Breakfast without or with low sugar
_Bettino1966_
Posts: 8 Member
Hello, kindly I’m looking for new suggestions about salted or low breakfast. I’m tired of eating milk corn flakes or yogurt.
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Replies
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Bacon and eggs.1
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I have an omelet or scrambled eggs most days.1
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I am a little confused by what you mean by "salted or low breakfast." Are you trying to reduce sodium and carbs, especially sweets?
If so, assuming you want about 300 calories and can handle 45 carbs:
I'm all about a peanut butter and X sandwich for breakfast, on toast. Use a low carb bread. Not much X.
Or any breakfast sandwich with two ounces of meat I've cooked, as opposed to processed lunch meat.
Boiled eggs are lovely and easy to make ahead. Use little or no salt, but pepper is fine, I think.
Microwave a small sweet potato, or half of a bigger one (about 4 ounces). I like them plain, but a dab of butter or cinnamon sugar makes it a treat.
Berries are low carb in realistic portions (3-4 ounces). Cherries and blueberries are in season now. Grapes, on the other hand, are tiny little glucose bombs.
Swiss cheese is fairly low sodium, as cheese goes. I buy the cheapest I can find, but I hear good things about Jarlsberg Lite. An ounce of ricotta is also low carb and low sodium. A tomato and cheese sandwich or low-carb wrap can be good.
Avocado toast? Or guacamole toast, if you mash a bit of salsa or lime juice into your avocado.
Half a pita round with some chicken salad, if you make your chicken salad without much salt added.
Basically, food is food, no matter what time of day you eat it. I almost always eat breakfast on my 45-minute commute, so most of these are car-friendly.
Some people swear by overnight oats. It's not car-friendly and I can't see the appeal of cold oatmeal, so I haven't tried it. But it would be a change from yogurt for you. And unsweetened oats have good nutrition, worth the carbs (but weigh your portion), and are actually heart-healthy.
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One of the best realisations I ever came to is that "breakfast food" as a concept is a load of hooey.
What makes something a 'breakfast food'?
Why is bacon and eggs (protein), mushrooms, spinach and tomatoes (veg), hash browns (potato), a biscuit (grains) and sausage gravy (sauce/condiment) a "breakfast food" when roast beef (protein), carrots cauliflower and broccoli (veg), roast potato (potato), a bread roll (grains) and gravy (sauce/condiment) is not?
Eat what you want for breakfast. I actually quite like a nice hearty soup. It's warming and comforting like a bowl of porridge, but probably more nutritionally balanced across the macros. I also like doing a tray bake of various veg and some meatballs and having that for breakfasts.5 -
@Alatariel75 yes! This! Once I had salad for breakfast, lol.2
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ldaltonbishop wrote: »I am a little confused by what you mean by "salted or low breakfast." Are you trying to reduce sodium and carbs, especially sweets?
If so, assuming you want about 300 calories and can handle 45 carbs:
I'm all about a peanut butter and X sandwich for breakfast, on toast. Use a low carb bread. Not much X.
Or any breakfast sandwich with two ounces of meat I've cooked, as opposed to processed lunch meat.
Boiled eggs are lovely and easy to make ahead. Use little or no salt, but pepper is fine, I think.
Microwave a small sweet potato, or half of a bigger one (about 4 ounces). I like them plain, but a dab of butter or cinnamon sugar makes it a treat.
Berries are low carb in realistic portions (3-4 ounces). Cherries and blueberries are in season now. Grapes, on the other hand, are tiny little glucose bombs.
Swiss cheese is fairly low sodium, as cheese goes. I buy the cheapest I can find, but I hear good things about Jarlsberg Lite. An ounce of ricotta is also low carb and low sodium. A tomato and cheese sandwich or low-carb wrap can be good.
Avocado toast? Or guacamole toast, if you mash a bit of salsa or lime juice into your avocado.
Half a pita round with some chicken salad, if you make your chicken salad without much salt added.
Basically, food is food, no matter what time of day you eat it. I almost always eat breakfast on my 45-minute commute, so most of these are car-friendly.
Some people swear by overnight oats. It's not car-friendly and I can't see the appeal of cold oatmeal, so I haven't tried it. But it would be a change from yogurt for you. And unsweetened oats have good nutrition, worth the carbs (but weigh your portion), and are actually heart-healthy.
Exactly. I would like to reduce carbs like added sugars. Thank you so much for the suggestions
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ldaltonbishop wrote: »
If so, assuming you want about 300 calories and can handle 45 carbs:
totally legitimate question (not being sarcastic or snarky, genuinely curious) - where did this assumption come from? I mean where are you getting those particular numbers?
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Carbs and added sugars aren't the same, of course.
If you want a lower carb breakfast, how about an omelet with various veg? I often have something like that with cottage cheese or half an avocado or smoked salmon -- all low carb. I also often have it with fruit, which isn't so low carb, but wouldn't have added sugar.
Steel cut oats with blueberries and peanut butter isn't low carb, but there's no added sugar.
Basically, you'll get different suggestions if you want low carb (and it would be helpful to know how low carb) vs no added sugar.
Today I had leftover Thursday dinner for breakfast, so no added sugar and it was actually pretty low carb, but isn't what some think of as breakfast.1 -
i love carbs with good protein. strawberries and yogurt, potatoes and eggs and ketchup all day everyday0
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I usually have yogurt and fruit or a (homemade) smoothie bowl consisting of fruit & veg, usually blended with water or plant-based milk, then some nuts and seeds on top. Maybe not low sugar by everyone's interpretation but it's low in processed sugar; and the body processes the sugar in fruits differently, given the fibre.
For a "salted breakfast" alternative, I would agree with omelettes with veg, wholegrain toast with hummus or avo + tomato. If I have time, I also like to make a Mediterranean whole grain pita with roasted chickpeas (jerk seasoning!) and a beetroot tzatziki (just Greek yogurt mixed with finely diced cucumber, beetroot, dill, mint, and some lemon juice). Add some cucumbers for crunch. YUM!0 -
I prefer protien shakes for breakfast. Protien powder of choice, almond milk and chia seeds.
On days where I do eat something in the mornings it's usually Kodiak pancakes topped with berries and sliced bananas. Or whatever I am craving that day.
Breakfast doesn't have to be "breakfast" foods. You can enjoy anything you like.0 -
Peanut butter on toast. Or if you're interested in something more exotic look up aloo paratha (spiced potato stuffed flat breads) or upma (semolina with potatoes, peas and spices).0
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