I followed Michael Mosley’s fast diet — now there’s one food I can’t go without

Lydia Royce poses for a picture in her kitchen

I followed Michael Mosley’s 5:2 fast diet plan and now there’s one food I now can’t live without (Image: Grant Royce Photography)

The emotional eating I had been doing was beginning to show.

My jeans were tighter, my energy was non-existent and my face was so puffy I didn’t feel like myself.

I tried to make changes but I had let my diet reach such a bad place that I really needed a complete overhaul.

I was completely reliant on quick and convenient ultra-processed foods and desperately needed to remind myself that it can be just as quick, simple and tasty to create healthy and enjoyable meals from scratch as it was to reach for the convenient processed chicken and chips I could pop in the oven.

That’s where Michael Mosley’s diet came in. It isn’t the first time I’ve followed one of his plans. I lost 5lb in a week doing the Fast 800 diet last year and managed to maintain that for more than six months.

How the 5:2 diet works

It creates a plan week by week, auto-generating meals that are all based on the Mediterranean diet: high in vegetables, low in carbohydrates, with healthy fats and proteins.

It then gives you a shopping list of everything that you will need that week. I find this incredibly helpful, as coming up with meal ideas and planning a food shop around that can be quite a task. It helps to ensure you only buy what you need. While I try and stick to the suggestions, I make some tweaks here and there to ensure I am trying food I will definitely like, and to ensure I will use up all the food that I have with little to no leftovers.

Monday

Monday was a fasting day. The plan created a day of three meals worth up to 800 calories. I broke my fast at around 10am, with full-fat Greek yoghurt, almonds, seeds and berries. I love cereal for breakfast, and this helped hit the spot of sweet and crunchy cravings.

Lunch was a recipe that I loved when I did the plan last year, two poached eggs, grilled asparagus, and parmesan cheese. I really didn’t like asparagus until I discovered it grilled with a little bit of salt last year and now it is one of my favourite vegetables. This is a really quick and easy meal to put together.

Dinner was a beef stir fry, which was really tasty and surprisingly filling. I made more so my husband could have some and enough to have for leftovers the next day. It was made up of beef, peppers, broccoli and mushrooms. Overall the day didn’t feel like I was in a drastic calorie deficit and I felt quite satisfied most of the day.

A bowl of yoghurt, nuts, seeds and blueberries

A bowl of yoghurt, nuts, seeds and blueberries (Image: Lydia Royce)

Tuesday

I started Tuesday morning with breakfast at 9am. Blueberry apple porridge – made with full fat milk, whole rolled oats, chia seeds, grated apple, with a dollop of Greek yoghurt and blueberries on the side. This was surprisingly delicious, coming from someone who never eats porridge. It is definitely a recipe I would reach for again. It felt like a huge portion and kept me satisfied all morning.

For lunch, I had the beef stir fry leftovers which was nice to have a quick option to put in the microwave.

Apple porridge with blueberries and greek yoghurt

Apple porridge with blueberries and greek yoghurt (Image: Lydia Royce)

Beef stir-fry

Beef stir-fry (Image: Lydia Royce)

Dinner was cauliflower cheese bites on a bed of salad. The recipe used up a whole cauliflower, so it is safe to say these were very smelly. I’m not a fan of cauliflower, I will happily have it on a cooked dinner drowned in gravy, but I never usually choose it otherwise. But I wanted to go with the flow of the plan and try as many options as it suggested. But I kind of wish I didn’t. They were not very nice and I ended up leaving some.

Cauliflower cheese bites

Cauliflower cheese bites (Image: Lydia Royce)

Wednesday

I started Wednesday morning with one of my favourite recipes: baked oats with strawberries and cream. For the sake of getting through the massive tub of Greek yoghurt I bought that week, I didn’t actually use the full fat cream cheese the recipe recommends, but the yoghurt instead. These are so easy to make and so tasty.

Lunch was supposed to be a naked chicken burger on a bed of salad, but I really didn’t want to shape the mince chicken meat into burgers using my hands, so I made a chicken burger salad style dish instead. This was really satisfying, and was the first time I’d tried chicken mince. I loved this and will definitely make it again.

Chicken burger salad bowl

Chicken burger salad bowl (Image: Lydia Royce)

By dinner time I was having one of those days where I just wanted to eat something that was very low effort and that I knew I would enjoy. I swapped a suggested recipe for smashed avocado with poached eggs on sourdough toast. The recipe did have tomatoes in it, but I left these out as I wasn’t really fancying them. I also added feta cheese, which inevitably bumped up the calorie intake, but again, it was one of those days.

Thursday

Thursday was a fasting day, and I had a simple Greek yoghurt and raspberries at 10am. I have always over-complicated breakfasts, but using Greek yoghurt as a base to build around this week has really helped me realise it doesn’t have to be hard to start your day with something healthy.

Lunch was leftovers of the chicken burger salad I had the day before. For dinner, I had Portobello mushroom toast with smoked salmon and poached eggs. I also crumbled some feta cheese on top. As you can tell, I really like savoury breakfast dishes, and love having them for lunch or dinner. I wasn’t that much of a fan of the Portobello mushroom as the base though. It put me off the smoked salmon with it. I was supposed to have this for breakfast the next day but decided to change it.

Portobello mushrooms and eggs and feta

Portobello mushrooms and eggs and feta (Image: Lydia Royce)

Friday

Friday started off great with another Greek yoghurt dish. The recipe was supposed to be cottage cheese, walnuts and blueberries, but I really don’t like cottage cheese, and trying not to waste the big tub of yoghurt I had, I used it as a substitute. I don’t think I’ve tried walnuts before, and I really loved this combination. They’re a great nut to have if like me you love a crunchy cereal.

Lunch was smoked salmon and avocado on sourdough toast, as opposed to the Portobello mushroom option. This was a classic staple and a safe bet that I know I like.

Dinner time is where things went a little wrong. I forgot to get chicken out of the freezer, so couldn’t make the pesto chicken traybake I had planned. I had a hard week, and had already swapped some recipes or added in foods I love to get that comfort that I always crave from food, but Friday is where I really struggled.

Smoked salmon on sour bread toast

Smoked salmon on sourdough toast (Image: Lydia Royce)

I don’t work Fridays so my routine was thrown out of the window, and I was unprepared with the meat. I ended up going off plan and making myself some chips in my ActiFry (which are delicious and use very little olive oil), as well as a breaded frozen chicken breast.

I also bought a big bar of Cadbury’s Whole Nut chocolate which of course was not on the plan at all, but I’m trying to focus on not feeling guilty if I do indulge, and treat this plan as a lifestyle. Weaning off these kind of food is a process, and I’m happy that I made it as long as I did without any chocolate after the five-a-day Creme Egg diet I’d been more used to recently.

Saturday

I started Saturday with a breakfast tray bake made up of two tomatoes, one Portobello mushroom, one sausage, one egg, and two pieces of bacon with the fat cut off. It was just enough to feel like a cooked breakfast but didn’t leave me feeling stuffed.

I then made banana blueberry muffins to take out for the afternoon with me for lunch. I made enough to have the next day too, and it worked out at around four muffins per serving. The recipe used ground almonds, eggs, and Greek yoghurt. I didn’t love these muffins, to the point I couldn’t even eat them the next day. I think the recipe was a bit too wet and it felt like the muffins were too savoury to have sweet ingredients like blueberries.

Saturday night was another un-prepared night. I ended up having a Chinese takeaway with my parents. I made up a smaller portion than usual, but it made me realise how hard it is to follow a strict plan on the weekends, especially in the summer, when days out of the house are much longer.

Blueberry muffins

Banana blueberry muffins (Image: Lydia Royce)

Poached eggs with asparagus and parmesan cheese

Health editor Lydia Royce tried Michael Mosley’s 5:2 diet and lost 6lb in one week. (Image: Lydia Royce)

Baked oats with blueberries

Health editor Lydia Royce tried Michael Mosley’s 5:2 diet and lost 6lb in one week. (Image: Lydia Royce)

Chicken pesto bake

Health editor Lydia Royce tried Michael Mosley’s 5:2 diet and lost 6lb in one week. (Image: Lydia Royce)

Sunday

Because I didn’t like the blueberry muffins from the day before, I stuck with the safe baked oats that I knew I liked from earlier this week. I also had another lunch I had earlier this week with eggs and asparagus with parmesan cheese.

For dinner, I finally made the pesto chicken traybake that I had planned for Friday evening, and it was delicious and so easy to make. I just chopped up peppers, courgette and red onion and baked them on a tray along with the chicken breast which was stuffed with pesto. I will definitely be making this again, and it reminded me, after a crappy weekend of indulging, that healthy food can also be really tasty.

What were the results of eating the 5:2 diet?

On June 3 I felt extremely heavy, bloated, and tight. By June 6, I was down 4lbs. By June 10, I was down 6lbs. And I didn’t follow the plan as strictly as I had previously.

Now people will say “it’s just water weight”. And of course it is. If someone goes from eating high sugar and high salt food every day, to cutting it out completely, of course that person is going to lose a lot of water weight in the first few days, but that doesn’t negate the benefits of losing that water weight. After the first five days I already felt like a different person – I noticed my jeans weren’t as tight, my face looked much less puffy, and overall, my energy levels were up as I felt much less of a slob.

I have a scale that also measures your body fat % among other things, and in that same week, I lost 1% body fat, and my BMI dropped by one point too. In terms of sticking to the plan, you really have to be highly motivated to do so. I really didn’t give this my all this week, it was one of those weeks I just needed to show myself some kindness and not be too strict.

Overall, I am so pleased that I took up the Fast800 5:2 plan, simply as a reminder of how good, satisfying and fulfilling a diet based on Mediterranean style food can be. There is so much research out there that shows the Mediterranean diet is the best for health benefits.

Greek yoghurt and walnuts and blueberries

Greek yoghurt and walnuts and blueberries (Image: Lydia Royce)

It is really hard when you are someone who struggles with maintaining a healthy weight, and trying to avoid bad eating habits, to view healthy eating as a lifestyle, and not just with the goal of losing weight. But the Fast800, while it has helped me reach that goal of losing weight, and reminded me how much better I feel when I am eating well and not indulging, has really taught me that there are so many food choices out there that I haven’t explored before.

And the one food that I can no longer live without? Greek yoghurt. It has become a staple for breakfast, and even snacks. I also use it to make flat breads, pizza bases and cake. I would never have imagined that yoghurt could be as versatile as it is.

Source: bing.com

Kerri Waldron

My name is Kerri Waldron and I am an avid healthy lifestyle participant who lives by proper nutrition and keeping active. One of the things I love best is to get to where I am going by walking every chance I get. If you want to feel great with renewed energy, you have to practice good nutrition and stay active.

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