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Low-carb bootcamp

Join discussions about low-carb bootcamp plans, meals and progress. Consider speaking to a medical professional before starting any diet.

May Low Carb Bootcamp: the preparation thread

239 replies

BIWI · 07/05/2018 15:02

The next Bootcamp starts on Monday 14 May.

In advance of this, here are some things to start to think about.

THE RULES

First, make sure you know the rules! I'll put those in a separate post, but it's a good idea to print them out, so that you have them to hand for each reference.

You do need to follow the rules to the letter. Low carbing isn't a very forgiving WOE. It's not like calorie counting, where one 'bad' day can be overcome by a 'good' day the next. And it's especially important in the first two weeks because we're ensuring that we switch our bodies away from burning carbs for fuel to burning fat.

After the first two weeks there is the option to move onto a slightly more relaxed approach, Bootcamp Light. It's entirely up to you whether or not you do this. But it's critical that you are strict in the first two weeks.

PLANNING AHEAD

Do what you can to get rid of as many of the carby things in your fridge/freezer/cupboards - especially things that you know are likely to tempt you.

Start planning your week in terms of meals and food. Make sure you have plenty of low carb ingredients available. Meal planning may be a bit of a chore, but in the early stages of low carbing, especially if it's a new WOE (way of eating) for you, it's vital.

In the initial few days, you may also like to have things available to snack on. Within a week or so of low carbing, you should find that you're not hungry at all between meals, so you won't need to snack, but while you're adjusting, it's good to have something you know you can grab.

Good low carb snacks:

hard boiled eggs (always a good idea to keep a few in the fridge)
cooked low carb sausages (The Black Farmer is a good brand, but all the supermarkets premium sausages tend to be lower carb. Avoid ones with extra ingredients, and check the back of the packet to see how many carbs they contain. As an example, Sainsbury's So Organic pork sausages are only 0.9g carbs per 100g, The Black Farmer ones are 1.0g carbs. Avoid like the plague 'ordinary' sausages, as they are very carby - Richmond Thick Pork sausages are 16g carbs per 100g!
olives
cheese
cucumber/celery

If you're at work but have a canteen, check out what they're offering that is low carb. If they have a salad bar that's usually an OK option, but make sure that you're getting plenty of fat with your salad, and not just adding low fat dressings. You may need to take your own lunch with you if their menu is - as is highly likely - heavily focused around carbs. And if they do a 'healthy' option beware! This is going to be low fat, which is not what we're doing here.

If your job means you're out and about a lot, this is hard and something you'll have to prepare carefully for. On-the-go food options are always very carby - sandwiches, crisps, chocolate bars. Even if presented as 'healthy', like cereal bars or Graze boxes, these will invariably be too high in carbs as well, because there's often a lot of sugar as well as higher carb ingredients like nuts and seeds.

M&S do some good things - individually wrapped pieces of cheese, they also do pork crackling strips and rounds, which are a good standby. Most of their salads have pasta or rice or noodles as a basis, but there are one two that don't - and along with some cooked meats or fish you can usually put together a reasonable low carb meal.

READ UP ON LOW CARBING

The more you know about it, and the science behind it, the more likely you are to be able to stick to it.

You'll find that a lot of people around you will dismiss low carbing as a fad. People will tell you that eating so much fat is bad for you - despite the fact that this simply isn't true.

But it can be very undermining when people do this to you, and you may find your resolve wavering.

When I post the first thread next Monday there will be a link to the spreadsheet where we all enter our weight. On the tabs on the spreadsheet you'll find links to all kinds of different resources that will help you.

But in the meantime, if you want to do some reading, have a look at The Diet Doctor's website.

Escape the Diet Trap by Dr John Briffa is also a book that's really worth getting hold of - it's very easy to read and explains low carbing really well.

LEARN TO LOVE FAT!

Olive oil, butter, cream, cheese. What's not to love?!

But you'll find it hard, if you've always been told that fat is bad, to fully embrace it. But it's essential. A low carb diet is a high fat one - which is often why it's abbreviated to LCHF.

Fat helps to keep you full. It's also good for you (apart from transfats). Importantly, it makes things taste lovely!

CONSIDER HOW YOU'RE GOING TO MONITOR YOUR WEIGHT

We have a spreadsheet to enter our weight every week, but this is by no means compulsory. There are a couple of other ways to monitor your progress - first, take your measurements, and repeat these each week. Second, take an item of clothing which its currently too tight, and try that on each week.

If you do decide to weigh, then weigh yourself first thing in the morning, naked, after you've been to the loo.

It's up to you whether you weigh weekly or daily. Some people find that weighing daily keeps them focused on what they're doing - others find it too hard, as natural daily fluctuations aren't always helpful!

DO YOU NEED TO SEE YOUR GP?

If you have a medical condition, particularly diabetes or high or low blood pressure, you should talk to your doctor or nurse about low carbing. Low carbing will reduce high blood pressure, and help improve your blood sugar levels, such that the level of medication you're taking may become inappropriate.

If you're in any way worried about a medical condition or medication that you have, and how this might interact with low carbing, then please take medical advice. I am not a GP or medically trained in any way. I'm not a dietician or a nutritionist, either. The advice given on Bootcamp is based on my own experiences, and the (considerable) reading that I have done/continue to do.

GET A JOURNAL TO KEEP A RECORD OF YOUR DAILY MENU

Writing down what you've eaten and drunk is incredibly useful, and can help to keep you focused. If, for any reason, you aren't seeing success one week, going back to what you've been eating and drinking can help you identify any possible issues.

It also helps to keep you honest with yourself! If you know you have to write it down, it can stop you cheating.

READ AND CONTRIBUTE TO THE CHAT THREADS

The help, support and general camaraderie on the chat threads is the most valuable thing about Bootcamp.

Please don't just jump on the thread to post your own progress or menus, but take the time to read what other people have written

The threads move very quickly - especially in the first couple of weeks - so make sure you bookmark them so you don't lose your place. But also take the time to help others out with any questions or issues that they have.

And if you have a question, please make sure you read the thread to see if anyone else has asked that before you. It's very, very wearing being asked to explain something that's already been talked about.

READ THE BOOTCAMP RECIPE THREADS

There are several of these, all stickied at the top of the Bootcamp topic. There are some fabulous recipes on those threads, and so you should have absolutely no excuse not to eat lovely food. And please feel free to add to them!

A FINAL REMINDER - THE 'BLACKLIST'

These are foods that you shouldn't be eating at all on Bootcamp:

pasta/couscous/polenta/noodles
rice
flour/cornflour (so be careful of things that come in sauces, as they are usually thickened with flour or cornflour, and absolutely nothing that's in batter of any kind)
cakes/biscuits/muffins/bagels/doughnuts (should be obvious, but just in case ...)
legumes/pulses/grains
potatoes/sweet potatoes/sweetcorn/peas (these are the carbiest veg; on the spreadsheet you'll also find a list of carb counts for veg)
sugar/honey/syrup/chocolate
balsamic vinegar (wine vinegar/ordinary vinegars are fine, at around 0.5g/0.6g carbs per 100ml, but balsamic is very high in carbs at around 22g carbs per 100ml)

BEWARE THE BIG STICK!

I think that's all for now! I look forward to getting going next week

OP posts:
Loungingbutnotforlong · 11/05/2018 22:38

Hello all, looking forward to starting bootcamp on Monday. I did LCHF last year and had great success (24lbs gone). Hit Xmas, went crazy and gained it all back, which was gutting.
New effort, new commitment. Excited!

TerfsUp · 11/05/2018 22:51

RShard, ouch! Sorry to hear about your finger and I hope you get full (or at least fuller) use of it soon.

ilovecherries · 11/05/2018 23:22

Rshard, ouch Sad. I missed what had actually happened to your finger. For some reason known only to myself, I thought you'd broken it doing a Tough Mudder. Sometimes I think I dream things then get convinced they really happened. But that would also have been a bizarre dream Confused.

AmIbeingTreasonable · 11/05/2018 23:26

@BIWI thank you for the info.
@TheOnlyPink can you point me to where you got those recipes from please?

StuntNun · 12/05/2018 05:06

TheOnlyPink meal planning doesn't have to be too difficult and you've already made a great start. Just make what you would usually have and replace the carb with an extra vegetable. A portion of meat or fish with two or three vegetable sides - either roasted or fried or add melted butter if steamed or boiled. Mashed potato can be replaced with mashed swede, celeriac or cauliflower in bangers and mash (choose high meat content sausages) or in cottage or shepherds pie. Replace pasta with courgetti and replace rice with cauliflower rice. Some supermarkets sell ready prepared courgetti and cauliflower rice but they aren't difficult to make yourself. We have bolognese on a bed of fried mushrooms and it's gorgeous. Find a few low carb meals that you think you will really enjoy and make them over and over again at first. Then you can gradually widen your repertoire and experiment with new things. Once we're through the first two weeks of Bootcamp and nuts are allowed then you can try low carb Fat Head Pizza..*

BIWI · 12/05/2018 07:42

@AmIBeingTreasonable

These are all recipes that are stickied on the Bootcamp topic:

Recipes for chicken, duck and other poultry

Fish recipes

Meat recipes

Vegetarian recipes

OP posts:
Rshard · 12/05/2018 07:59

Thanks terfs and cherries no tough mudder cherries, but yes that would be weird dream.

TheOnlyPink · 12/05/2018 10:50

stuntnun thank you so much for another really helpful post! That makes lots of sense, and that advice will definitely make it much easier to manage with feeding a family. I've definitely been over thinking it. Bolognese with fried mushrooms sounds amazing.... I've put it on my planner for next week!

Tesco just delivered and my fridge is bursting. No excuses now! Smile

Yarboosucks · 12/05/2018 11:33

I am three weeks into LC (again - silly me!)

I don't weigh or measure, but I do have some favourite dresses and jeans. If I can get back into them and wear them again, then I will be very happy.

I take psyllium husk to help with, um, transit….

One important lesson that I have learnt is that kale and me are never going to be friends. Like being punched in the stomach from the inside out!

Good luck everyone!

Sosogoodagain · 12/05/2018 12:02

I am starting this WOE in earnest with 7-8 stones to lose. Ive just reached rock bottom in confidence, energy and general sparkle.

Im 42 and terrified that this is it. that my best years are behind me. I have been through some horrendously stressful live events over the past 3 years (marriage breakup, redundancy, subsequent job loss, knee injuries, bereavement.....) Time to change the script and give myself a fair chance to live and love again.

Loving the choice and variety of foods. I don't enjoy fruit normally anyway so no big loss.... I have a very savoury tooth.

Happily i drink tea and coffee black and love my veg.

Your stories and advice are inspiring and motivating in equal measure - thank you so much for sharing :)

Yarboosucks · 12/05/2018 12:21

I am a serious coffee addict and it has to be drunk with milk - full fat. I have been successful with LC in the past and actually find it quite difficult to consume enough carbs, so the compromise on milk in coffee does not seem to matter too much and does not affect my Keto levels.

Sosogood - I am 51 - you are about to have your best 10 years - LC is just the start!

BIWI · 12/05/2018 12:28

@Yarboosucks

actually find it quite difficult to consume enough carbs, so the compromise on milk in coffee does not seem to matter too much

This is not Bootcamp though! You should be getting most of your carbs from vegetables and salad, not milk. Why is it that you can't get 'enough' carbs? And what do you mean by 'enough'?

OP posts:
Yarboosucks · 12/05/2018 13:18

Hi in the past I have done Atkins and got stuck at about 20g carbs - also lifestyle, I am often having to eat on the run so access to veg can be patchy.

Going to be a good girl on this bootcamp though. Except for my splash of milk! Replacing coffee with lots of water!

BIWI · 12/05/2018 13:49

Have you experimented with almond milk (or other plant-based milks)?

OP posts:
neonlicht · 12/05/2018 14:17

Hello all. I’ve only recently got interested in LCHF and these bootcamp threads have been so helpful. Thanks particularly to BIWI! Looking forward to following the new BC threads when it starts.
Anyway, I started following the BC rules early (Weds) b/c I’d like to get a good two weeks in before my wedding later this month. I’ve enjoyed the food and surprising lack of carb-cravings, but I’ve felt pretty terrible for the last couple of days. I’m guessing it’s “carb flu” – muscles feel really heavy, bad headache, feel tired and grumpy and just generally weird. Been trying hard to keep fat, salt and water levels high. Just wondered how common this is for people? Haven't seen many mentions on previous BC threads. I need some carb flu success stories to keep me going!

BIWI · 12/05/2018 14:25

It's very common! If you've had it for a couple of days now, you'll be through it very soon.

You could also try some Zero electrolyte tabs here

OP posts:
neonlicht · 12/05/2018 15:19

Thanks BIWI, I will try those tablets if I can get them in time to be useful. I'm going to push through and hope tomorrow is better!

MelanieCheeks · 12/05/2018 16:58

Made a gingery turmeric carrot and cauli bisque for lunch, with enough to freeze for next week. I had it today with a swirl of chimichurri sauce and some crusty bread, but on LC plan will have it with garlic prawns or crispy Parma ham.

Might make some Parmesan and psyllium crispies.

RunningjustasfastasIcan99 · 12/05/2018 17:25

How do I sign up?

PuddingAndHotMilk · 12/05/2018 18:46

running I tagged you in the sign up thread

BlackMozart · 12/05/2018 19:40

Thanks Beryl I can now use my mini bowl in my processor!

Mimosa1 · 12/05/2018 20:31

Hi all,
I'm all stocked up on lovely food. I think the nicest part of this woe is that it actually forces me to cook from scratch. I'd been living off Deliveroo during a packed few weeks, and been reminded that actually, it really doesn't take more time cook at home than to wait for delivery, and I feel much better for it. Slightly nervous for "full" BC but looking forward to the threads and support and losing 5kg!

AthelstaneTheUnready · 12/05/2018 20:55

I have a positive story!

Last bootcamp I lost 17lbs, despite crashing a few times. I also:

  • lost nearly all my cellulite
  • saw some old scars fade to near invisible
  • started taking a bit more interest/pride in my appearance
  • saw my mood improve drastically
  • regained lovely creamy skin, instead of blotch
  • lost 4" from my chest, 4" from my waist, and 3" from my hips
  • gained control back over my very dubious wine/evening habit
  • lost all the abdominal bloat (nearly flat now)
  • no more excruciating bowel cramps

All the things in the list just happened without any work, as long as I stayed within the rules. I didn't have to exercise madly, or buy creams, or tablets, etc etc. The results also prove that, for me, this WOE isn't just about losing weight, it's about nutrition that really is healthy for my body and lets it look after itself. Giving up the too frequent alcohol (which is where most of my sugar came from, along with crisps) has merely meant getting out of my own (body's) way.

AND I have never let myself go hungry. Some days I haven't wanted anything, others I have eaten the equivalent of 4 dinners - it all evens out over the week, but it has been lovely to break free of the '3 meals a day whether you want them or not' mindset. I actually enjoy my food far more now, than I did when I was still making rubbish choices. It turns out there is a physiological reward sensation for eating well which appears when you are well into the WOE - others have reported it as well - little wriggles of happy satisfaction shortly after eating a lovely fatty meal. technically, something to do with serotonin produced in the gut, but my science fails me at this point

Destinysdaughter · 12/05/2018 23:51

I read that eating fat releases oxytocin which may account for that lovely warm feeling after eating a high fat meal?

Destinysdaughter · 12/05/2018 23:53

Also I've lost 26lbs since Jan doing low carb, haven't been this weight for years! 😀