Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

    I'm pretty sure I need extended induction, since I have almost 100 lbs. to lose. I know I could find lots of good recipes and meal ideas here, and on other websites, but I'd really like to find a cookbook with recipes appropriate for induction. In browsing at Amazon, I saw lots of books that say the recipes are all under 10 carbs, etc, but *10 carbs!!*? That would be half my carbs for the day, in just one serving for one meal? I'd like to find a book that would offer family-friendly meal ideas for induction. We won't be eating any stir-fried squid, or artichoke-caper tapenade, etc. It needs to be real family food!

    I welcome any book suggestions.
    Thanks,
    Julie
    Started 8/31/09: 235.8lbs.
    9/29/09: 227.0
    10/13/09: 224.0 (yes, it's slow, but it's still happening!)
    Goal: 140 lbs. AND...
    I'd like a regular bath towel to fit all the way around me.
    I'd like to be able to fit into clothes bought at a regular store, not a store for "large women".
    I'd like to go on the annual rafting trip with my kids, confident that if I get tossed out of the raft into the river, I'll be able to hoist my backside back in with a minimum of embarasment!

  • #2
    Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

    To be honest I don't think there are any published cookbooks with very low carb counts.

    Maybe if you look on Linda's Low Carb Recipes website Linda's Low Carb Menus & Recipes - Recipes
    you can copy and save the recipes for induction you like and print them out to compile your own looseleaf folder.
    She has marked the recipes suitable for induction with an asterix (*)
    Wondering how to get 'most' of your net carbs from your induction veggies?
    Take a look at the thread from the latest Veggie Challenge to see how others manage it!



    Check out our Low Carb Recipes website and add to it!!





    F/60 yrs/5ft 5.5" (Though due to collapsing vertebrae I am now only 5'3" - but I refuse to recalculate my BMI )

    Comment


    • #4
      Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

      There are no really good induction style cook books out there. I agree. You are better of using the internet as a resource here. Or adopting your favourite recipes to be low carb. It is not very hard. The Joy of Cooking is a great book.

      My favourite low carb cook books are
      Karen Barnaby The low carb gourmet
      Dana Carpender 500 low carb recipes (check it out at Google book)
      Hellers' The Carbohydrate Addict's No-Cravings Cookbook
      Eades The Low Carb Comfort Food Cookbook (check it out at Google book)

      Startdate: November 18, 2007. Female 5'2"

      May Challenges 2010
      Push-ups: 450/800
      Abs: 850/1900
      Squats: 650/1200
      Lunges: 500/1000
      Strength: 490/1200
      Running: 50/100 km


      2 Years on Atkins.................. President Challenge Medals earned

      Comment


      • #5
        Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

        Linda's website is teh best for induction recipes. If it has an * by it then it is induction friendly. And they are soooooooooo yummy!!
        Traci

        1st Mini Goal - 149 - WOOHOO!! Met Goal on 9/4/09

        2nd Mini Goal - 140

        Comment


        • #6
          Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

          As mentioned, there are no Induction cookbooks...even the Atkins recipes from his books need to be scrutinized for allowable ingredients.

          The best way I've found is to print out the food lists and go through recipes in your cookbooks. I've found the older cookbooks to have recipes more easily adaptable than the newer ones with the low-fat influence. Either eliminate ingredients not allowed or make an allowable substitute: Splenda for sugar/honey, diced yellow bell pepper or cousa squash and diced orange bell pepper are good visual subs for corn and carrots, etc. Check Linda's Low Carb site for good cauliflower and other faux starch recipes.

          When I first started low carbing a while ago and had to cook "normal" meals for the family, I found Saving Dinner the Low-Carb Way to be a useful book. Even now most of the recipes can be easily adapted to Atkins (a lot of Induction and the rest, OWL) and each recipe gives you what to add for the carb-eating family members.

          Before long you will be able to easily look at a recipe and re-make it Atkins friendly.

          p.s. We all know what recipes will never be Atkins friendly (or any other diet plan for that matter). Don't go there...
          Female, 54, 5'6" START DATE: 22JUL09




          Journal of a Shrinking Foodie
          Stats of a Shrinking Foodie

          Comment


          • #7
            Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

            Originally posted by mizski View Post
            As mentioned, there are no Induction cookbooks...even the Atkins recipes from his books need to be scrutinized for allowable ingredients.

            The best way I've found is to print out the food lists and go through recipes in your cookbooks. I've found the older cookbooks to have recipes more easily adaptable than the newer ones with the low-fat influence. Either eliminate ingredients not allowed or make an allowable substitute: Splenda for sugar/honey, diced yellow bell pepper or cousa squash and diced orange bell pepper are good visual subs for corn and carrots, etc. Check Linda's Low Carb site for good cauliflower and other faux starch recipes.

            When I first started low carbing a while ago and had to cook "normal" meals for the family, I found Saving Dinner the Low-Carb Way to be a useful book. Even now most of the recipes can be easily adapted to Atkins (a lot of Induction and the rest, OWL) and each recipe gives you what to add for the carb-eating family members.

            Before long you will be able to easily look at a recipe and re-make it Atkins friendly.

            p.s. We all know what recipes will never be Atkins friendly (or any other diet plan for that matter). Don't go there...
            Thank you for responding. That's exactly my situation. I'm on Induction, and probably will be for a while, and I need to figure out how to make this work with my family's needs. One potential problem is that the family food dynamic is complicated. Several of my kids are overweight, but they have their dad's sweet tooth, and I can't really see them going low-carb. My husband believes that sweets are fine "in moderation", so for the kids I've just been trying to control the sweets a little, watch the fat, and encourage them to watch portion sizes. Any other approach would start World War 3 in our house, and I'm just not willing to sacrifice our happy home life in order to (attempt to) make people skinny!

            With that said though, the low-carb thing seems to be the right thing for me, I just need to try and adapt that for my family. So...dinners can't have very many carbs, but also need to be fairly lean in order to meet the needs of the rest of the family. I have no idea how to incorporate everyone's needs here...but I'm trying!

            Thanks again,
            Julie
            Started 8/31/09: 235.8lbs.
            9/29/09: 227.0
            10/13/09: 224.0 (yes, it's slow, but it's still happening!)
            Goal: 140 lbs. AND...
            I'd like a regular bath towel to fit all the way around me.
            I'd like to be able to fit into clothes bought at a regular store, not a store for "large women".
            I'd like to go on the annual rafting trip with my kids, confident that if I get tossed out of the raft into the river, I'll be able to hoist my backside back in with a minimum of embarasment!

            Comment


            • #8
              Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

              I have the Heller’s The carbohydrate addict’s no cravings cookbook and just bought George Foreman’s Lean Mean Fat Reducing Grilling Machine Cookbook – to learn how to use the grill because I've been either burning or not cooking my burgers well enough LOL It has some really yummy recipes: Dijon grilled chicken, zesty marinated zucchini, mushroom tenderloin steaks, quick and easy halibut fillets, scallops en brochette…
              “You cannot expect to achieve new goals or move beyond your present circumstances unless you change.” Les Brown

              “You have to stay in shape. My grandmother, she started walking five miles a day when she was 60. She's 97 today and we don't know where she is.” Ellen DeGeneres



              Comment


              • #9
                Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

                Originally posted by tasteslikechicken View Post
                I have the Heller’s The carbohydrate addict’s no cravings cookbook and just bought George Foreman’s Lean Mean Fat Reducing Grilling Machine Cookbook – to learn how to use the grill because I've been either burning or not cooking my burgers well enough LOL It has some really yummy recipes: Dijon grilled chicken, zesty marinated zucchini, mushroom tenderloin steaks, quick and easy halibut fillets, scallops en brochette…
                Cool! I'll have to look up the George Foreman cookbook--I have a GF griller.
                Thank you.
                Started 8/31/09: 235.8lbs.
                9/29/09: 227.0
                10/13/09: 224.0 (yes, it's slow, but it's still happening!)
                Goal: 140 lbs. AND...
                I'd like a regular bath towel to fit all the way around me.
                I'd like to be able to fit into clothes bought at a regular store, not a store for "large women".
                I'd like to go on the annual rafting trip with my kids, confident that if I get tossed out of the raft into the river, I'll be able to hoist my backside back in with a minimum of embarasment!

                Comment


                • #10
                  Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

                  >>I don't think there are any published cookbooks with very low carb counts.>>

                  There any number of Atkins cookbooks.

                  Amazon.com: atkins cookbook

                  There's also cookbooks by Dana Carpender.

                  I think that you need to have low carb cookbooks that will serve you for all the phases.

                  Also, be careful about buying "low carb" cookbooks that aren't written by somebody doing low carb ... some of those low carb cookbooks use sugar and flour.
                  J.

                  "Your life will never change until you change your choices."

                  Comment


                  • #11
                    Re: Extended induction...any good cookbooks?

                    >> My husband believes that sweets are fine "in moderation">>

                    Does he eat them "in moderation"?

                    Why not use this time to teach your children NOT to feed the sweets dragon?
                    J.

                    "Your life will never change until you change your choices."

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X