leave me still wanting more food.
Does this sound normal for any other ketoers in previous holidays where they ate a normal style carb heavy diet?1