Eating Meat after 17 Years of being Vegetarian to Build Muscle - Good Decision?
misslizzierod
Posts: 57 Member
Hey guys!
I've been vegetarian for 17 years and usually pretty fit for the most part. After tracking my protein intake for the past 2 weeks, I've realized it's hard to meet my protein requirement without eating tubs of greek yogurt, so much egg/egg whites, and putting protein powder in everything. (Okay I'm exaggerating, but truthfully it's been challenging).
Yes, we can get tons of protein from quinoa, beans, legumes but they are also high in carbs so my macros is off. I realized I could get twice the amount of protein with chicken and seafood with much less carbs and smaller amounts.
So I decided to eat meat after 17 years. I decided overnight and knew I wanted to just take the plunge. Never imagined myself making this decision.
It's Day 2 and I've eaten salmon and chicken but the texture and taste are so weird to me. I hope I can get used to this.
Anyone else make this drastic change? How did it go? Also, did you notice a change in muscle mass? My goal is to lose fat and gain muscle
Any feedback or tips are appreciated, thanks!
I've been vegetarian for 17 years and usually pretty fit for the most part. After tracking my protein intake for the past 2 weeks, I've realized it's hard to meet my protein requirement without eating tubs of greek yogurt, so much egg/egg whites, and putting protein powder in everything. (Okay I'm exaggerating, but truthfully it's been challenging).
Yes, we can get tons of protein from quinoa, beans, legumes but they are also high in carbs so my macros is off. I realized I could get twice the amount of protein with chicken and seafood with much less carbs and smaller amounts.
So I decided to eat meat after 17 years. I decided overnight and knew I wanted to just take the plunge. Never imagined myself making this decision.
It's Day 2 and I've eaten salmon and chicken but the texture and taste are so weird to me. I hope I can get used to this.
Anyone else make this drastic change? How did it go? Also, did you notice a change in muscle mass? My goal is to lose fat and gain muscle
Any feedback or tips are appreciated, thanks!
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Replies
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Only you can decide if it's a good decision. I wouldn't do it personally (close to 28 years vegetarian), but I have no problem getting enough protein. I wonder if perhaps you have your protein goal set too high? We see that a lot, with people struggling to eat what they think is enough. You really don't need more than 1g per lb of LBM (or 0.8g of ideal bodyweight, if you don't know LBM).9
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After 46 years vegetarian, I figure I may have to start eating meat in a decade or two when I move to assisted living (I'm 65 now), because they probably won't provide that great of nutrition for a vegetarian. Until then, I don't seem to have any major difficulty getting what I think is adequate protein (eating in a way I enjoy).
I'm a subscriber to the idea of 0.6-0.8g protein per pound of healthy goal weight, around 1g per pound of lean mass, and I meet or exceed that daily (without protein powder, protein bars, fake meat, and that sort of thing - not because there's anything wrong with those, but because I personally don't find them tasty).
If that doesn't work out for you, I don't see anything wrong with stopping being vegetarian, in the abstract. You know your own goals and ethics best. Certainly, I don't think being vegetarian is "healthier". I would expect the meats and fish to taste kind of weird for a while, and it might take some time (few weeks, maybe?) for gut microbiome to adapt. (I don't have the cite handy, but there was a small crossover study that looked it this - it happened faster than the researchers expected, IIRC there were material changes in a couple of weeks.)
Personally, I don't worry about how many carbs I eat, as long as I get enough protein, enough healthy fats, and plenty of veggies/fruits, within a sensible calorie goal; and I can do that fine. (I eat 100g minimum protein (usually exceed it), 50g minimum fat, 5 minimum (ideally 10+) veggie/fruit servings, and usually end up with 200-250g carbs daily, but I don't target the carbs, that's just where they end up.)
FWIW, I'm not a bodybuilder or even a serious weight trainer, but I don't seem to have any difficulty in increasing strength or muscle. YMMV. 🤷♀️ I think my bodyfat and fitness are OK-ish enough for a woman my age, but maybe my standards are lower than yours.
I don't think this is a question anyone else can answer for you: Eating styles are about principles, tastes, practicality, satiation, and that sort of thing . . . all of which are pretty individualized.8 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »Only you can decide if it's a good decision. I wouldn't do it personally (close to 28 years vegetarian), but I have no problem getting enough protein. I wonder if perhaps you have your protein goal set too high? We see that a lot, with people struggling to eat what they think is enough. You really don't need more than 1g per lb of LBM (or 0.8g of ideal bodyweight, if you don't know LBM).
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After 46 years vegetarian, I figure I may have to start eating meat in a decade or two when I move to assisted living (I'm 65 now), because they probably won't provide that great of nutrition for a vegetarian. Until then, I don't seem to have any major difficulty getting what I think is adequate protein (eating in a way I enjoy).
I'm a subscriber to the idea of 0.6-0.8g protein per pound of healthy goal weight, around 1g per pound of lean mass, and I meet or exceed that daily (without protein powder, protein bars, fake meat, and that sort of thing - not because there's anything wrong with those, but because I personally don't find them tasty).
If that doesn't work out for you, I don't see anything wrong with stopping being vegetarian, in the abstract. You know your own goals and ethics best. Certainly, I don't think being vegetarian is "healthier". I would expect the meats and fish to taste kind of weird for a while, and it might take some time (few weeks, maybe?) for gut microbiome to adapt. (I don't have the cite handy, but there was a small crossover study that looked it this - it happened faster than the researchers expected, IIRC there were material changes in a couple of weeks.)
Personally, I don't worry about how many carbs I eat, as long as I get enough protein, enough healthy fats, and plenty of veggies/fruits, within a sensible calorie goal; and I can do that fine. (I eat 100g minimum protein (usually exceed it), 50g minimum fat, 5 minimum (ideally 10+) veggie/fruit servings, and usually end up with 200-250g carbs daily, but I don't target the carbs, that's just where they end up.)
FWIW, I'm not a bodybuilder or even a serious weight trainer, but I don't seem to have any difficulty in increasing strength or muscle. YMMV. 🤷♀️ I think my bodyfat and fitness are OK-ish enough for a woman my age, but maybe my standards are lower than yours.
I don't think this is a question anyone else can answer for you: Eating styles are about principles, tastes, practicality, satiation, and that sort of thing . . . all of which are pretty individualized.
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I'm not a vegetarian, but I get over 100g of protien in my typical diet. Majority of the 100g comming from 600g egg white, 500g broccoli, and 50g edamame. So it is definitly doable if you dont mind eating that much egg white.0
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I'm not a vegetarian, but I get over 100g of protien in my typical diet. Majority of the 100g comming from 600g egg white, 500g broccoli, and 50g edamame. So it is definitly doable if you dont mind eating that much egg white.
Uh, that does not sound enjoyable at all to be honest. Also, TO is a woman and has likely a much smaller calorie goal, which means eating food with 100g of protein might take up a substantial amount of her daily calories.7 -
I was a "dietary vegan" for over a decade and the transition back to omnivore took about a month. My reasoning at the time was similar to yours. I was marathon training and felt I needed more protein.
While I recall a few GI issues, nothing debilitating happened.
That said, I still didn't get the body composition results I wanted at the time (then again, I didn't have a full understanding of macros and weight training versus cardio,etc)
Still an omnivore but tempeh, tofu, etc are regulars in my fridge. And, I never stopped using Vega's protein powders.
All that to say, more than a decade out, I think it's not so much the food that matters but the results you're seeking.
There are plenty of athletes nowadays who are vegan. Perhaps find one on social media who is doing what you want to do (in terms of physical activity) as I'm sure they share their routines and nutritional information.
There are also many threads here on body composition.
If your food choices go beyond dietary reasons, then you may want to look at other ways you can uplift, support and otherwise sustain animals respectfully even if you're not vegan or vegetarian. Have fun with it all!6 -
lizrod2014 wrote: »Hey guys!
I've been vegetarian for 17 years and usually pretty fit for the most part. After tracking my protein intake for the past 2 weeks, I've realized it's hard to meet my protein requirement without eating tubs of greek yogurt, so much egg/egg whites, and putting protein powder in everything. (Okay I'm exaggerating, but truthfully it's been challenging).
Yes, we can get tons of protein from quinoa, beans, legumes but they are also high in carbs so my macros is off. I realized I could get twice the amount of protein with chicken and seafood with much less carbs and smaller amounts.
So I decided to eat meat after 17 years. I decided overnight and knew I wanted to just take the plunge. Never imagined myself making this decision.
It's Day 2 and I've eaten salmon and chicken but the texture and taste are so weird to me. I hope I can get used to this.
Anyone else make this drastic change? How did it go? Also, did you notice a change in muscle mass? My goal is to lose fat and gain muscle
Any feedback or tips are appreciated, thanks!
The biggest driver for muscle gains will be your lifting program. Are you following a structured lifting program? If not, the below link is good.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10332083/which-lifting-program-is-the-best-for-you/p1
Adding meat/fish/seafood/eggs/dairy into your diet will make it easier to get adequate levels of high quality protein. But you don't have be all or nothing. You can certainly consume both animal and plant based proteins. From a lifting perspective, the key is really protein. Your fats and carbs are relative to your workout and personal preference.7 -
I too have made the switch to veggie and finding protein levels hard to reach1
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lizrod2014 wrote: »Hey guys!
I've been vegetarian for 17 years and usually pretty fit for the most part. After tracking my protein intake for the past 2 weeks, I've realized it's hard to meet my protein requirement without eating tubs of greek yogurt, so much egg/egg whites, and putting protein powder in everything. (Okay I'm exaggerating, but truthfully it's been challenging).
Yes, we can get tons of protein from quinoa, beans, legumes but they are also high in carbs so my macros is off. I realized I could get twice the amount of protein with chicken and seafood with much less carbs and smaller amounts.
So I decided to eat meat after 17 years. I decided overnight and knew I wanted to just take the plunge. Never imagined myself making this decision.
It's Day 2 and I've eaten salmon and chicken but the texture and taste are so weird to me. I hope I can get used to this.
Anyone else make this drastic change? How did it go? Also, did you notice a change in muscle mass? My goal is to lose fat and gain muscle
Any feedback or tips are appreciated, thanks!
I'm an omnivore so have no anti-meat agenda. I do have an anti-arbitrary macros agenda, so am interested in where you got your macros as we see so many people here who have picked up the impression that one cannot lose weight unless drastically reducing carbs. I believe one should set macros around how one feels the fullest, and for some that might be higher protein, or higher fat, or higher carbs.
Are you using the default 50% carbs macro? @AnnPT77 @janejellyroll - what macros do you hit? (The former is a long time vegetarian and the latter is vegan.)
During the three years I spent at yoga retreat centers, I knew plenty of healthy and fit vegans who likely got at least 60% of their calories from carbs, and made legumes the backbone of their diet. (They were also very active.)3 -
I get about 60-65% of my calories from carbohydrates and am usually around 20-30% fat and 15-20% protein (I don't have a specific goal, so it does vary). It's never been a problem for me to lose fat and see more muscle/gain strength (I don't have a goal of actually gaining muscle weight, I just go by performance and visual cues). I am a pretty active person, usually eating about 2,000 calories a day to maintain my current weight.
There are vegans in all types of sports who manage to meet their goals with plants -- including vegans who are powerlifters. I never perceive myself as having to make a choice between meeting my fitness/body goals and my ethical beliefs. I understand how protein can be an issue for newer vegans or people with additional food restrictions, but there are so many protein-rich plant foods that I enjoy eating, it's not an issue for me.7 -
I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/1 -
kshama2001 wrote: »I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/
It should be noted that what an elite athlete eats in terms of calories, tends to be much higher than a normal person. And they became elite athletes following a different diet. You see this in the body building world. Most didn't get there from following a ketogenic diet but it has made it easier to sustain their physique.
This also doesn't get into the amount of athletes who tried going plant based, only to switch back after performance issues arose.3 -
kshama2001 wrote: »
Are you using the default 50% carbs macro? @AnnPT77 @janejellyroll - what macros do you hit? (The former is a long time vegetarian and the latter is vegan.)
Warning: I'm going to answer, but rattle on in much more detail about protein sources and adequacy of vegetarianism for active people, with some eating philosophy thrown in. Stop reading now if that's uncongenial.
I don't do it by percent, I do it by grams. I just set MFP close, eat to my gram goals, and pretend it's Christmas when my MFP totals are a mix of red/green. And, as I said, I literally don't pay attention to carbs, just protein, fats, veggies/fruits (occasional spot check of specific micros).
That said, looking it up because you asked, over the last couple of months, the lowest week was 43% carbs, highest 49%
I was at 125.4 pounds this AM (at 5'5"), and my BIA scale claims 23.3% bodyfat (I don't believe that because I'm not gullible, but I'm guessing mid-20s percent somewhere is fairly realistic). For convenient math, if I use that 23.3%, 1g protein per pound of lean mass would be 95.875 grams. I use 100g as a minimum because it's easier to remember. Over the last few weeks, lowest daily average was 108g daily, highest 124g (for a fully logged week, as I skip a day here and there fairly often in maintenance).I'm not a vegetarian, but I get over 100g of protien in my typical diet. Majority of the 100g comming from 600g egg white, 500g broccoli, and 50g edamame. So it is definitly doable if you dont mind eating that much egg white.
That sounds grim to me, too, frankly. I like variety in my eating too much to do that. Life is too short to eat in ways I don't enjoy. (I'm not saying you don't enjoy that, just that I wouldn't.)
Here are my protein sources (all of them), for a full day, with gram amounts, though they vary a lot by day:
Nonfat milk 12g
Oatmeal 4g
Walnuts 2g
Flax seed 3g
Hemp seed 3g
Nonfat Greek yogurt 18g
Cauliflower mac'n'cheese (own recipe, also has beans/chickpea pasta) 20g
String cheese 7g
Pea chips 6g
Cabbage 2g
Avocado 1g
Black beans 16g
Mixed cheese 7g
Puppodums 2g
If I didn't make a typo, that's 106g, though the total from MFP probably includes some fractional amounts from small other amounts of nuts, veggies, etc.). Some of those listed (especially the tiny ones) are not great sources in an essential amino acid sense, but they're quite varied (helps to compensate), and many of them are good sources (I looooove dairy!). It's unusual for me to have a day without a major soy food(s) in there (can be various types tofu, tempeh, edamame noodles, etc.)
This day wasn't cherry picked to be exemplary, it's just my most recent full day of logging. If anyone cares, it was 2,143 calories, 1,848 net, which is ultra-slow-loss calories for me (maybe a couple hundred under maintenance). If that seems like a high TDEE so you're dismissing the practicality, you can back out my 250 calories of beer that night, and call it 1893 gross, 1598 net.
From my perspective, if someone is trying to be vegetarian, the "shape" of meals will benefit from a re-think. Omnivores, IME, often think of a meal as one big protein. ("What's for dinner?" "Chicken." "Pork chops". "Salmon". "Burgers". ) As I vegetarian, I still try to include some major protein source(s) in each meal (maybe a couple of different ones combined). On top of that, I try to get a little bit of protein from nearly everything I eat, while still eating in a way I enjoy.
When I first started calorie counting, so needing to get adequate nutrition on reduced calories, I made it a habit to review my diary often, looking for items that had a high calorie "cost", but little protein. Unless those were important to me for other reasons (satiation, nutrition, enjoyment), I would reduce or eliminate those, replacing the freed-up calories with some other food I enjoy that contributed at least a bit of protein. This was easy. I figure a food (single item, not dish) with 1g reasonably-EAA-complete protein per 10 calories is a really good vegetarian protein source, and 20-30 calories per gram is decent for whole dishes/compound products.
For me, reaching my goals, this thread was helpful (once I scrolled past the meaty/fishy stuff at the top of the spreadsheet):
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also
In terms of maintaining fitness, I seem to be doing OK, I think. I'm routinely active, not completely devoid of muscle (substantially more muscular at age 65 than the average li'l ol' lady, among my acquaintance - that's me in my profile photo, so you can decide if I'm deluded). It makes me laugh at the absurdity of the estimate, but Garmin estimates my fitness age at 36, and says my estimated VO2max is in the top 10% for my age group. The point is not to brag. I'm no kind of stellar athlete, but I've been quite active for 17+ years (even while obese); I don't spend multi hours daily training or anything like that. My point is that whatever I'm doing, my way of eating doesn't seem to have some dire and deleterious effect on my health or fitness.
People should adopt whatever nutritionally adequate diet they enjoy. Vegetarian can be healthy, fully plant based can be healthy, omnivory can be healthy (actually that's probably the *easiest* one). There's no special health magic in any of those, as long as nutrition is reasonable, and calories appropriate. The special health magic is the proper nutrition and calorie level, IMO.6 -
kshama2001 wrote: »I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/
It should be noted that what an elite athlete eats in terms of calories, tends to be much higher than a normal person. And they became elite athletes following a different diet. You see this in the body building world. Most didn't get there from following a ketogenic diet but it has made it easier to sustain their physique.
This also doesn't get into the amount of athletes who tried going plant based, only to switch back after performance issues arose.
But to circle back to the subject of the OP, we're discussing whether protein needs for non-elite athletes can be met on a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, and I think it's pretty clear that the answer is "yes."
This doesn't mean that individuals aren't going to choose to add meat back to their diet for pleasure or convenience, it's just that it's not mandatory in order to meet an average person's fitness or body composition goals (I don't think you're necessarily arguing that).
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janejellyroll wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/
It should be noted that what an elite athlete eats in terms of calories, tends to be much higher than a normal person. And they became elite athletes following a different diet. You see this in the body building world. Most didn't get there from following a ketogenic diet but it has made it easier to sustain their physique.
This also doesn't get into the amount of athletes who tried going plant based, only to switch back after performance issues arose.
But to circle back to the subject of the OP, we're discussing whether protein needs for non-elite athletes can be met on a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, and I think it's pretty clear that the answer is "yes."
This doesn't mean that individuals aren't going to choose to add meat back to their diet for pleasure or convenience, it's just that it's not mandatory in order to meet an average person's fitness or body composition goals (I don't think you're necessarily arguing that).
Yea, I don't disagree. That is why it's important to understand goals. If a goal is muscle gains, animal based proteins make it "easier" to get all amino acids and stimulate muscle protein synthesis the most, but it can be achieved with plant based diets, but will often require more protein in comparison to an animal based diet due to lower levels of L-Luecine in plant based proteins.
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janejellyroll wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/
It should be noted that what an elite athlete eats in terms of calories, tends to be much higher than a normal person. And they became elite athletes following a different diet. You see this in the body building world. Most didn't get there from following a ketogenic diet but it has made it easier to sustain their physique.
This also doesn't get into the amount of athletes who tried going plant based, only to switch back after performance issues arose.
But to circle back to the subject of the OP, we're discussing whether protein needs for non-elite athletes can be met on a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, and I think it's pretty clear that the answer is "yes."
This doesn't mean that individuals aren't going to choose to add meat back to their diet for pleasure or convenience, it's just that it's not mandatory in order to meet an average person's fitness or body composition goals (I don't think you're necessarily arguing that).
Yea, I don't disagree. That is why it's important to understand goals. If a goal is muscle gains, animal based proteins make it "easier" to get all amino acids and stimulate muscle protein synthesis the most, but it can be achieved with plant based diets, but will often require more protein in comparison to an animal based diet due to lower levels of L-Luecine in plant based proteins.
True. There's a persistent myth out in the extremes of the advocacy blogosphere that plant-based eaters require *less* protein than omnivores, besides . . . though I've never seen any even remotely rational explanation of why that would be so. (Greger 🙄 even argues that leucine is The Worst!)
IMO, getting a bit *more* protein, as a plant-based eater, is IMO a more reasonable strategy, especially if one has athletic goals. One can also make it a point to give some thought to EAAs - some plant foods have higher leucine levels than others, of course.1 -
janejellyroll wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »I just learned that tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams eat mostly plant based, and they certainly are fit and have plenty of muscle.
The following doesn't seem like enough calories for an elite athlete, but I suppose it would depend on portion size:
https://thebeet.com/venus-williams-follows-a-mostly-vegan-diet-and-here-is-exactly-what-she-eats/
It should be noted that what an elite athlete eats in terms of calories, tends to be much higher than a normal person. And they became elite athletes following a different diet. You see this in the body building world. Most didn't get there from following a ketogenic diet but it has made it easier to sustain their physique.
This also doesn't get into the amount of athletes who tried going plant based, only to switch back after performance issues arose.
But to circle back to the subject of the OP, we're discussing whether protein needs for non-elite athletes can be met on a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, and I think it's pretty clear that the answer is "yes."
This doesn't mean that individuals aren't going to choose to add meat back to their diet for pleasure or convenience, it's just that it's not mandatory in order to meet an average person's fitness or body composition goals (I don't think you're necessarily arguing that).
Yea, I don't disagree. That is why it's important to understand goals. If a goal is muscle gains, animal based proteins make it "easier" to get all amino acids and stimulate muscle protein synthesis the most, but it can be achieved with plant based diets, but will often require more protein in comparison to an animal based diet due to lower levels of L-Luecine in plant based proteins.
True. There's a persistent myth out in the extremes of the advocacy blogosphere that plant-based eaters require *less* protein than omnivores, besides . . . though I've never seen any even remotely rational explanation of why that would be so. (Greger 🙄 even argues that leucine is The Worst!)
IMO, getting a bit *more* protein, as a plant-based eater, is IMO a more reasonable strategy, especially if one has athletic goals. One can also make it a point to give some thought to EAAs - some plant foods have higher leucine levels than others, of course.
Wait, what? I never heard of him saying this so I Googled and . . . oh man.
"To reach the leucine intake provided by dairy or meat, we’d have to eat nine pounds of cabbage . . . "
He says this like I wouldn't!6 -
If you're still conflicted, google Robert Cheeke. He's a pretty high profile, vegan bodybuilder. He has diet books and information online.
Personally, having been raised vege, I feel like I've served my time and deserve some bacon! But there's alternatives out there.1 -
I'm not a vegetarian, but I get over 100g of protien in my typical diet. Majority of the 100g comming from 600g egg white, 500g broccoli, and 50g edamame. So it is definitly doable if you dont mind eating that much egg white.
Uh, that does not sound enjoyable at all to be honest. Also, TO is a woman and has likely a much smaller calorie goal, which means eating food with 100g of protein might take up a substantial amount of her daily calories.
What people enjoy varies between people. I love my current meal plan. In fact now that I’m trying to eat at maintenance, I’m just adding an additional meal similar to my other 4.
I value my time far more than time spent cooking. So bring able to buy the frozen packs of broccoli and microwave a pack and share it with my wife at lunch and dinner to get my 500g is ideal. Sure they have other mix veggies at Costco, but I prefer he broccoli. Eating oatmeal and 200g of egg white for breakfast is normal for lot of people. Eating another 150 in 2 more meals is easy. I sometimes wish I can eat more than 150g in my other meals. I’m just glad I found something I enjoy. But the point was I eat over 100g in protein with out taking meat into account. Eating this way was also the best way to satisfy my hunger when I was dieting.1 -
I"m not a vegetarian/vegan but am not opposed to the idea. If it works for you great. I just wasn't raised as one and have felt no need to become one.
That said, I have looked into the topic on occasion and, from what I've read, while there are some vitamin deficiencies (like B12) to be aware of that may require supplementation, getting enough protein from non-meat sources is NOT a significant problem.
For an article that makes the same point, see for example: https://www.thehealthy.com/nutrition/vitamin-deficiency-vegetarian-vegan/
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Thank you to everyone for sharing your personal experiences. I forgot to mention one important thing - I have been intermittent fasting for a long time (just recently started tracking my macros). I also have a 30+ BMI since giving birth a few years back which is why my short term goal is fat loss (long term goal - body recomposition). Based on personal research, which I might be wrong but I am always open to learning, moderate carb intake is important when trying to lose fat as opposed to high carb intake. I am not on a low carb diet but after tracking my macros, the data I received demonstrated that carbs where taking up a much higher amount than my protein in my diet.
Most importantly, my daily eating window of 8 hours is 7am-3pm. In order for me to meet my 105 grams of protein within that window, I had to eat larger amounts of vegetarian protein rich foods and I was feeling so full. I felt like I was entering an eating contest trying to meet my macros by 3pmish which didn't feel natural nor sustainable. I'm sure if I wasn't intermittent fasting, splitting up my protein intake between meals through plant-based sources would be less challenging for me.
Due to this and after researching, I realized chicken and seafood has a higher protein amount through way smaller portions so I decided to try this for convenience. I respect vegan and vegetarian lifestyles and have benefitted from them regardless and plan on still incorporating plant-based.
Also, in case this might help anyone making a transition or thinking about it, today is Day 3 as an omnivore and my body reacted quite well. I haven't felt sick, sluggish, or queasy. My digestion has been the same to be honest. The taste and texture are still not enjoyable but I am that will change in time. So far, I've had salmon and chicken. I can always go back to plant-based if omnivore diet is not for me.
Thanks you everyone for taking the time to provide and share your personal experiences.4 -
Is there a reason you're doing IF? It has no bearing on weight loss whatsoever. Some people find it easier to stick to their calorie allowance if they only eat within a set window, but that's it. Anything else you've read to the contrary is BS.
And yes, you are misinformed about varying carb intakes making a difference to fat loss. Calorie deficit dictates fat loss. That's it. Everything else is for satiety, good nutrition, personal preference. It's not at all unusual for carbs to make up a bigger percentage of your calorie intake, and not the least bit detrimental.
There is flat out no reason for you to be making yourself eat things you don't like.9 -
"Based on personal research, which I might be wrong but I am always open to learning, moderate carb intake is important when trying to lose fat as opposed to high carb intake"
Sorry but you are wrong, calories matter for weight loss - not carbs and certainly not the proportion of carbs.
Don't make decisions based on poor information.
If carbs were crowding out your protein (and fat) and stopping you getting sufficient amounts that would be a valid argument but the amount of carbs themselves are an irrelevance for weight loss as long as you are achieving a calorie deficit.5 -
misslizzierod wrote: »Based on personal research, which I might be wrong but I am always open to learning, moderate carb intake is important when trying to lose fat as opposed to high carb intake. I am not on a low carb diet but after tracking my macros, the data I received demonstrated that carbs where taking up a much higher amount than my protein in my diet.
This is inaccurate. For example, MFP's default macros are 50% carbs, 20% protein, and 30% fat, and that works fine for fat loss. It's also not high carb (terms like "moderate" or "high" carb seem so incredibly subjective, as with your apparent view that anyone with a higher percentage of carbs than protein would be eating high carb, which is not consistent with typical definitions). At 1600 cals, MPF's defaults would be 200 g carbs, 80 g protein, and 53 g fat. Now, I can see wanting to eat more protein than that (I am using 1600 since I don't have your stats, but you did say that preserving/gaining muscle was a priority, so I'm assuming not 1200).
Specifically, as has probably been noted upthread, a commonly recommended goal for someone in your position is 0.8 g/lb of healthy goal weight. For myself, 5'3 with a 120 goal weight, this comes to 96. Based on this formula, 105 could be a perfectly fine goal (it's consistent with a goal in the low 130s), so I don't question that at all. At 1600, then, we are talking around 25% protein, and at even 1200, we'd be talking around 35% protein (but if you are trying to gain muscle and have the exercise activity to support that, 1200 seems way too low).
If at 25% or 30% protein, even if taken all from carbs, we are talking 45-25-25 or 30-40-40 -- full disclosure, I did the first part of my weight loss at 40-30-30 and loved it. The point I want to make is that neither would be considered "high" carb (nor would MFP's default) and yet neither has protein higher than carbs. That is because excess protein does nothing and absent doing some very low carb diet (which I have nothing against), carbs tend to be the primary source of energy, as well as important for many important nutrients (fruits, veg, beans and legumes, whole grains, potatoes and sweet potatoes, etc., all have lots of nutrients, which is why the demonization that carbs sometimes get is distressing).
That said, if what you are saying is you want to hit 105 g protein on something like a 25% or 30% protein diet (gram number is more important than percentage), that should be extremely easy on vegetarian. (I've done periods of both vegetarian and vegan and find it easy to hit 100 or over on vegetarian, while on vegan, without more meat subs than I like, I tend to struggle to consistently eat over 80.) Of course what you are going to prioritize will be different if an ethical vegan, and one can be healthy and lose weight and even preserve/gain muscle eating 70-80 g protein at my stats, and likely at yours. But since you are not an ethical vegan this doesn't matter.
TL/DR: I think it should be pretty easy to hit your protein goal on a vegetarian diet of about 25-30% protein (105 g), especially if you are calculating a calorie goal consistent with not being completely sedentary and a healthy rate of weight loss. I think this likely will be harder, or at least more limiting in what you can eat, if you have told yourself carbs must be a lower number (less than 105) than your protein, and that that would have no benefits to weight loss.
I actually do currently eat lower carb and like it, as it works for me, but I like meat and have no ethical issues with eating it (although I care about how I source it). If you were vegetarian for reasons other than ethics or personal taste preferences, I have no reason to say don't eat meat (and it is possible to do that even on a low carb diet). But if you feel better ethically or enjoy your diet more without meat, I'd say this idea that you must eat protein and carb amounts that make a vegetarian diet more difficult is a mistaken one.6 -
misslizzierod wrote: »Thank you to everyone for sharing your personal experiences. I forgot to mention one important thing - I have been intermittent fasting for a long time (just recently started tracking my macros). I also have a 30+ BMI since giving birth a few years back which is why my short term goal is fat loss (long term goal - body recomposition). Based on personal research, which I might be wrong but I am always open to learning, moderate carb intake is important when trying to lose fat as opposed to high carb intake. I am not on a low carb diet but after tracking my macros, the data I received demonstrated that carbs where taking up a much higher amount than my protein in my diet.
Most importantly, my daily eating window of 8 hours is 7am-3pm. In order for me to meet my 105 grams of protein within that window, I had to eat larger amounts of vegetarian protein rich foods and I was feeling so full. I felt like I was entering an eating contest trying to meet my macros by 3pmish which didn't feel natural nor sustainable. I'm sure if I wasn't intermittent fasting, splitting up my protein intake between meals through plant-based sources would be less challenging for me.
Due to this and after researching, I realized chicken and seafood has a higher protein amount through way smaller portions so I decided to try this for convenience. I respect vegan and vegetarian lifestyles and have benefitted from them regardless and plan on still incorporating plant-based.
Also, in case this might help anyone making a transition or thinking about it, today is Day 3 as an omnivore and my body reacted quite well. I haven't felt sick, sluggish, or queasy. My digestion has been the same to be honest. The taste and texture are still not enjoyable but I am that will change in time. So far, I've had salmon and chicken. I can always go back to plant-based if omnivore diet is not for me.
Thanks you everyone for taking the time to provide and share your personal experiences.
People can lose fat on a high, moderate, or low carbohdyrate diet. There are many people who find that eating low carbohydrate either lowers their appetite or helps control cravings - if you're in this group and you find you enjoy it, these are good reasons to limit your carbohydrates. But otherwise, there is no particular need to do so. I lost all my weight while getting about 60% of my calories from carbohydrates and I was very happy with my body composition at the end (which I attribute to resistance training, keeping a moderate deficit so I didn't lose weight too quickly, and making sure to get enough protein).
Also, if IF is making it hard to meet your nutritional goals while eating how you like, maybe it's the IF that needs to be changed -- not the foods you're choosing. Just something to consider. IF is just a tool to help control calorie intake. Like any tool, it isn't going to be the perfect fit for every situation.
Not saying this to tell you that you HAVE to stop eating meat, but just throwing some more potential solutions out there.8 -
While some people find IF or reducing carbs HELPFUL, neither is NEEDED in order to lose weight.
Easiest weight loss in my life was when I was in Costa Rico, eating tropical fruit all day long and rice and beans twice a day. Very high carb but I dropped a size without even intending to.
12 -
Seems like I need to really do some research on carbs. There is so much conflicting information online. Thanks for the info everyone!1
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misslizzierod wrote: »Seems like I need to really do some research on carbs. There is so much conflicting information online. Thanks for the info everyone!
It's one of several recent trendy marketing points. If weight loss were, say, a straightforward matter of counting calories, how would hundreds or thousands of people make money by selling books, supplements, special diet plans, etc.? In other words, be really careful about sources, note what their monetization strategy is.
(Truth in advertising:
I'm another in the "calories determine weight loss" camp. I think I only implied the number in my previous posts, but I lost weight just fine while eating 150g+ carbs most days . . . from BMI 30+, at age 59-60, while hypothyroid (treated), in less than a year, while vegetarian, losing down to BMI in the lower 20s; and I've been eating 200g+ carbs most days to maintain that healthy weight for 5 years since.
There are a lot of marketers out there who will tell you that low carb is essential for weight loss. Low carb can be a great strategy, for those it suits: Some find it helps them with appetite control, and appetite control makes it easier to stick with a reasonable calorie goal. If that's true of you (or if you have a health condition like diabetes that requires carb management), then low carb eating may be helpful. On the other hand, some people find low carb eating unpleasant, unsustainable, or unnecessary . . . sometimes even find that it tanks their energy level. Those people will probably do better eating more carbs.
IMO, experimentation with low carb for a few weeks, just calorie counting on a preferred nutritious balanced way of eating for a few weeks, will tell you everything that's important *for you* about carb intake level.)4 -
misslizzierod wrote: »Seems like I need to really do some research on carbs. There is so much conflicting information online. Thanks for the info everyone!
It's one of several recent trendy marketing points. If weight loss were, say, a straightforward matter of counting calories, how would hundreds or thousands of people make money by selling books, supplements, special diet plans, etc.? In other words, be really careful about sources, note what their monetization strategy is.
(Truth in advertising:
I'm another in the "calories determine weight loss" camp. I think I only implied the number in my previous posts, but I lost weight just fine while eating 150g+ carbs most days . . . from BMI 30+, at age 59-60, while hypothyroid (treated), in less than a year, while vegetarian, losing down to BMI in the lower 20s; and I've been eating 200g+ carbs most days to maintain that healthy weight for 5 years since.
There are a lot of marketers out there who will tell you that low carb is essential for weight loss. Low carb can be a great strategy, for those it suits: Some find it helps them with appetite control, and appetite control makes it easier to stick with a reasonable calorie goal. If that's true of you (or if you have a health condition like diabetes that requires carb management), then low carb eating may be helpful. On the other hand, some people find low carb eating unpleasant, unsustainable, or unnecessary . . . sometimes even find that it tanks their energy level. Those people will probably do better eating more carbs.
IMO, experimentation with low carb for a few weeks, just calorie counting on a preferred nutritious balanced way of eating for a few weeks, will tell you everything that's important *for you* about carb intake level.)
That’s impressive! Congratulations on the weight loss and greater health. Thank you for sharing your experience of weight loss without the use of a low carb diet and for this helpful information!2
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