
Protein Shakes
Home › Forums › Nutrition & Diet › Protein Shakes
![]() | Hi, cox6164. We would rather you use the whole grass-fed dairy food (milk, yogurt, or kefir, for example), but the overall mixture looks good for a snack. |
![]() | I have grass-fed whey protein powder that is 80 calories and 15 G protein and 3 g total carbs. Is this OK to use for a shake using veggies and fruit with almond milk or water? |
![]() | Hi, Jakt. Yes, lassi shakes are excellent. |
![]() | So lassi shakes are okay. |
![]() | Thanks = what I’m attempting to do is have a snack I can eat while driving home from the gym. Yogurt just doesn’t work for that. I suppose I can try mixing the drink up using just yogurt. Hopefully it won’t separate during the few hours it sits. With this I can shake it back up. My other alternative so far has been nuts and dried fruit. I never got an answer on it, so I’m hoping that switching my afternoon snack from veggie-based (with protein) to fruit is okay – as long as I switch my breakfast fruit to veggie. |
![]() | Hi, hwyla. We generally don’t encourage protein powders, as they are inherently more processed that recommended. What you listed there is fine as an occasional snack, but it would be better to use a high-protein yogurt like Greek yogurt, and add your own honey. |
![]() | I would still like an answer to this. Is the protein powder in my previous post below okay? |
![]() | I’m considering using the following powder: soy + yogurt + honey blend |
![]() | Hi, KarinHart. The food-based part sounds excellent – that type of shake would make a perfect snack. The protein mix depends on the ingredients – can you list them here? |
![]() | Can I add protein shakes to my diet? I use only frozen or fresh fruits, organic Greek Yogurt and original unsweetened almond milk plus the protein mix. |
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.