Oats don't fill me up at all
Replies
-
halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Thanks for the replies. It nice to know I'm not the only one. I keep hearing about how filling it is and couldn't understand why it did nothing for me. I'm trying to cut out heavily processed foods so would have liked to replace my toast with oats but not at the expense of me wanting to gnaw off my arm from hunger
You do realize there are a lot of breads that aren't overly processed or loaded with a lot of fillers right?4 -
halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Aren't they supposed to be slow energy releasing carbs? That satiate? They do nothing for me but taste good. I'm famished under 2 hours later. That's will a banana mashed in, raisins, skimmed milk and a tsp peanut butter. Come to think of it, the only thing that fills me at breakfast time is toast(s) and eggs.
Anyone else find that oatmeal/porridge doesn't fill them up?
This is exactly me. The only breakfast food that fills me up for four/five hours is scrambled eggs on toast. Oats especially, I am consistently hungry two hours later. It's so frustrating because scrambled eggs on toast are well over a third of my daily calories and probably not good for me - but it's all that fills me up. I even tried bulking up my oats with nuts and seeds and fruit, to try and up the protein count, thinking maybe it was the protein. Nope; still hungry two hours later, like clockwork. I have to reserve oats for my days off, because if I eat them on work days I literally get to the point where I almost pass out from hunger. I get dizzy. It's like the stuff goes straight through me.0 -
I have steel cut oats. Much more filling imho1
-
They don’t fill me up much either. I do eat them sometimes because I like them.0
-
I like coarse oats, mixed with skyr and some sweet things, usually raisins and whatever fruit I have at the moment. A warm breakfast with high protein or vat, or oats mixed with more fluid yogurt don't keep me full. I need carbs, and preferably rather stiff ones, hence the skyr.0
-
This thread is over 3 years old.
Now i know oats are still around and people are still eating breakfast - so sure, discuss it again - but just pointing that out so nobody goes to great lengths to specifically advise on the OP.6 -
Oats will live forever 💪1
-
jessabela4464 wrote: »halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Aren't they supposed to be slow energy releasing carbs? That satiate? They do nothing for me but taste good. I'm famished under 2 hours later. That's will a banana mashed in, raisins, skimmed milk and a tsp peanut butter. Come to think of it, the only thing that fills me at breakfast time is toast(s) and eggs.
Anyone else find that oatmeal/porridge doesn't fill them up?
This is exactly me. The only breakfast food that fills me up for four/five hours is scrambled eggs on toast. Oats especially, I am consistently hungry two hours later. It's so frustrating because scrambled eggs on toast are well over a third of my daily calories and probably not good for me - but it's all that fills me up. I even tried bulking up my oats with nuts and seeds and fruit, to try and up the protein count, thinking maybe it was the protein. Nope; still hungry two hours later, like clockwork. I have to reserve oats for my days off, because if I eat them on work days I literally get to the point where I almost pass out from hunger. I get dizzy. It's like the stuff goes straight through me.
why would scrambled eggs on toast not be good for you? Do you have an egg allergy? I get the frustration, though, on using a lot of calories at breakfast. But if that's 1/3 of your daily calories, I'd suggest finding some compromises there to get the calories down - a lower calorie bread, or maybe half a slice instead of a whole one? If you are using more than 1 egg, try using 1 whole egg and then egg whites?
Boxed dry cereals don't satiate me at all - I need several servings to get full, and I'll be hungry again fairly quickly, so I found that for me, cereal is not worth the calories. However, old fashioned oats and steel cut oats are an exception to that - I do very well on oats. But I understand that everyone is different. Fruits don't hold me very well either - if I try to eat an apple, for example, as a snack, I'll be absolutely ravenous in about 20 minutes after I finish it. Most fruits don't hold me well at all.1 -
Oats don't keep me full for long. I always read dietitians recommending oats for a good filling breakfast and I am so surprised. Eggs on low calorie bread keep me happy the longest in terms of breakfast foods.0
-
Oatmeal is useful but no, on its own: not long term filling. I need protein + fat for a long lasting satiety. 2-3 scrambled eggs will last me much longer.halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Aren't they supposed to be slow energy releasing carbs? That satiate? They do nothing for me but taste good. I'm famished under 2 hours later. That's will a banana mashed in, raisins, skimmed milk and a tsp peanut butter. Come to think of it, the only thing that fills me at breakfast time is toast(s) and eggs.
Anyone else find that oatmeal/porridge doesn't fill them up?
0 -
jessabela4464 wrote: »halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Aren't they supposed to be slow energy releasing carbs? That satiate? They do nothing for me but taste good. I'm famished under 2 hours later. That's will a banana mashed in, raisins, skimmed milk and a tsp peanut butter. Come to think of it, the only thing that fills me at breakfast time is toast(s) and eggs.
Anyone else find that oatmeal/porridge doesn't fill them up?
This is exactly me. The only breakfast food that fills me up for four/five hours is scrambled eggs on toast. Oats especially, I am consistently hungry two hours later. It's so frustrating because scrambled eggs on toast are well over a third of my daily calories and probably not good for me - but it's all that fills me up. I even tried bulking up my oats with nuts and seeds and fruit, to try and up the protein count, thinking maybe it was the protein. Nope; still hungry two hours later, like clockwork. I have to reserve oats for my days off, because if I eat them on work days I literally get to the point where I almost pass out from hunger. I get dizzy. It's like the stuff goes straight through me.
Nuts and seeds are actually a better source of fat than protein. Eggs and toast is likely a higher protein breakfast. Unless you have a problem with gluten, why wouldn't it be good for you?
Two large eggs cooked in zero calorie spray plus one piece of 70 cal bread and 5 g of butter is only 249 calories. (Which wouldn't be enough calories for me for breakfast.)
If your eggs and toast equal 1/3 of your calorie goal, you are probably using more fat and/or bread than you need to, and/or have a lower calorie goal than necessary.
https://www.aworkoutroutine.com/1200-calorie-diet/4 -
I dont like oatmeal. As a kid I was forced to eat oatmeal daily and I never eat it again until I became an adult. I can only have a small bowl (less than half of a cereal bowl) and I have to eat it with toast. I cant eat it by itself. Oatmeal makes me hungry. Way more hungry than eggs & toast & more hungry than my protein cereal (which I cant eat eggs by istelf either, I really dont enjoy breakfast in case u cant tell).
One day I bought protein powder & thought it was a great idea to add a whole scoop to my small bowl of oatmeal. It was so terrible. So much powder. So much! I couldn’t get it all to dissolve. Kept adding more milk. The taste of straight up vanilla protein powder along with the already meh taste of oatmeal. I almost gagged the whole time but I ate the whole thing, got all my protein in. I havent had oatmeal since then, like 2mo ago.2 -
I know that this is an old thread, so this comment is just a general one.
It always mystifies me when people are eating in some particularly way that they read would control their cravings, or keep them full, or grow new muscles quickly, or increase energy level, or magically cause lots of weight loss, or whatever desired outcome . . . but once they find that it doesn't have that effect for them personally, they ask questions that make it sound like they think there's something wrong with them.
If advice doesn't work for you (generic you) as an individual, it's bad advice for you. Stop following it. Try something else!
IF HIIT is exhausting and miserable and odious to you, don't do HIIT.
If you don't like kale (or protein powder, or whatever), there's no reason to eat kale (or whatever).
If low carb doesn't reduce your cravings/appetite, but instead makes you enjoy life less, stop trying to eat low carb (unless it's a medical necessity, of course).
And so forth.
A few things are objectively important - proper calories, adequate nutrition, maybe some healthful exercise - but most of these complicated prescriptions are completely optional. If they work poorly for you personally, they may even be obstacles to good health.
(End rant. ).8 -
Consider adding protein like an egg or yogurt.0
-
halimaiqbal00 wrote: »Aren't they supposed to be slow energy releasing carbs? That satiate? They do nothing for me but taste good. I'm famished under 2 hours later. That's will a banana mashed in, raisins, skimmed milk and a tsp peanut butter. Come to think of it, the only thing that fills me at breakfast time is toast(s) and eggs.
Anyone else find that oatmeal/porridge doesn't fill them up?
Carbs in general don’t fill me up much. I enjoy them and find them better as a fast energy source before a workout or right after if I’m famished. Of the macros fat sources like avocado or nuts tend to fill me up the longest2 -
Oats as part of a broader breakfast that includes fats and protein - usually in the form of a breakfast shake. My go to is oats, greek yogurt, kale, avocado, chia seeds, banana, peanut butter powder, mixed fruit fresh or frozen - if frozen 8 - 16 drops of liquid stevia, on a unsweetened almond milk base liquid. I make two shakes for two breakfasts and it keeps me satiated for 4 hours, until lunch. I keep my breakfasts light about 250 calories, 5-700 lunch, and the rest for dinner. I am in maintenance which is 2100 without exercise - I eat my exercise calories back. I am trying to recomp, and while bio-electrical scales are notoriously inaccurate, it is showing trends overtime that I am gaining muscle and loosing fat overtime as I workout. I like large dinners - dinner and evening is when I am the most hungry even before watching my health and paying attention to my diet and exercise.
Everyone is different, find what works for you!
Edit: Didn't realize how old this thread was - just adding my two cents for whomever is reading..0 -
When mixing your oatmeal mix in bit by bit a whisked up egg. Tastes really good - and you can have it savory or sweet (toppings).
Just oatmeal doesn't do it for me either - I need protein and fat too
***Ha...I didn't realize this post was 4 years old either!0 -
I also don’t find oatmeal filling. I prefer eggs and toast. You are not alone.0
-
Interesting thread.
I find steel cut oats the most filling food out there, bar none. One bowl of steel cut oats and I'm good to go without hunger pangs allllll the way to my next meal, however long it takes. The problem is I just don't love them. Faced with a choice between oatmeal or eggs/bacon/omelette/hash browns, etc., I find it super hard to actually choose the oats LOL0 -
I know this is an old thread but I'm here to throw shade at oats too. Had some for lunch and all downhill from there 🤣 I've been at this long enough to know not to do it but sometimes I live recklessly.0
-
For what it’s worth steel cut oats barely raise my blood glucose and it drops just as quickly. Compared to other foods with the number of net carbs and amount of fiber on paper, they hardly seem to act as carbs to my body at all.
If you find oats flavorless, my favorite trick is vanilla extract plus a teaspoon of cacao powder, after cooking them with Granny Smith Apples, cinnamon, and orange zest. The zest and extract hardly have any calories and really pump up the flavor. Cranberries are another low-sugar fruit with a lot of flavor punch for the calories.0 -
I mix oats with Almond Milk, Nuke in Microwave for 2 mins on high heat, then 2 mins on a lower heat. Then, add a Whey Protein, mix in with some more Almond Milk. Microwave for min on low heat. Then top with fruit/nuts and peanut butter. Yummy!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions