Macro‑friendly meal posts

Fitness creators are posting macro‑forward comfort staples: a garlic‑butter burger clocked ~475 kcal and ~69 g protein, a whole high‑protein pizza listed at ~660 kcal and ~72 g protein, and a zero‑carb chicken‑crust pizza with ~24 g protein per slice — plus a low‑cal breakfast burrito flagged at ~440 kcal. ( )

The posts come from creators who also sell recipe collections: fitfoodieliving’s site lists a PDF cookbook that promises “110+” recipes with nutrition information for every recipe. (fitfoodieliving.com) Liv Carbonero, the face behind fitfoodieliving, lists a TikTok account with about 963.6K followers and roughly 28M total likes, illustrating the scale behind that handle’s recipe posts. (tiktok.com) Low Carb Love publishes multiple chicken‑crust and “zero‑carb” pizza recipes on its site, including an “Air Fryer Chicken Crust Pizza” and a separate “Zero Carb Crust Pizza” post that walk through ingredients and preparation. (lowcarblove.com) Recipe blogs and food sites that have tested chicken‑crust pizzas report high per‑serving protein counts — one independent recipe lists about 36 g of protein per serving for a chicken‑crust pizza. (eatingbirdfood.com) Fitfoodieliving explicitly markets its output as “macro‑friendly” and bundles “100+ High‑Protein Recipes” in paid collections aimed at meal planning and tracking. (fitfoodieliving.co) Low Carb Love monetizes through digital cookbooks and meal plans on its storefront and promotes results such as “helped me lose 30lbs in 8 months” on its site and product pages. (lowcarblove.com) The handle evaishungry maps to an active creator presence—there’s a YouTube channel under “evaishungry” and a bio.link aggregation for that handle, indicating recipe videos and cross‑platform links behind that post. (youtube.com)

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