T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
138.1 | Welcome wise eater. | ENUF::ROYER | | Mon Oct 26 1987 11:38 | 23 |
| Hi Sue,
Welcome to WW. It is the best weight loss progam I have ever used.
I
just lost 30 lbs.
One suggestion. Get the book Weight Watchers Quick Start II cookbook.
It is really great because every receipt tells you what week you
can eat it on. Since I have no imagination when it came to cooking,
I found it to be a God sent of creativity.
Also try doing it with a friend at work. Have the person also get
the book and every week make lunches for each other trying a different
receipt from the book. I had three people doing the program with
me so I only had to "cook" every fourth day. It was such a treat
to know that my lunch was going to be served three times a week.
We actually had several otherr people "jealous" of all the great
things we could eat.
Good luck!
Mary Ann Life Time Member of Weight Watchers
|
138.2 | hi everyone... | SCOMAN::GARIEPY | | Thu Oct 06 1988 05:31 | 15 |
|
Hi all...
I'm Laurie Gariepy and I work in Hudson Ma. (third shift).
I have been following this notes file for about a year now, and
tonight was the first note that I entered. So I thought that it
was about time that I introduced myself. I have about 15 lbs. that
I would like to loose. Thanks for alot of ideas that I've already
used and lets keep it up....
laurie
|
138.3 | WW Subscription toll free # | MAGOS::JOHNSON | | Wed Apr 18 1990 10:38 | 8 |
| Need toll free number for subscribing to weight watcher. I think
it is mention in one of the note files but I don't remember which
one.
Thanks
LJ
|
138.4 | WW: bread exchanges | SOLVIT::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Mon Jun 27 1994 19:38 | 12 |
| Been a while since this string had a reply, but it seems the most
appropriate place for my question. I think I've asked this before, but
not in this file. I have a bread maker, and I hate to give up my nice
fresh bread. Does anyone have any clue how to count that as a WW bread
exchange? The leader at the meeting suggested by ounce; one ounce
equals one bread exchange. Does this sound right? Since the bread is
hand cut, it is never the same twice.
Also, does anyone know what reduces the calories in reduced calorie
bread? Is it just the fat content? Or maybe the sugar too? Since the
yeast needs to feed on the sugar, I doubt that artificial sweetener
could be used.
|
138.5 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Do you hear the people sing ? | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:54 | 17 |
|
I agree with your leader, count one ounce as one exchange.
I just started using that tip to calculate my bagels, as I buy them
from store bakeries more often than buying a brand name, so I never
know the fat/calorie count.
I now weigh my bagels on my food scale, and multiply the number
of ounces by 70 calories and 1 gram of fat (equivalent to one
slice of bread). My Stop and Shop bagels average 4 ounces,
so they are 280 Calories, 4 grams of fat.
As for reduced calories, I'm not sure. I would guess it's
a reduction in fat, but don't know that for a fact. It could
be that they just slice it thinner.
Karen
|
138.6 | bread info | GOLLY::CARROLL | the courage of my contradictions | Tue Jun 28 1994 21:34 | 20 |
| yes, 1 oz bread = 1 bread exchange (unless there is something really
unusual about the bread, like it's cheese bread, or has lots of extra
fat or whatever.)
reducing the sugar you use to feed the yeast would not reduce calories;
sugar is a carbohydrate and as such has the same amount of calories as
flour. however, it is a misconception that you need sugar to make
bread. the yeast needs to eat something and sugar works the fastest,
but flour works too. when i make bread, i use apple juice concentrate.
there isn't enough to adversely affect the flavor of the bread, and 2T
of the stuff works quite well with 1 pkg yeast. (be sure to heat the
AJ to the right temperature with the water, of course. )
reducing the amount of fat too much results in bread with a
poor consistency. commercial lowcal breads add extra non-digestable
substances - cellulose f'rinstance - and extra fiber. the slices are
also sometimes just plain lighter than regular bread. my attempts at
reducing calories in bread have always resulted in inedible bread.
D!
|
138.7 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Do you hear the people sing ? | Wed Jun 29 1994 14:40 | 8 |
|
Thanks D!
When I get back into bread making mode, I think I'll forego
the efforts to cut the calories and fat. Bread is lowfat as
it is, and the calorie count is not outrageous anyway.
Karen
|
138.8 | more questions | SOLVIT::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Wed Jun 29 1994 21:02 | 19 |
| Thanks from me too. Much nicer knowing you're on the right track.
Another question: Is the superstart program lower in calories than
what comes next? Is that why they say two weeks only? When I tried WW
a few years back they called it the personal choice program. It's
level 1 seems similar to the superstart.
I know I should ask that at the meeting tonight, but I may not get the
chance. It looks like I will have to bring my 5 and 7 year olds with
me, and after a day at camp, they're going to be off the wall. So I
may have to leave early so that everyone else can have a normal
meeting. I certainly like the results of superstart. I haven't
stepped on a scale, but my belt is looser. But I have made a few
substitutions, for various reasons, and I wonder if I would results of
a second week on superstart by following whatever their standard
program
Thanks
Debby
|
138.9 | turkey cold cuts | SOLVIT::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Thu Jun 30 1994 19:13 | 12 |
| Well, I chose to start week one, even though they said it was higher by
1 portion per day of bread and protein. I just like the comfort of
having a better idea of what I'm doing when I make a substitution.
Another question: when I got my sandwich in the caf today I asked how
many ounces it was and was told all the meat is weighted out at 2.5
ounces per serving. I had turkey. Is that poultry (1 ounce = 1
protein) or processed meat (1 ounce = 1 protein) or lean processed meat
(1.5 ounce = 1 protein)?
Thanks again
Debby
|
138.10 | | GOLLY::CARROLL | the courage of my contradictions | Tue Jul 05 1994 15:15 | 11 |
| turkey is lean meat, even when in lunch meat form. in fact, when in
lunch meat, they add water so it's got fewer calories per ounce.
(this rfers to plain turkey, not turkey ham etc, which all vary from
type to type. also doesn't refer to turkey salad and the like.)
D!
ps; i haven't done WW in years, i just know a lot about nutrional
contents etc, and i understand the ww theory.
|
138.11 | cheese | SOLVIT::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Mon Jul 25 1994 16:57 | 8 |
| And another question....
Which are hard cheeses and which are soft? I would guess that Parmesan
is hard, and Montery Jack is soft, but what about Mozzarella, Cheddar
and Swiss?
Thanks
Debby
|
138.12 | late reply | GOLLY::CARROLL | the courage of my contradictions | Mon Aug 15 1994 19:03 | 9 |
| sorry for the late answer; I've in out for a while.
I don't know what weight watchers considers hard and soft but generally
hard cheeses are things like parmesan and Romano, semi-hard are things
like cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey Jack, Swiss, etc. soft cheeses are
things like brie, cream cheese, etc.
D!
|
138.13 | | SOLVIT::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Mon Aug 15 1994 21:45 | 1 |
| Thanks!
|
138.14 | Trading Milk exchanges? | MRBIL::HAYES | | Fri May 26 1995 20:50 | 15 |
| I have a Weight Watcher's question, which I couldn't find the answer to
anywhere in this conference. Somewhere (one of the first few notes) I
read that the Milk exchanges could be used as Protein exchanges. Is
there any truth to this? The reason I'm interested, is because I don't
tolerate milk very well, unless it's cooked in something, so will have
a hard time using 2M exhanges each day, but I'm so hungry all the time
following the plan I was on 6 years ago, and would like to have an
additional Bread or Protein (but I don't want to just start
rearranging, because then I won't lose weight!). I take Calcium
supplements to make up for the problem with milk (and cheese, if I eat
very much).
Thanks for any advice you can give me!
TIna
|
138.15 | substitutions | RANGER::MAJEWSKI | | Sun May 28 1995 18:18 | 10 |
| I have hearda couple of leaders say that you can use one bread and
one protein selection in place of the two milk selections. The way
it has been presented is that this is a temporary substitution, not
something to be used all the time.
But, if you review the WW program outline for vegetarians that eat no
animal products, I believe that this substitution is part of that
regular food plan.
|
138.16 | Substitutions - thanks! | MRBIL::HAYES | | Tue May 30 1995 21:01 | 4 |
| Thanks! That's what I needed to know!
Tina
|