Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- thanks for the suggestions. I hate oatmeal (actually I hate yogurt too) but will try and choke it down. I really love food and have never had to diet before. I am trying to aim for less than 1400 calories but find it hard.
I'd rather carry 10 extra pounds than choke down food I hated. That isn't sustainable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - what lean protein?
This is what I am trying to eat:
Breakfast - coffee and Greek yogurt with 1/3 cup of granola
Lunch - salad with shrimp
Dinner - protein of some sort and veggies
Snack - apple slices with mozzarella stick
Skip the granola - nit a health food. You said you don't really like yogurt, what about switching to cottage cheese? This still gets your dairy in.
Salad - shrimp is low cal, but high in cholesterol. If your salad with shrimp is greenery with shrimp thrown on top, that's pretty good. If it's shrimp salad (full of mayo), thats not so good. You want to make sure you are skipping anything with cheese, or anything that floats (eg, marinated in oil mushrooms, artichoke hearts, etc).
If your veggies are sreamed and your protein is lean (grilled chicken v steak for example), that's great. You could add a complex carbohydrate, like a small (4 oz) sweet potato for example
For your snack, skip the cheese stick and go with another protein. A piece of chicken or a hard boiled egg. Cheese is not a great protein source because it's so high in fat
Op - thanks. I hate cottage cheese. Will never ever eat it. But I can skip granola. And shrimp is not mayo based. Just simply sautéed.
Per the previous poster I am going to try and drop the snacks and try and eat closer to 1000 calories. To be in a calorie deficit.
Anonymous wrote:OP- thanks for the suggestions. I hate oatmeal (actually I hate yogurt too) but will try and choke it down. I really love food and have never had to diet before. I am trying to aim for less than 1400 calories but find it hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - what lean protein?
This is what I am trying to eat:
Breakfast - coffee and Greek yogurt with 1/3 cup of granola
Lunch - salad with shrimp
Dinner - protein of some sort and veggies
Snack - apple slices with mozzarella stick
Skip the granola - nit a health food. You said you don't really like yogurt, what about switching to cottage cheese? This still gets your dairy in.
Salad - shrimp is low cal, but high in cholesterol. If your salad with shrimp is greenery with shrimp thrown on top, that's pretty good. If it's shrimp salad (full of mayo), thats not so good. You want to make sure you are skipping anything with cheese, or anything that floats (eg, marinated in oil mushrooms, artichoke hearts, etc).
If your veggies are sreamed and your protein is lean (grilled chicken v steak for example), that's great. You could add a complex carbohydrate, like a small (4 oz) sweet potato for example
For your snack, skip the cheese stick and go with another protein. A piece of chicken or a hard boiled egg. Cheese is not a great protein source because it's so high in fat
Anonymous wrote:Op - what lean protein?
This is what I am trying to eat:
Breakfast - coffee and Greek yogurt with 1/3 cup of granola
Lunch - salad with shrimp
Dinner - protein of some sort and veggies
Snack - apple slices with mozzarella stick
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - so yesterday I walked 20,000 steps and did Yoga. This is what I ate:
Breakfast - coffee, greek yogurt and 1/3 cup of granola
Snack - half an apple and string cheese
Lunch - Chicken Soba with rice noodles
Snack - Protein shake
Dinner - Greek chicken bowl (chicken with cauliflower and veggies)
I ate a total of 1580 calories for the day. Does this look about right?
Remove the protein shake. You don't need it because you had yogurt and chicken. I don't know you BMR but this is way more than my body needs I terms of calories. I eat 1200 to maintain.
Op - I did a BMR calculator it says 1386 calories. But when you add in moderate exercise is says 2150 calories.
The calculations are off. No way moderate exercise burns 700 calories. I'm a marathon runner and an average 7 mile run at a reasonable pace burns 500 calories for me - I wear a monitor and collect the data 24/7 so it's based on o2, skin temp, hr, etc. Moderate exercise will increase your calorie need by 200-300 max for a long workout - like 1-1.5hrs. Plus for weight loss you need to operate at a 200-500 calorie deficit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - so yesterday I walked 20,000 steps and did Yoga. This is what I ate:
Breakfast - coffee, greek yogurt and 1/3 cup of granola
Snack - half an apple and string cheese
Lunch - Chicken Soba with rice noodles
Snack - Protein shake
Dinner - Greek chicken bowl (chicken with cauliflower and veggies)
I ate a total of 1580 calories for the day. Does this look about right?
Remove the protein shake. You don't need it because you had yogurt and chicken. I don't know you BMR but this is way more than my body needs I terms of calories. I eat 1200 to maintain.
Op - I did a BMR calculator it says 1386 calories. But when you add in moderate exercise is says 2150 calories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - so yesterday I walked 20,000 steps and did Yoga. This is what I ate:
Breakfast - coffee, greek yogurt and 1/3 cup of granola
Snack - half an apple and string cheese
Lunch - Chicken Soba with rice noodles
Snack - Protein shake
Dinner - Greek chicken bowl (chicken with cauliflower and veggies)
I ate a total of 1580 calories for the day. Does this look about right?
Remove the protein shake. You don't need it because you had yogurt and chicken. I don't know you BMR but this is way more than my body needs I terms of calories. I eat 1200 to maintain.