Laura said:Everyone should please look up and calculate the fat/carbs in every recipe and provide that information.
trendsetter37 said:Laura said:Everyone should please look up and calculate the fat/carbs in every recipe and provide that information.
Are you guys calculating the calories per gram of (enter macronutrient here) to get your fat / carb ratios? Because awhile back I was looking into this while weighing portions of fat and meat; long story short if i was roughly around 50/ 50 or 60/40 fat/protein in grams I would be closer to the ratio (70/30 or 80/20) in terms of caloric energy from the fat and protein If I broke them down to calorie count.
A couple of searches yielded that 1 gram of fat is 9 (cal/kcal) of energy where as protein and carbs only contain around 4 calories per gram. Ergo I began calculating my fat to protein ratios with the caloric energy input as opposed to the mass or weight I was consuming. Is this the correct way of getting the correct ratios or would you also need to pay more attention to the amount in terms of weight (grams) to be more sufficient?
Laura said:Okay, another I just made for lunch (I chilled it in the freezer while preparing a slice of ham for the meal). I've given approximations of different measuring systems which are close enough. I gotta tell ya, this is divine and boy, does your body ever feel full, sated, and happy with this one!
Coconut Cream Custard
9 tablespoons – 130 grams – 4.5 ounces butter (121 grams fat)
1 cup – 200 ml – 8 ounces coconut cream (24 grams fat, 4 carbs)
4 or 5 egg yolks (8 grams fat each , 1 carb each)
2.5 tsp xylitol (10 carbs)
Dash of vanilla – liquid and/or powder (maybe 1 or 2 carbs)
Place coconut cream and butter cut in pieces, and xylitol in small saucepan or top of double-boiler. Bring to small bubble stage stirring constantly or very frequently. Take off heat. While beating the cream/butter mixture, drizzle in already beaten egg yolks until completely mixed. Place back on heat and stir constantly until it thickens and just begins to bubble around the edges. Remove from heat. Add vanilla to taste. Place pan in cold water and stir to cool faster, about five minutes. Pour into dessert dishes and refrigerate until cold.
Divided in two, each serving has about 85 grams of fat and 9 carbs.
Be careful with these things because there ARE carbs in there. You could add a couple more egg yolks and a bit more butter to make it 100 grams of fat and thus get more of your fat allowance along with the carbs. I'll do that next time.
trendsetter37 said:Is this the correct way of getting the correct ratios or would you also need to pay more attention to the amount in terms of weight (grams) to be more sufficient?
Arwenn said:trendsetter37 said:Laura said:Everyone should please look up and calculate the fat/carbs in every recipe and provide that information.
Are you guys calculating the calories per gram of (enter macronutrient here) to get your fat / carb ratios? Because awhile back I was looking into this while weighing portions of fat and meat; long story short if i was roughly around 50/ 50 or 60/40 fat/protein in grams I would be closer to the ratio (70/30 or 80/20) in terms of caloric energy from the fat and protein If I broke them down to calorie count.
A couple of searches yielded that 1 gram of fat is 9 (cal/kcal) of energy where as protein and carbs only contain around 4 calories per gram. Ergo I began calculating my fat to protein ratios with the caloric energy input as opposed to the mass or weight I was consuming. Is this the correct way of getting the correct ratios or would you also need to pay more attention to the amount in terms of weight (grams) to be more sufficient?
trendsetter, I could be wrong here but what I think Laura wants is quantities of fat to carbs, as she stated in her recipe a few posts back:
Laura said:Okay, another I just made for lunch (I chilled it in the freezer while preparing a slice of ham for the meal). I've given approximations of different measuring systems which are close enough. I gotta tell ya, this is divine and boy, does your body ever feel full, sated, and happy with this one!
Coconut Cream Custard
9 tablespoons – 130 grams – 4.5 ounces butter (121 grams fat)
1 cup – 200 ml – 8 ounces coconut cream (24 grams fat, 4 carbs)
4 or 5 egg yolks (8 grams fat each , 1 carb each)
2.5 tsp xylitol (10 carbs)
Dash of vanilla – liquid and/or powder (maybe 1 or 2 carbs)
Place coconut cream and butter cut in pieces, and xylitol in small saucepan or top of double-boiler. Bring to small bubble stage stirring constantly or very frequently. Take off heat. While beating the cream/butter mixture, drizzle in already beaten egg yolks until completely mixed. Place back on heat and stir constantly until it thickens and just begins to bubble around the edges. Remove from heat. Add vanilla to taste. Place pan in cold water and stir to cool faster, about five minutes. Pour into dessert dishes and refrigerate until cold.
Divided in two, each serving has about 85 grams of fat and 9 carbs.
Be careful with these things because there ARE carbs in there. You could add a couple more egg yolks and a bit more butter to make it 100 grams of fat and thus get more of your fat allowance along with the carbs. I'll do that next time.
It is not about calculating calories or energy. OSIT
3D Student said:trendsetter37 said:Is this the correct way of getting the correct ratios or would you also need to pay more attention to the amount in terms of weight (grams) to be more sufficient?
I recall from the extensive keto thread information that 3/1 ratio of calories was what you want to at least be at. I remember something being 1.7, the amount of fat you should eat compared to protein. Does my math look right?
50 grams of fat is 450 calories. That makes for 37.5 grams ((450 / 3) / 4) of protein. That comes out to 75% of the fat you ate.
At the 4:1 ratio: 50 grams of fat is 450 calories. That makes for 28.125 ((450 / 4) / 4) grams of protein. That comes out to eating 56.25% protein of the fat you ate.
Looks like the 3:1 ratio is 1.3333 times the protein in grams and the 4:1 is 1.7778 times the protein in grams.
trendsetter37 said:Are you guys calculating the calories per gram of (enter macronutrient here) to get your fat / carb ratios? Because awhile back I was looking into this while weighing portions of fat and meat; long story short if i was roughly around 50/ 50 or 60/40 fat/protein in grams I would be closer to the ratio (70/30 or 80/20) in terms of caloric energy from the fat and protein If I broke them down to calorie count.
A couple of searches yielded that 1 gram of fat is 9 (cal/kcal) of energy where as protein and carbs only contain around 4 calories per gram. Ergo I began calculating my fat to protein ratios with the caloric energy input as opposed to the mass or weight I was consuming. Is this the correct way of getting the correct ratios or would you also need to pay more attention to the amount in terms of weight (grams) to be more sufficient?
dugdeep said:One I came up with after refining the "butter coffee" idea is BUTTER HOT CHOCOLATE. It is absolutely divine and gets the fat count up. It has somehow taken on the name "chococcino" here in the house (pronounce chok-o-keeno, for some reason ).
80-100g of butter, cubed
2 heaping Tbsp cocoa powder
15-20g cocoa butter (this is the secret ingredient! Adds fat and deliciousity)
2 Tbsp xylitol
3 drops stevia extract
1 tsp lecithin (optional)
A healthy pinch of salt (don't be shy here)
750mL water
Heat the water in a pot on the stove. Once boiled, take off the heat and whisk in cocoa, xylitol and stevia. Add cold butter, cocoa butter and lecithin to a blender. Pour in the chocolatey liquid and blend well until it's frothy and delicious. Serves 3 or 4, but everyone will probably want seconds!
Native Forest Organic Coconut Milk (unsweetened) in the can