High protein, low calorie, low fat, low carb, low cholestero
Evelyn_Gorfram
Posts: 706 Member
Quick, name all you can think of! ....Are there any* other than egg whites?
(*Preferably not involving soy, peas, beans, lentils, garbanzos/chickpeas, etc. - I have an allergy to almost all legumes.)
(*Preferably not involving soy, peas, beans, lentils, garbanzos/chickpeas, etc. - I have an allergy to almost all legumes.)
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Replies
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I love my chicken and Turkey and cottage cheese0
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low fat cottage cheese; low / no fat greek yoghurt
skinny milk. Poached chicken breast (no skin obviously).0 -
I forgot one ( I dont eat because I'm a vego). Special only to Australians: kangaroo - one of the best meats to eat!0
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Tuna fish (light) packaged in water w/ no salt. Easy to pack for on-the-go, and no cooking required.
165g can = 191 cal, 50mg cholesterol, 0g carb, 42g protein.0 -
Greek yogurt.
The 0% kind if you like that.0 -
fish0
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tuna with eggs mmmmmmmmmmmmm0
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shrimp0
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Shrimp, Crab and most fish (not breaded or fried)0
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i thought shrimp had a boatload of cholesterol0
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whey protein0
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Kale !0
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cottage cheese
yogurt
venison
fish0 -
boiled eggs
hard cheese (you can get little individual sizes that are great as a snack)0 -
Lean meats and fish, these are the ones I mainly eat.
Chicken
Turkey
Tuna
Also I have protein shakes, they curb my sweet tooth as I get to have choc or vanilla shakes, yummy! x
:flowerforyou:0 -
i thought shrimp had a boatload of cholesterol
There are good cholesterols and bad cholesterols. The body needs good cholesterol and shellfish is a good source of it. The body does not need bad cholesterol - but you don't get bad cholesterol from eating it, your body makes the bad cholesterol from saturated fat. So if you want to reduce your cholesterol cut down on too much saturated fat, like in meat and dairy but you can eat the shellfish0 -
Sorry for taking so (very!) long to respond. This whole RL thing can sometimes kind of take over your whole life...
And many thanks to all you you for all your suggestions. Here is my Protein-Fix Food List so far:
Egg whites
Chicken (esp. breast)
Turkey
Cottage Cheese (low fat)
Milk (low fat)
Yogurt (low or non-fat)
Greek Yogurt (non- fat)
Hard cheese
Tuna (water-packed)Light Tuna (165g can = 191 cal, 50mg cholesterol, 0g carb, 42g protein)tuna with eggs mmmmmmmmmmmmmI forgot one ( I dont eat because I'm a vego). Special only to Australians: kangaroo - one of the best meats to eat!
Just to be on the safe side, you'd better immediately pack all your kangaroo tails in dry ice and send them to me.whey protein
OTOH, I tried some yesterday, and found it really did not agree with me. I'm not sure whether it's just that one brand & flavor (Designer Whey Protein Powder, French Vanilla), or if the whey protein itself just isn't compatible with my particular innards.Kale !
Sounds perfectly reasonable to me. :happy: :laugh: :happy:cottage cheese
yogurt
venison
fish
Cottage cheese = roughly $1.15 - $1.50/pint (approx. 1 lb.)
Yogurt = roughly $1.25 - $2.00/pint (approx. 1 lb.)
Fish = roughly $4.00 - $25.00/lb
Venison = roughly $15.00 -$50.00/lb, available only by mail order AFAIK
Either venison is much cheaper and easier to get hold of in Northeastern Scotland than in the Northwestern US, or there's something wrong with this picture.shrimpShrimp, Crab and most fish (not breaded or fried)i thought shrimp had a boatload of cholesterolThere are good cholesterols and bad cholesterols. The body needs good cholesterol and shellfish is a good source of it. The body does not need bad cholesterol - but you don't get bad cholesterol from eating it, your body makes the bad cholesterol from saturated fat. So if you want to reduce your cholesterol cut down on too much saturated fat, like in meat and dairy but you can eat the shellfish
I like to think that I'm smarter than the average bear, but I'm confused as all-get-out here. If I eat the shellfish, my "bad" cholesterol goes down? If so, does that mean that I can treat shellfish as if it had zero (or negative) cholesterol? Can or should I eat all the "good" cholesterol I want? Should I ignore "bad" cholesterol completely and worry about saturated fat? What about trans-fat? Poly- & mono-unsaturated fats? Does all of this change if my total cholesterol is already high (i.e. 237 mg/dl)?
I don't really expect anyone to try to answer all that, but if you happen to know of some sort of (on- or offline) reference that someone with a mere master's degree in an utterly-un-biological science might be able to understand, I would be very grateful to be pointed in its direction.
(I hope that doesn't sound ill-tempered. While I am frustrated with this gawdawful confounded cholesterol confusion, I'm not frustrated with you or anyone else who's been kind enough to reply to my questions. :flowerforyou: )
Thanks again to everyone.0 -
this is a great topic i start next week on what will be the hardest thing in my life. my doctors are putting me on a 1400 cal 150+ protein and less than 60 carb diet. not sure how to do all this number crunching but i am seeing TUNA will become my new best friend and staple of my diet thanks for all the info any other friendly advice thanks a ton
Dan
my new word in my life is BALANCE i need to Balance all these things and make a diet that will work for me0
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