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What do you eat in a typical day?

(41 Posts)
MayBee70 Mon 22-Jan-24 19:32:44

Today I had tea bread at midday ( made with lots of fruit, walnuts, beetroot powder, and wholemeal flour). Chicken and salad sandwich for tea; half a Kit Kat and a packet of crisps. I’m treating myself to a packet of crisps each day to try to stop myself binging on them sometimes. Try to fast for as long as possible after my evening meal. Take vitamin tablets each day, vit D, zinc, magnesium and macusave. And a prebiotic. Will have a smoothie tomorrow made with green tea.

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 22-Jan-24 19:16:51

I never snack. Never.

Maggiemaybe Mon 22-Jan-24 18:46:38

Oh, and lots of fruit as snacks throughout the day.

Maggiemaybe Mon 22-Jan-24 18:45:29

Same here, Serendipity. But today is fairly typical. I’ve had a boiled egg and toast for breakfast, lunch out was a falafel flatbread with lots of salad, tea was homemade corned beef hash - mainly veg, 5 of them - and sourdough bread. Drinks mainly tea, ordinary and fruit, and one cup of coffee. A couple of glasses of water, but I’m trying to remember to drink more of it.

I’m not sure I should declare the chocolate orange minis I’m just about to open - a gift from a friend today. At least today is one of my 2/3 no alcohol days a week.

Serendipity22 Mon 22-Jan-24 18:18:15

Whatever I fancy on that particular day, no set diet, no forward planning. 😃

JamesandJon33 Mon 22-Jan-24 17:06:39

Being a reversed diabetic, I want to keep it that way. I eat low carb and fast 16:8

Freshair Mon 22-Jan-24 16:24:42

I've heard that if you eat pasta when it's a day old, it has less calories, might be a myth though

Freshair Mon 22-Jan-24 16:23:25

Norah, is that cooked or uncooked weight. I never know

Norah Mon 22-Jan-24 16:15:35

I think it's down to your activity level, weight, height, and desired size.

I carefully count and eat 300g carbohydrates, 50g+ low fat protein, 60g fat (of which I prefer only 30% to be saturated), very little sugar or salt, lots of fibre and many many herbs & spices.

Coffee, porridge, toast, fruit, nuts.
Soup of lentil/pulses, fruit, veg, bread, hummus, nuts.
Late meal of high quality protein with quinoa, rice, pasta, potatoes etc, veg, fruit, breads, nuts. Maybe pudding.

tanith Mon 22-Jan-24 16:05:54

Cereal/porridge and fruit for breakfast, sandwich, crackers or soup with an apple for lunch then dinner would be perhaps a stew, chicken/fish with veg, occasionally I’ll have burger/hotdog/bacon and egg with chips. I do snack on plums, satsumas in the afternoon.
Of course in the Summer I eat salad 4/5 times a week which I love and fruit salad. I probably eat too much but if my weight goes up I cut back for a couple of weeks.
Of course as has been said we are all different.

Poppyred Mon 22-Jan-24 15:45:07

I have one healthy meal (chicken or fish with a variety of vegetables or salad drizzled with olive oil and a jacket potato) a day followed by a piece of fruit and sometimes with a slice of granary bread. Also a small glass of kefir.

No health problems so far and this regime keeps my weight steady and BMI at an acceptable level.

When I reached 60 I started piling on weight without any change to my diet. Realised eventually that my metabolism had slowed down to a snails pace, so had to adjust food intake accordingly.

Freshair Mon 22-Jan-24 15:39:49

Porridge with blueberries, soup or mackerel on toast for lunch, cooked meal of pasta/rice/sweet potatoes and a protein dish eg, chicken breast/quorn and some veggies. Eat after the gym usually. Lots of water amd far too much coffee. Sounds boring doesn't it

Dee1012 Mon 22-Jan-24 15:28:32

I'd also suggest that the actual health of a person would impact their diet and what can / can't be consumed.
So surely the question is what is 'healthy' for that person?

I have to eat a largely low residue diet due to my condition.

Zuzu Mon 22-Jan-24 15:27:52

I'd consider my weight and health to begin with. I'm about 20 lbs heavier than I'd like to be and in excellent health. I'm almost homebound due to my DH's health/stroke. I'm his full-time caregiver. He's getting better and I hope within a year, we'll be able to get out more. But for now, looking at what's going on in my life, we eat eggs/bacon/toast or bagels/fruit for a late breakfast. I keep fresh fruit in a bowl, salads with broiled salmon/steak/or chicken on top or roasted veggies for an early supper. I'll make soup such as chili, veggie/beef, chicken tortilla, etc about once a week. We eat out when running errands/dr visits, always order a nice size meal--which we can never eat all--but it gives us lovely leftovers for later. We drink coffee, tea, water, wine. Neither of us are big dessert eaters, snacks are nuts, pop corn, etc.

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 22-Jan-24 15:14:57

We are all different. Some are very active, some are not. And a retired woman might be in her 50s or a centenarian. I would however suggest that what is healthy and what is not healthy is the same throughout life.

CynthiaDennison Mon 22-Jan-24 14:46:05

I am curious as to what you all eat on a typical day. I am so confused as to what is and what is not healthy at the same time as balancing a retired woman's dietary needs.