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genezapharmateuticals
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puritysourcelabs
RESEARCHSARMSUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsRESEARCHSARMSUGFREAKeudomestic

Cottage Cheese during cutting

SoreArms

New member
I love cottage cheese but have been avoiding it and all dairies (except for occasional yogurt cheese) since I started my cutting diet. Today, at lunch, i relaized that I did not bring any balsamic and olive oil to eat with my broc (broc by itself is not the best tasting), so i went out and bought some cottage cheese and dipped the broc in it (ummm ummm good).

Is it OK to eat cottage cheese during cutting or is it best left out?

Thanks in advance fellas!
 
I eat it. It's a good source or protein. As long as you factor it into your overall calorie count. It's especially good at night before you go to sleep because the casein protein is absorbed slower and it stays with you more of the night. I also mix it with my tuna, sounds gross, I know, but it beats the hell out of plain tuna.
 
I personally buy a small carton of fat free cottage cheese and eat the whole thing with 1 packet of Splenda. The overall calories is about 300 per carton, and like 64 gram of protein. (Pretty sure about numbers)

They sure do beat any protein bar out there for content , satieity, and price (1.50 per carton)
 
The only problem with cottage cheese is the high sodium content. If you eat a whole carton of reg. skim or low fat cot cheese your taking in around 1400mg of sodium or more depending on brand etc. Opt for the low sodium varieties. They typically cut sodium content from around 400-500mg per serving to around 50-90mg.

Try mixing 1 Cup low fat reduced sodium cot chz, 2 scoops vanilla whey powder, cinnamin, .5 granny smith apple diced, packet splenda(or other sweetener). Mix up cheese, whey, splenda, cinnamin, then fold in apple pieces. Taste mmm.

approx. 360cal, 62gm pro, 27gm carb, 2gm fat
 
I looked at cottage cheese at the store yesterday to see the differences between regular, low and fat free

regular had 5g fat (not much) 340 mg sodium and 3g carbs.
Low fat had 3g fat (not much reduction) 400 mg sodium 5g carbs and 3 g sugar.
Fat free hat 0g fat 450 mg sodium 3g sodium and I cant remember the carbs.

I don't see any advantage of low or fat free over regular. As a matter of fact, it seems regualr is even better, i mean 5g of fat is not much at all.

I think I'm going to add it back to my diet 2 - 3 times a week. Sounds great for night time, like onerepmaximum recommended.
 
Trying to opt for "real food" instead of powders/MPRs/bars etc here. I started eating lowfat cottage cheese before bed instead of a PM protein powder. Seems to be working well.
 
SoreArms said:
I looked at cottage cheese at the store yesterday to see the differences between regular, low and fat free

regular had 5g fat (not much) 340 mg sodium and 3g carbs.
Low fat had 3g fat (not much reduction) 400 mg sodium 5g carbs and 3 g sugar.
Fat free hat 0g fat 450 mg sodium 3g sodium and I cant remember the carbs.

I don't see any advantage of low or fat free over regular. As a matter of fact, it seems regualr is even better, i mean 5g of fat is not much at all.

I think I'm going to add it back to my diet 2 - 3 times a week. Sounds great for night time, like onerepmaximum recommended.

Yes there is not much difference in FAT content. Look for REDUCED sodium cottage cheese. That sodium is alot for one meal if you are cutting. One the big reasons bbers stray from dairy during dieting is their sodium content.
 
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