Low-Carb Food Costs


I sometimes see people describing the low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet that we follow as unaccessible to the masses due to its expense. I don't believe that to be true and hope to document that in this page, over time, starting with breakfast.

As of this writing in mid-2019, Andrew is 14 years old and over 9 years past his T1D diagnosis. He is rapidly growing and eats a monstrous amount of food. To get a sense of how rapid his growth currently is, and how much protein and calories his body demands, these pictures were taken 364 days apart, November of 2018 and 2019, with 13 years old on the left and 14 on the right.

Breakfast

My wife gave me a recent Walmart receipt and on it were these two breakfast staples:

Andrew is rapidly growing and eats a monstrous amount of food. For breakfast, he typically eats 4 eggs and 3 sausages, and using the prices above, he can be fed that meal for $0.19 of eggs and $0.67 of sausage, totaling $0.86. We often make the 4 eggs into an omelet, so there will be some cheese, perhaps a little diced green pepper, etc. But generally speaking, we are feeding him breakfast for close to $1 per day and that breakfast has 4x72+3x210=918 calories, 4x6g+3x7g=45g of protein, and essentially zero carbohydrate.

From Walmart.com, I got these prices and data:

It has been nearly 10 years since I have eaten a bowl of cereal, so just going with what is on the labels for serving size, but I suspect that my son would need several multiples of that... a serving of cereal with milk would be $2.98/9+$1.99/16=$0.33+$0.14=$0.47. However, that meal has only 80+90=170 calories, 3+8=11g of protein, and 20+13=33g of carbohydrate.

If you double the serving sizes of cereal and milk, you then get to 340 calories, 22g of protein, and 66g of carbohydrate and at essentially the same cost of the eggs and meat breakfast. But, the meat and eggs has almost triple the calories (340 vs 918), double the protein (22g vs 45g, plus a much broader amino acid profile), and essentially no carbohydrate versus 66g. On a nutrition-equivalent basis, the eggs and meat is a bargain versus the cereal and skim milk.

Summarized in Tables:

BreakfastCostCaloriesProteinCarbs
4 eggs and 3 sausageAbout $191845galmost zero
2 cups Cheerios and skim milkAbout $134022g66g

BreakfastCost per 100 CaloriesCost per 10 Grams of Protein
4 eggs and 3 sausage$0.11$0.22
2 cups Cheerios and skim milk$0.29$0.45

References:

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