Food Prep for VSG

MJSpencer
on 1/20/18 7:07 pm
VSG on 03/29/18

Hi All

Expecting to have my VSG in about a months time. Was thinking I'd like to do as much food prep and freeze food in little containers of the size my future meals will be. As I live alone I dont have to consider family meals so just for me to grab and go.

Was thinking any stage from liquids to later meals. Soups, casserole etc. What are your best tips or recipes or advice.

Cathy H.
on 1/20/18 11:58 pm
VSG on 10/31/16

The best advice I can give you is not to prep much in advance. Many people experience a drastic change in taste and tolerance for foods after surgery...many do not. There is no guarantee that you will like or tolerate the things you prepare in advance. The best thing you can do is get a few things and be ready for the first couple of weeks, and then go from there. The only way you are going to know is to try things as the different stages progress. Don't waste time or money on a lot of pre-surg prep that may go to waste. Good luck on your surgery!

Livin' La KETO Loca!!
134 lbs lost since surgery, 195 overall!! Initial goal reached 9/15/17, (10.5 months)!
5'3", SW*: 299 GW: 175 HW 3/2015: 360 PSW* 5/2016: 330 *PSW=Prog Start Wt; SW=Surgery Wt

M1 -31, M2 -10, M3 -15, M4 -16, M5 -8, M6 -6, M7 -11, M8 -8, M9 -8, M10 -4, M10.5 -7 GOAL

Liz WantsHealthForAll
on 1/21/18 5:18 am - Cape Cod, MA
VSG on 03/28/16

I completely agree with Cathy. Plus the things you eat early on don't require much (if any) prep and by the time you are eating real "meals" you'll be fully capable of making them.

Liz 5'3" HW: 219 SW: 185 GW: 125 LW: 113 Desired maintenance range: 120-125 CW: 119ish

Gwen M.
on 1/21/18 6:17 am
VSG on 03/13/14

For liquids I primarily stuck to protein shakes and sugar free popsicles. I also really loved Panera's French Onion soup, so you could make a clear-broth based soup that you like and then freeze that. Strain it before eating. (Although you might have a hard time finding 1-2 ounce containers... so you'll likely need to freeze things in larger than actual portion sizes.)

For purees, I made meaty saucy things - spaghetti sauce, chili, meatballs with marinara, chicken curries, anything like that. Yogurt and cottage cheese can freeze okay, but why bother?

Beyond purees, think dense proteins. I, personally, wouldn't freeze those things. Cooked fish doesn't really freeze super well in my experience. Which is a good food for the soft solids phase. Steak is easy enough to cook a la minute. If you sous vide, you could cook these things early, freeze them, and then thaw them and sear when ready to eat though.

You might find that it's easier to cook some food in larger quantity once a week and portion out your meals for the week then, instead of freezing lots of stuff now. I've found that the things people most often recommend freezing are not things in line with my way of eating. Except for chili and spaghetti sauce :)

VSG with Dr. Salameh - 3/13/2014
Diagnosed with Binge Eating Disorder and started Vyvanse - 7/22/2016
Reconstructive Surgeries with Dr. Michaels - 6/5/2017 (LBL & brachioplasty), 8/14/2017 (UBL & mastopexy), 11/6/2017 (medial leg lift)

Age 42 Height 5'4" HW 319 (1/3/2014) SW 293 (3/13/2014) CW 149 (7/16/2017)
Next Goal 145 - normal BMI | Total Weight Lost 170

TrendWeight | Food Blog (sort of functional) | Journal (down for maintenance)

Harpediem
on 1/21/18 3:30 pm

I thought of freezing a variety of soups in muffin tins, then bagging them so I could nuke one soupsicle at a time.

Acedding27
on 1/21/18 4:14 pm
VSG on 12/14/17

Prepping would have been useless for me.

The first week varies for most, but I just had protein shakes, broth, crystal light, sf popsicles, etc. Next week was scrambled eggs, yogurt, cottage cheese. No prep needed. Week 3 was soft foods (My program skips purees) like tilapia and cheese, which doesn't freeze well.

I realized before surgery that I was obsessing a bit over food beforehand. I wanted to "stock up" because I was getting scared. That may not be you, just commenting. :-)

Now, I typically just cook enough for 3-4 days and hard boil some eggs on Sunday. I keep individually packaged frozen tilapia filets and fresh harvestland chicken breasts on hand to cook as needed. I've heard that people use ice cube trays to prep soups, though.

Amanda 12/2016 HW: 393 11/2017 Consult: 378 12/2018 SW: 350

2/2018: 309 3/6/2018: Broke a barrier! 297 4/2018: 286 5/2018: 279

Pre-op: -28 M1: -25 M2: -16 M3: -12 M4: -11 M5: -7

Short-term Goal: 250 by August 15th!

Acedding27
on 1/21/18 4:15 pm
VSG on 12/14/17

Prepping would have been useless for me.

The first week varies for most, but I just had protein shakes, broth, crystal light, sf popsicles, etc. Next week was scrambled eggs, yogurt, cottage cheese. No prep needed. Week 3 was soft foods (My program skips purees) like tilapia and cheese, which doesn't freeze well.

I realized before surgery that I was obsessing a bit over food beforehand. I wanted to "stock up" because I was getting scared. That may not be you, just commenting. :-)

Now, I typically just cook enough for 3-4 days and hard boil some eggs on Sunday. I keep individually packaged frozen tilapia filets and fresh harvestland chicken breasts on hand to cook as needed. I've heard that people use ice cube trays to prep soups, though.

Amanda 12/2016 HW: 393 11/2017 Consult: 378 12/2018 SW: 350

2/2018: 309 3/6/2018: Broke a barrier! 297 4/2018: 286 5/2018: 279

Pre-op: -28 M1: -25 M2: -16 M3: -12 M4: -11 M5: -7

Short-term Goal: 250 by August 15th!

Beam me up Scottie
on 1/21/18 5:07 pm
What everyone else said. Make sure you have enough bottled water....lemon....popsicles...and a sampling of protein shakes.

You most likely won't be able to "eat" enough to start worrying about prepping until you are a few weeks out. The very first few weeks you are going to be concerned with hydration and then getting in enough protein.

Also tastes change after surgery and so does food tolerances. I know I couldn't tolerate pizza (have no idea why) for the first 3 years after surgery....even today my once favorite food is a food I'll eat if it's the only thing there is to eat food.
Janet P.
on 1/22/18 10:01 am

What you think of as "meals" will completely change immediately post-op. If you wanted to make some home made stock, that might be a good treat, but otherwise don't bother.

Plenty of water (cyrstal lite if you want), some protein shakes, sugar-free jello, sugar-free popsicles. Most of us (no matter what surgery you have) experiment for months - soft food stages would be things like tuna, cottage cheese, yogurt, etc.

Remember that post-op (and the first couple of months) you will be exploring what agrees with you, what you like (your tastes will/may change), and how much you can eat. Suggest weighing/measuring what you anticipate being able to eat - it's all mind games. We're talking a couple of bites - literally.

Since you're not cooking for a family, this should be fairly easy (it was for me). You're not worrying about feeding anyone else.

Janet in Leesburg
DS 2/25/03
Hazem Elariny
-175

Jeepnyak
on 1/26/18 10:42 pm
VSG on 07/03/17

I'm pretty sure most casseroles will be out the window. You'll be focusing on lean meat and real veggies.

HW:320 SW:290 GW:190 CW:181

5'11", age 37 M1-28, M2-12, M3-16,

M4-15, M5-16, M6-5

M7-8(100lb goal) M8-4 M9-0

M10-5 M11-3 M12-0

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