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- October 12, 2014 at 7:43 pm #23901
please4pls
MemberI have just joined and was excited. It takes too much time. How do you incorporate the menus from the cookbook into your weekly menu?
October 13, 2014 at 12:38 pm #23911Ossie-Sharon
MemberHi, please4pls, and welcome! Many of the recipes are in the Menu Planner lists, and we are adding more. For those that are not, you can select one that is similar (particularly with regard to the main ingredient so you don’t waste too much time on comparisons) and then just make the swap when it comes time to prepare the meal.
January 1, 2015 at 7:50 pm #25467sbest
MemberI agree! Who had time for these preparations? Can’t do it! Not a quitter a realist!
January 1, 2015 at 10:45 pm #25469Ossie-Sharon
MemberHi, sbest. The planning part will ultimately not take very much time – there is just a period of adjustment at the beginning, and then it becomes second nature. Just ease into it, and make small changes gradually. Part of the challenge of eating “clean” is finding ways to save time while using whole foods and making dishes from scratch. It doesn’t have to be complicated. What sort of things do you eat now that are not time-consuming? I’ll do my best to help.
February 2, 2015 at 10:19 pm #26655vtpfl48
MemberI am new too and agree that this is very time consuming. I would like to make a menu for just one day at a time and can’t seem to do that and print it out. It gives me a whole week that I have not edited yet. I guess I am a very boring eater as I usually eat the same things with just a slight variation. I don’t want to think about seven different breakfasts! Oatmeal with fruit and some nuts is one breakfast I like most days. Eggs or omlet on weekends. Also there is no accounting for eating out which I do several times a week for lunches and at least once a week for dinner. I do not cook much so forget recipes!
February 3, 2015 at 5:04 pm #26690Ossie-Sharon
MemberHi, vtpfl48. You can repeat meals or even whole days as often as you like. You can even mix and match and have something like Monday’s breakfast with Tuesday’s lunch, and Wednesday’s dinner, etc. etc. every day forever if it is healthy (i.e. score above 80%). Whatever makes you comfortable and makes your positive changes sustainable :).
February 16, 2015 at 8:13 pm #27109jermarnm
MemberHi Ossie, you didn’t address the “eating out” portion of the previous post… I was just wondering about that also.
February 17, 2015 at 7:32 am #27125Support
KeymasterHi Jermarnm,
Here are some greats tips that Ossie posted the other day đ
⢠If you can, get online to search for the ideal place ahead of time, filtering the options by features. Look for restaurants with an emphasis on whole foods, including vegetables and even âslowâ cooking â or at least a de-emphasis on junk food, deep-fat frying, heavy sauces, and rich sweets.
⢠If you know in advance where youâre going, peruse the menu ahead of time and prepare yourself with the right choices. The usual wisdom applies here: salads, cooked or âhiddenâ vegetables (i.e. red sauce and salsa), baked or sautĂŠed entrees, light sauces, and fruit for dessert. Or if nothing else, âprepared how you like itâ.
⢠Avoid the bread or chip basket, or any other âempty calorieâ filler that a restaurant may offer before a meal. This will add a whole new course that you hadnât anticipated, usually made up of refined carbohydrates an undesirable oils. This can be diet sabotage, so kindly ask the server in advance to leave the breadbasket or chips and salsa off your table, so you are not tempted. If you order unsweetened tea or water with lemon in advance for sipping, you may not miss it. When it comes to the real food, eat bulky, low energy-density (a.k.a. âlow-calorieâ) foods first, generally high in water and fiber â order a salad or clear soup as your first course, and when dinner arrives, start with the lightest foods on your plate, usually the vegetables.
⢠Donât be shy about asking how your food is prepared. They are there to serve customers, of which you are one. Even if your server doesnât know, the cook does, and if you do, you can take it or leave it â or improve it. Find out if butter, margarine, or oil is used, and what is available for substitution. Ask about the sauce that comes with an entrĂŠe, and if it has âcreamâ, âbutterâ, or âcheeseâ at the core â then go with a healthier alternative.
⢠Look for foods on the menu that are broiled or grilled (but not charred or blackened), poached, steamed, roasted, or baked; avoid foods that are fried, crispy, creamy, creamed, au gratin, escalloped, or breaded â all of which are synonyms for high amounts of added fat prepared in an unhealthy way.
⢠Balance is key. If you really want a high-calorie item, balance it out with lighter choices for the rest of the meal.
⢠Every food has a healthier version. Order the leaner type or cut of meat, and exercise portion control (take advantage of the doggie bag, and only eat half if the portion is too large). If you love fish and chips, then try grilled fish and oven-fried potatoes, etc. Substitutions can usually be made. Here are some healthy choices you can make at different types of restaurants:
â At a pizzeria, choose a plain cheese pizza (not âextraâ cheese) with a plain crust (not âstuffedâ), or pizza with vegetable toppings instead of meat toppings, such as âMargaritaâ with fresh tomatoes.
â In an Italian restaurant, if you like chicken, veal, or eggplant parmesan, try grilled chicken or eggplant with marinara sauce and a sprinkle of parmesan cheese. Ask for oil and vinegar on the side to dress your own salad. Order pasta with red sauce such as marinara, instead of such creamy white or butter sauces as Alfredo. Mushrooms make a great low-fat meat alternative. Have sorbet or a cappuccino for dessert instead of rich cake â unless youâre splitting it 4 or more ways.
â In an Asian restaurant, choose steamed rice instead of fried rice â brown if you can get it! â steamed dumplings or vegetables instead of fried egg rolls or tempura, as well as vegetarian entrees that include a number of different vegetables instead of meat; particularly avoid deep-fried entrees such as lemon chicken and âsweet-and-sourâ pork or chicken. Be sure to avoid monosodium glutamate (MSG), which can work against your weight and health goals, and opt for low-sodium soy sauce. Have a salad or clear/miso soup as a first course.
â In a Mexican restaurant, choose salsa instead of sour cream or cheese dips; avocado is a great source of âgoodâ fat, but it is still quite dense, so go easy on it. Choose dishes made with plain, soft tortillas that arenât fried, such as burritos, soft tacos and enchiladas. Have baked instead of refried beans.
â In a cafeteria or food-buffet restaurant, fill your plate with plain vegetable side dishes before you go for the heavier items. Look for grilled, broiled or flame-cooked chicken, fish, and lean meats or tofu, and avoid anything breaded, batter-dipped or fried. If thereâs a salad bar, concentrate on crisp, crunchy vegetable and bean mixtures; leave the potato, macaroni and tuna salads behind. Avoid going back for seconds on all items except vegetables, and be sure to use dressings sparingly unless naturally light, such as lemon juice and/or vinegar.
⢠If you want a salad with dressing on the side, ask for it. If the house dressing is too rich, oil and vinegar are almost always available, at least upon request. Vegetables can always been steamed instead of fried, and lemon and spices added instead of butter. If you want your chicken grilled instead of fried or smothered, go for it. The same goes for marinara sauce instead of the regular cream-based sauce. You get the idea.
⢠Stick with sound serving sizes, though sometimes this is easier said than done. Many restaurants, especially the âaffordableâ ones, make it a point to fill your plate to give you a sense of value. Though this seems like a good idea, be aware that it can take up nearly your entire daily allotment for fat and/or energy. Cut your âgainsâ right away, and divide your restaurant portion into two â share with a dining partner, or just eat half there and pack the other half to go â in this way, you avoid the problem of eating too much and paying for it later. If you know youâll be tempted to eat more than you should, ask to have your âdoggy bagâ prepared in advance, so youâll only get a sensible portion size at the table. Some restaurants will even let you buy a half order or childrenâs portion of an entrĂŠe.
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