At Goal & Successfully Maintaining. So Why Am I Doing This All Over Again?

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  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,437 Member
    EliseTK1 wrote: »
    Skyr is made exactly like yogurt except you use skim milk and you add a few drops of liquid rennet after it cools to 110, same time as when you stir your starter.

    You can make it as thick or thin as you like- depends on the draining time.

    It’s a protein powerhouse.

    I’ve also been setting some aside to drain extra extra well to use in lieu of cream cheese on pancakes.

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    This is awesome! Thank you for the inspiration. May be time to try my hand at making skyr. I’ve just been buying it when it’s BOGO at Publix. I’ve been brewing kombucha for years, grind my own wheat to bake bread, and just started growing blue oyster mushrooms- I’m all about foodie DIY!

    I made cherry scones this afternoon and subbed skyr for the sour cream the recipe called for. Lots less calories and boy, were they good.

    Skyr, kefir and Greek yogurt are amazing. I’ve baked cakes using nothing but a boxed mix and yogurt or kefir.

    Kefir is another good one for baking. I loved using it, but it fermented so fast I couldn’t keep up with it, and we were even eating the extra grains.
  • ridiculous59
    ridiculous59 Posts: 2,908 Member
    @springlering62 thanks! When I was a child, cottage cheese was something that was ALWAYS in our fridge. It was my mother's go-to for everything. I personally don't care for the texture of cottage cheese, however sometimes I will mix it with the handheld blender, add some seasonings, and use it for a veggie dip. Plain Greek yoghurt is my version of my mother's cottage cheese and I always have it in the fridge. It's my go-to for everything and I eat it for breakfast, lunch, snacks, in smoothies, and baking. But I only buy skyr when it's marked down because it's a bit more expensive. I will definitely try making it though!
  • LifeChangz
    LifeChangz Posts: 456 Member
    stumbled across this last month, and enjoyed the updates and BLs related observations/discoveries. Wondering how it goes? Is BL pressing forward and doing well with ease or hit an obstacle? Entered post-honeymoon phase and pushed through the common urge to stop? Hope all is well with continued progress.
  • JenKindo
    JenKindo Posts: 418 Member
    Are all the extra walks helping out with the HR dog's reactivity?
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,437 Member
    JenKindo wrote: »
    Are all the extra walks helping out with the HR dog's reactivity?

    The High Anxiety Dog is improving, somewhat.

    We’ve got a trainer walking him every afternoon, and she is a wizard.

    He seldom barks at people now unless they step suddenly out of a doorway or alley (historical district backs up to walking trail- lots of wierd little doors and alleys people pop in and out of all the time).

    Other dogs, still a problem. I can see some improvement, but mostly a brain shift. I think it exhausts him now, too, because if he sees another dog coming he simply pulls us across the street or toward any available alley to avoid the drama and the inevitable “bag dog, no treat for you”.

    Being half dachshund, it’s all about treats. 🤷🏻‍♀️
  • sheahughes
    sheahughes Posts: 133 Member
    I wish I had a food orientated dog! Mine is affection/toys, and sometimes it isn't appropriate to pull out a squeaky toy
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,437 Member
    sheahughes wrote: »
    I wish I had a food orientated dog! Mine is affection/toys, and sometimes it isn't appropriate to pull out a squeaky toy

    I oughta “disagree” you for that lol. “Food dogs” are always underfoot hoping you’ll drop something or cave and give them a scrap. It’s a constant battle.

    I have to move the dog just to get the pantry door open.

    Oh and then there’s was the dachshund who used to climb in the dishwasher to lick dishes the minute you turned your back. It’s a wonder his little yellow butt never went through a cycle.

    This one’s half dachshund and half spaniel. So he’s underfoot half the time!
  • wunderkindking
    wunderkindking Posts: 1,615 Member
    edited March 2022
    Yeaaaah, but you can put that food motivation under pretty good control and use it to reward the dog for what you want. Like not getting under your feet and climbing in the dishwasher hoping for an opportunity to reward themselves (look up 'its yer choice' and 'mat training' - youtube has some good how to videos).

    You can do the same with toys but it's much harder to train calm behavior with a toy because they're by nature inciting prey drive which is exciting and move fast/play.
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,437 Member
    Interesting. Loaf bread now languishes in the drawer, but we’re going through low carb tortillas at a pretty good clip.

    A handul of chopped anything in a 45 calorie tortilla is really good for lunch or snacks.

    And those tortillas are just fine with Mexican dinners. They taste just like “regular” tortillas.

    We like the La Banderita carb smart ones. Dirt cheap at Lidl, and presumably Aldi, but available everywhere. And they stay fresh for weeks and weeks if you can’t make it through a whole bag quickly.
  • dralicephd
    dralicephd Posts: 402 Member
    edited March 2022
    @springlering62 What do you use for your source of microbes in your skyr? Do you add buttermilk, yogurt, or skyr?

    I really like the vanilla skyr, but wow, it's expensive. We've made lots of fermented foods, so I think I'll try to make some of this just to save some pennies. It sounds like it's made like what we call "farmer cheese", since it uses rennet.

    Also, glad to hear BL is still on track! I've enjoyed following his journey (and yours too!).

    Lastly, add me to the low carb tortilla camp. Those are a staple around here. I also like a low carb "veggie bread" my husband found. I think the brand is Oasis and it's only 45 calories per slice. :)
  • rheddmobile
    rheddmobile Posts: 6,840 Member
    My experience with low-carb tortillas is that not only do they taste like sandpaper, blood testing reveals they seem to be lying about being low-carb, since they spike my glucose just as much as regular ones. Sincerely, I believe on the ones I have tried the package info is falsified, since 6 net carbs ordinarily barely registers for me. They seem to be listing everything as fiber when it’s not.

    Experimentation has found corn tortillas don’t spike me nearly as much, though, which is a personal thing, someone else might be different.
  • fatty2begone
    fatty2begone Posts: 249 Member
    +1 on the low carb wraps. I have also just recently discovered the Ole - Xtreme Wellness Wraps (50 calories) which I actually prefer to the flour tortilla type wraps. I havent tried cooking with these yet so not sure I could swap them out for the low carb "flour" type wraps in recipes.

    Bread...MMM with you Spring, I could eat the whole loaf and I have... It is a trigger food, and I have caved this week for a couple slices of bakery sour dough, with not good results. Ate the house...GRRR. I have got to stay away from that delicious devil...
  • EliseTK1
    EliseTK1 Posts: 483 Member
    +1 on the low carb wraps. I have also just recently discovered the Ole - Xtreme Wellness Wraps (50 calories) which I actually prefer to the flour tortilla type wraps. I havent tried cooking with these yet so not sure I could swap them out for the low carb "flour" type wraps in recipes.

    Bread...MMM with you Spring, I could eat the whole loaf and I have... It is a trigger food, and I have caved this week for a couple slices of bakery sour dough, with not good results. Ate the house...GRRR. I have got to stay away from that delicious devil...

    I use the Ole Xtreme Wellness Wraps in my enchilada lasagna- they’re perfect!
  • Sparkuvu
    Sparkuvu Posts: 2,698 Member
    I'm not much of a bread eater, except bakery loaves, those I do love. Was buying Sara Lee 35 cal, but it really tastes like cardboard, so why?, I finally concluded. (I also often wonder,, low cal, carb ect stuff, all of it--wth are we ingesting in it that makes it taste good--is that really better for us?, or just a very money making angle for companies?) Wish there was a way (weigh, lol) to get better counts on Walmart bakery loafs of Everything bread. (A 93% burger on it, oh, yum--& HAS to be way lower than a bun). I really love it, and the seasoning makes any eat-on-bread thing taste so good. When I have them slice it, it is very slim, uniform slices, and if I get French, not Italian, it's skinnier than normal bread as well. It SEEMS like, most 35 cal bread ect is actually just much slimmer sliced than others, so I reason that slices of Everything bread are probably not too bad. I also stick it in the freezer,, and just takes out enough for whatever I want it for, so no plowing through a loaf at a time. BUT, I'm sure it's probably made with lower quality higher fat and less whole grain than 'health' breads, so maybe I'm way off base. Welcome any thoughts, suggestions on this.
  • coblujay
    coblujay Posts: 688 Member
    I'm eating Ezekial bread. It was the bread recommended to me on the diet program, State of Slim, that I started with. I like it and I'm a hamburger girl, so one slice, cut in half makes a great burger. I honestly haven't paid much attention to the nutritional info on it, just keep adding it to my log.