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26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
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26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
26G PROTEIN • 4–5G NET CARBS • STILL TASTES LIKE A REAL BAGEL •
Free shipping on orders over $70! •
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    Protein, Fiber, Satiety & Performance Nutrition

    The Science Behind Fit Bagel

    High protein. High fiber. Built for satiety, performance, and modern nutrition.

    Contents

      Most modern convenience foods are low in the nutrients most associated with satiety and dietary quality. Fit Bagel was intentionally designed differently — combining substantial protein and fiber in a portable format backed by modern nutrition science.

      • 26g Protein
      • 41g Fiber
      • Built for Satiety
      • Performance-Oriented Nutrition

      Modern Convenience Foods Often Leave People Hungry

      Many modern convenience foods are:

      • low in protein,
      • low in fiber,
      • rapidly digested,
      • and easy to overconsume.

      As a result, many people struggle with:

      • poor satiety,
      • energy crashes,
      • and chronically low intake of important nutrients like fiber.

      Fit Bagel was designed to address this gap.

      Protein Is One of the Most Important Nutrients for Satiety & Recovery

      Protein plays a critical role in:

      • muscle maintenance,
      • recovery,
      • satiety,
      • healthy aging,
      • and metabolic health.

      Modern sports nutrition research consistently supports higher protein intake for:

      • athletes,
      • active individuals,
      • body composition goals,
      • and appetite regulation.

      Protein RDA vs Optimal Intake

      The official Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for protein is:

      0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight.

      For many adults, this equals roughly 50–56g/day.

      However, sports nutrition organizations frequently recommend significantly higher intakes for physically active individuals.

      “Protein intakes of 1.4–2.0 g/kg/day for physically active individuals are safe and may improve training adaptations.”

      — International Society of Sports Nutrition

      Fiber Is One of the Most Underconsumed Nutrients in America

      Fiber supports:

      • digestive health,
      • satiety,
      • blood sugar regulation,
      • cholesterol management,
      • and gut microbiome health.

      Yet most Americans consume dramatically less fiber than recommended.

      Average American Fiber Intake ~15g/day
      Recommended Intake 25–38g/day

      Fiber is officially classified as a “Nutrient of Public Health Concern”

      Understanding the 25–38g Fiber Recommendation

      The commonly cited recommendation of 25–38 grams of fiber per day originates from the National Academy of Medicine’s Dietary Reference Intake system.

      The recommendation is based on:

      14 grams of fiber per 1,000 calories consumed.

      Importantly, this recommendation is classified as an:

      Adequate Intake (AI)

      An AI is designed to represent nutritional adequacy in the general population — not necessarily an optimal intake target for every individual or lifestyle.

      Adequate Intake ≠ Maximum Limit

      The fiber recommendation was designed to prevent underconsumption — not to establish a “do not exceed” threshold.

      Fiber Recommendations Work Similar to Protein Recommendations

      Protein

      Official RDA:

      ~50–56g/day

      But athletes and active individuals commonly consume substantially more.

      Fiber

      Official AI:

      25–38g/day

      But this benchmark was designed around adequacy — not necessarily optimal intake for every lifestyle or goal.

      The Key Idea

      Nutrition reference values are often designed around minimum adequacy — not necessarily optimal intake for every lifestyle, performance goal, or dietary philosophy.

      Satiety Matters

      Many modern foods are engineered to be:

      • rapidly digested,
      • highly palatable,
      • and easy to overconsume.

      Protein and fiber are two of the nutrients most consistently associated with:

      • increased fullness,
      • reduced hunger,
      • and improved appetite regulation.

      Meals higher in protein and fiber are associated with:

      • greater satiety,
      • slower digestion,
      • reduced snacking,
      • and lower calorie intake later in the day.

      High Protein + High Fiber Is a Rare Combination

      Food Protein Fiber
      Traditional Bagel Low Low
      Breakfast Pastry Low Low
      Protein Bar Moderate/High Low–Moderate
      Fit Bagel High High

      Most convenience foods prioritize taste, shelf stability, and refined carbohydrates. Few are designed around both meaningful protein and substantial fiber. Fit Bagel was intentionally built around both.

      Fiber Helps Slow Digestion

      Fiber helps slow gastric emptying and carbohydrate absorption, which may help moderate post-meal glucose response and improve satiety. This is one reason higher-fiber foods are often associated with improved metabolic health.

      Fiber Feeds the Gut Microbiome

      Many forms of dietary fiber act as fuel for beneficial gut bacteria. These bacteria produce compounds called short-chain fatty acids, which researchers associate with digestive health, immune function, and metabolic regulation.

      The Fiber in Fit Bagel Comes From Multiple Sources

      Not all dietary fiber behaves the same way in the body. Different fibers can support digestion, satiety, gut microbiome activity, stool bulk, and metabolic health in different ways. Fit Bagel was intentionally formulated using multiple fiber sources rather than relying on a single ingredient.

      Inulin Fiber

      Inulin is a soluble prebiotic fiber naturally found in foods like chicory root, onions, garlic, and asparagus. It is one of the most researched prebiotic fibers and is known for helping nourish beneficial gut bacteria.

      Potential benefits associated with inulin include:

      • gut microbiome support,
      • increased short-chain fatty acid production,
      • digestive support,
      • and satiety support.

      Important Note: Because inulin is fermentable, some individuals may experience digestive adaptation when significantly increasing intake rapidly.

      Oat Fiber

      Oat-derived fibers are commonly associated with digestive health, stool bulk, satiety, and cholesterol management. Oat fibers contain compounds that researchers associate with heart-health benefits and slower digestion.

      Wheat-Based Fiber Components

      Fit Bagel also contains wheat-derived ingredients that contribute to texture, structure, and fiber content. Certain starch and fiber structures may digest more slowly than traditional refined carbohydrates, contributing to improved satiety and texture.

      Why Multiple Fiber Sources Matter

      Different fibers behave differently throughout digestion. Some fibers are more fermentable, some provide bulk, some influence satiety, and others support the gut microbiome. Using multiple fiber sources allows for a broader functional nutritional profile than relying on a single isolated fiber ingredient alone.

      What Is a Prebiotic Fiber?

      Prebiotic fibers are fibers that help feed beneficial gut bacteria. When these bacteria ferment prebiotic fibers, they produce compounds called short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs). Researchers associate these compounds with digestive health, microbiome diversity, metabolic health, and gut barrier support. Inulin is one of the most widely studied prebiotic fibers.

      One of the Largest Nutrition Reviews Ever Conducted

      A landmark 2019 review published in The Lancet analyzed 185 prospective studies and 58 clinical trials. Researchers found that higher fiber intake was associated with reductions in cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke, colorectal cancer, and all-cause mortality.

      Higher fiber intake was associated with a 15–30% reduction in all-cause and cardiovascular-related mortality.

      Is 41g of Fiber “Too Much”?

      For healthy individuals, there is currently no established Upper Limit (UL) for dietary fiber from foods. Unlike nutrients such as sodium or vitamin A, researchers have not identified a toxicity threshold for fiber intake in healthy populations consuming fiber-rich foods.

      However: tolerance varies by individual, hydration matters, and increasing fiber intake too rapidly may cause digestive discomfort.

      Important to Know

      Some individuals may experience bloating, gas, or digestive discomfort when increasing fiber intake rapidly. Most medical organizations recommend increasing fiber gradually and maintaining adequate hydration.

      Built for Real-World Performance Nutrition

      Fit Bagel was designed for people who need convenient nutrition that is filling, portable, protein-forward, and more nutritionally substantial than traditional convenience foods.

      Whether used before training, after workouts, during travel, or between meetings, the goal was to create a product built around real satiety and practical nutrition.

      Why Fit Bagel Was Designed This Way

      Fit Bagel was created around a simple idea: modern convenience foods often sacrifice satiety, protein, and fiber in favor of refined carbohydrates and short-term palatability.

      We wanted to create something different: high protein, high fiber, satisfying, portable, and performance-oriented — not as a gimmick, but as a practical nutritional tool for real life.

      FAQ

      Is 41g of fiber safe?

      For most healthy adults, fiber intake from foods is generally considered safe. Individual tolerance varies, and adequate hydration are important.

      Why do some people think 25–38g is the maximum?

      Because the recommendation is commonly misunderstood. It is an Adequate Intake benchmark — not an established upper limit.

      Why can higher fiber cause digestive discomfort?

      Rapid increases in fiber intake without enough water can temporarily cause bloating or gas.

      Is all fiber the same?

      No. Different fibers behave differently in digestion and microbiome fermentation. Fit Bagel contains multiple fiber sources, including inulin and oat fiber, each with distinct functional properties related to digestion, satiety, stool bulk, and gut microbiome support.

      Why combine high protein and high fiber?

      Protein and fiber are two of the nutrients most associated with satiety and dietary quality, yet most convenience foods are low in both.

      Sources & References

      • National Academy of Medicine / Dietary Reference Intakes
        Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate, Fiber, Fat, Protein and Amino Acids
        nap.nationalacademies.org/read/10490/chapter/1
      • NIH — Nutrient Recommendations
        Office of Dietary Supplements — Nutrient Recommendations
        ods.od.nih.gov/HealthInformation/nutrientrecommendations.aspx
      • NIH — Protein Fact Sheet
        Protein Fact Sheet for Health Professionals
        ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Protein-HealthProfessional/
      • USDA — Fiber Recommendations
        USDA Nutrition Resources
        usda.gov/about-usda/news/blog/online-nutrition-resources-your-fingertips
      • Dietary Guidelines for Americans
        dietaryguidelines.gov
      • Harvard Health — Fiber Intake
        Should I Be Eating More Fiber?
        health.harvard.edu/blog/should-i-be-eating-more-fiber-2019022115927
      • Harvard Nutrition Source — Fiber
        nutritionsource.hsph.harvard.edu/carbohydrates/fiber/
      • Harvard Nutrition Source — Protein
        nutritionsource.hsph.harvard.edu/protein/
      • Harvard Nutrition Source — Microbiome
        hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/microbiome/
      • Mayo Clinic — Fiber
        Dietary Fiber: Essential for a Healthy Diet
        mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/fiber/art-20043983
      • Mayo Clinic — Satiety
        Feeling Full on Fewer Calories
        mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/weight-loss/in-depth/satiety/art-20044897
      • Cleveland Clinic — Benefits of Fiber
        health.clevelandclinic.org/benefits-of-fiber
      • Cleveland Clinic — Fiber Intake
        How Much Fiber Per Day Do You Need?
        health.clevelandclinic.org/how-much-fiber-per-day
      • Cleveland Clinic — Prebiotics vs Probiotics
        health.clevelandclinic.org/prebiotics-vs-probiotics-whats-the-difference
      • CDC — Fiber & Blood Sugar
        Fiber Helps Control Blood Sugar
        cdc.gov/diabetes/healthy-eating/fiber-helps-diabetes.html
      • Stanford Medicine — Fiber & Gut Health
        Fiber and Fermented Foods
        scopeblog.stanford.edu/2023/07/27/fiber-fermented-foods/
      • International Society of Sports Nutrition
        ISSN Position Stand: Protein & Exercise
        jissn.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1550-2783-4-8
      • The Lancet — Fiber Meta Analysis
        Dietary Fiber and Chronic Disease
        pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30638909/
      • NIH / PubMed — Inulin Review
        Health Benefits of Inulin
        pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25231862/
      • FDA — Oats & Heart Health
        Oats and Coronary Heart Disease
        fda.gov/food/food-labeling-nutrition/qualified-health-claims-letter-oats-and-coronary-heart-disease
      • ISAPP Consensus Statement — Prebiotics
        The International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics Consensus Statement
        nature.com/articles/nrgastro.2017.75