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this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2023
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Asklemmy
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just a preference of eating them seperately on the same day together if it is healthy vs on different days
The healthiest choice is the one you will eat. It's more work to cook both each morning than to alternate, and in the long run it doesn't matter. That said, they both have iron and protein but oats have fiber, so on egg days have something at lunch like an apple or salad, to help you poop, or put your egg on wholemeal toast. On oat days have fewer carbs. It's a lot easier to balance your nutrients over a whole day or a couple of days than each meal.
Preference is one thing but what does that have to do with being healthy? Not trying to make fun of it, just trying to understand the idea behind it.
Poor food combinations can give you gas/bloating, indigestion, fatigue. Good food combinations work together and can help with the uptake of certain nutrients.
I've never thought about that and just now read about it a little more. Interesting. Would make my day to day life too complicated if I would try to consider that into my meal planning as well though.
Edit: Reading more into it, it seems bogus.
It doesn't have to be strict. Some people make too big of a deal out of it. Most of us are used to eating in certain combinations anyways and our bodies have adjusted. One small example that you've probably heard, turmeric's beneficial components are more bioavailable when eaten with black pepper. The body digests foods in varying ideal circumstances depending on what it is. Ultimately, you'll probably be just fine eating a varied diet, but there are combinations that are better or worse for nutrient uptake, gastric comfort, blood sugar spikes, etc.
In terms of health, it doesn't matter I don't think. You're not going to be deficient in an important nutrient by going a day from eating it (but weeks or months is another story)
So I think if you don't want to eat them at the same time, you could just eat more of each on alternating days?
Unless I misunderstood the question