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Bufflehead   6,358
Fluffnomore   1,235
This whole thing is why I wonder about why my binder from my clinic insists so much on fat free and low fat dairy. And sweeteners! Eating a fat free yogurt with artificial sweeteners seems counterintuitive to me.
I understand that higher fat dairy has a few more calories per serving, but this is one of those things I'm really experimenting with. I would love to hear others' thoughts about that.
Fascinating, thank you for posting!
This whole thing is why I wonder about why my binder from my clinic insists so much on fat free and low fat dairy. And sweeteners! Eating a fat free yogurt with artificial sweeteners seems counterintuitive to me.
I understand that higher fat dairy has a few more calories per serving, but this is one of those things I'm really experimenting with. I would love to hear others' thoughts about that.
Here is what I've learned about lowfat dairy. If there is ONE food that's safe to eat low fat, it's dairy. Why? because it's made by removing something and NOT adding anything to compensate for the fat they took out.
Other low-fat products have sugar, sweeteners such as HFCS etc added to it. With dairy, they take out the fat, and leave the rest be.
As part of a calorie reduction scheme, I can see eating low fat cheese. I find the full fat ones to kill my daily eating plan quite hard. 100 calories for an ounce of cheese that doesn't go thunk seems a bit wasteful. In contrast, 100 calories for a glass of milk, which I assume goes thunk? ( I can't drink milk) or 100 calories for full fat yogurt that goes thunk seems worth it in my opinion.
so it comes back to nutrient density vs. bulk once again for me.
I tend to use fats such as butter, ghee, and coconut oil to add flavor and caramelization to my food. But I am moving toward low fat cheese because usually I can't tell the difference in taste.
tonydepalma   19
Atkins was the Man! I lost my first big weight in 1978 at 24 following it lost 70-80 pounds in record time. If Only I could stay on it:) But one thing is for sure after being sleeved I ignore this potatoes ,sugar ats. This guy won't lose messing with that stuff. Sleeve is life changing. But Atkins laid the ground work for diet long ago. RIP DR. Atkins!
Beach Lover   1,084
This was very interesting and completely validates my thoughts. I have always believed in the Atkins diet and with the help of my sleeve it is completely doable. Carbs are just a big bad no no for me and will only be in my diet for special occasions such as Thanksgiving and Christmas. Fortunately my sleeve does the job and keeps those limited also! Thanks for posting this.
I think you are reading the book that came our of this article? I have started it a couple times but it is so dense (like protein) that I find it hard going. I also find Protein to make for very plain eating even though I know it is good. I certainly don't crave it which I guess is the point! It is amazing how easy it is for me to have less than 150 grams of carbs in a day since the sleeve though. I tried Atkins before and found it just impossible. The amount of protein it took to get me full when I had my whole stomach was just unpalatable!
A good read
Yes the book is slow going for me, esp since my 13-year old and I are reading Allegiant and he is ahead if me, which he rubs in routinelyI think you are reading the book that came our of this article? I have started it a couple times but it is so dense (like protein) that I find it hard going. I also find Protein to make for very plain eating even though I know it is good. I certainly don't crave it which I guess is the point! It is amazing how easy it is for me to have less than 150 grams of carbs in a day since the sleeve though. I tried Atkins before and found it just impossible. The amount of Protein it took to get me full when I had my whole stomach was just unpalatable!
I'm actually craving protein these days which I thought would never happen but agree, the quantities we were expected to eat at higher calorie levels were impossible, esp without shakes. I'm so glad I found shakes I love because I don't see them going away in the near future.
Yes the book is slow going for me, esp since my 13-year old and I are reading Allegiant and he is ahead if me, which he rubs in routinely I'm actually craving Protein these days which I thought would never happen but agree, the quantities we were expected to eat at higher calorie levels were impossible, esp without shakes. I'm so glad I found shakes I love because I don't see them going away in the near future.
I haven't made shakes part of my routine actually. Maybe I should try them again. The on,y ones I can get here that are decent are Optifast and chocolate are the only ones I find palatable. During my post-op I made the mistake of the cheaper optislim, which were quite thin and chalky. We certainly don't have the variety you have in the US, especially with the premix. I'd love to try the Syntrax Nectar but can't find it here.
Fluffnomore   1,235
I got all giddy with moving up to purees/mushies and gleefully left the shakes for a week or so, but had one for Breakfast yesterday (Premier Protein, my favorite one.) Let me tell you, the rest of the day just fell into place nutritionally.
I love changing things up with cream of wheat or eggs, but there is very little that gives you that nice hit of Protein first thing in the morning and sets things up for success.
I see that others are encouraged to leave off the Protein Shakes after moving finally to solids; I think I will probably use them regularly as long as I can.
I got all giddy with moving up to purees/mushies and gleefully left the shakes for a week or so, but had one for Breakfast yesterday (Premier Protein, my favorite one.) Let me tell you, the rest of the day just fell into place nutritionally. I love changing things up with cream of wheat or eggs, but there is very little that gives you that nice hit of Protein first thing in the morning and sets things up for success. I see that others are encouraged to leave off the Protein Shakes after moving finally to solids; I think I will probably use them regularly as long as I can.
You know I asked around in a thread and found that many who were even a year out were still doing at least one shake a day. CLK had the best explanation. She said it allowed her to get some more variety in her diet, knowing the protein had been accounted for.
We are 4 months out and still do 2 shakes a day. Until my stomach can hold more than 2-3 oz at a time, I don't see that changing.
Fluffnomore   1,235
Ugh. I continually worry about the fact that I can easily hold more than that. I see these threads that say "You should only be able to hold 1/4 cup" and it freaks me out. I can do 1/2 cup easily (not more, but still.)
Oh well. I'd be worried about something regardless.
YES!! Thank you for posting. History will vindicate the low carb diet, I firmly believe that. Ketosis is key to substantial weight loss. What this article alludes to but doesn't explicitly get into is just how corrupt our scientific community can be, and government institutions in particular (FDA, NIH). food industry, the grain industry especially, wields such enormous power to the detriment of the population.
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