List of fruit you eat
TheDevastator
Posts: 1,626 Member
Fruit I eat: lemons, limes, avocados, blueberries, blackberries
Fruit I eat occasionally: watermelon
What fruit do you eat?
Fruit I eat occasionally: watermelon
What fruit do you eat?
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Replies
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Since starting keto... Cherries, avocados, and heirloom tomatoes!
Lemons and limes (mainly juices).
I like cranberries added to salad.
Will probably add more... Need to grocery shop more!
The only fruits I don't like are pears and apples raw... Will eat, but don't like the texture.2 -
Blueberry season here - I've kinda been overdoing it a bit on them. And we just finished 20lbs of cherries (that many cherries for two people is not keto friendly ) and some raspberries from my friend's garden. Avocados when I can afford them. Some tomatoes. Lemon & lime juices. Fresh cranberries in the bag (usually only available from Oct-Dec) - they are awesome just to toss in your mouth - they have a distinctive 'pop' feeling when you bite into them and delicious sourness.
I will splurge and get myself a few peaches & nectarines when they are locally ripe. And a few good local apples in the fall.5 -
avocado, berries and tomatoes2
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I drink 16 ounces of lemon water a day, does that count? Otherwise, I don't ingest any fruits, except for the occasional strawberry from my garden.1
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tomatoes, cranberries, strawberries, blackberries, raspberries, and blueberries4
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Lemons, limes, blueberries (and tomatoes )1
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Thanks for the lists. I think lemon water is great to help the liver out but so is getting the right proteins and fats. I don't see myself eating that many fruits except avocados and some berries when in season.1
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I'm actually shifting from keto to ... I'm not sure what to call it yet except that I want to incorporate more fruits as well as veggies. I bumped my carb count up to 80 gm/day. I think very few fruits will be off my list (other than maybe bananas); I want to have 1-2 servings of fruit per day and 5 servings of veggies. I've realized that with my last 3+ years of eating keto/LCHF, the food ruts I've fallen into include a LOT of processed foods (lots of processed meats and cheese, especially) and I want to shift that and see how things go.9
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TheDevastator wrote: »Thanks for the lists. I think lemon water is great to help the liver out but so is getting the right proteins and fats. I don't see myself eating that many fruits except avocados and some berries when in season.
Those are the fruits I stuck to while eating keto. Good choices.
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macchiatto wrote: »I'm actually shifting from keto to ... I'm not sure what to call it yet except that I want to incorporate more fruits as well as veggies. I bumped my carb count up to 80 gm/day. I think very few fruits will be off my list (other than maybe bananas); I want to have 1-2 servings of fruit per day and 5 servings of veggies. I've realized that with my last 3+ years of eating keto/LCHF, the food ruts I've fallen into include a LOT of processed foods (lots of processed meats and cheese, especially) and I want to shift that and see how things go.
I’m sure your fatty liver will be back to normal soon once you those cut out those processed foods. Bananas are a sugar rush, much too high of a carb count for me.2 -
My fruits are ones most don't know are fruits like peppers - mostly jalapeños, serranos and cayenne (hañero are not ripe yet) - and okra from my garden. Also, cucumber and some zucchini. I will occasionally have some blackberries, but that is a rare occasion where I will get a couple of 6 oz containers and eat them over the course of a week or so.3
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cstehansen wrote: »My fruits are ones most don't know are fruits like peppers - mostly jalapeños, serranos and cayenne (hañero are not ripe yet) - and okra from my garden. Also, cucumber and some zucchini. I will occasionally have some blackberries, but that is a rare occasion where I will get a couple of 6 oz containers and eat them over the course of a week or so.
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@macchiatto
Agree with TheDevastator, once processed foods are gone, a lot of health benefits should come.
I still eat clean and consume whole foods on keto. Processed foods are hard on the liver.
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I don't eat much fruit. But berries, avocado and cherry tomatoes are about it.1
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Part of my influence is Terry Wahls' research on MS. I want to get back to following her advice of 6 cups of fruits and vegetables a day (2 each of different categories) and some of her other guidelines, too. Her full protocol is a bit much for me at this point but I want to move more in that direction.4
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Raspberries from the garden. An occasional half of an apple from our tree. Lemon, limes, mostly just juice to add to recipes or in water. I will eat organic, in season, strawberries or blueberries and I allow myself a few figs when they are in season.
To me avocados are a fat source, not a fruit, but biologically they are, I eat lots of avos. I eat cherry tomatoes in season as well.2 -
Two fruits I just added on a daily bases is one whole organic apple including the stem and one banana. I did start eating one tablespoon of raw honey at the same time. All three are for the health of my gut microbiome.
One day I saw some raw honey on the counter and wound up eating 8 tablespoons just to get it out of my sight. A positive change in my stools lead me to google honey's value to one's microbiome. That lead to learning about the value of a whole apple and a banana as well. After the first week I think adding these three carb sources may become a long term change.
Effect of honey in improving the gut microbial balance
https://academic.oup.com/fqs/article/1/2/107/3860141
"Conclusions and Future Prospects
Our understanding on the role of intestinal microflora in the maintaining host health and nutrition has vastly improved in the recent times, driven largely by the advancements in novel analytical techniques and global research initiatives on the gut microbiome. Dietary application of probiotic strains and non-digestible oligosaccharides aim to achieve a positive microbial balance towards a more favourable bacterial community. Furthermore, effective synbiotic combinations can potentially enhance the discrete health benefits of prebiotic carbohydrate and probiotic microorganisms, and also present development opportunities for innovative functional foods. The unique oligosaccharide components and antibacterial mechanisms of honey are of a great research interest for the physiological effects. A more rigorous evaluation of the potential prebiotic effect of honey on probiotic lactobacilli and bifidobacteria, and the action mechanisms involved, however, may be necessary to incorporate the functional ingredient with scientifically substantiated health claims. In vitro models of the human gut can be employed to test digestibility and fermentation selectivity of honey oligosaccharides, followed by in vivo animal studies and randomized control trials in human subjects. Although the selectivity of honey as a substrate for the probiotic bacteria is an important aspect of the prebiotic effect, the holistic metabolic benefits of gut microbiota modulation must also be adequately considered."
Study: One Apple Carries Roughly 100 Million Bacteria — Which Is A Good Thing
https://studyfinds.org/study-one-apple-carries-roughly-100-million-bacteria-which-is-good-thing/
“Freshly harvested, organically managed apples harbor a significantly more diverse, more even and distinct bacterial community, compared to conventional ones,” Berg explains. “This variety and balance would be expected to limit overgrowth of any one species, and previous studies have reported a negative correlation between human pathogen abundance and microbiome diversity of fresh produce.”
Furthermore, organic apples only were shown to contain Lactobacilli, a fairly well known probiotic. Conventional apples on the other hand, contained bacteria known to harbor pathogens. The research team even say that organic apples contain much more of a specific bacteria, methylobacterium, known to enhance flavor quality in fruits.
These findings mesh well with another recent study that found fungal communities among organic apples were much more diverse compared to regular apples grown using pesticides."
A Mix Of These Foods Could Restore Healthy Microbes In Malnourished Kids
https://npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2019/07/11/740820882/a-mix-of-these-foods-could-restore-healthy-microbes-in-malnourished-kids
This was the article that sent me down the banana rabbit hole.
Again it was the day after I ate 8 tablespoons of raw honey that turned me onto adding a one tablespoon daily of raw honey article. I just added the organic apple and a banana while I was at it. My n=1 testing of digestive enzymes had changed my stool somewhat and the day after the honey usage things were back to normal and was why I googled honey and the gut microbiome. Is there a connection with honey I can not say because I do not know. It is just my observation that was easy to see.
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I love raw local honey too!!! I could eat an entire jar in one sitting if I let myself. But I feel like the only person on Earth who does not like apples!
Another reason, I take an organic apple pectin supplement. It's supposed to be equivalent to eating something crazy like 20 apples a day.
I try to buy all my produce organic. It taste better. I have given so many blind taste tests to people who call me crazy, saying there's absolutely no difference in taste...100% have chosen the organic every single test, and then have to apologize, because they realized there is a huge taste difference.
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Berries, tomatoes, avocados, cucumbers (could not live without these!), plum (one occasionally), and muscadine (have to splurge when they are in season here because they are full of so much healthy stuff!).
Also since we are talking about more splurge stuff - wanted french fries when my husband and kids eating their burgers and homemade fried/chips. Found a garlic Parmesan carrot fries recipe on Tasty. Really good! And easy! Normally don’t eat a ton of carrots. But you can have a couple and get away with it. They tasted like sweet potato fries.1 -
Carrot fries sound good, I might have to try that. I'll fry them in butter. Only for a treat once in a while.
I have raw honey but I don't have it very much at all. It's excellent to fulfill a sugar craving that will not go away.
I also believe organic is tastier most of the time.
Soon it will be cranberry season, so I might try to eat some of those. They are pretty much the cheapest berry if I'm not mistaken, at least here in Wisconsin, U.S.A.2 -
Yum! I looked at the recipe for carrot fries from Tasty. They do look tasty. Recipe printed.2
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I've never been much of a fruit eater. I do love some watermelon and peaches in the summer but honestly? I don't really eat fruit. Avocados and tomatoes are about it. lol2
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I'm comfortable in where I am right now. I've been able to tract my food, and this is helping I think. I am eating more fruits as part of the main diet macros diet plan. This is mainly strawberries (3 cups in a shake, or 250 grams raw). I also like avocado. But no bananas as yet..I need to watch my carbs, which is so easy to rise.2
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A whole apple (peeling and core) and a banana are two items I have added for my gut microbiome enhancement about a month ago. I try to do these carbs first thing each morning so I burn them off during the day.1
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I've added back in plums, peaches, nectarines. I've been trying to consume one to two fruits a day. Still coming in low net carbs. And not feeling bloated or blah.
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Lemons, limes, avocados, blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, tomatoes, peppers, and small amounts cranberries on occasion usually in prepackaged salads. Also the occasional small servings of melon and pineapple as long as it fits in my allowance for the day.3
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I like fruits, but I changed the way I eat them. For example, I cut an apple to 4 pieces and eat one at a time for my snack, with something else like cottage cheese, etc. So, I still eat the fruits I like (Mellons, apples, grapes, bananas (those are tough), strawberries, tomatoes, avocados and more), but in less quantities and it does not seem to be too much of a problem.3
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I’m trying to be carnivore, so I'm not eating much fruit mainly avocados and I still have a bunch of lemons sitting in the fridge.1
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Tomato, avocado, and very, very rarely I'll eat some berries. I also do the juice from lemons and limes.
To be fair, I'm not a huge fruit eater even when not doing a low carb diet. I could go months without eating fruit. Summer is a bit different because there are so many more options, and I'm a melon lover0 -
WholeFoods4Lyfe wrote: »Tomato, avocado, and very, very rarely I'll eat some berries. I also do the juice from lemons and limes.
To be fair, I'm not a huge fruit eater even when not doing a low carb diet. I could go months without eating fruit. Summer is a bit different because there are so many more options, and I'm a melon lover
I love melons. Watermelons are so refreshing in hot weather. I like cantaloupes for breakfast in the summer as well.2