Re: Soylent (no, not THAT Soylent) really isn't that bad
@Mabouya, my two cents would echo those of @guido. There are so many good apps and websites out there these days for tracking nutritional info that it should be a cinch to see if there are any missing pieces. If so, it should be easy to compliment Soylent or whatever other "powders" you've acquired to ensure you're not creating some nutritional gap (though I can't see them being any more gap-inducing than a frozen Amy's meal in that situation.
For what it's worth, my wife and I recently used a company called 5-strands to do a hair sample analysis to determine potential deficiencies since we have relatively odd diets (17 years vegetarian, 11 vegan, then recently started eating eggs in the last years as we moved to a farm and started raising livestock and chickens). It was very informative and I'm eating a lot more hemp seeds these days. It might be worth doing (cheap and quick) if you have any concerns of that nature. We both tweaked our diets a bit and will redo in 6 months to see if there is a notable difference.
Originally Posted by
sk_tle
I don't understand the purpose of those things.
Huh? The OP seemed to state it pretty clearly, let me help you here. Otherwise I'll just assume this is the usual virtue signaling.
Originally Posted by
Mabouya
On a lark the other day I ordered two tubs of Soylent and two other "meal replacement" powders. I just had a 12 oz serving of the chocolate (aka "cacao") and taste-wise it's pretty good. When mixed correctly that's about 400 calories, and will serve as my last meal of the day. I certainly don't plan on using it as a very large % my meals, but every now it then it will be convenient, say if I'm stuck late at work and have run out of the Amy's TV dinners + frozen veggies that are usual go-to in that situation.
"Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants."
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