Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think an egg a day is absolutely fine.
I also think that both referring to beans as too much carbs, and labeling a kid who eats ground beef, eggs, beans, and some chicken and fish as “hard to get protein into” makes me think that there is some unhealthy thinking about food here that you should examine.
This is the OP of the thread. That’s a lot of assumptions you’re making there. I am pre-diabetic, so I try to watch my carb intake, but that doesn’t mean I prevent my family from eating carbs. If I didn’t substitute what I want to enjoy eating for what my son will eat, he would live on rice and pasta and not eat protein during the meal, which for him would come with behavioral consequences that impact the entire family. I shouldn’t have to explain all of that in the original post. People are so quick to jump on others on this site.
Anonymous wrote:I think an egg a day is absolutely fine.
I also think that both referring to beans as too much carbs, and labeling a kid who eats ground beef, eggs, beans, and some chicken and fish as “hard to get protein into” makes me think that there is some unhealthy thinking about food here that you should examine.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
Just to clarify, my kid eats 3 eggs for breakfast almost every day. And I'm good with that, but it makes me hesitant to do egg based dinners like shaksuka or quiche too often.
I'm wanting to cut back on meat. Not cutting it out, but he eats 4 meals a day, and I'd love to get it down to say 5 times a week, because meat is expensive, and bad for the environment, and the adults in our family have health issues that would probably benefit from less meat. So, I'm just figuring out what to sub. I read that even for lower mercury fish you should aim for 12 ounces a week due to mercury. That's probably what he eats at one meal.
He eats a lot of soy, and a lot of beans, and a lot of dairy.
As for why I think he needs the protein? Because it's what he craves. If I put out a variety of foods, the foods he's drawn to are the ones with protein and fat. So, I assume he's listening to his body and eating what he needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think an egg a day is absolutely fine.
I also think that both referring to beans as too much carbs, and labeling a kid who eats ground beef, eggs, beans, and some chicken and fish as “hard to get protein into” makes me think that there is some unhealthy thinking about food here that you should examine.
+1