Yes, Phil S, as a powder it rehydrates instantly (an asset at lunchtime) but you have to be careful with the quantity of water – a small excess leaves you with a drink, not a spread :)Phil S wrote:Also, Bernieq, re your dried homus, do you mean you grind the dried slab into a powder?
climberman wrote:Could I ask for a breakdown of meals and grams and kJ for folks with a low weight ? Interested in what I can learn from 500-600 grammers !
John Sheridan wrote:Phillipsart do you do any deydrated curry meals with rice, veggies and or chicken or beef added ???
I just made myself a nice curry and I WANT THAT IN THE BUSH, with a few wraps and a coffee, MIGHTY YUMMY
Cheers.
Phillipsart wrote:climberman wrote:Could I ask for a breakdown of meals and grams and kJ for folks with a low weight ? Interested in what I can learn from 500-600 grammers !
Practically I dehydrate almost all my food. Pasta, rice, chinese meals, bananas, tomatoes etc.
Moondog55 wrote:8000kj per 500 grams ???
8000/38 = 210 grams of butter so doable, I suggest a menu based on dark chocolate ( Army survival ration used to be 2 off 2 * 100gram bars of chocolate)
At only 8000 kj tho you will be assured of loosing body fat on a long walk
http://www.mydr.com.au/tools/basal-energy-calculator
climberman wrote:I'd like around 500g/8000kJ/day but am interested to see if people manage this.
8,000kJ/day is seriously deficient. Based on Australian Government Dept of Health guidelines, daily kJ energy requirement for a 45yo male at high workload is : 60kg : 13,000 70kg : 14,200 80kg : 15,400. For a female of the same weight and age, subtract 1,800kJ.climberman wrote:So.... anyone with a low weight want to give a meals/g/kJ breakdown or approximation ?
Agreed !Moondog55 wrote:I like to eat too much to devise a starvation ration.
Anyway for walks of up to a week it really doesn't matter much
Focus on energy dense foods (doh! :) - things like coconut milk, pinenuts, peanut butter (in fact, just about all nuts) as well as meats, rice, pasta and cous-cous. Dried fruit is also reasonably good at around 1100kJ/100gclimberman wrote:I like your meals. Interested though to drop weight...
I was surprised to see such a low kJ figure for BC Roast Lamb, Phil, so I looked it up – and was even more surprised to read that 1552kJ is 18% of the (NZ) recommended daily intake (RDI) = 8620kJ/day. According to the (Aus) tables I have, that’s the RDI for a sedentary 65-70kg 65yo male.Miyata610 wrote:a back country roast lamb and veg is only 1552kJ.
bernieq wrote:I was surprised to see such a low kJ figure for BC Roast Lamb, Phil, so I looked it up – and was even more surprised to read that 1552kJ is 18% of the (NZ) recommended daily intake (RDI) = 8620kJ/day. According to the (Aus) tables I have, that’s the RDI for a sedentary 65-70kg 65yo male.
climberman wrote:Yes, me too. But am interested in what, particularly, people end up with for weights and if they know how many kJ they take ? I'd like around 500g/8000kJ/day but am interested to see if people manage this.!
Moondog55 wrote:I have been seriously looking for information on the added needs of cold weather; ie: winter above the snow line, and I have found much conflicting information out there.
I usually add several hundred calories ( a thousand k'joules ) to my basic menu in extra chocolate bars for every day in winter and it seems to work for me.
10 days above the snow line at Falls Creek and while I thought I was eating very well my wife tells me she could see my weight loss and my waist is about an inch smaller so I guess I lost 5kg during the 10 days.
even if half that was water I used an extra 250 grams of body fat each day so that really can be taken into account, it is like adding a quarter kilo of butter to each days ration.
My breakfast was ~55grms of rolled oats plus ~25 grams black sugar plus ~25 grams butter
Sweet coffee with milk
Lunch was eaten on the go as Mars bars and snickers ( 1 of each ) plus 2 Uncle Tobys muesli bars
Dinner was typically instant mash, ramen or packet rice with peas and a tin of some sort of processed meat ( Yes Spam ) with added butter.
A full packet of mash/rice (4 portions) same of peas (a full surprise packet for 4 portions) or two packets of ramen , so I was eating a surprising quantity of food, perhaps because I was a little under dressed for the conditions or I was sleeping a little colder than usual?
Moondog55 wrote:matagi You don't know what you are talking about.
have you ever looked at the protein level of a snickers or mars mar??
I lost weight because I was working so hard in a cold environment, I simply did not eat enough for my situation.
The only "simple" carb in the foods I mentioned are in the mashed potato.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests