Tips to increase protein intake in Latvia
Créé le : 2 septembre 2025
Répondu en utilisant GPT-5 Thinking par Chat01
Créé le : 2 septembre 2025
Répondu en utilisant GPT-5 Thinking par Chat01
Tips to increase protein intake in Latvia
Here are easy, Latvia-friendly ways to bump your protein without overthinking it:
1) Lean into Latvia’s dairy heroes.
2) Keep Baltic fish in the rotation.
Canned Riga sprats (and other oily fish like herring or mackerel) are shelf-stable and high-protein; Riga Gold sprats clock ~27 g protein per 100 g (they’re rich, so use on rye bread or in salads). (FatSecret)
3) Use traditional legumes.
Dry peas/“pelēkie zirņi” and split peas are cheap and pack ~22 g protein per 100 g (dry). If peas feel heavy, local dietitians suggest eating them regularly and pairing with veggies instead of fatty meat. (Rieksti Jums, santa.lv)
4) Don’t forget buckwheat (griķi).
A Latvian staple that’s easy to batch-cook; ~11 g protein per 100 g (dry) plus minerals. (My Food Data)
5) Stock quick protein add-ins.
Boiled eggs, canned tuna, smoked chicken breast, edamame, kefīrs, and even protein wraps/breads (check labels) make it simple to add 10–25 g to any meal.
6) Make high-protein “Latvianised” meals.
7) If you use supplements, local delivery is easy.
MyProtein ships to Latvia (from a Poland warehouse; ~2–4 business days, free over €50). Good for whey/vegan powders to top up shakes or porridge. (Myprotein LV)
8) Simple “add 20–30 g” habits
Want a 1-day high-protein menu tailored to your preferences (veg/omnivore, budget, lactose-free)? I can put one together.