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Weight loss chat

A space to talk openly about weight loss journeys and challenges. Mumsnet hasn't checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. You may wish to speak to a medical professional before starting any diet.

What protein do you eat, when & how? I need inspiration!

57 replies

dancinginthewind · 01/01/2024 22:02

The food I enjoy eating most are white carbs and dairy products. However, I feel much better when I eat foods high in protein with plenty of veg, some carbs and very little dairy. The veg I'm fine with - I could eat bowls of tenderstem broccoli with chilli for example. Where I get bored is around the protein.
Dinner is easy. Breakfast is often eggs. Lunch is where I struggle. And a mid-afternoon snack to eat at my desk.
I'm sure some will question the need for a mid-afternoon snack but, if I don't have one, by the time I walk into to the house, I am ravenous and just raid the kitchen doing a good impersonation of The Hungry Caterpillar!
Any suggestions? And does anyone supplement their diet with a protein powder? I've been wondering if taking protein powder would mean I don't need to be so fixated on eating protein with all of my meals.
Thank you

OP posts:
whyamiawakestill · 03/01/2024 21:33

wiltingflower · 02/01/2024 08:17

I'm a vegetarian and have been tracking my protein since the summer holidays. Eating in my previous diet, I would rarely get to 45g of protein daily. Now I aim for at least 80g daily and on a 'bad day' get to about 50 or 60g. I monitor using my fitness pal and journalling, reading food labels and doing calculations to double check my fitness pal as it's not always accurate.

I make sure each meal I eat has something high in protein whereas before I wasn't considering my macronutrient (carb protein fat) intake- this could be through cheese (e.g cheddar, halloumi), low fat cottage cheese, milk (I've recently moved from whole to semi skimmed from August to December and now onto skimmed end of December onwards), greek yoghurt, protein yoghurts. I try to have 20g protein in each meal or get close to this. I usually have 1 snack daily with yoghurt, milk, eggs, cottage cheese, protein shake- whatever I'm feeling and fits in my with my calorie allowance for the day- to make up to 80g daily. I tend not to have nuts or else weigh it out each time because it's calorie dense and I can't easily work out what 1 serving looks like with them. Calories wise I am doing low carb, I prioritise protein rich food and I don't monitor my fat intake as it's not a priority. Fats and protein are satiating and make you feel fuller for longer compared to carbs.

My diet has gone through different phases as I've learnt new things and through trial and error with meals and with cravings and portion control. Sometimes depending on the day and activities I eat like below and sometimes I just eat whatever I want and just add 100g low fat cottage cheese or 15-30g cheddar cheese or a cup of 200ml skimmed milk or 2 protein drinks (PhD Smart Protein or Plant Diet in strawberry - less than 100 calories for 18-20g protein) as snacks or sides in a meal.

I really recommend researching, it's changed how I think and see food for the better. Back in August I researched what a healthy diet looks like, looked at the eatwell plate, NHS Choices, BHF, WebMD, Healthline, watched Panorama Ultraprocessed People and listened to Zoe nutrition. I browsed Holland and Barratt to see what they sold as supplements and for muscle building and then researched the science behind those foods to work out what is actually needed / could be useful for me personally. I using made a list of all the foods I usually eat, what foods I enjoy, what foods are high in protein or considered healthy and looked at their protein: calorie ratio, vitamins, minerals, fibre, cost using Asda/Tesco's/Sainsbury's and learnt what foods best serve me and which don't. Since then I mentally make notes of how nutritionally valuable different foods are by checking the ingredients list and food labels and recipes and physically weighing them to see how much a suggested serving on the box vs 25g, 50g, 100g actually looks like. This opened my eyes to how calorie dense, low in protein and nutrients my diet was previously. I eat a much balanced and healthier diet now. It took to around October half term for me to work out the nutritional value of different foods quickly in my mind and honestly this initial research process was so useful because now whenever I eat new foods or see new recipies there's no difficulty in working out if I would enjoy eating something and whether it's actually good for me.

Breakfast
1 or 2 eggs with toast +/- porridge with skimmed milk. Sometimes the porridge has protein powder added in. Protein shake on the side depending on what I've had e.g. if I have Greek yogurt and granola and fruits then I'll always drink a protein shake to get to at least 20g a meal because the Greek yogurt is higher in protein to other foods but not that high compared to eggs/halloumi/mozzarella/cottage cheese/protein shake.
Protein pancakes- I'm still looking for a good recipe for this- typically has oats, eggs, cottage cheese. You can add protein powder or have it on the side as a drink.
At one point I got into making almond croissants at home using old croissants, ground almonds, almond flakes. I'd have this with greek yoghurt and fruit +/- protein shake.

Lunch
Depends on whether I'm at work or at home because I don't always have time to eat at work and often my nicely prepared lunch comes home to be eaten.
I'm really loving baked mushrooms atm - 80-100g Mushrooms with stalks removed, then add 16g Boursin cheese and 30g mozzarella and small amounts of panko breadcrumbs to this, bake in air fryer until mozzarella has melted and is golden.
Salad- feta cheese or fried halloumi, toasted pine nuts, veg or antipasti.
Something else, whatever it is I'm feeling, plus a protein shake.

Dinner
Variable family meal, not always high in protein but usually high in carbs so I add a protein shake on the side or have it as a snack earlier or later in the day.

So helpful

StrangeNew · 11/01/2024 08:36

Keen to hear if you’ve made any changes to your diet since you started the thread, @dancinginthewind!

dancinginthewind · 11/01/2024 12:49

Totally! I'm aiming for 100g a day and nailing it whilst also having 8 - 10 portions of fruit & veg (mainly veg), staying within 1400 calories and largely cutting out UPF.
At this time of year, work hasn't really ramped up for me so I've got time to myself as well as time to exercise (and cook - this can be quite a time consuming way to eat) and I'm not stressed. There's also the discipline and novelty factor of something like day 10 of a diet which I am determined will work like all previous diets. Nonetheless, I'm not thinking about food as much, as not having highs and lows, am not binging, am significantly less bloated (I have lost inches even if the scales aren't moving) and am sleeping really well.
I've discovered prawns, anchovies and cottage cheese are all low in calories, high in protein and can be added to pretty much anything as a side; the lentil soup makes a very satisfying breakfast; that I really don't like puy lentils or black beans however much I try & jazz them up. I'm also very grateful for the existence of chickens - I'm roasting a chicken at the weekend so it's just there as a base for meals during the week and probably having about 10 eggs a week too.
Thanks for asking @StrangeNew as it's made me reflect

OP posts:
StrangeNew · 11/01/2024 14:19

Progress!

Have you read ‘Ultra-Processed People’, btw?

I’m only a little way through it but finding it revelatory in some ways. I never have counted calories - but it’s fascinating to learn about the difference in value-as-food between say a home made and a processed pizza … I highly recommend it to anyone wanting to upgrade their diet.

One other thing - you mentioned how time consuming your cooking now is, and I thanked the universe once again for intermittent fasting. I only do a strict 16:8 if I find I can’t fit into my clothes, but even following the regimen loosely, I find I’ve completely lost the habit of cooking in the evening. (At home.) Eat almost nothing between say 3.30pm and 7.30am. It works beautifully for me in terms of eating exactly what I like and maintaining a reasonable weight. And I can set it aside whenever I’m away from home or dining with other people.

WithARainbow · 05/04/2024 11:32

Placemarking need to get more organised about not just eating carbs

Vegetus · 05/04/2024 11:56

FlabMonsterIsDietingAgain · 03/01/2024 13:22

Nuts are a protein source, ground almonds are often used instead of flour to increase protein and peanut butter is on many high protein diet lists

www.healthline.com/nutrition/high-protein-nuts

If more of the calories come from fat than protein then it's a fat source. Yeah sure you can increase protein by adding peanut butter to things but you'll jack up the calories massively and barely increase the protein.

Bread has protein are we calling that a protein source now? Lean meats, fish, soy products and dairy are best options.

wiltingflower · 05/04/2024 12:25

Breakfast - 150g Sainsbury's fat free Greek style yoghurt with 30-40g PHD Smart protein powder mixed in, with 200g fruit on top/swirled in (50g per type of fruit, usually defrosted frozen strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and cherries).

Lunch - grains, halloumi, vegetables. Babybel light or cottage cheese as a side.

Dinner - similar to lunch sometimes, otherwise vegetables, cottage cheese, soup or something potato based.

Dessert - similar to breakfast with or without cheese as a side.

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