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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.

Low Carb Lockdown Bootcamp - Jan 21 - Week 1 chat thread

999 replies

BIWI · 17/01/2021 21:49

Welcome everyone! Hopefully you've found the easing-in week helpful, and it's given you time to get all the Christmas carby stuff out of the way, and to plan for this WOE (way of eating).

Here's a link to the Spreadsheet of Fabulousness which is managed and cherished by The Very Lovely @AthelstaneTheUnready. If your name isn't on there, and you want it to be, just add your name to the bottom of the list. Don't try and insert it in the right alphabetical place, and DON'T TOUCH THE BLUE CELLS!

(If you're using your phone you'll probably have to download the Google Sheets app to be able to access the spreadsheet.)

Before we get going, I need to post my disclaimer:

I am not a medic and I have absolutely no scientific training (beyond O-levels in Biology, Chemistry and Physics!). I'm not a dietician or a nutritionist. The advice given here is based on my own experiences as well as lots and lots of reading, but you follow it at your own 'risk'. I hope it's not a risk, but you know what I mean! If you are taking any medication currently, especially if you're hypertensive or a diabetic, please discuss this with your GP or practice nurse; low carbing should help to lower your blood pressure and can help lower your blood sugar levels, which would mean that the dosage you're taking may need to be reduced.

So let's get going ...

Some/many of you may have done Bootcamp before, but it's still worth reminding yourself about low carbing and the rules.

Firstly - how do you do low carb?

There are lots of different ways and plans! Each will have different levels of carbohydrate per day that is recommended. Keto and the first stage of Atkins (induction) are the strictest, with a maximum of 20g carbs per day.

On Bootcamp we don't count carbs (or calories). There are ten rules which you need to follow, which should ensure that you see good weight loss, without needing to weigh or count your food.

Specifically on Bootcamp this is what we do:

First, you don't eat any:

  • bread
  • pasta (brown or white)
  • rice (ditto, brown or white)
  • potatoes, sweet potatoes, sweetcorn
  • flour/anything made with flour - so no cake, biscuits, pastry, pastries, thickened sauces, crumble toppings, batter)
  • sugar (which includes honey, agave syrup, molasses)
  • fruit juice
  • full sugar fizzy drinks/squash/cordial
  • sweets and chocolate (with the exception of the very occasional piece of dark chocolate, which should be at least 70% cocoa, and then only after the first two weeks of Bootcamp)
  • pulses/legumes (including peas)
  • artificial sweeteners
  • balsamic vinegar (all other vinegars are fine - this one is sweetened, which rules it out)

For the first two weeks of Bootcamp, you also don't eat any fruit, nuts or seeds, and don't drink any alcohol. After the first two weeks, you can introduce some fruit - mainly berries - and some nuts/seeds, but in strict moderation. And you may have the occasional drink of alcohol.

What can I eat, you may ask?!

  • any meat or fish (taking care to avoid processed products as much as possible, e.g. ham, bacon, crab sticks, etc)
  • most shellfish
  • eggs, as many as you want
  • plenty of good fats (this is a high fat diet), so butter, olive oil, avocado oil, coconut oil, lard
  • cheese, full fat yoghurt and cream
  • plenty of veg and salads - this is where your carbs should mainly come from

The ten Bootcamp rules are:

1. Eat three proper meals a day
If you're new to low carbing, you must eat breakfast. It doesn’t have to be a lot, and it doesn’t have to be absolutely first thing, but you must have something. For the rest of the day, if you’re eating enough food at mealtimes then you shouldn’t be hungry between meals. But if you are hungry, eat something. (Hard boiled eggs make a great snack).
After the first two weeks of Bootcamp we will relax this, but these two weeks are critical in terms of helping you switch easily to a low carb way of eating - and if you start to feel hungry, it makes things much harder! Eating this way will ensure that your blood sugar levels are kept stable, which will mean that you are much less likely to experience hunger.
A typical high carbohydrate diet can mean that snacking is a routine part of your day. Once your blood sugar levels are stable, by eating low carb, you should find that you no longer want to snack. But the rule of thumb here is ‘if you are hungry, eat!’. (Just make sure you are only choosing low carb snacks, of course!)

If you're an old hand at low carbing, you may decide to skip breakfast (or another meal if that works best for you). This leads us to intermittent fasting, which can be hugely significant in terms of weight loss as well as delivering lots of other health benefits.

2. Avoid processed foods
Focus on pure, natural protein as the basis for your meals - meat/fish/eggs. Things like sausages, ham, bacon, pre-prepared burgers etc should be avoided as much as possible. You can have them, but just not every day. Avoid foods marketed as low carb, eg. Atkins bars.

3. Eat lots of fat
Eating fat will not make you fat. Honestly! But it will keep your appetite satisfied, and it sustains your body’s energy requirements perfectly. Fat does not provoke an insulin spike, unlike carbs which do (a lot) and protein (a little). Fry in butter, add butter to vegetables, eat salad with a home-made vinaigrette dressing (not made with balsamic vinegar though, as this is too sweet), add mayonnaise where you can (just check the carb count on your mayo first). Eat fattier cuts of meat – e.g. pork belly, roast chicken with the skin on and/or eat the fat off your lamb chops. Absolutely no low fat/light foods of any kind!

4. Make sure you are eating vegetables and salads with your food
This is where your carbs should come from, and this is non-negotiable. But choose only those vegetables that are on the allowed list. Make sure that you focus on eating those vegetables that are 3-4g carb per 100g or less, and this will ensure that your carb counts are kept low. You don’t have to weigh/count carbs – this is one of the great joys of this WOE (way of eating), but if you’re new to low carbing it can be helpful to weigh your portions of veg in the early days, just so that you know how many carbs are in the sort of portions that you like to eat.

5. Be careful about dairy (apart from butter, which is unlimited)
Dairy can impede weight loss for some people. If you are drinking tea/coffee with milk or cream, restrict yourself to max 2 cups per day. There are a lot of carbs in milk, so if you are having several cups of tea/coffee per day, you will quickly rack up your daily carb count (e.g. 1 medium latte contains more than 12g carbs!) You may eat cheese but again, don't overdo it. Full fat yoghurt is the best way to include dairy in your diet - but beware, it does contain carbs.

6. You must drink a minimum of 2 litres of water per day
The more weight you have to lose, the more water you should drink. This is from www.low-carbdiet.co.uk/. Water is essential to weight loss for those who eat low-carb. The minimum consumed in a day should be:
Your Weight----Litres
140lbs-----2.5
160lbs-----3.0
180lbs-----3.0
200lbs-----3.5
220lbs-----3.5
240lbs-----4.0
260lbs-----4.5
280lbs-----4.5
300lbs-----5.0
320lbs-----5.5
340lbs-----5.5
360lbs-----6.0
380lbs-----6.5
400lbs-----6.5

High levels of ketones in the blood stream can lead to a reduction in ketone production, therefore being well hydrated could aid in keeping the levels low and ketone production ongoing. Consuming enough water can have many other positive side effects: aids your kidneys with the processing of protein, reduces the retention of water, helps with preventing constipation, and reduces the levels of ketones released by your breath, which in-turn will reduce breath odour. However, drinking a lot of water can mean that you also need to keep an eye on your electrolyte balance. You need to make sure that you are consuming sufficient sodium and potassium. On a low carb diet we can eat more salt, so make sure that you are cooking with salt and adding salt to food, if you like it. Good, low carb, sources of potassium are spinach (raw), avocado, mushrooms, courgettes and asparagus, as well as salmon and yoghurt.

7. No alcohol
Alcohol is the easiest source of fuel for the body to burn, so it will always use this first before it starts to burn any fat - which is why you need to restrict it, especially in the first two weeks of Bootcamp, when we are encouraging the body to stop using carbs for its source of fuel and turn to fat-burning instead. If you really can't do this - at least try and restrict it to the weekend. Vodka with soda is the best thing to drink. Or Champagne, red wine or dry white wine.

8. No fruit
Really. Seriously. Honestly. None at all. Zilch. Nada. After the first two weeks of Bootcamp you will be able to introduce certain fruits, but at this stage fruit is simply too carby. We are also trying to break the addiction to sweet things, so cutting fruit out is part of this process. If you are getting all your carbs from vegetables and salad, you will be getting all the nutrients and fibre that you need.

9. No nuts/seeds
They make a great snack, but it’s also very easy to eat large quantities of them very quickly, so you can consume way too many carbs this way

10. No sugar or artificial sweeteners
Sugar is an obvious ‘no no’, but artificial sweeteners are also an issue. One of the aims of this way of eating is to eat pure and natural foods, so including sweeteners is not recommended. Some people find that artificial sweeteners can impede their weight loss, and there is some suggestion that your body can respond to sweeteners as if they were sugar, by releasing more insulin - and therefore laying down fat. Given that the aim of Bootcamp is to help us lose our sweet tooth and addiction to sweet things, then it is a good idea to avoid sweeteners altogether in this first two weeks.

So having dealt with the rules, what else do we need to think about?

The key to success is planning and preparation.

First thing is to get rid of anything in your cupboards/fridge/freezer that might tempt you. (As far as you can, give it to other members of your household!)

Next, plan what you're going to eat, and make sure you have all the ingredients that you need. If you need any inspiration, go and browse the recipes which are stickied at the top of the Low Carb Bootcamp topic.

If you don't know anything/much about low carbing make sure you read up about it. It's really important that you understand the science behind it and how it works. Have a look at the spreadsheet, and you'll see on there (on one of the tabs) a whole load of resources - videos, articles, websites etc - which are invaluable.

One of the truly amazing things about a low carb diet is that it will bring many health benefits beyond just weight loss - and you can read about those there.

OP posts:
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Mixitupalot · 17/01/2021 23:55

@BIWI thanks for clarifying. I will drink tea and coffee black and lots of water.

SummerBody1 · 17/01/2021 23:59

I weighed this morning as I decided that Sunday was the best day for me - I started with a run, then yoga and stretching. There was a bathoom trip Blush in there and I weighed in the nip. Monday is more of a rush out the door .

The bad part was I put on a lb!! Totally deserved. I was traumatised by home schooling [head exploding emoji] - long story. Anyway, between that and level 5 lockdown and SAD (Seasonal Affective Disorder - which I have diagnosed myself), I had an eating carcrash.
I'm off to bed now but I'm back in the zone for tomorrow.

Midlifemission · 18/01/2021 00:26

Thanks BIWI I am very happy we are starting officially tomorrow- good luck everyone .
I have been struggling to keep on top
Of the thread due to new job and homeschooling. This Bootcamp journey is however the most positive thing in my life this lockdown so I will not lose focus.

Got egg muffins at the ready for weekday breakfasts so am feeling organised. ( slightly over cooked them but we will ignore that !)

Low Carb Lockdown Bootcamp - Jan 21 - Week 1 chat thread
AndeaMartel · 18/01/2021 00:56

I think I have correctly added myself to the spreadsheet.
I have done enough reading to get started although I need to keep going to understand the science better.
Very impressed and grateful for the huge resource re recipes etc on the spreadsheet.
The muffins look good Midlifemission.

Onelittlepiglet · 18/01/2021 05:54

Hello everyone, I’m guilty of being a lurker I’m afraid, but I will try and post a bit more. Thanks for setting up the great BIWI!

I’ve lost the pesky lb that kept going back on and am starting the week having lost 7lb since 1 January so very happy with that! I’ve cut down on dairy so this should help.
Yesterday is had:
B- buttery scrambled eggs and smoked salmon
L - homemade creamy leek and courgette soup
D - slow roast pork belly with some Chinese five spice tubes on it, with a pile of broccoli and courgetti fried in butter with a tiny bit of soy sauce added to make it feel like noodles.
4 + litres of water.

Today will be
B - Greek yoghurt and a tiny spoon of double cream
L - the leek and courgette soup again
D - home made lamb meatballs with a spiced tomato sauce and cauliflower rice. (Adapted from a recipe taking out the pine nuts and the sugar in the sauce).
4+ litres of water.

Good luck everyone!

Onelittlepiglet · 18/01/2021 05:55

@Midlifemission those muffins look great - I will give them a go too!

StuntNun · 18/01/2021 07:00

Bestbees tikka is often a good choice for curry as it doesn't have a sauce and usually comes with a side salad. I buy pre-prepared frozen cauliflower rice from Tesco which only needs a couple of minutes in the microwave if you feel like you really must have rice.

Cheeseisthebest are you a vegetarian? Vegetarians tend to keep having pulses in small quantities on Bootcamp to keep their protein intake up.

Mixitup diet drinks aren't great on Bootcamp because they prevent you losing your taste for sweetness. You won't believe how sweet foods taste once you're off sugar. I once accused my DH of putting sugar in a salad dressing... turned out he had used balsamic vinegar, a no on Bootcamp because it's 17% carbs but certainly not something I had ever thought tasted sugary before.

Pastrami haggis is definitely too carby for Bootcamp. It's full of oatmeal.

Andea if you have any questions about the science then just ask.

Lyrata · 18/01/2021 07:02

Weighed this morning and have STS which is probably to be expected seeing as I massively cheated on Thursday. Still, STS is good as I am in the middle of a healthy BMI right now so the longer I stay here, the more my body will adjust to the new weight.

That being said, very much looking forward to seeing the back of 9 stone 9 this Bootcamp as it’s been haunting me since Christmas.

Breakfast will be coffee and cream
Lunch - spicy slow cooked sausage soup
Dinner - some sort of take-away as I have my friends staying again due to the flood. They’ve suggested Wahaca but there is nothing LC on that menu at all. I’m thinking of asking we do Nandos instead.

Bestbees · 18/01/2021 07:18

Morning everyone.
@lyrata frustrating to stay the same but good point about the body getting used to it. I have been hovering in the same pound this whole week so hoping for a shift downwards ASAP!

@StuntNun thanks for the tip on takeaway. Would something like chicken tikka plus a side (aubergine curry or paneer maybe be OK?)

So far cutting out carbs has made me more energetic and calmer which is great for the current situation. Anyone else find this?

StuntNun · 18/01/2021 07:29

Bestbees you could have a vegetable side dish with tikka however the sauce will definitely be thickened so it won't be Bootcamp friendly.

Iamnotacerealkiller · 18/01/2021 07:31

For Indian food I usually order a tandoori starter, chicken or mixed kebab. Then a vegetable side so mushroom or couliflour bhaji or sag paneer. Thick sauces best avoided as many contain sugar.

Not weighed yet as waiting for oh to get up for the day so I can hand over the babies.

GreeboIsMySpiritAnimal · 18/01/2021 07:40

Morning all, just checking in.

The good news is I've already lost 4 of the 6lb I put on over Christmas, so only a couple more to go, though I'd ideally I'd like drop a couple more after that for "safety."

It just goes to show, you really can't cheat on this WOE. I have stuck to it since Spring 2019. I did not go mad for carbs over Christmas at all - I had some booze, a couple of roasties with Christmas dinner, the occasional small slice of stollen. I didn't eat much chocolate at all - I even gave most of the chocolate my DM bought me (despite me asking her not to!) back to her, only keeping the one bar which was very dark chocolate (and there's still some of that left). I continued to drink All The Water. And yet, I put on almost half a stone.

Ah well. Have been Bootcamp Light since NY and things are moving in the right direction. Hopefully a couple of weeks of Strict Bootcamp will give it an extra kick.

Dailyhandtowelwash · 18/01/2021 07:50

I’ve entered my weight and my final fling weekend has resulted in a 4lb weight gain since last week! So I’m off to a non-stellar start.

AthelstaneTheUnready · 18/01/2021 07:52

Morning, everyone!

Up a lb for me since beginning of year, but then I've given up smoking (again) and that always plays merry hell with weight gain for me for a month or so. Fully prepared to see no or low progress on bootcamp for a while till I adjust, and then... whoosh!

In the meantime, will be strictly stricting on the WOE, to ensure when things do settle I'm in the best possible place.

Ratherchillyinhere · 18/01/2021 07:55

Ok. Well i had a great start last week and 6lbs down!

B - streaky bacon and buttery scrambled eggs

L - mackerel and salad

D - Thai larb in lettuce leaf wraps after seeing the recipe recommended on another thread.

VeryLittleOwl · 18/01/2021 07:55

Morning everyone. Starting 3lbs up on the end of the last Boot Camp and about to go into the fortnight of my cycle where it's much harder for me to lose weight, so I'm expecting a slow start, but I only have 6.5lbs to lose to get to the lowest number I've seen on the scales in 2 years, which is a big incentive, and if I can lose 12lbs over the next 10 weeks, I'll be 9st-something for the first time in about 8 years.

For anyone starting Boot Camp for the first time today, please, please, please go and take a photograph of yourself and/or take measurements. Being able to see how far you've come will really help you stick with it when the scales don't seem to be moving - and often even when the scales aren't moving your measurements still are.

PseudoBadger · 18/01/2021 08:00

Morning! Feeling eager to go!

ZiggZagg · 18/01/2021 08:02

Morning, I am 1lb lower than I finished last bootcamp! Let's go!

LostaraYil · 18/01/2021 08:10

Morning! Well done, ZiggZagg, I'm also just lighter now than when I last finished bootcamp last summer. I've lost all the Christmas weight, hooray!

Bestbees · 18/01/2021 08:12

@ZiggZagg that's inspiring!

@Ratherchillyinherecould you point me in the direction of the larb recipe please?

CowGurl · 18/01/2021 08:13

Morning!

I started bootcamp proper last week and am down 6 lbs, which is 2 lbs over the 4lbs I put on over Christmas, so v happy!

This is the second time I'll have done boot camp. It took me a 3/4 weeks to get my head around the water and electrolytes in the first bc, and I suffered a bit with carb flu as a result (a few headaches and was really tired) HOWEVER this time I was on the water and electrolytes from the start and haven't had any carb flu, apart from a nausea on day 5 which is just as likely to have been hormones as am approaching peri-menopause.

So if this is your first time, focus as much on the water and the electrolytes as you do the food. BIWI keeps mentioning it for a reason! You'll feel so much better for it.

Also take photos and/or measurements as VeryLittleOwl says above. If you're taking measurements then include one around your belly button - it's probably the one place you want to avoid when you start, it was for me anyway! - but that is where I've lost the most inches. 1.5-2 from everywhere else on my torso but a very satisfying 3.5 from around my belly, and that's where the unhealthiest fat sits. I've lost 15.5 lb so far and I had to finish the last boot camp 3 weeks early as I had an operation, so could have been more.

AND finally I just was to SHOUT from the roof tops - as of today I am NO LONGER OBESE!!!! Whoop! Thanks so much to BIWI, Athelstane, Stuntnun and everyone else on the threads.

Ratherchillyinhere · 18/01/2021 08:21

@Bestbees

www.eatingthaifood.com/thai-larb-recipe/

This is the one linked to on the other thread.

Obvs, we're not having the rice!

I've not made it before so no idea what it's like!

poorbuthappy · 18/01/2021 08:28

Morning all.

Let's have a great week - and could someone please point me at the easiest egg muffins recipe? Grin Is it on the recipe thread?

Ta muchly!

1WayOrAnother2 · 18/01/2021 08:29

The Thai pork sounds great!
I look forward to being able to try it.

AthelstaneTheUnready · 18/01/2021 08:39

Congratulations, @CowGurl, that's fabulous news. Flowers