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Research Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsResearch Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic

LV work in progress log

12pm
250g fat free sour cream/yogurt

2.45pm
1 can tuna
70g broccoli
70g rye pasta

5.15pm
protein shake

7.15pm
150g lean ground beef + sauce
50g rye pasta
105g broccoli

10.30pm
30g almonds
4 egg whites
50g lean ground beef

total
prot: 148.3g 45%
carbs: 77.9g 24%
fat: 46.7g 32%
1345.7 calories
 
Last edited:
Lady Viking said:
I hope so too, but this freakin´ cold/flu/whatever is getting worse.
Things are little bit better, we came home yesterday.
Five days junk eating has made pretty bloated + i look like zombie, lol. Have to get back on track.
I finally found peanut butter with no added sugar. Ingredients: organic roasted peanuts (96%), palm oil and sea salt. Is it ok?

9.30am
2 slices rye bread
2 slices low fat turkey ham
cucumber

I am glad things are a little better, I wish they were a lot better for you but I know time :rolleyes: I actually find when I eat like crap and then get back on the wagon the weight just slides off and a bit more cause you threw your system for a loop, but then that is just me. But I hate being bloated, arrrr, I feel for ya!

I have never tried but I found this, AHHHH
The lovely and dangerous Sondra K has asked me to explain the dangers of organic peanut butter. When Sondra asks, I am obliged to obey.

There is a common family of molds known as aspergillus. These molds are everywhere. You'll find them in your carpet, for example, as well as in a lot of foods. Now, in a nice clean environment, you won't have lots of this stuff around, but believe me, it's there. A particular variety of aspergillus is known as Aspergillus Vlavus, which is coincidentally also the name of the 14th Emperor of the Roman Empire.

Okay, just kidding about the Emperor bit. However, aspergillus flavus is a mold found in small amounts in wheat, most legumes, and most tree-based nuts. However, it is found in particularly large quantities in two sources: corn and (you guessed it) peanuts. Furthermore, aspergillus flavus is one of the types of mold which produces a carcinogen known as aflatoxin. Aflatoxin is considered a cancer-causing substance in humans and animals by both the FDA and world health authorities.

What's particularly insidious about aspergillus flavus is that it is found in especially heavy quantities in peanuts and corn and, except in very extreme cases, isn't even visible to the naked eye. Furthermore, no practical way exists to get it out of the foods it's found in. While you can sometimes kill the aspergillus by cooking it, the aflatoxin it created will be left behind.

The most common way most people get aflatoxin in their diets is through peanut butter. Peanuts have an especially high naturally-occurring concentration of aspergillus flavus mold. Furthermore, while most peanuts are roasted, the roasting process rarely kills all the mold. The longer peanuts sit around in the store or in your house, the more of the mold will grow back--and again, it generally won't be visible to the naked eye. The longer the mold grows, the more aflatoxin builds up.

Here's the most interesting thing about all this: usually your "organic" or "natural" peanut butters will have the highest aflatoxin concentration. The highest concentration of all, though, will typically be the stuff you buy in the store where they take peanuts and grind them into peanut butter for you while you wait. Because while the USDA and FDA has rules for how much aflatoxin is allowed in food before it's shipped to stores, there's no measure of it after it reaches the stores. Those peanuts could have been sitting on the shelves at the story for weeks or months at room temperature, building up mold. It's even worse if the air is mildly moist. Furthermore, if you fresh-grind those nuts into peanut butter, the mold keeps growing in the peanut butter.

Once again, it rarely grows to the point where you can see it with the naked eye.

This means that your safest source of peanut butter is generally your cheap, garden variety Jif or Skippy. The companies that make those generally get the peanuts fresh, roast and grind them immediately, put them through an effective cooking and homogenization process, then seal them in airtight jars. The mold buildup on those will be much lower than your typical "fresh" or "natural" peanut butters.

By the way, the aflatoxin threat is taken seriously enough that OSHA actually requires workers dealing with large quantities of peanuts to wear facial masks so they don't breath in too much of the mold.

Also by the way, as a general rule, no matter what kind of peanut butter you buy, it's safest if, after you open the airtight seal, you refrigerate it. This slows down the mold buildup and reduces the amount of aflatoxin produced over time. Of course, it's not as easy to spread onto your bread that way. But it does reduce the cancer risk.

Statistically, just as a rule of thumb, two tablespoons of peanut butter a day produce a higher risk of death than living next to a nuclear power plant. A lot higher, if you eat peanut butter made from peanuts that sit around on the shelves for weeks at a time, or from opened jars of peanut butter that sit around unrefrigerated for weeks at a time.

This is just one of many areas where the words "natural" and "organic" do not necessarily translate to "fewer toxins" or "more healthy." Of course, put it in perspective: there are other things we do every day that are a lot more dangerous than eating a peanut butter sandwich. But to understand that, you have to get serious-minded, and start taking statistical analysis of risk factors seriously. Alas, most people refuse to do that sort of thing.
 
ck2006 said:
There is a common family of molds known as aspergillus...
:worried:
Wow, i think i eat the jar i bought and then stop buying it!

Sat 10th

9.15am
30g rye&oatmeal
100g cottage cheese
 
Last edited:
Lady Viking said:
:worried:
Wow, i think i eat the jar i bought and then stop buying it!

Sat 10th
30g rye&oatmeal
100g cottage cheese

I just looked it up on the net quickly and that is what I found, maybe others here know something different. But it did change my mind pretty quick when I saw that!

Have a great weekend!
 
Lady Viking said:
Sat 10th

9.15am
30g rye&oatmeal
100g cottage cheese

11.15am
1 slice rye bread
2 slices cheese
250g fat free sour cream/yogurt

1.30pm
80g rye pasta
140g lean ground beef + low fat sauce

3.45pm
20g cashews
protein shake

7pm
120g lean ground beef + low fat sauce
60g rye pasta
80g veggie mix

8.45pm
20g almonds
1 can tuna
4 egg whites

total
prot: 141.8g 38%
carbs: 90.8g 24%
fat: 64.2g 38%
1504.4 calories
 
I feel little bit better now:), no fever but still coughing badly and you should hear my voice, lol. So no gym for a few days, blaah.

Sun 11st

10.00
30g rye&oatmeal
100g cottage cheese

12.15
1 slice rye bread
1 slice low fat turkey ham
cucumber
250g fat free sour cream/yogurt

14.30
1 can tuna
80g rye pasta
70g veggie mix

17.15
protein shake

19.00
50g rye pasta
80g veggie mix
200g lean pork

22.45
1 whole egg
3 egg whites
15g blue cheese

total
prot: 200.3g 48%
carbs: 90.5g 22%
fat: 54.7g 30%
1680.2 calories
 
Last edited:
Lady Viking said:
I feel little bit better now:), no fever but still coughing badly and you should hear my voice, lol. So no gym for a few days, blaah.

Sun 11st

10.00
30g rye&oatmeal
100g cottage cheese

12.15
1 slice rye bread
1 slice low fat turkey ham
cucumber
250g fat free sour cream/yogurt

14.30
1 can tuna
80g rye pasta
70g veggie mix

17.15
protein shake

19.00
50g rye pasta
80g veggie mix
200g lean pork

22.45
1 whole egg
3 egg whites
15g blue cheese

total
prot: 200.3g 48%
carbs: 90.5g 22%
fat: 54.7g 30%
1680.2 calories

Get better soon! :heart:
 
Mon 12nd

10.30
30g rye & oatmeal
100g cottage cheese

13.00
1 slice rye bread
1 slice low fat turkey ham
1 whole egg
cucumber
250g fat free sour cream/yogurt

15.30
100g lean pork
80g rye pasta
50g green beans

18.30
protein shake

20.30
150g lean pork
50g rye pasta
50g green beans
 
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