Good protein sources on a budget
paleojamie
Posts: 191
I am on a very tight student budget, and need to up my protein as it has been taking a while to recover from my workouts!
I need something that isn't high in fibre .. as I already get more than enough at almost 50g.
No dairy
I need something that isn't high in fibre .. as I already get more than enough at almost 50g.
No dairy
0
Replies
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Do you mean as in a supplement?0
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Cottage Cheese
Protein Shakes
Chicken/Turkey Breasts0 -
oh right, forgot to mention - NO DAIRY!!!!0
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Egg whites, canned tuna0
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canned tuna
eggs
dried lentils (I guess those have more fiber...but they are so cheap)0 -
eggs sound good0
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hard boiled egg whites are my go-to protein fix. I hard boil a dozen on Sunday and use them for my afternoon snack which has to be protein to get me through an evening workout and hold me over until a late dinner.
My second favorite is a 100 calorie pack of almonds. You can buy raw unsalted almonds in bulk pretty inexpensively. I think 16-18 of them are about 100 calories.0 -
Nothing cheaper than chicken.0
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Eggs, chicken breast, turkey breast, hydrolyzed whey protein (I have a lactose issue and this doesnt bother me...if that is the same reason you said no dairy)0
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bacon has a good amount of protein and its only 60 calories a slice
also try this its cheap to make and tastes amazing. one serving has 22grams of protein
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/giada-de-laurentiis/rigatoni-with-eggplant-puree-recipe/index.html0 -
Canned tuna - 40 grams of protein in a can, and I usually stock up when I find them on sale for $1 a can.0
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bump! I have the same issues. I like egg whites and tuna a lot. I also LOVE edamame0
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eggs 10 for 10.00 @ Kroger pretty cheap when you can catch them on sale0
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chicken thighs etc are cheaper than breasts. higher in cals, but good protein.
ground turkey/chicken
tuna/salmon canned - buy from costco or sams club etc. better deals
protein powder
eggs
liquid egg whites
frozen tilapia. costco has some. reasonable, low cals and solid protein0 -
tofu and other soy products
spinach is very high in protein for a veggie 1 cup cooked has approx 5 grams of protein
eggs or egg subs
egg whites
beans
nuts/seeds0 -
Quinoa is the only grain that is a complete protein by itself. All the other suggestions above are good too.0
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Dried beans and lentils are dirt cheap and go such a long way. Tofu is also cheap.0
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bump0
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bump!
chicken is actually quite expensive for me ... it is 3 pounds for 525g0 -
Egg whites, canned tuna
this for sure!!!0 -
nuts0
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Protein powder from Walmart.
(Oh, sorry, just saw the no dairy. Tofu is good, too.)0 -
things are very expensive at the moment here in the UK !
Annoying really .. little things like cucumber being put up by 20p and stuff .. doesn't sound a lot but it's annoying.
and tuna is also expensive.0 -
If you find tuna too expensive try sliced ham, or sliced turkey/chicken breast.
Something worth thinking about is buying whole chicken from Aldi (small is £3:50 ish) and roasting it. For 2 people you can have a breast each for evening meal and a good portion each or the rest of the meat for lunch the following day.
Eggs are cheap and one of the highest protein to cals ratio for a non-meat item. Even better ratio if you just have the whites but the yolks are good for you and tasty, and so it is a shame to waste them.
Tinned mackerel in tomato sauce is good for protein and also provides a good dose of fish oil. They are pretty cheap and with some crackers make a great lunch.0 -
Chicken
Tuna
Eggs
In that order0 -
Tuna and hard boiled eggs - convenient, tasty and low in calories.0
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I went bought 5 tubs whey protein for £45.0
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I went bought 5 tubs whey protein for £45.
Bargain! What brand, how big and where from? :flowerforyou:
Oh, and does it taste nice? :drinker:0 -
Super cheap:
- cottage cheese
- eggs
- beans, lentils
Moderately cheap:
- chicken breast
- canned tuna or canned salmon
- greek yogurt
- mackarel fillets
- cod filleds
anyway, I suggest the RELATIVELY cheap, pay attention to super cheap food, I wouldn't trust so much: powder derived dairies or eggs from intensive livestock farming for sure affect the quality of food we eat, not to mention other issues.
I suggest a smart STRATEGY to save your budget instead: alternate extra cheap with expensive source of proteins: salmon/tuna/GOOD eggs + lentils/beans. You fix in this way both the wallet and the variety problem In a few words, when it comes to NON VEG proteins put a few more money for good quality, weight out saving on VEG proteins (beans and co)0 -
i'm sure someone's said it already: BEANS! dried beans are especially cheap, if you have the time and wherewithall to remember to soak them!0
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