Is it too soon to eat this?
--gina
5'1" -- HW 195/SW 187/GW 115 July 08/CW 121 Dec 2012
******GOAL*******
Starting BMI between 35 and 40ish?
Join us on the Lightweights Board!
DS on Aug 9, 2007 with Dr. Hazem Elariny
Ginger<><
Revision #2 Dr John Rabkin June 21, 2013; First Revision DS - Dr Maguire 5-18-09; First DS 7-15-2003 Dr Clark Warden = Third time is the charm
i agree with the other posts, whichever you do, take it slow, chew well, and your body will tell you if you should stop or keep going.
good luck!
Noreen HW 352 / SW 324 / CW 175/ LW/ 148 / GW 150 (achieved Aug 14 '11)
I also had tuna fish from a can mixed with lots of mayonaise and with cheese melted on top.
I couldn't handle chicken breasts for 6 months although ground meats could be tolerated around the 4 month mark.
Congrats on the surgery and good luck. Remember get your protein in and drink, drink, drink.
Good luck! How are you feeling?
However, 2 weeks later (at 10 weeks post-op) I tried snow crab legs dipped in melted butter. My stomach did not revolt. SUCCESS! They were frozen legs that I picked up in the meat dept. at Super Target. Crab meat seems to be a lot easier to digest than shrimp... for me anyway.
Regardless of what type of seafood you decide to try... now might be the perfect time to stock up. I just noticed in today's newspaper that all the grocery stores are running great deals on lobster, crab legs and shrimp this week because folks tend to buy that stuff for New Year's feasts. I'm planning to hit the butcher shop this evening so I can fill my freezer with crab legs, lobster tails, etc. YUM!
EDITED TO ADD: I am not saying you should wait until 8 or 10 weeks to try some soft seafood. I just had to wait that long because my stomach is finicky when it comes to denser foods and I've had to take it slower than some folks. Your mileage may vary. :)
It depends on how well/fast you're healing. Consult your doctor about that. It was 4 weeks for me.
Scallops were my go-to food early out, bay or sea. Sea scallops(the big ones) pack a whopping 32g of protein per serving. Bay scallops are good too, but it takes a lot more of them to get 32 g of protein. I think a serving of bay scallops is somewhere around 13 g. You can get a good sized frozen bag of bay scallops at Wal-Mart, from 5 to 7 bucks a bag, depending on where you live. You can get cooked (pink) or raw (grey-looking) frozen shrimp there too for about the same price.
I had a litle trouble with water packed tuna, it was too dry, so I got the tuna packed in oil, which is kind of hard to find these days. Baked or poached fish were kindest to my tummy early out.
Beef and pork are the hardest to digest, even ground. I would start with the seafood, then work your way up to chicken. Dark meat has more fat, so that might sit a little better in the beginning. The further out (and healed!) you are, the more varied your meals will be.