Red Meats.

TravelingMomofTwo
on 8/19/12 3:08 pm
I had my surgery on 7/25 and feel the same way-tired of same foods. Tried some cheese today...that's not even on my surgeons list until week 6! I've been dying for meatloaf. I figured if it's moist with ketchup it could be doable.
rcarper1965
on 8/20/12 11:26 pm - OH
 I have been eating frozen meals.  I have found that not only is the meat moist but the protions are almost perfect.  Little to waste.  I have had checken, pork, meatloaf, salbury steak and meatballs.  So far so good.  The hardest thing for me is to eat slow.  I am learning but the hard way.  God Bless.
        
JazzyOne9254
on 8/21/12 2:21 pm, edited 8/20/12 7:25 pm


I got a notebook from my program outlining food introductions for the entire first year.

My surgeon did not say anything about not eating red meat until 6 months out.
We were allowed lean ground beef, actually, for me plain old 80/20 ground beef worked better than 95% lean but the dietary sheets did not introduce beef steak, roast, et****il we were one year out. I ate it earlier than that, and did not tolerate it well. In fact, to this day, beef steak, roast and white meat chicken seem to "swell" once I eat them and drink my beverage, and I can "lose my lunch/dinner" if I get too full from the meat absorbing the liquid, and I'm 3 1/2 years out. That might be something to think about. It seems the juicier the meat, the better it sits, and medium rare to medium is juicier than well done.

The burnt T-Bone advice may be due to the carcinogens that develop when fat is charred by flames during broiling. That's something that came out a few years ago in popular health news. That used to be my favorite part of the steak, but no more! There's enough stuff in food these days that leads to one disease or another!

HW 405/SW 397/CW 138/GW 160  Do the research!  Check the stats!
The DS is *THE* solution to Severe Morbid Obesity!

    

preachermomma37
on 8/23/12 1:28 pm - TN
As you can see everyone's body tolerates things differently and everyone's doctor recommends different things. The best thing is trying it slow and in small portions. As far as eating to fast, I use a stop watch and rest at least 60-90 seconds between every two bites. I have only thrown up twice since surgery both times because of eating too fast. The first was early out. The second was just last weekend when I had stopped using my stop watch because I thought I had this.
Most Active
Recent Topics
×