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Is kugel good to fill up on?



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amother
OP


 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 9:30 am
Before a fast
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zaq  




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 9:36 am
Depends on what kind. Simple starches like white lokshen and white potato not so much as whole-grain lokshen and sweet potato. All veggies like squash are good for both the fiber and water content. What you don't want is refined sugar and white starch.
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amother
Oleander


 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 10:49 am
If you don't have diabetes, then I would say yes, go for it as long as the kugel isn't too salty.

Drink lots of water, and if you have room for fruit and veggies, do those too.

B'hatzlacha.
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patzer




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 11:12 am
amother Oleander wrote:
If you don't have diabetes, then I would say yes, go for it as long as the kugel isn't too salty.

Drink lots of water, and if you have room for fruit and veggies, do those too.

B'hatzlacha.


Interestingly, I've always heard that salty foods are great before a fast because they help your body retain water.
Or is that just a myth?
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amother
Zinnia  


 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 12:36 pm
patzer wrote:
Interestingly, I've always heard that salty foods are great before a fast because they help your body retain water.
Or is that just a myth?


I’ve always been confused about this. Is salt good or bad for dehydration? I’m a bad faster and last fast I did better than usual. It happened to be that day before the fast (not at the meal right before) I ate some very salty food. Nothing else was different. If anyone has real information on whether salty food before fasting is a good or bad idea, let us know.
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amother
Caramel


 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 12:41 pm
Too late now, but I would increase salt a starting two days before fasting. Day of is not idel because you'll feel thirsty during the fast.
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  zaq




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 12:51 pm
Salt increases thirst. Yes, it attracts water, but the water stays outside the cells, and the salt actually draws water away from the cells. So while you're "retaining water" on a macro level, your cells are actually dehydrating, which is why you feel thirsty. After YT if you want the whole lesson on how this works I'll be happy to explain in depth. Or Google "osmosis."

Short answer: drink water and avoid salt.
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amother
  Zinnia


 

Post Fri, Oct 11 2024, 1:03 pm
Thank you.
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