Instore and online. Less than half price at £1.42 until 14th February (normally £2.93).
Little chocolate tubes that taste very nice and a bit like Weetos. Contains Wholegrain wheat and oats.
12 comments
mkara
1 Feb 161#1
Heat for the price. But not going to vote. Most the Protein comes from Soy, not very good for your body. If only they used something natural not harmful!
rfclee1988 to mkara
1 Feb 16#2
theres no soy in it ?
hardly a protein cereal with 20g per 100g lol
cookietom
1 Feb 163#3
Beef generally has 20g protein per 100g so is that not high in protein?
nokiafusion
1 Feb 16#4
Carbs for breakfast not protein.
Zygus
2 Feb 16#5
Carbs for breakfast and you fat as 2/5 people in the UK and US. Protein and fats that's you need!
vardx to Zygus
2 Feb 166#7
I'll try not to berate you as you're only regurgitating the crap you read on the internet, but please. Stop posting such utter rubbish.
Gaining fat is the result of a caloric surplus. It doesn't matter what ratio of carbohydrate / protein or fat that surplus consists of. Fat, of course, doesn't make one gain fat. Fat is vital for an abundance of reasons, hormone/T levels, and even satiety, but the fact is, gram for gram, it's calorically dense - almost twice as much when compared to carbohydrates and protein.
There are studies relating to Soy and it's bioavailability, but to the average person, any negatives are negligible. And no, your estrogen levels won't suddenly explode and you aren't going to grow a pair of tits because you had a couple of weetabix.
There's an abundant amount of misinformation on the subject of nutrition on the internet. Unless you're a competitive athlete, or a bodybuilder looking to determine the differing factor between 5 and 4% bodyfat, do yourself a favour and practice basic common sense and use your intuition. Eat plenty of protein, know roughly how many calories a day you need to maintain/build/lose - whatever your goal is - and have whatever amount of carbohydrates and fats you want.
As far as this deal goes... I hate weetabix. Decent price though...
Zygus
2 Feb 16#6
There's soy so not good at all sorry.
Zygus
2 Feb 16#8
Eat and grow :smiley: ... Fat :smiley: do you know how insulin spark after milk and hi Gi carbs?...
yrreb88
2 Feb 16#9
So if you eat as high a fat diet as possible, you can never gain weight? Do you know how insulin spikes after protein? :stuck_out_tongue:
Some honest advice. Base your opinions on unbiased scientific studies and stop paying attention to thinly veiled advertisements and fear mongering from companies trying to sell you products and supplements!
yourmam84
3 Feb 16#11
What's with all these 'Protein' ranges of cereals all of a sudden? Anyone know?
Opening post
Little chocolate tubes that taste very nice and a bit like Weetos. Contains Wholegrain wheat and oats.
12 comments
hardly a protein cereal with 20g per 100g lol
Gaining fat is the result of a caloric surplus. It doesn't matter what ratio of carbohydrate / protein or fat that surplus consists of. Fat, of course, doesn't make one gain fat. Fat is vital for an abundance of reasons, hormone/T levels, and even satiety, but the fact is, gram for gram, it's calorically dense - almost twice as much when compared to carbohydrates and protein.
There are studies relating to Soy and it's bioavailability, but to the average person, any negatives are negligible. And no, your estrogen levels won't suddenly explode and you aren't going to grow a pair of tits because you had a couple of weetabix.
There's an abundant amount of misinformation on the subject of nutrition on the internet. Unless you're a competitive athlete, or a bodybuilder looking to determine the differing factor between 5 and 4% bodyfat, do yourself a favour and practice basic common sense and use your intuition. Eat plenty of protein, know roughly how many calories a day you need to maintain/build/lose - whatever your goal is - and have whatever amount of carbohydrates and fats you want.
As far as this deal goes... I hate weetabix. Decent price though...
Some honest advice. Base your opinions on unbiased scientific studies and stop paying attention to thinly veiled advertisements and fear mongering from companies trying to sell you products and supplements!