Hi All,
I just want to say Huel Bars are soooooo nice warmed up (15 secs microwave maybe less).
They have a resmblence to mince pies almost!
Really nice!
K x
Hi All,
I just want to say Huel Bars are soooooo nice warmed up (15 secs microwave maybe less).
They have a resmblence to mince pies almost!
Really nice!
K x
Hmmmm, nice idea. Noted.
On it. Will post back to confirm.
This fact is correct. It’s yum, very much like a a warmed up mince pie, but a very crumbly one! @JamesCollier probably wouldn’t advise microwaving them them though due to some loss of the more labile micronutrients.
Despite the bad press they are given…especially here in Glastonbury where every other person is a tinfoil hat wearing flatearther…microwaves are one of the better ways of cooking things to preserve micronutrients…but yes there will still be some loss…though I can’t imagine 15 secs will be too horrendous.
Send a tenner my way and I’ll give it a go…or don’t you care about your marks.
A tenner to take it once, but I’ll do a discount on bulk deals. £40 will get you five! Offer good for today only mind you.
The subject of this survey is the new development of meal replacement shakes and whether you would consider substituting one or more of your three main meals per day.
Surveying a group of meal replacement users is going to get you biased data which is totally useless for the purpose described above, unless you’re just trying to rig the results. That would be consistent with you asking individuals to take the survey multiple times.
EB96, has it occurred to you that whoever assesses your dissertation might well look into how you collected your data, do a simple search of the web & discover your, um, methods?
I might do a similar one on Huel as a suitable pudding replacement for my dessertation (sic).
“The subject of this survey is the new development of meal replacement shakes and whether you would consider substituting one or more of your three main meals per day.”
Hmm. I can’t help but agree that asking people on the Huel forum if they would consider replacing a traditional meal with a Huel type product is a bit daft.
Hey Ed, not to jump on the bully train here, because you’re more than welcome on this forum and also welcome to recruit participants here, however let me offer some feedback…
As stated, be careful not introduce bias into your study. You should add some questions into the questionnaire around exposure to meal replacement products, it might be useful to know if participants have ever tried liquid food, if so how often, do they have any special dietary requirements (huuuuge factor), are they aware of more than one product (I didn’t like only being able to write down one product), would they consider going fully Huel or just supplementing their diet with meal replacement powders, do they currently use or have they used in the past supplements or similar products, what is their diet like, for example to they care about eating a balanced diet currently, etc etc
Bullying is stretching it when the dude is studying for one assumes a recognised qualification & advocating we supply him with specious data to make him look good. What would you call it if I contacted his department head & reported his request? Assault? Maybe GBH?
Innocent until proven guilty mikey boy, all are welcome on the Huel forum. If his university cocks up and overlooks flaws in his research it won’t be alone, so called experts estimate that >90% of contemporary scientific research is based on unsound data practices
Hehehehe…if you think this is bullying you should go on some vegan forums. That’ll man you up…try talking about vegan cats or if horse riding is vegan, or whether you can wear 2nd hand leather or look at a honey bee in a funny way, or push over a cow and see t all kick off…
Schooling given and received by the looks of it
Bully…
But wait… cold food is not good for your stomach. You better get it to room temperature first.