Progress report!
Yesterday for the first time I ate enough protein to satisfy MyFitnessPal.com. But I'm starting to doubt the amounts it's giving me. According to their calculations, I should be eating 75g of protein a day. Yesterday I only met that by eating two cans of tuna, a can of kidney beans, an egg and some peanut butter with breakfast, peas and pasta (which apparently contains a surprising amount of protein), and a whole grain wrap, as well as a gram or two here and there from other sources. That's quite a lot for one day, and it's way more than I'll normally manage. A whole can of kidney beans only has 18g of protein in it. Even a can of tuna only has 16g. I suppose if I ate nothing but meat, I could manage 75g every day, but that doesn't seem right to me. I feel like a can of beans and two cans of tuna should be more than enough, but it wasn't - I had to supplement it with lots of other things. I mean, I love beans. I eat them all the time. I could easily eat a can a day. But if that's not enough, what else should I do?
If I really should be getting 75g a day, then I definitely need to supplement it. My boyfriend was trying to help me find some protein powder which is almost entirely protein (not filled with other stuff designed to make you gain muscle mass quickly - not at all what I'm trying to do). But he said he really doesn't know enough about it to know which type is right. And there are SO MANY different types! The web site I have available to order from is only available in Czech, but Google translate does a pretty good job of auto-translating it to English, I think. Anyone happen to know
which of these would be the best type for simply supplementing protein?
I also started taking a B12 supplement once a day. The pills are 250 mcg and they were surprisingly expensive. I got 100 tablets - I'll see if I feel any different after a couple of weeks or so.
Over the weekend, for breakfast, each day I had an egg along with two small pieces of toasted Czech bread, one with a little bit of butter and the other with a big scoop of peanut butter. I was impressed by how filling it was and how long it took before I was hungry again. So I did a quick Google search about cholesterol, and apparently if I'm only eating one egg a day, my cholesterol should be just fine. Thanks a lot, friends who freaked out when they heard I ate an egg every day! Apparently it's okay. And it won't be every day anyway, since 3 days a week I have to get up very early for work and I won't have time to eat at all. So I'll switch back to that for breakfast at least half the week, and hopefully it will help. Both Saturday and Sunday I managed to be under all my limits for each day (again according to MyFitnessPal) and I wasn't hungry all day.
I don't have to work today, so this morning before breakfast I went out for a nice 35-minute walk. I will definitely be able to do that at least a few days a week. It felt pretty good. It was nice out, not hot yet, and when I got home I was pretty awake.
I am once again considering buying a food processor and doing smoothies. The real question is, will I actually use it on a regular basis. I do have a little stick blender thing, but it's Tesco brand and it works like crap. If I'm going to make smoothies regularly, I'll need something better, a proper blender. Maybe I'll just shop around a bit and see how much one would cost.
I'm really lamenting my lactose intolerance. There's a food here called tvaroh (quark in German, tvarog in Russian, no English word for it and sadly not readily available in the US) which is a type of cheese, usually sweet, and delicious, and there's one type which is 26.3% protein. If only I could find a lactose-free version, I'd be all over that shit. It's quite firm but apparently blends very well into smoothies and matches both sweet and savory flavors well. A block of that with a banana, some chia seeds, maybe a little (lactose-free) milk would be very filling and take a lot less time and effort than cooking eggs. I could have it ready in the fridge, grab it and go to work.
Although actually, there is at least one brand of lactose-free tvaroh available. It's only 12.5% protein, but still, that's a decent amount - 25g per 200g container. I would probably use half a container at a time. That's really not bad at all. I just need to figure out where I can buy that brand. It's not easy to find. :/