Group: Specific Diets & Nutrition

Created: 2012/01/01, Members: 104, Messages: 22775

With so many diets and nutritional plans out there, you can get lost. Find out what works best for others and share your experiences!

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how to fix your shake

sandysford
sandysford
Posts: 1,139
Joined: 2002/11/18
United States
2003/05/07, 04:20 PM
If your protein shake is:
Too thin: Try adding a few ice cubes, frozen fruit, or a tablespoon of sugar-free instant pudding mix to thicken it.
Too thick: Some protein mixes have guar gum or other artificial thickeners in them. Instead of throwing them out, you can make shakes using only half the packet, mixing in a regular whey protein to cover the protein gap.

Not creamy enough: Try using a tablespoon of sugar-free pudding if you make your shakes with water or milk. If you use milk, you can try using milk with higher fat content (1 or 2% instead of skim) or just use a tablespoon of dry, sugar-free instant pudding mix.

Not “foamy” or frothy enough: Extend the “whip” time in the blender to “fluff” the shake.
Won’t dissolve: Solubility problems usually have to do with the particular brand of protein that you buy. Your best option is to first blend your liquid and ice and slowly add the protein to the blender. Look for an “instantized” protein that blends with a few shakes to avoid the problem all together.

Not sweet enough: Add a packet or two of Splenda or a small piece of banana. Fructose (fruit sugar) is 70% sweeter than sucrose (table sugar) so even just a small piece of banana or other fruit go a long way in providing sweetness.

Weak vanilla flavor: A ½ tsp of imitation vanilla flavor or ¼ tsp vanilla extract will enhance the vanilla flavor without adding calories. Alternatively, you could add a tablespoon of sugar-free instant vanilla pudding for just 13 calories.

Weak chocolate flavor: A teaspoon of real cocoa powder will give you a nice chocolate flavor without adding the sugar that comes with using chocolate syrup. This is a great idea for those on tighter budgets that can only purchase one flavor of protein at a time because you can add cocoa to vanilla protein and make a chocolate flavor.

Protein sticks to blender glass: Always add the liquid to your blender or shaker first. When blending thicker shakes, try pouring the protein into the blender as it whirls or lightly pushing the powder down with a spoon to ensure it mixes.
Is "to go": To cut down on dishes and make a handy "to go" shake, you may be able to use a pint or quart Mason jar in place of your blender pitcher. Simply remove the blending attachment from the pitcher; if it twists onto the jar (like a cap) it will work. Put your drink ingredients into the jar, twist on the blending assembly, turn the jar top-down onto the blender and hit the switch. Voila!



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I will lift my own weight someday!!!!!
mackfactor
mackfactor
Posts: 766
Joined: 2002/10/17
United States
2003/05/08, 04:49 PM
Great ideas!!
I've been using the fat-free, sugar-free pudding mixes and cottage cheese to pice things up recently. I made a great pudding-like subtance using milk, cottage cheese, pudding mix, chocolate protein, cocoa powder, splenda, ice and natural peanut butter. If you do it right, you can throw a full cup of cottage cheese in there and never even taste it. I had a butterscotch pudding mix/banana shake the other day and I'm planning on trying butterscotch PB soon!

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"Don't follow leaders and watch your parking meters!"
-- Bob Dylan