Amount | Volume | Ingredient | $ / day | Source | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
145 | g | Oat Flour Honeyville Farms | $0.40 | Honeyville | ||
79 | ml | 0.34 | cup | Canola Oil | $0.13 | Local, 5qt (Costco) |
36 | g | 3 | tbsp | Sugar or sugar+sucralose (see notes) | $0.10 | Amazon |
1 | pill | Kirkland Signature Daily Multi | $0.03 | Amazon | ||
5 | g | Potassium chloride | $0.10 | Amazon | ||
1.35 | g | Lysine | $0.02 | Amazon | ||
66 | g | Wheat protein isolate 80% | $0.38 | Amazon | ||
3.1 | g | Salt | $0.01 | Amazon | ||
111 | g | Yellow corn flour | $0.21 | Amazon | ||
0.19 | g | Nutmeg, powdered | $0.02 | Amazon | ||
1.33 | g | Choline Bitartrate | $0.03 | Amazon | ||
0.9 | pill | Calcium and vitamin D | $0.03 | Amazon | ||
0.9 | g | ⅜ | tsp | Xanthan gum (see notes on amount) | $0.03 | Amazon |
0.08 | pill | Vitamin K | $0.00 | Amazon | ||
Amounts for: Total Daily Cost: | $1.51 | Add Ingredients to Amazon Cart |
For variety, it's great with a little salsa, or curry powder and other Indian spice, or probably lots of "main dish" flavors I haven't tried yet. You can exchange the wheat protein powder with rice protein.
This has a tiny amount of nutmeg in it...not enough to make it a noticeable flavor, but it rounds out the taste nicely..., more satisfying. I tried several spices, and nutmeg is it.
See my other recipes using whey protein , rice protein, and wheat protein. They taste very different. I sell samples of my other recipes, but not for this one.
This corn version is the least used of my recipes. I would try the other versions first. It has a main dish flavor rather than a breakfast one. This has the most texture of my recipes. I like it for variety.
Yes, the great price is for real and I update the ingredient prices when I buy more. You need to buy in bulk (see the links) to get these savings. And an Amazon prime account might help. Costs: The recipe editor on this site automatically calculates price per day. It shows you how many days that each purchase lasts... look at the recipe editor tab, column "days/unit". As far as how long your first order would last, you can see that the oat flour bag runs out first at 105 days. If you ordered 2 bags of oat flour and 2 calcium jars, you'd be up to about 200 days when the potassium runs out, and you have to order that again. So it's about $400 investment to get started, and then it will average less than $2.00 a day to replace supplies.
See instructions here for how to use this mix and adjust to soylent.
Background
My family used official Soylent (1.1 through 1.4) for about 5 months for about 2 meals a day. At the same time, I experimented with my own recipes, while matching the official Soylent nutrition, and finding the right prices for the ingredients. In Feb 2015 I found a rice protein recipe that was a hit with the family, who said it tastes better than the official product (v1.4). I now rotate between all of my recipes.
I find that weight loss/maintenance is a lot easier with soylent for two meals a day than eating traditional meals. It's very satisfying, and you know you're getting complete nutrition without worrying about what to prepare and eat.
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Mixing
I mix a month's supply of powder (everything but the oil and water) in a 5 gallon bucket with a mixer that's powered by my drill in reverse. Pour it into a second bucket (to turn it upside down) to do the final mixing of what was on the bottom of the first bucket. I measure amounts on a digital scale in a very large bread mixing bowl (holds about 3 kg of flour) and put it into the bucket for mixing. You'll be glad if you get a lid like this for the bucket.
Here's a spreadsheet calculator for mixing any number of days you want of the mix or the vitamin mix. Just replace "Days to Mix" number with the number of days you want to mix.
To save time, I mix about 4-6 months at a time of the vitamins and minerals (the pills go in the blender with a tight lid...I put plastic over the blender and then the lid..the dust is not pleasant) including salt and xanthan, and mix all in the large bowl with a whisk. I save the powder to add to the monthly batches. Then just add the number of grams of this vitamin mix that the calculator above says. This method means you can get good vitamin accuracy with a scale with 1 g resolution.
For example, for 180 days of vitamins/minerals, I go to the recipe calculator and choose 180 days. This is many multivitamin pills, but I don't count them, I just weigh them. The calculator gives the number of grams of multivitamins to use, and the number of other pills (I just round to whole or half pills) Then I blend them all up. Then add this to the powders in the big bowl and whisk.
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Protein
The protein comes from wheat, oats, and a little from corn. I added lysine to achieve the balance for complete protein. See the protein essential amino acid analysis (blue columns are the summary). This recipe provides at least 144% of the WHO recommended of each essential amino acid, and the balance is very good. There is a lot of tryptophan in oats, but in amounts similar to meats, fish, cheeses and beans (ref). Larger amounts of tryptophan in foods does not seem to change the blood levels of tryptophan, as opposed to the purified form in supplements (ref).
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Oats
All my recipes have some oat flour. It's easy to digest and has excellent protein and fiber (why add a fiber supplement when this grain is so good?).
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Xanthan gum
This adds a little thickening for texture, and keeps it from separating. It also reduces all tastes somewhat, including sweetness (slips right past those tastebuds if you put a lot). Optional. I mix it in with my big powder batches so I don't have to add it on a daily basis. If you do choose to add it separately into the blender each day, use only half as much! It's a more effective thickener before it's mixed with the other powders.
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Sodium
Most nutritional and medical associations have lowered their recommendations to 1500 mg/day (down from 2300 mg). The amount here (1250mg per 2000 cal) is below that, and below that in official Soylent 1.5 (1440). If you want to lower sodium further, it also tastes good with 1000 mg.
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Chloride
The potassium comes with chloride. In the past I used some potassium citrate for part of the potassium to keep the chloride within the typical "maximum" amount. But I researched this, and there is no chloride toxicity from chloride in the range of double the "maximum" amount. Because there is no danger from chloride itself, the "maximum" amount was simply set to match the amount of chloride that comes in the recommended amount of salt. In other words, it's sodium that can be dangerous (high blood pressure), and whoever set the "maximum" amount of chloride was making things up: "The AI for chloride is set at a level equivalent on a molar basis to that of sodium, since almost all dietary chloride comes with the sodium added during processing or consumption of foods."(ref). In fact studies of patients taking potassium chloride (in addition to a steady salt intake) showed a reduction in sodium levels in the body.(ref), caused by the presence of potassium.
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Sugar
The sugar amount is within the WHO guidelines: - "In both adults and children, WHO recommends reducing the intake of free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake (strong recommendation). • WHO suggests a further reduction of the intake of free sugars to below 5% of total energy intake (conditional recommendation). • Free sugars include monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods and beverages by the manufacturer, cook or consumer, and sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, fruit juices and fruit juice concentrates."
This recipe is less than 5% calories from free sugars.
To reduce sugar, you can replace half of it with the equivalent volume (not weight) of sucralose (Splenda). Tastes the same.
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Oil
Official Soylent went from 30% to 40% of calories by fat in version 1.4 and 1.5, and I've followed that here. I think this reflects the increasing understanding that getting a significant portion of our calories by healthy fats can be very healthy and satisfying. The problem with our diets wasn't too much fat, but too many calories, too much sugar and unhealthy fats.
Oil preference is more a matter of fad than science these days, so if you're against Canola, find a new oil...I don't mind. It won't really change the price or calories. But the research in these notes has convinced me that canola oil is quite healthy:
"Canola oil is low in saturated fat and contains both omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids in a ratio of 2:1. If consumed, it also reduces low-density lipoprotein and overall cholesterol levels, and as a significant source of the essential omega-3 fatty acid is associated with reduced all-cause and cardiovascular mortality" Wikipedia. "In 2001, researchers at a conference sponsored by the National Institutes of Health concluded that the two classes of fatty acid should be consumed in a 1:1 ratio. As of 2007, the Japanese government recommended a ratio of 4:1, while the Swedish government recommended a ratio of 5:1, and the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Science in the United States recommended a ratio of 10:1. (In all cases, the number to the left of the ratio is omega-6 fats, while the number to the right is omega-3s.)" Wikipedia.
"Several sources of information suggest that human beings evolved on a diet with a ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 essential fatty acids (EFA) of approximately 1 whereas in Western diets the ratio is 15/1-16.7/1. Western diets are deficient in omega-3 fatty acids, and have excessive amounts of omega-6 fatty acids ... A ratio of 2.5/1 reduced rectal cell proliferation in patients with colorectal cancer, whereas a ratio of 4/1 with the same amount of omega-3 PUFA had no effect. The lower omega-6/omega-3 ratio in women with breast cancer was associated with decreased risk. A ratio of 2-3/1 suppressed inflammation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, and a ratio of 5/1 had a beneficial effect on patients with asthma, whereas a ratio of 10/1 had adverse consequences" 2002 study.
So the ratios are all over the place. But the info above makes me think that the high ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 in western diets is probably an extreme to avoid. This recipe has a total ratio of about 3:1.
Another issue in the oils controversy that wrongly criticizes canola and is not an issue in this recipe is the form of vitamin E, gamma vs alpha. One correlation study suggests that the consumption of higher gamma over alpha in the US could reduce the lung capacity for 1% of people. Another study says that the gamma form might guard against cancer and dementia. So it's not decided, but regardless, high gamma consumption in the US is due to soybean oil (76% gamma) and corn oil, not canola (7% gamma).
In any case, the multivitamin vitamin E used here has the alpha-form, which is where almost all of the vit. E comes from, and so the vitamin E in this recipe is overwhelmingly alpha form; the gamma form is very small here (about 1%), and you probably should be glad to get a little of it, since just one form is probably not great.
So canola seems to work well with a good ratio of omega-6 to omega-3, and no issues with vitamin E.
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