T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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231.1 | That was an easy one... | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Wanna buy a stadium? | Tue Feb 23 1988 10:18 | 16 |
| re .0:
> Does anyone have any ideas for the Irish Meal or
> if you have people over what will you serve?
The standard Irish seven-course dinner -- a six-pack and a boiled
potato... :-) :-) :-)
Seriously, count your corned beef under protein, the potato as bread,
the cabbage as vegetable, and anything you care to drink as optional
calories. No big deal.
Paul_who's_Irish_by_marriage :-)
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231.2 | | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Vivo, ergo sum | Wed Feb 24 1988 09:42 | 22 |
|
NOT to put a damper on anyone's party or celebrating, HOWEVER....
(hint: don't hit return if you don't want a damper)
1 ounce of corn beef is 110 calories folks.
12 ounces of regular beer is 151 calories...
1 cup of common or Chinese cabbage, shredded, cooked and drained
is 29 calories..
1 cup of onions, mature, cooked, whole or sliced is 61 calories...
1 cup of potatoes, fresh, boiled, diced or sliced is 101 calories...
After reading the above, I think I'm going to skip the beef and
beer, and ask for the cabbage only...
Think about it, is it worth it????.... One minute on the lips can
equal forever on the hips...
|
231.3 | WW Magazine To The Rescue | SRFSUP::TERASHITA | California Native | Wed Feb 24 1988 13:33 | 8 |
| This month's (March, 1988) WW magazine has recipies for "Saint Paddy's
Boiled Beef and Cabbage" and "Irish Whiskey Custard", complete with
exchanges per serving.
Sounds good to me!
Lynn
|
231.4 | My $.02 | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Wanna buy a stadium? | Thu Feb 25 1988 04:27 | 14 |
| re .3:
You beat me to it Lynn. If there's one thing I've learned since
starting Weight Watchers 8-1/2 months ago, it's that the peopl who find
ways to include their favorite foods in their weightloss program (in
reasonable quantities of course) stand the best chance of losing their
weight and keeping it off. The "Dieting must equal depriving yourself"
frame of mind stated in .2 doesn't work for me. It too often results
in either not being able to stick to a program, or regaining lost
weight back once one is through depriving oneself because of the
subsequent urge to "make up for lost time".
Paul
|
231.5 | Portion Control is the Key | RSTS32::KASPER | c = (pascal - training_wheels) | Thu Feb 25 1988 08:48 | 23 |
|
> ...the people who find ways to include their favorite foods in their
> weightloss program (in reasonable quantities of course) stand the
> best chance of losing their weight and keeping it off.
Amen! I think this is one of the biggest reasons that WW is working
*consistently* for me. If I decide I just have to have some of
whatever is calling me, I do so; I make sure I'm aware of how much I
have, and count it against my optionals, but instead of feeling guilty,
I feel virtuous! There have been occasions when I went over my
optional allowance for the week, but not by a lot; it might slow down
my weight loss, but I'm still eating much more healthily than before.
So have a few ounces of Corned Beef (trim the fat), and a serving
of potatoes, and a beer! A protein exchange is supposed to be 70
calories, so you'll probably want to check off some optionals, unless
it's unusually lean.
Beverly
(ps: corning is a process. It involves pepper corns, not "maize!")
|
231.6 | For All You Trivia Buffs... | SRFSUP::TERASHITA | California Native | Thu Feb 25 1988 12:51 | 10 |
| re .5 ps
"Corned" beef refers to beef that has been soaked in brine. In
England, where this process originated, the salt that was used to
make the brine was coarsely ground, so that the granules were the
size of kernels of wheat. And, as our British friends will tell
us, wheat in England is called "corn".
Lynn
|
231.7 | So I'm not trivial! | RSTS32::KASPER | c = (pascal - training_wheels) | Fri Feb 26 1988 07:39 | 7 |
|
Okay, okay! My primary point, that corning is a process, so it's
"corned beef," not "corn beef" is still valid!
Bev :-)
|
231.8 | a little sense, a little nonsense :-) | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Thu Mar 10 1988 14:07 | 20 |
| Well, Glenn wanted some controversy (see Awful Quiet note :-)), so I'll
better late than never reply here and stick myself between some of my favorite
contributors (yeah, you all are my favorite contributors, but :-))
I agree with Gale that we should remember the "damage" we would be "causing"
by eating everything on her list, and balance it against the pleasure we'd
get out of it, and decide what is it worth to us to indulge in those things,
or which of them would be most pleasurable to indulge in. Then, I agree
with Paul and say you shouldn't deprive yourself of what you REALLY want, or
you're heading in the wrong direction. Life is full of choices, decide
what's important to you.
Personally, I don't particularly care for anything on the menu, except
maybe the cabbage, and that would have a horrible effect on me, judging from
what 2 cabbage leaves in my WW dinner last night did :-) However, in school
I was always partial to green pizza (or any other kind, which is why I had
this weight problem :-)).
Jill, who's almost as far from Irish as you can get but still likes pizza :-)
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