Hungry Vegan
angeleswine
Posts: 3 Member
Hi all
I'm 5'2 and 144 lbs. My goal weight is 120, but that means I only get 1,250 calories a day. That's not a lot of food!!! I like to eat and if I'm not careful I can easily double that in just one meal, so spreading it out to three, plus snacks...I'm just always hungry.
I'm also vegan. Does anyone have any belly filling ideas, that don't involve animal products? EVOO helps with "whole foods plant based" cooking, but TBH I don't really cook and don't really want to. So I'm eating a lot of carrots and triscuts with hummus...so much hummus...
Thank you!!!
I'm 5'2 and 144 lbs. My goal weight is 120, but that means I only get 1,250 calories a day. That's not a lot of food!!! I like to eat and if I'm not careful I can easily double that in just one meal, so spreading it out to three, plus snacks...I'm just always hungry.
I'm also vegan. Does anyone have any belly filling ideas, that don't involve animal products? EVOO helps with "whole foods plant based" cooking, but TBH I don't really cook and don't really want to. So I'm eating a lot of carrots and triscuts with hummus...so much hummus...
Thank you!!!
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Replies
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What is your rate of loss? For somebody only looking to lose about 24 pounds, you might want to consider setting a 0.5 lb/week. That will allow you to eat more food.16
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I absolutely should but I'm just so tired of all this weight. It doesn't seem like a lot but on my small frame it is. I want to feel good about how I look for the summer.0
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cdudley628 wrote: »What is your rate of loss? For somebody only looking to lose about 24 pounds, you might want to consider setting a 0.5 lb/week. That will allow you to eat more food.
This, definitely. Since you’re on the shorter side, though, you may not get a ton more calories with a slower pace of loss.
Additionally, I’m not sure how olive oil “helps” unless you aren’t getting enough dietary fat. Oil is very calorie dense and many people do not find it filling. If you’re getting enough fat, there’s no reason to add oil unless you just want to.
It sounds like you’re getting very little protein. Protein helps many people feel full and is required for health. Hummus isn’t a particularly good source of protein per calorie. I would add more low calorie protein dense foods, such as tofu or TVP/soy curls.9 -
angeleswine wrote: »Hi all
I'm 5'2 and 144 lbs. My goal weight is 120, but that means I only get 1,250 calories a day. That's not a lot of food!!! I like to eat and if I'm not careful I can easily double that in just one meal, so spreading it out to three, plus snacks...I'm just always hungry.
I'm also vegan. Does anyone have any belly filling ideas, that don't involve animal products? EVOO helps with "whole foods plant based" cooking, but TBH I don't really cook and don't really want to. So I'm eating a lot of carrots and triscuts with hummus...so much hummus...
Thank you!!!
I'm not vegan, but I've eaten mostly plant based several times in my life. I find rice and beans and green veggies very filling.
What is your protein % goal and how well do you meet it? Inadequate protein can make you hungry. I don't know what brand of hummus you use, so looked up Sabra's Classic Hummus, and see it has more fat grams than protein, so it is not a great source of protein. https://sabra.com/dips/hummus/classic-hummus.html
There are plant based proteins that are better sources and foods like seitan, while they might be improved by cooking, don't require it. https://www.thelifepilot.com/diet/vegan-protein.html7 -
Oh, and this:
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First, like suggested above, make sure your goal is appropriate for your current weight.
At the end of my weight loss, my goal was about 1,300 so I've got some experience with planning lower calorie meals (I also ate back exercise calories, which is how MFP is designed).
Some stuff that worked for me:
* I minimized the use of grains, as I found they didn't usually do much to keep me full
* I used a lot of volume-eating techniques -- soups that were mostly broth with some vegetables, roasted vegetables (I roast oil-free to keep the calories low), adding pre-shredded cabbage to my dinner most nights (it bulks up a meal in the way that rice can and the crunchy nature means it takes longer for me to eat, which also helps). Check out the "volume eater" thread in this subforum for more ideas. It's not specifically vegan, but volume eating does tend to feature a lot of lower calorie vegetables so a lot of it does work for us.
* Figuring out my ideal meal timing. For me, this was breakfast around 7 AM, lunch around 11 AM, and dinner at 7-8 PM. It's very individual, but perfect for me because I hate going to bed hungry. Some people have great success with not having breakfast at all, so consider that too. Also figure out what calorie spread works best for you -- I like to have most of my calories at dinner.
* Figure out what foods don't do anything at all for your satiety and be thoughtful about eating them. An example for me would be fruit -- I really like it, but my body doesn't really recognize it as filling at all. So on lower calorie days, I'm not going to want to eat much of it.
To be honest, not cooking will likely make most of this more difficult. Are simple recipes like sheetpan dinners or Instant Pot/crockpot meals an option? If not, some other items I can suggest that might help are canned soups (Amy's has a bunch of vegan ones and Progresso lentil soup was vegan last time I checked) and pre-cut vegetables. Lean Cuisine and Healthy Choice both have vegan options now too, although I haven't tried them yet (waiting until the next time I travel for work).
What were you usually eating before counting calories? Sometimes we can make our previous options fit by just tweaking a few things.9 -
angeleswine wrote: »I absolutely should but I'm just so tired of all this weight. It doesn't seem like a lot but on my small frame it is. I want to feel good about how I look for the summer.
I think when we're losing weight we think of our end goal as when we start feeling good. But that's not true for so many of us. I started in the 150s and I began feeling better about myself in the 140s. I could tell a difference in how I looked and how my clothes fit. It took about seven months for me to reach my goal, but it was a time when I was feeling good about how I looked just about every week because every month was a concrete improvement over the month before.
So even if you started now with a reasonable goal, chances are high that you'll feel good about how you look for the summer even if you still aren't completely to your goal.12 -
angeleswine wrote: »I absolutely should but I'm just so tired of all this weight. It doesn't seem like a lot but on my small frame it is. I want to feel good about how I look for the summer.
Appropriate pace of weight loss is mostly determined by how fast you can safely lose weight, rather than how fast you want to lose weight. Your stats do not support a faster pace of loss.10 -
angeleswine wrote: »I absolutely should but I'm just so tired of all this weight. It doesn't seem like a lot but on my small frame it is. I want to feel good about how I look for the summer.
Wellll. . . if it's difficult or unpleasant to stick with the calorie level needed for an aggressively fast weight loss rate, such that you semi-regularly over-eat your goal, you might actual lose more weight in a shorter calendar time by adopting a less aggressive weight loss rate target you can happily stick with the overwhelming majority of the time (for steady loss) vs. a more aggressive goal that's only met in fits and starts (so that weight goes up and down, or down then stalls repeatedly).
Also, trying to lose too fast can lead to counterproductive fatigue (tired = move less, burn fewer calories), and more confusing water-weight fluctuations that mask progress on the scale.
As far as eating, there are some very minimal cooking things I sometimes eat that might be examples of easy things to consider:
* Ezekiel tortilla, smoked tofu, vegan cheese - microwave to warm, then add some fresh veggies or sauerkraut and eat.
* Dry soy noodles of some sort (just boil in water), sauce of peanut butter powder/soy sauce/Asian chile sauce/rice vinegar mixed together in pretty much any proportions (or a commercial vegan sriracha or something), mixed with microwaved frozen veggies or stir-fried fresh ones.
* Refried beans or black beans with vegan cheese and salsa, heated in microwave.
* Canned beans with canned tomatoes plus some nutritional yeast for soup (I like some chopped sweet onions on top).
Simple cooking is pretty achievable, along those lines.
Best wishes!10 -
Broccoli, asparagus, green beans, squash, mushrooms. Berries, oranges, apples, strawberries. Those are my go to fillers outside of salads.1
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Boca makes a vegan burger that is only 70 calories and 13 g protein. Just microwave. I serve it on a "slim" bun (90 cal) with a little avocado (60-80 calories). Microwave veggies to go with it.
Much of the Sweet Earth brand frozen food is vegan. That's my go to for quick meals.
Frozen edamame pods are a great snack and are cooked in the microwave. Depending on the brand, they are 80-130 calories and have a good amount of protein. I also like that they take time to eat. I feel full after eating them.
I also like the dry roasted edamame as a snack.
Protein powder was actually a game changer for me. I was hungry all the time before adding it to smoothies. I really like Garden of Life Raw Organic Unflavored and Unsweetened (plant based).3 -
I'm a a happy and full vegan. You want to make sure you're getting enough protein, first of all. Beyond that, I find volume eating to keep me full. I eat GIANT bowls of steamed vegetables with dinner every night (w/ a cup of beans or lentils for the protein). Lunch is a gigantic salad with nothing but raw veggies and a boca burger on top (the one mentioned in the previous post). Try to cut back on the olive oil - it's very calorie dense - eat your veggies steamed or raw. As others have mentioned, you might want to choose a less aggressive deficit or work out more.2
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Mentioned above, but I’ll second it: eat larger quantities of low cal nutritional veggies like broccoli, greens, cauliflower, etc. with every meal. And of course look at protein too. The extra volume and fiber with more vegs will help you feel fuller and with fewer calories than more triscuits and hummus (which I now want lol).2
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I'm a a happy and full vegan. You want to make sure you're getting enough protein, first of all. Beyond that, I find volume eating to keep me full. I eat GIANT bowls of steamed vegetables with dinner every night (w/ a cup of beans or lentils for the protein). Lunch is a gigantic salad with nothing but raw veggies and a boca burger on top (the one mentioned in the previous post). Try to cut back on the olive oil - it's very calorie dense - eat your veggies steamed or raw. As others have mentioned, you might want to choose a less aggressive deficit or work out more.
@angeleswine speaking of lentils, they are very easy to cook, IMO. A lentil and veggie soup would be very filling.
But if you don't want to cook and have the budget for buying premade soup, Pacific and Amy's are two of many brands that make vegan lentil soup. Progresso Vegetable Lentil With Roasted Vegetables Soup says vegetarian but unless I'm missing something, it looks vegan and would be easier on your budget than the first two brands https://www.walmart.com/ip/8-pack-Progresso-Vegetable-Lentil-With-Roasted-Vegetables-Soup-19-oz/9179114123 -
It's all about that FIBER! Eat more beans and other fiber-rich foods. I'm never hungry on days when I get my 50+ grams of fiber. Make sure you're hitting your protein goals and getting a B12 supplement, too!4
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Higher protein, fiber, and fat will fill you up! I'm also vegan and make a soymilk and powdered peanut butter shake every morning (220 kcal, 23g protein). It does wonders for me. I also set higher goals for protein and fat and lower for carb because I stay fuller that way. Grab a small spoon of peanut butter, munch on some homemade coleslaw, drink broth instead of water. I've lost 52 lbs in a little less than a year, and I felt hungry all the time at the beginning, but now my stomach has adjusted.2
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I’m in a similar boat (but with more to lose) and I’d second the protein comment many have made. I can easily meet a 1200 calorie goal most days as long as I get enough protein. Beans, hummus and tofu are *ok* sources of protein, but sorry to say, the processed stuff is far more protein-dense. I’ve recently started eating an Impossible Burger (by itself, no bun, seasoned) as my usual breakfast/lunch (1 meal—I don’t do both), then a regular-sized balanced dinner (e.g. tofu with veggies and noodles or beans +veggies +quinoa or some such) and usually at some point a light snack of usually fruit or veggies. It has been way easier getting a big serving of protein early in the day than trying to restrict calories on a low-protein diet. In fact, I think the main reason I gained a lot of weight after moving here 5 years ago is that it’s a much less vegan-friendly area than the larger cities I lived in before, and I found it really hard to get enough protein, or any healthy vegan options at restaurants and catered events and I was always hungry. It’s gotten better, thankfully!
Unless you have a medical condition requiring frequent meals/snacks, it might not be in your best interest to eat 5+ times/day. Regardless of popular wisdom on that, I think not everyone has more success eating smaller, more frequent meals. I don’t, and really can’t if I want to run without getting either weak or sick to my stomach. You might experiment to see what works best for you.
My other suggestion would be to exercise more if you can, to allow for a slightly higher calorie budget.0 -
I love #vegan food4
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Hi @angeleswine,
I empathize with your post! We have almost the same stats. I'm 5'1 and in November of 2018 I set out the lose 30-35 pounds. I started at 150 pounds. I'm currently at 117 pounds. I've been vegan for a decade.
I highly recommend you consider the advice given around your rate of loss. In 2015, I started at 140 pounds and wanted to lose 20 pounds. I chose an agressive rate of loss, 1.5 - 2 pounds a week. I lost about 10 pounds back then, but was always so hungry and I was so frustrated at the first plateau, so I gave up altogether. Fast forward to 2018 and I had gained all the weight back plus an extra 10 pounds. What I learned was that being hungry all the time and feeling deprived just to get to my goal weight faster was a recipe for failure. I also wasn't getting much activity then which kept my calorie bank at 1200.
What I did differently this time is recognize that I needed to learn how to lose weight sustainably so that I could eventually keep it off. I didn't want to suffer or feel deprived AND I wanted to ensure I got to my goal. But how to do both? The answer: in order to have it both ways, I realized the factor I needed to change was TIME. Rather than race to the finish when I hadn't even learned how to walk per se, I changed my mindset: life was going to happen and time was going to pass either way, so I might as well not suffer and just "get there when I get there." What's the rush anyway?
So, this time with 30 pounds to lose, I chose a deficit of 0.5 pounds per week. I accepted it might take a year. And it took me exactly a year to get to my current weight (with a few diet breaks and vacations in between where I practiced maintenance). I also walked A LOT (I started slow, like 4k steps a day, then very slowly got up to 10-12k a day) which gave me between 200-300 more calories to eat.
It has been totally worth it because at no point did I feel deprived. Along the way I learned what kinds of foods made me feel full (higher volume foods, more fat and protein). The best part is that I actually got to my goal and learned how to eat to keep the weight off for good.
I don't enjoy cooking either (for me, it's just that having to do it often is exhausting). Prepping one pot meals or casserole style meals helped a lot in the beginning. Soups are easy and satisfying. I made a a different kind of soup or chili (each with beans, legumes) every Sunday all winter long so that I would have lunch taken care of throughout the week. 30-60 minutes in the kitchen once a week was a small sacrifice for eventually getting to my goal. I made a casserole dish for dinner every Monday night so that I would have 4-5 days worth of dinners every week. This way I only had to cook 2 times a week and rarely had to think about what to eat. It took so much of the pressure off of figuring out what to eat. It made adhereing to my defecit easy. I followed recipes so it would be easy to do and so I would have variety/not get bored. Sometimes I would buy the vegetables for the soup pre-cut so that I wouldn't have to spend long in the kitchen. On the weekends, one block of tofu for tofu scramble easily makes two high protein breakfasts. Whenever I was on the go, I ate a Clif Builder bar to get 20g protein easily without a lot of calories. For months that builder bar was just called "breakfast."
You can do this. Don't rush and don't make something that is already hard to do even harder. Society says that fast weight loss is "the only way," that being ready for "this summer" is more important than setting yourself up to be ready for all the other summers in your future. You have permission to take your time. Make it easy, convenient, and doable without suffering your way through and the habits will stick. Getting there eventually is better than the risk you take of not getting there at all.6 -
I just finished a 3-session vegan cooking course taught by a non-vegan clinical dietitian. I hate to say this, but you need to learn to cook. There are lots of things you can do to make it less painful (canned beans instead of dried, frozen precut vegetables, cut your vegetables for the week in advance all at once), but you need to learn to cook some. Even if it’s just heating up beans in jarred tomato sauce and then serving it with whole wheat toast. Or making a stir-fry with tofu and shredded vegetables from a bag served with brown rice.
We learned that a *balanced* vegan diet has tons of vegetables with some fruit, a lot of whole grains, a moderate amount of legumes and leafy greens, and a small amount of fats and oils from sources like nuts, olives, avocados, etc.4 -
bathsheba_c wrote: »I just finished a 3-session vegan cooking course taught by a non-vegan clinical dietitian. I hate to say this, but you need to learn to cook. There are lots of things you can do to make it less painful (canned beans instead of dried, frozen precut vegetables, cut your vegetables for the week in advance all at once), but you need to learn to cook some. Even if it’s just heating up beans in jarred tomato sauce and then serving it with whole wheat toast. Or making a stir-fry with tofu and shredded vegetables from a bag served with brown rice.
We learned that a *balanced* vegan diet has tons of vegetables with some fruit, a lot of whole grains, a moderate amount of legumes and leafy greens, and a small amount of fats and oils from sources like nuts, olives, avocados, etc.
I don't really eat a lot of whole grains and I eat a lot of legumes and leafy greens. I rarely eat fruit. According to my tracking, my vegan diet is balanced. I'm not convinced the template that RD gave you is the only way to achieve a balanced vegan diet. It also doesn't mention foods like tofu, tempeh, and seitan, which can be great contributions to the balanced vegan diet. I also believe the evidence shows there can be healthful vegan diet patterns that include more than a small amount of fat.7 -
I am vegan since 12 years. before a veggie0
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You can’t get fat on low glycemic fruits and veggies1
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Yes, ve gan1
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If you don't have time to cook every day, maybe you could batch cook some seitan and pop it in the fridge to just fry up when you want to eat it?
I've recently started upping my protein as a vegan and I honestly feel better (and fuller!) than I have for the past four years. Another protein trick is to bulk up low calorie, canned vegetable based soups with half a can of chickpeas for a protein hit.
Tofu scramble is great, just crumble it in and stir fry with veggies, seasoning and nutritional yeast.
Also, put beans in the blender and add spices/sauce. It makes a tasty (and cheap) bean spread which is low fat and good for dipping crudite vegetables and spreading on corncakes and crackers.
Check which vegan sausages have the highest protein and lowest fat content, batch cook them and keep them in the fridge alongside chopped veggies to eat as snacks and on salads.
Spend some time finding a protein shake that you enjoy drinking, for when you want a sweet hit.2 -
BuddhaBunnyFTW wrote: »You can’t get fat on low glycemic fruits and veggies
If you're eating more calories than you're burning, you absolutely can get fat on low glycemic fruits and vegetables.7 -
Laurenconway8619 wrote: »If you don't have time to cook every day, maybe you could batch cook some seitan and pop it in the fridge to just fry up when you want to eat it?
I've recently started upping my protein as a vegan and I honestly feel better (and fuller!) than I have for the past four years. Another protein trick is to bulk up low calorie, canned vegetable based soups with half a can of chickpeas for a protein hit.
Tofu scramble is great, just crumble it in and stir fry with veggies, seasoning and nutritional yeast.
Also, put beans in the blender and add spices/sauce. It makes a tasty (and cheap) bean spread which is low fat and good for dipping crudite vegetables and spreading on corncakes and crackers.
Check which vegan sausages have the highest protein and lowest fat content, batch cook them and keep them in the fridge alongside chopped veggies to eat as snacks and on salads.
Spend some time finding a protein shake that you enjoy drinking, for when you want a sweet hit.
I'm not vegan, but made my first seitan the other day: https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/241963/seitan-pepperoni/
It did taste amazingly like pepperoni when the batter was raw, but less so after cooking. Next time, I will double all the spices but the cayenne, which I will halve, as I am currently having a little difficulty with spicy foods
Since the OP doesn't like to cook, they probably don't have most of the spices, so I'm not necessarily recommending it for them if they want something that does taste like pepperoni but do not want to purchase a bunch of spices. I had everything but the anise, and used Chinese 5 Spice for that.
There is a more basic recipe on the Bob's Vital Wheat Gluten bag:- If I didn't have marjoram and thyme, I'd just use Italian seasoning, which I keep on hand in place of most of the individual Mediterranean spices (Oregano, Marjoram, Thyme, Rosemary, Basil, Sage.)
- If I only had one of the garlic or onion powder, I'd just double it.
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In my past experience, it is impossible to achieve your nutrition requirements on a vegan diet with a goal of 1200 calories. I would eat 2000 calories and still no be getting enough protein/calcium etc.. would always be hungry. Now i eat mostly animal based and reach my nutrition goals way easier and feel satiated and happy.0
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Sakura_Tree wrote: »In my past experience, it is impossible to achieve your nutrition requirements on a vegan diet with a goal of 1200 calories. I would eat 2000 calories and still no be getting enough protein/calcium etc.. would always be hungry. Now i eat mostly animal based and reach my nutrition goals way easier and feel satiated and happy.
Happily, most people aren't limited to just 1,200 calories. That's only an appropriate goal for a small number of people.
I was easily able to meet my goals on around 1,400 calories as a vegan. I think I would struggle to meet some micronutrient goals while eating mostly animal products. There are so many nutrient-rich plant foods.8 -
Sakura_Tree wrote: »In my past experience, it is impossible to achieve your nutrition requirements on a vegan diet with a goal of 1200 calories. I would eat 2000 calories and still no be getting enough protein/calcium etc.. would always be hungry. Now i eat mostly animal based and reach my nutrition goals way easier and feel satiated and happy.
What were your protein and calcium sources? What other nutrients did you struggle with?
Also, milk isn't the great osteoporosis prevention the Dairy Association would have you believe, in fact, this study showed the opposite was true:
https://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g6015
...Conclusion
A higher consumption of milk in women and men is not accompanied by a lower risk of fracture and instead may be associated with a higher rate of death. Consequently, there may be a link between the lactose and galactose content of milk and risk as suggested in our hypothesis, although causality needs be tested using experimental study designs. Our results may question the validity of recommendations to consume high amounts of milk to prevent fragility fractures.3 71 72 The results should, however, be interpreted cautiously given the observational design of our study. The findings merit independent replication before they can be used for dietary recommendations.4
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