Just Egg vs Real Egg
donjtomasco
Posts: 790 Member
I just tested "Just Egg" (plant based) after reading great reviews on it. It was a great new discovery since I love eggs.
1 large egg is +/- 3-3.25 tablespoons and is 70 calories. 3 tablespoons of "Just Egg" is 70 calories. So to bring a little more richness to the "Just Egg" I added 1 real large egg to 3 tablespoons of "Just Egg". They looked identical to fluffy scrambled eggs.
The reviews I read had one complaint that was the "Just Egg" alone could not be cooked to the softer side, but I got softer by adding the one real egg. I added 2 slices of Mild White Cheddar Cheese (90 total calories) and it was perfect.
Total calories 140 for the equivalent of 4 regular eggs, 1/4 the cholesterol. I am a convert!!! (230 calories with the cheese).
Has anyone else tried "Just Egg"?
1 large egg is +/- 3-3.25 tablespoons and is 70 calories. 3 tablespoons of "Just Egg" is 70 calories. So to bring a little more richness to the "Just Egg" I added 1 real large egg to 3 tablespoons of "Just Egg". They looked identical to fluffy scrambled eggs.
The reviews I read had one complaint that was the "Just Egg" alone could not be cooked to the softer side, but I got softer by adding the one real egg. I added 2 slices of Mild White Cheddar Cheese (90 total calories) and it was perfect.
Total calories 140 for the equivalent of 4 regular eggs, 1/4 the cholesterol. I am a convert!!! (230 calories with the cheese).
Has anyone else tried "Just Egg"?
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Replies
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Why would you rather add 1 real egg and half just egg instead of just all real eggs?
I have tried them and loved them. I was surprised how egg like it is! It reminds me of egg substitute.2 -
It was my first go at it and I love real eggs anyway, so I decided to add one real egg since I would have usually eaten four eggs after my 689 calorie deficit walk. Who knows what I might do next time.....I love being able to more than double the food for the same calories and zero cholesterol. I might have to try that fake new meat now that is selling like gangbusters.
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I'm glad it worked for you. Eggs are my favorite food so I'll stick with the real deal. ☺3
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I love eggs, so I’m not looking to substitute them at all. I do substitute chia seeds for eggs in baking quite often though.0
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For those like me who's doc tells them that they need to lower their cholesterol, this is a perfect food to do it with while not sacrificing taste.3
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Thanks, Don! I hadn't heard of this vegan product yet; I'll have to give it a try. Some people on the web are saying Just Egg is the next "Impossible Burger." I guess we'll see, huh?
https://www.washingtonian.com/2018/06/28/is-vegan-just-egg-the-next-impossible-burger/1 -
Yep! That is why I had to try it after reading reviews. I did not believe it myself till I tried it. I don't think I will give up my real meat though.0
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dunno if its more healthy they added some fats to it. (canola oil) Most of cholesterol don't come from food. Its liver based. "Only about 20% comes from the foods you eat. (See illustration.) If you eat only 200 to 300 milligrams (mg) of cholesterol a day (one egg yolk has about 200 mg), your liver will produce an additional 800 milligrams per day from raw materials such as fat, sugars, and proteins."1
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Of course I was curious so had to google it. I found a site that tried to look at all the bad points, as well as the good. One complaint by testers was that you can’t scramble them as soft as some liked, or as hard as some liked. Some said the texture was a little grainy. After you open the bottle, you only have 4 days to finish it. It looked like a pretty big bottle and suggested price was 7.99.
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Replacing whole foods with highly processed foods for health concerns doesn't sound like a good idea to me -- these imitation egg/meat products are not health foods. Did your doctor actually advise you to cut back on/out eggs and meat and replace them with these products?
I'd get a second opinion if they did. Best wishes to you.10 -
Kimondo - That was interesting. Thanks for the info.
Corina - I read the same thing which was why I added one regular egg which gave me the softness that I like. Texture was not grainy to me at all. Looking at the label it says "Consume within 7 days of opening." I purchased a 12 ounce bottle at Whole Foods. So 12 ounces would be 24 tablespoons. Since 1 large egg is 3.24 tablespoons, you get just over 7 eggs worth.1 -
Alabaster, I agree with you if I was replacing all of my whole foods with alternative foods. How do you figure Just Egg is 'highly processed'? What qualifies as highly processed? Have you read the ingredients? Maybe the ingredients on the label I read all qualify as highly processed, but I can't confirm that.2
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Here's a nice article/explanation for the different categories of processed foods I think:It’s a classification system called NOVA that was developed by an international panel of food scientists and researchers. It splits foods into four categories:
Unprocessed or minimally processed foods: Think vegetables, grains, legumes, fruits, nuts, meats, seafood, herbs, spices, garlic, eggs and milk.
Make these real, whole foods the basis of your diet.
Processed foods: When ingredients such as oil, sugar or salt are added to foods and they are packaged, the result is processed foods. Examples are simple bread, cheese, tofu, and canned tuna or beans.
These foods have been altered, but not in a way that’s detrimental to health. They are convenient and help you build nutritious meals. See? Not everything in a package is bad for you!
Ultra-processed foods: Here’s the category where almost 50% of our calories come from – and where we should cut back. These foods go through multiple processes (extrusion, molding, milling, etc.), contain many added ingredients and are highly manipulated.
Examples are soft drinks, chips, chocolate, candy, ice-cream, sweetened breakfast cereals, packaged soups, chicken nuggets, hotdogs, fries and more.
Heart and Stroke CA: What is ultra-processed food?
The ingredients for Just Eggs taken from Amazon's product page -- if these are what you're eating they're highly processed and not better for you or more nutritious than eggs.
The same is true for the new plant based meat products -- eat and enjoy them if you like but they're not health foods or better for you.
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Ewwwww, that list sounds disgusting.0
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LOL!!!! I am not on a quest for perfection, I am simply trying to eat 'healthier', exercise more, eat less, lose some weight and add some strength. I am very aware of the hyper vigilance of many in this community who are quick to isolate one item (like Just Egg) and try and paint an overall picture of one leading a very unhealthy life.
I think it is important for people new to MFP to not feel like a failure if they don't eat and CICO to perfection like many in MFP do, which I think is admirable, but not a realistic goal for so many who come here having gained a lot of weight and have terrible eating habits.
I think if people come to MFP and can improve their eating habits and burning of calories that this is more important than trying to perfect the process. It can be a recipe for demoralization and failure and send people into a failure mentality.
Anyone coming into MFP who improves their life is winning. I think that is more important then perfection.5 -
donjtomasco wrote: »Alabaster, I agree with you if I was replacing all of my whole foods with alternative foods. How do you figure Just Egg is 'highly processed'? What qualifies as highly processed? Have you read the ingredients? Maybe the ingredients on the label I read all qualify as highly processed, but I can't confirm that.
You don't get something called "isolate" without a bit of processing. It's pretty much in the name.
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donjtomasco wrote: »For those like me who's doc tells them that they need to lower their cholesterol, this is a perfect food to do it with while not sacrificing taste.
Interesting. I've always been under the impression that eggs are very healthy for you. And that the cholesterol in them is the "good" kind, and not the "bad" kind. But I guess that is fully dependent upon your overall diet and each individual. Now I'm thinking I should bring this up with my doc on my next visit. Since he told me to exercise a bit more as my cholesterol numbers were starting to seem a tad high. About two months ago I started eating three hard-boiled eggs for lunch, four times a week. Wonder if that is why it moved up. If that is the case, that is a simple fix.
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