Cheese, cheese, cheese - --- how do I give up cheese? I'm going to start calling for Gromit and muttering about Wensleydale any minute. . .
Watch the eating of carrots. There is a lot of natural sugar in them and it can cause sugar rushes and binge eating.
I guess Cream Cheese is better than normal Cheese. I guess it has a lot less Phosphate. I got that out of the Kidney Friendly Comfort Foods cookbook. Epoman has that book as well from the Renal Prom.
And cream cheese is fine, in and of itself, but it's not going to fix my craving for a nice sharp, hard cheese to nibble on. . . *sigh*
When your chemistries say 'yes,' how about a nice tangy feta cheese. Not the fake ones made in the States (mostly salty--not tangy), but the ones imported from Greece, Israel or France. It's one of the lowest in PO4. Snack on a couple of ounces with a couple of binders.
I am curious as well since I LOVE cheeese, which are all the lowest Phosphate cheeses?
Quote from: angieskidney on January 26, 2007, 12:36:25 PMI am curious as well since I LOVE cheeese, which are all the lowest Phosphate cheeses?1 oz. Cream Cheese 29 mg1 oz. Neufchatel Cheese 39 mg1 oz. Brie 53 mg1 oz. Soft Goat Cheese 73 mg1 oz. Feta 96 mg1 oz. Camembert 98 mg1 oz. Blue Cheese 110 mg1 oz. mozzarella, whole milk, low moisture 117 mg1 tbsp Grated Parmesan cheese 36mgIf you have a craving for pizza:DOMINO'S 14" Cheese Pizza, Crunchy Thin Crust1 slicePhosphorus, P 117 mg Potassium, K 72 mgEven two slices are doable ... just take your binders.The Renalist
The information is from the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference:http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/search/Seek and Ye shall learn.The Renalist.
Quote from: Zach on January 27, 2007, 09:34:23 AMThe information is from the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference:http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/search/Seek and Ye shall learn.The Renalist. Oh ya I just found that a few days ago! That is a good link!