Quote:
Originally Posted by FrouFrou
I'm wondering if you would have the same effect if you just say, had a piece of fruit or something with a glass of water before each meal. Wouldn't you have the same feeling of being full and not being able to eat as much? So is it the bars that are actually making you not want to eat as much, or is it just that you had 'something' with a glass of water before you ate? I only ask because I don't do this with every meal, but with dinner every night I have a banana with a bottle of water, or just a bottle of water and it makes me feel full so when I do eat dinner I don't eat as much.
I saw the commercials for this and thought...why pay the money when you can eat a granola bar, piece of fruit or whatever with a bottle of water and it's cheaper.
Right! The " Caramel Apple Crisp" looks to have about 160 calories, 31 grams of carbohydrate, 5 grams of fiber, 6 grams of protein and 1 gram of fat.
While I don't consider this a stellar nutritional example, here's a "convenience" food that is pretty comparable:
Fiber One Honey Clusters
Per cup: 160 calories, 5 g protein, 42 g carbohydrate, 1.5 g fat (0 g saturated), 13 g fiber.
Yes, the cereal has more carbs but much of it is fiber.
I imagine that 3/4 a cup of that and 1/2 a serving a of Greek yogurt would be filling and satisfying.
Oakes Organic Greek Yogurt
Per 5.3-ounce container: 90 calories, 15 g protein, 6 g carbohydrate, 0 g fat (0 g saturated), 0 g fiber.