Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A scoop of orgain collagen in your coffee adds an easy 9 g. I do 2 cups of coffee so 18g protein. Helps me get my day started because I don’t like meat or yogurt in the AM. then I have meat and vegetables at lunch and dinner plus nuts and/or cheese for a snack.
Collagen is not a complete protein. Also, my dermatologist scoffs at collagen as a supplement. He claims its biologically impossible due to molecule size. Just something to think about.
Anonymous wrote:A scoop of orgain collagen in your coffee adds an easy 9 g. I do 2 cups of coffee so 18g protein. Helps me get my day started because I don’t like meat or yogurt in the AM. then I have meat and vegetables at lunch and dinner plus nuts and/or cheese for a snack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.
Your google broke?
If you don't have any dietary restrictions, eating 100 grams of protein per day should be pretty easy. Here's one way to do it:
Greek yogurt (15 grams of protein)
Beef sausage (14 grams)
1 ounce of mixed nuts (5 grams)
Two eggs (12 grams)
Snack cheese (5 grams)
Four slices (2 ounces) of deli ham (10 grams)
Two slices of rye bread (10 grams)
½ cup of rolled oats (5 grams)
One can of tuna (27 grams)
Everything pictured above comes to 103 grams, which puts you slightly over the 100-gram goal.
Not the poster you are responding to but thank for the information. Are you always so snarky, though? It kind of undercuts your helpfulness.
I can't abide such laziness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.
Not PP but I hit 120 grams by eating a mix of non fat cottage cheese, chicken breast, white fish, Barebell protein bars, Dannon pro yogurt, egg whites, farro, oats, and dark green veggies. I find nuts have too much fat for the amount of protein.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.
Your google broke?
If you don't have any dietary restrictions, eating 100 grams of protein per day should be pretty easy. Here's one way to do it:
Greek yogurt (15 grams of protein)
Beef sausage (14 grams)
1 ounce of mixed nuts (5 grams)
Two eggs (12 grams)
Snack cheese (5 grams)
Four slices (2 ounces) of deli ham (10 grams)
Two slices of rye bread (10 grams)
½ cup of rolled oats (5 grams)
One can of tuna (27 grams)
Everything pictured above comes to 103 grams, which puts you slightly over the 100-gram goal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just increased protein intake. Every meal has become a challenge to get enough protein. Creatine is too gritty. I don’t like it.
Get better creatine. I take it to help maintain muscle tone and don't even notice it
Anonymous wrote:Ya'll need to check your kidney performance scores. EGFR and creatinine.
The giant amounts of protein are not good for your kidneys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.
Your google broke?
If you don't have any dietary restrictions, eating 100 grams of protein per day should be pretty easy. Here's one way to do it:
Greek yogurt (15 grams of protein)
Beef sausage (14 grams)
1 ounce of mixed nuts (5 grams)
Two eggs (12 grams)
Snack cheese (5 grams)
Four slices (2 ounces) of deli ham (10 grams)
Two slices of rye bread (10 grams)
½ cup of rolled oats (5 grams)
One can of tuna (27 grams)
Everything pictured above comes to 103 grams, which puts you slightly over the 100-gram goal.
Not the poster you are responding to but thank for the information. Are you always so snarky, though? It kind of undercuts your helpfulness.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you need to force down that much protein …
Anonymous wrote:Just increased protein intake. Every meal has become a challenge to get enough protein. Creatine is too gritty. I don’t like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:56 and building muscle now. I try to eat 100g of protein a day, no other supplements other than collagen. I stopped lifting before and after surgery in January, and just restarted in June and have been pleasantly surprised how fast I regained my strength and am starting to increase weights. I know at some age this won't be possible but am happy it isn't yet.
Grateful if you can share examples of what you eat to hit 100g of protein each day. TIA.