Protein - Ideas and advice please!

Hi all - I'm not new to MFP but this is a fairly new account after rejoining a couple of months ago as I wanted a fresh start. I've got a complicated history with diet (in the broad and restrictive sense) but I seem to have found a good balance and now the lbs are coming down, albeit slowly but I'm okay with that.

I'm now at a point where I'm feeling okay about my calories and where they're at but something that I really need to work on is my protein intake. Since going vegetarian-ish (as in, I cook 99% veggie at home but will eat meat if we order or eat out) my protein is lower than I'd like because it's not something I've looked at so much. I looked at the James Smith Academy calculator, which suggested that for good fat loss I should aim for 196g a day which is never going to happen but I would like to aim for 100g plus a day I think.

I'm going to look into seitan, which is meant to be a great source of protein, and work on increasing things like greek yoghurt and cottage cheese but a lot of other things like nuts, seeds, avocado etc are high in protein but really high in calories too so they're only good to have in moderate amounts. So any suggestions, advice or tips welcome, particularly for good breakfast ideas!

Thanks in advance.

Replies

  • jennypapage
    jennypapage Posts: 489 Member
    do you eat fish or eggs? fish, eggs and dairy are where i get most of my protein from, and every now and then a protein bar.
  • Lietchi
    Lietchi Posts: 6,834 Member
    Legumes and pulses are a good vegetarian source of protein.

    I suggest looking at this file and seeing if there are foods you hadn't thought of yet/didn't know were sources of protein:
    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Hi all - I'm not new to MFP but this is a fairly new account after rejoining a couple of months ago as I wanted a fresh start. I've got a complicated history with diet (in the broad and restrictive sense) but I seem to have found a good balance and now the lbs are coming down, albeit slowly but I'm okay with that.

    I'm now at a point where I'm feeling okay about my calories and where they're at but something that I really need to work on is my protein intake. Since going vegetarian-ish (as in, I cook 99% veggie at home but will eat meat if we order or eat out) my protein is lower than I'd like because it's not something I've looked at so much. I looked at the James Smith Academy calculator, which suggested that for good fat loss I should aim for 196g a day which is never going to happen but I would like to aim for 100g plus a day I think.

    I'm going to look into seitan, which is meant to be a great source of protein, and work on increasing things like greek yoghurt and cottage cheese but a lot of other things like nuts, seeds, avocado etc are high in protein but really high in calories too so they're only good to have in moderate amounts. So any suggestions, advice or tips welcome, particularly for good breakfast ideas!

    Thanks in advance.

    I'm not familiar with the James Smith Academy calculator but 196 g seems really excessive and 100 g far more reasonable.

    What do you get here?

    https://examine.com/nutrition/protein-intake-calculator/

    I shoot for @ 500 calories of exercise per day, and when I do, using the MFP default of 20% protein aligns with the protein recommendation from examine. If I were completely sedentary, I'd need to bump it up to 30%.

    It's better to consider nuts, seeds, avocado, etc. sources of fat rather than protein :)

    For breakfast, do you eat eggs? People also bump up their protein at breakfast by adding protein powder or Greek yogurt to foods.
  • ehju0901
    ehju0901 Posts: 394 Member
    I would add a hard-boiled egg to your diet (if possible...I know you said you are somewhat vegetarian).

    Otherwise adding PB2 to foods is a good idea as well.
  • littlegreenparrot1
    littlegreenparrot1 Posts: 702 Member
    I often eat a salad for lunch which has quinoa as the base with some roast veg, and a couple of falafel.

    Both quinoa and falafel are good sources of protein and easy to add in.
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,453 Member
    Not vegetarian, but using Greek yogurt and cottage cheese in my smoothies and desserts helps bump my protein up quite a bit. I was making kefir and using it in smoothies, and to bake with. It made amazing fluffy, light baked goods, but I couldn’t keep up with production.

    I’ve been adding Bob’s Red Mill unflavored whey powder and extra eggs to my pancakes.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,217 Member
    I'm vegetarian (ovo lacto), 5'5", 125-ish pounds (in weight maintenance now). I have a protein minimum of 100g, which I hit the overwhelming majority of days, and exceed very often. I'm a believer in the "0.6-0.8g per pound of healthy goal bodyweight" rule of thumb for protein minimum, which is roughly equivalent to 0.8-1g per pound of lean body mass, for quite a range of people (but most of us don't have a good body fat/lean mass estimate, so it's easier to math out based on healthy goal bodyweight).

    The link @Lietchi gave you is super-helpful: You'll just want to scroll down past the meat/fish heavy top of the list, to find more plant-based options. They're there.

    For protein amounts, here's some more food for thought, from a source generally considered neutral, evidence based (they don't sell supplements; they sell research, but offer some for free):

    https://examine.com/guides/protein-intake/
    https://examine.com/nutrition/protein-intake-calculator/

    My guidance to newer vegetarians (from my perspective of having been veg for 47+ years now) is to continue getting that "one big protein per meal" thing that omnivores do. That'd be your tofu, tempeh, seitan, legumes, bean/pea/soy pasta, some faux meats (watch out: not all are protein/calorie efficient!), etc. . . . or calorie-efficient dairy (nonfat Greek yogurt, lowfat cottage cheese, a few other cheeses, nonfat milk, etc.) , or eggs.

    In addition to that, think about getting at least a little bit of protein in almost any other thing you eat. There are veggies with more protein, even fruits with a little protein, nuts/seeds to add crunch instead of croutons, snack foods with protein (dry-roasted soybeans, crispy chickpeas or broad beans, bean chips, frozen Greek yogurt bars, etc.), and so forth.

    Look at your food diary, note foods that have quite a few calories, but not much protein. Are they foods you could reduce or eliminate and still get other good nutrition, feel full and happy? If so, cut some calories there, add in something you enjoy eating that has a little more protein. Across the day, those small amounts add up. Keep reviewing, keep tweaking your eating, before you know it, you'll have your protein levels where you want them, eating vegetarian foods primarily, if that's what you prefer.
  • rosebarnalice
    rosebarnalice Posts: 3,488 Member
    I'm a self-proclaimed "Goddess of Seitan"--my bbq "fibs" have made confirmed omnivores moan in delight. But it's not necessarily a low cal option, so be careful :-)

    @AnnPT77 has a great tip about "one big protein" and finding ways to add "little proteins" other ways.

    One of my faves is making salad dressing or "creamy" simmer sauces with hummus or silken tofu as a base (I don't dairy so yogurt is out for me).

    I'm also big on nutritional yeast, which adds a cheesiness to oatmeal and veggie casseroles, and can produce a passable queso with plenty of tomatoes, serrano peppers and cilantro.

    And like @ehju0901, I keep PB2 peanut butter powder on hand-- which I add to veggie stirfries and salads with soy sauce and maybe some ginger garlic paste for a southeast Asian satay vibe.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    do you eat fish or eggs? fish, eggs and dairy are where i get most of my protein from, and every now and then a protein bar.

    I don't eat fish much but a little, eggs I do. I need to get some more to boil up and keep in the fridge, that worked well. I tried making my own protein bars from a recipe but they weren't that high protein really! I have some pre-bought ones though which help a little.

  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    Lietchi wrote: »
    Legumes and pulses are a good vegetarian source of protein.

    I suggest looking at this file and seeing if there are foods you hadn't thought of yet/didn't know were sources of protein:
    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also

    Oh that's a really helpful link, thank you. It's finding those foods that are a good balance of calories and protein and that's really helpful for that so thank you again.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    I'm not familiar with the James Smith Academy calculator but 196 g seems really excessive and 100 g far more reasonable.

    What do you get here?

    https://examine.com/nutrition/protein-intake-calculator/

    I shoot for @ 500 calories of exercise per day, and when I do, using the MFP default of 20% protein aligns with the protein recommendation from examine. If I were completely sedentary, I'd need to bump it up to 30%.

    It's better to consider nuts, seeds, avocado, etc. sources of fat rather than protein :)

    For breakfast, do you eat eggs? People also bump up their protein at breakfast by adding protein powder or Greek yogurt to foods.

    It does seem excessive doesn't it? That link says 156g, which is more reasonable but still a bit too much realistically for me I think. Although 30% without exercise calories is 143g so maybe I should be aiming for about that but considering I'm averaging about 50g at the moment, it's going to take a bit of work!

    I do see those as sources of good fat but they're also listed as sources of protein, I just don't really think that they can be used as that. I add a little for the overall nutrition of them and there's a small protein benefit but the calories are too high to really add much protein so that's not really the focus of them.

    I do eat eggs, yes. I could probably do with trying to eat them more. I've just bought a vanilla protein powder so may add that to things a bit more, before that I only had a chocolate and caramel flavour one which is delicious but couldn't have that in everything.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »

    Oh that's really helpful, thank you. I'd got as far as deciding to give it a go but not what to actually do with it!
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    ehju0901 wrote: »
    I would add a hard-boiled egg to your diet (if possible...I know you said you are somewhat vegetarian).

    Otherwise adding PB2 to foods is a good idea as well.

    I do eat eggs (veggie rather than vegan so I'm good with eggs) and have had some boiled up in the fridge before so might do that again today, thanks.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    I often eat a salad for lunch which has quinoa as the base with some roast veg, and a couple of falafel.

    Both quinoa and falafel are good sources of protein and easy to add in.

    I didn't realise that quinoa was a good source of protein so that's a good shout. Thank you.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    Not vegetarian, but using Greek yogurt and cottage cheese in my smoothies and desserts helps bump my protein up quite a bit. I was making kefir and using it in smoothies, and to bake with. It made amazing fluffy, light baked goods, but I couldn’t keep up with production.

    I’ve been adding Bob’s Red Mill unflavored whey powder and extra eggs to my pancakes.

    I was wondering about getting some unflavoured whey, I bought vanilla yesterday as they only had that, strawberry and chocolate but I may look online for some unflavoured I think and then use it in things as realistically, I think I'll need it as an extra bump to reach my protein for the day.

    Was kefir easy to make? I use greek yoghurt for things too, need to look at having cottage cheese more though as I really do enjoy it.

    thanks for replying.
  • cazzcampbell
    cazzcampbell Posts: 22 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    I'm vegetarian (ovo lacto), 5'5", 125-ish pounds (in weight maintenance now). I have a protein minimum of 100g, which I hit the overwhelming majority of days, and exceed very often. I'm a believer in the "0.6-0.8g per pound of healthy goal bodyweight" rule of thumb for protein minimum, which is roughly equivalent to 0.8-1g per pound of lean body mass, for quite a range of people (but most of us don't have a good body fat/lean mass estimate, so it's easier to math out based on healthy goal bodyweight).

    The link @Lietchi gave you is super-helpful: You'll just want to scroll down past the meat/fish heavy top of the list, to find more plant-based options. They're there.

    For protein amounts, here's some more food for thought, from a source generally considered neutral, evidence based (they don't sell supplements; they sell research, but offer some for free):

    https://examine.com/guides/protein-intake/
    https://examine.com/nutrition/protein-intake-calculator/

    My guidance to newer vegetarians (from my perspective of having been veg for 47+ years now) is to continue getting that "one big protein per meal" thing that omnivores do. That'd be your tofu, tempeh, seitan, legumes, bean/pea/soy pasta, some faux meats (watch out: not all are protein/calorie efficient!), etc. . . . or calorie-efficient dairy (nonfat Greek yogurt, lowfat cottage cheese, a few other cheeses, nonfat milk, etc.) , or eggs.

    In addition to that, think about getting at least a little bit of protein in almost any other thing you eat. There are veggies with more protein, even fruits with a little protein, nuts/seeds to add crunch instead of croutons, snack foods with protein (dry-roasted soybeans, crispy chickpeas or broad beans, bean chips, frozen Greek yogurt bars, etc.), and so forth.

    Look at your food diary, note foods that have quite a few calories, but not much protein. Are they foods you could reduce or eliminate and still get other good nutrition, feel full and happy? If so, cut some calories there, add in something you enjoy eating that has a little more protein. Across the day, those small amounts add up. Keep reviewing, keep tweaking your eating, before you know it, you'll have your protein levels where you want them, eating vegetarian foods primarily, if that's what you prefer.

    Based on your method, I should aim for 170g of protein a day. It feels like quite a lot but it's something that I could try and work up to, although I'm not sure I'd get quite that high as that's around 35-40% of my calorie intake. I've set it at 30% for now, which is 143g which is still going to take a bit of planning and working up to.

    I think my issue is a bit like you've said, I don't know that I always have a big protein thing per meal. Some meals, at least my main evening meal, but not always and I could do with working on those and additional sources of protein a bit more.

    Your tips are really helpful, thank you.
  • tvm1970
    tvm1970 Posts: 164 Member
    edited August 2021
    5 minute easy seitan:

    45 gram, Vital Wheat Gluten
    6 grams (2 Tbsp), Pb2.
    0.50 teaspoon, Liquid Smoke
    5 g, Savoury Yeast Flakes
    1/3 - 1/2 cup water
    Seasoning of your choice eg. garlic powder, chilli flakes, Italian seasoning, black pepper

    Mix with a fork until just combined. Cook on a sandwich press or in a waffle iron until desired doneness.

    Particularly good served with marinara, cashew cheese sauce or salsa for dipping.

    I've split the mix in two and made a high protein burger 'bun' and used it as a high protein pizza base.

    Great when you are short on time and low on protein.

    Macros: 214 calories / 39g protein / 10g carbs / 2g fat
  • Lietchi
    Lietchi Posts: 6,834 Member
    In the dairy family, skyr yogurt is a great option too. I put protein powder into my skyr with some fruit which gives me 35 grams of protein for 200 to 300 calories.
  • I2k4
    I2k4 Posts: 188 Member
    I'd echo most of the non-vegetarian advice for fish, eggs, lean unprocessed meats, and dairy though I eat a lot of tofu. Whey protein is the big top-up for me, mainly mixed in morning oatmeal, shakes and non-fat yogurt with nuts, berries, fruit. I buy on sale and in bulk on the basis of grams per dollar.

    (The protein powder industry is a heavily marketed chaos of ingredients and percentages, scoop and jar sizes, and PEDrugged fitness influencers - purified "isolates" and heavily marketed brands are radically overpriced. Here in Canada some good whey brands are relabeled as drug store generics and sold at half the price. Amines, etc. added to the basic whey in "concentrates" or blends are inexpensive filler, redundant to what's in ordinary good nutrition. Apart from grams/ dollar price, the mixability and flavor are important considerations if it's stirred or shaken by hand, but matter much less if blendered with other tasty things.)
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,217 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    I'm vegetarian (ovo lacto), 5'5", 125-ish pounds (in weight maintenance now). I have a protein minimum of 100g, which I hit the overwhelming majority of days, and exceed very often. I'm a believer in the "0.6-0.8g per pound of healthy goal bodyweight" rule of thumb for protein minimum, which is roughly equivalent to 0.8-1g per pound of lean body mass, for quite a range of people (but most of us don't have a good body fat/lean mass estimate, so it's easier to math out based on healthy goal bodyweight).

    The link @Lietchi gave you is super-helpful: You'll just want to scroll down past the meat/fish heavy top of the list, to find more plant-based options. They're there.

    For protein amounts, here's some more food for thought, from a source generally considered neutral, evidence based (they don't sell supplements; they sell research, but offer some for free):

    https://examine.com/guides/protein-intake/
    https://examine.com/nutrition/protein-intake-calculator/

    My guidance to newer vegetarians (from my perspective of having been veg for 47+ years now) is to continue getting that "one big protein per meal" thing that omnivores do. That'd be your tofu, tempeh, seitan, legumes, bean/pea/soy pasta, some faux meats (watch out: not all are protein/calorie efficient!), etc. . . . or calorie-efficient dairy (nonfat Greek yogurt, lowfat cottage cheese, a few other cheeses, nonfat milk, etc.) , or eggs.

    In addition to that, think about getting at least a little bit of protein in almost any other thing you eat. There are veggies with more protein, even fruits with a little protein, nuts/seeds to add crunch instead of croutons, snack foods with protein (dry-roasted soybeans, crispy chickpeas or broad beans, bean chips, frozen Greek yogurt bars, etc.), and so forth.

    Look at your food diary, note foods that have quite a few calories, but not much protein. Are they foods you could reduce or eliminate and still get other good nutrition, feel full and happy? If so, cut some calories there, add in something you enjoy eating that has a little more protein. Across the day, those small amounts add up. Keep reviewing, keep tweaking your eating, before you know it, you'll have your protein levels where you want them, eating vegetarian foods primarily, if that's what you prefer.

    Based on your method, I should aim for 170g of protein a day. It feels like quite a lot but it's something that I could try and work up to, although I'm not sure I'd get quite that high as that's around 35-40% of my calorie intake. I've set it at 30% for now, which is 143g which is still going to take a bit of planning and working up to.

    I think my issue is a bit like you've said, I don't know that I always have a big protein thing per meal. Some meals, at least my main evening meal, but not always and I could do with working on those and additional sources of protein a bit more.

    Your tips are really helpful, thank you.

    A couple of specific things I like, that are reasonably high protein meals (or a big chunk of a meal):

    Smoked tofu, lowfat mozzarella, thin-sliced onions, mustard on small Ezekiel tortilla, heated in microwave to melt the cheese a bit, then add raw sauerkraut. (Around 350 calories, 26g protein.)

    Edamame pasta, peanut sauce (PB2 + soy sauce + a mild vinegar, optionally other spices/seasonings or some chile sauce), stir-fried or stir-steamed veggies of choice. (Calories depend on the the veggies, but excluding veggies, it's about 260 calories, 31g protein. Something like bok choi would add volume with few calories; green beans or peas would add a bit more protein.)

    Both of the above are pretty high-sodium, which isn't a problem for me. If it is for you, then something like a vinaigrette coleslaw on the tortilla instead of sauerkraut, and a swap-out of the soy sauce on the pasta, would take it down a lot.

    I mentioned bean pastas in passing in my PP, but if you haven't explored those, you may find them helpful. The chickpea and red lentil pastas I've tried have a flavor/texture more like wheat pasta (especially the red lentil ones), but around 13g protein per 2 oz dry portion, substantially more than wheat pasta. There's also chickpea "rice" (really an orzo-shape pasta, but labelled "rice"). The edamame or black bean pastas I've tried are either chewier than wheat, or (in the case of larger black bean shapes like penne) kind of mushier textured. I don't care for the larger black bean types, except in soup/stew, but you might like them better than I do. While I enjoy the chickpea or lentil pastas in Italian-like sauces/preparations, or in mac'n'cheese, I don't enjoy the edamame or black bean ones that way. IMO, though, the chewier edamame or black bean pastas in thin shapes (spaghetti, fettuccine) are good in pseudo-Asian-styled dishes, like the peanut sauce idea above.

    I don't like protein powder or protein bars, so don't use them. (I don't think there's anything wrong with them in theory, I just don't personally find them tasty/satisfying). I also don't much care for faux meats, so don't usually eat those, either.

    I do eat a lot of dairy (some regular cheese, but also some reduced fat types in certain contexts, like lowfat string cheese as a snack; nonfat milk; lowfat cottage cheese; some of the more calorie-efficient cheeses like chevre, parmesan (not genuine parmesan if avoiding animal rennet, but there are some parmesan-style cheeses made with vegetarian enzymes instead); and in my case really a lot of nonfat Greek yogurt.) Greek yogurt can be used as a sour cream sub in some cases (like a dab on a taco, tostada, bowl of hearty soup/stew), as a basis for a cold soup (fruit or cucumber are especially good IMO), as a component of home-made salad dressing, mixed into smoothies, used to top oatmeal or protein pancakes, etc. I don't personally eat lots of eggs, though I like them. As a generality, it seems like goat cheeses are a little more calorie/protein efficient than cow cheeses.

    I'm not a big pancake person, but the Kodiak mixes are tasty and high protein, if you like pancakes or waffles. (They have protein powder in them). A serving of those with nonfat Greek yogurt and some fruit is protein-rich and tasty. For a little more sweetness, I might mix some blackstrap molasses with the yogurt - it's an added sugar, but a good brand also adds a meaningful amount of micronutrients like potassium and iron.
  • penguinmama87
    penguinmama87 Posts: 1,155 Member
    Most things I would say have already been said, so I won't go on at length. But, if you like the idea of hardboiled eggs but find yourself getting tired of them...try pickling them. I like to with beets so they turn nice and pink. There's a million recipes out there but this one is pretty close to what I do, just adding the beets:

    https://www.food.com/recipe/pickled-eggs-29150

    The beets themselves are a nice addition to sandwiches in place of sliced tomato. :)
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    I'm a self-proclaimed "Goddess of Seitan"--my bbq "fibs" have made confirmed omnivores moan in delight. But it's not necessarily a low cal option, so be careful :-)

    @AnnPT77 has a great tip about "one big protein" and finding ways to add "little proteins" other ways.

    One of my faves is making salad dressing or "creamy" simmer sauces with hummus or silken tofu as a base (I don't dairy so yogurt is out for me).

    I'm also big on nutritional yeast, which adds a cheesiness to oatmeal and veggie casseroles, and can produce a passable queso with plenty of tomatoes, serrano peppers and cilantro.

    And like @ehju0901, I keep PB2 peanut butter powder on hand-- which I add to veggie stirfries and salads with soy sauce and maybe some ginger garlic paste for a southeast Asian satay vibe.

    @rosebarnalice: recipe, please!
  • westrich20940
    westrich20940 Posts: 920 Member
    Canned beans are my go-to - and often I just chuck a cup or so into whatever I'm eating whether it's soup, salad, or rice dish ... whatever. I've never had them ruin a dish. I also love keeping quinoa around and I also add that in with my steel cut oats when I make oatmeal. Could cut your rice with it as well for some cool texture along with the rice (which also has protein). Hempseed hearts I also add to my oatmeal or rice, or salads. I use Banza (surely other brands are available) which is chickpea pasta. There are many other pasta brands made with legumes too (like lentils)..but I think the Banza brand is the most 'like regular pasta' as far as flavor and texture. Lentils are also great.

    Seitan is good, if you want to make it - you can find lots of recipes. Tofu would also be good to add in.
  • JennBona
    JennBona Posts: 255 Member
    I find it hard to get in alot of protein too and Im not vegetarian lol My goal is 130g I usually have a shake a day post workout and I like mixing greek yogurt and cottage cheese for my afternoon snack and sometimes ill have a protein bar if im low on protein. Try protein cereal and theres protein granola you can add to your greek yogurt.
  • Salt4Stone
    Salt4Stone Posts: 75 Member
    Cover Everything in Peanut Butter!!
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,217 Member
    Salt4Stone wrote: »
    Cover Everything in Peanut Butter!!

    Great fat source, lackluster protein source, in calorie efficiency terms, IMVO** . . . unfortunately, because it's yummy.

    My fave peanut butter: 190 calories, 8g protein, so 23.75 calories per protein gram.

    I figure 10 calories (from all macros) is a calorie-efficient vegetarian protein source, 20-30ish calories per protein gram may be reasonable for a complete food/meal (sandwich, stir-fry, soup, casserole, whatever).

    That's just a personal rule of thumb . . . but I'll assert that there are darned few food (not supplement) sources much better than 10 total calories per protein gram.

    ** In my vegetarian opinion
  • jenstress
    jenstress Posts: 19 Member
    Great tips here. I like Orgain pea protein powder vanilla.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    JennBona wrote: »
    I find it hard to get in alot of protein too and Im not vegetarian lol My goal is 130g I usually have a shake a day post workout and I like mixing greek yogurt and cottage cheese for my afternoon snack and sometimes ill have a protein bar if im low on protein. Try protein cereal and theres protein granola you can add to your greek yogurt.

    I see no mention of lean meat, which is a more efficient source of protein for omnivores :)
  • jessica2021624
    jessica2021624 Posts: 18 Member
    JennBona wrote: »
    I find it hard to get in alot of protein too and Im not vegetarian lol My goal is 130g I usually have a shake a day post workout and I like mixing greek yogurt and cottage cheese for my afternoon snack and sometimes ill have a protein bar if im low on protein. Try protein cereal and theres protein granola you can add to your greek yogurt.

    I struggle getting protein in too! My goal is 137 g and I’m not used to eating so much. It feels overwhelming. My body naturally only wants like 50-60 g.

    I talked to my trainer and she suggested Quest protein powder and snacks but they contain milk. Even though I’m sensitive to dairy and trying to avoid inflammatory food, I did try the choco chip cookies and they’re actually decent tasting. Trainer also suggested sprinkling protein powder in foods like oatmeal, yogurt, baked snacks, coffee, etc.