Today my good food choice was...

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  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    Good to know! I just bought some and haven't tried it yet. Thanks cupcake.

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited January 2012

    That's because that picture was taken when I was 37.  And it has a soft fuzzy screen on it. :)

    I turn 40 next month.  Feel better now than I did when I was 20, I'll say that.  I work out (never did when I was 20), rarely drink (drank like a fish at 20), take vitamins (at 20?  I wasn't even wearing matching socks) and get veggies (only if they were on a hamburger at 20).

    Husband, who has known me since I was 18, told me the other day that my body is in better shape now than when I was 20.  Maybe he was just being nice to get out of doing the dishes, but I sure do feel better.

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited January 2012

    Corinne, whatever his reason he gets major brownie points ;) That said, I bet his reason was not related to dishes, just sayin'

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    LOL, you look great, but I agree with momine, he may have had ulterior motives.

  • SusanHG
    SusanHG Member Posts: 655
    edited January 2012

    gina-yes, come right back up on the bandwagon!  we all fall off sometimes.  I know I did!  Plus, I know how it feels when you stop eating good foods and then it is hard to get back to wanting to eat them again, but once you start back, you'll be fine.

    corinne-you so don't look 40 (or 37 for that matter)!  Ulterior motives or not, what a great husband! :-)

    Yesterday, I had organic oatmeal for breakfast, low fat chicken salad and caprese salad for lunch on romaine leaves, fish and mixed green salad for dinner with grapefruit for dessert.  Kashi Go Lean cereal for breakfast this morning with a tiny bit of coffee.  (Haven't managed to totally wean myself off from coffee.  I may never! :)  )

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    Susanhg, I saw a study that coffee drinking actually lowered recurrence for triple negatives. It certainly is confusing, not knowing what to eat. Google breast cancer and coffee and see what you find and think. The only thing my doctors told me was everything in moderation, definitely warned about alcohol, but said one or two drinks per week were okay, and did tell me a little soy was okay, but not to eat too much. That's it as far as instruction on eating. Not much help. The soy is because I am ER +.



    Had oatmeal with organic blueberries for breakfast. I have not seen organic oatmeal, was it steel cut oatmeal? Do you mind sharing where you buy it? Thanks.

  • cupcakies
    cupcakies Member Posts: 71
    edited January 2012

    i had oatmeal too... made w/ a bit of almond milk, banana, cinnamon, splash of vanilla, and chia seeds!

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    I had a good day yesterday until company showed up (unexpectedly)--my best friend's son and friend travelling up the coast.  I put together some food at 11pm (hour of weakness) and ruined a good day of discipline!  Good choices included my 5 bean veggie chili, with white bean hummus, carrot sticks and a handful of multi grain pita chips. Bad choices will remain a dark secret.

    When the boys wake up I will make them multi-grain french toast, berry smoothies and fruit. I will have my slice of french toast with agave. Definitely a big salad of some kind for dinner!  

    Now, Corrine...the way you look at 40 is a testament to good eating and exercise! 

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited January 2012

    Ok, I'm halfway back - been and avocado on corn tortilla - it's not the best breakfast but oatmeal is just blah to me right now - (I bathed in oatmeal bath a lot when in chemo and I think the smell is messing with my head), I haven't been to the grocery store to get my almond milk - so tomorrow back to cheerios and chia seed!

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited January 2012

    Trying to start my day with something other than water (to take my vitamins and tamoxifen) and coffee.  During the week, I generally don't eat breakfast often.  I was watching Dr. Oz (love him!) and he was stressing how much breakfast is the most important meal of the day.  I know I know...who hasn't heard this a bizillion times right.  Well, for some reason it has now set in with me.  So I have been trying to have a smoothie or pc of fruit or glass of a green veggie/fruit drink in the mornings.

    For lunch today I am having a melon fruit cup, a half of a red pepper hummas wrap and a broccoli/carrot salad.

    Last night we had delish dover sole with fresh green beans and rice pilaf.  Tonight will be gingered carrots and basmati rice (for me) plus orange chicken for the kids.

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    Had portabello mushroom burger with roasted red peppers, onion, tomato and lettuce on a whole wheat bun along with sweet potato fries, broccoli and a salad.

  • SusanHG
    SusanHG Member Posts: 655
    edited January 2012

    Hi Kay, Yes, I heard about coffee and triple negatives, but the study specified that it must be more than 5 cups.  If I drnk five cups of coffee, I will be permannetly awake for a week!! Smile  Hopefully, they will be doing more studies.  Will be interested to see what they say.  For now, I am emphasizing drinking more green tea.  I buy organic instant oatmeal packets at our local Wegmans (big supermarket) in the organic section.  Actually, made it this mrning with blueberries, peanut butter, and blueberries with soy milk.

    Gina-can see why you wouldn't want to eat oatmeal!

    Susan

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    So sad today.  Popcorn is a high glycemic food.  Sigh.

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited January 2012

    Any suggestions as to what to sub for popcorn?  (something other than carrot or celery sticks)

  • mks16
    mks16 Member Posts: 415
    edited January 2012

    May I join this thread? I love all the ideas and while I generally make at least one good food choice a day, I also usually pair it with a bad oneUndecided I hope to get more motivated to keep the bad stuff out.

    Today I made my very first butternut squash soup and I loved it. CalorieCount gives it an A in Nutritional Grade, I haven't been this proud of myself since collegeSmile

  • SusanHG
    SusanHG Member Posts: 655
    edited January 2012

    sure can, mks!  welcome and please share your choices and ideas.  We'd love to hear them!

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    Welcome and congratulations MKS. Did you find a good recipe for butternut squash soup?

    I had a barrel of arugula for lunch, with half avocado, yesterday's sweet potato, almonds and scallions.  Dressing was Drew's sugar free. Clemintines and green tea for snack.  Dinner is wild rice, oven roasted brussel sprouts, tilapia and a tums :-)

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    Welcome MKS!



    Had salmon, broccoli and a mound of salad for dinner. Had a spring mix, cherry tomatoes, a little feta cheese, a little bit of walnuts, some raspberries and dressing was good seasons balsamic vinaigrette. I replaced half the olive oil with water to reduce fat/calories.

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    Instead of tilapia I made carrots on a griddle for DD and I-- thick sliced lengthwise, marinated in ginger and a little olive oil.  It was an experiment and it turned out OK.  I was thinking to use coconut oil next time...are we allowed coconut oil?

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited January 2012

    Kids had a school event at the local McDonalds last night.  I was thinking about ordering a salad with grilled chicken and then saw a posting on my facebook page.  It was a question to guess what the food was in the picture.  It looked like soft serve strawberry ice cream.  It wasn't.  Here is the info that went with the picture:

    "Can You Guess What McDonald's Food Item This Is? Say hello to mechanically separated chicken. It's what all fast-food chicken is made - things like chicken nuggets and patties. In addition, the processed frozen chicken in the stores is made from it. Basically, the entire chicken is smashed and pressed through a sieve - bones, eyes, guts, and all. It comes out looking like this. There's more: because it's crawling with bacteria, it will be washed with ammonia, soaked in it, actually. Then, because it tastes gross, it will be reflavored artificially. Finally, since it is weirdly pink, it will be dyed with artificial color. People still eat this and feed it to their children!See More ‎"The food you eat can be either the safest and most powerful form of medicine, or the slowest form of poison." - Dr. Ann Wigmore, ND".

    So.  I got a small decaf coffee and then put in an order at the vegan restaurant 5 storefronts down and picked up a rice noodle, shiitake mushroom, stir fry dish that was delish.

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited January 2012

    Corinne, I can't imagine why you decided against the McD food ;)

    I decided long before BC that processing food can't really be a great idea in most cases. It does not take very long to cut up a chickenbreast, bread it in actual egg and actual bread that you have run through the food processor and stick it in the oven, or even a pan with some olive oil. It may have the same carbs and as many calories as the processed crap, but it will be real food at least.

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited January 2012

    Agreed.  I feel better when I plan out meals for the week and keep it simple.  I tossed out any kind of "helper" item as well as any "instant" item from the pantry months ago.   If we have rice, its basmati or brown.  If we have noodles, they are whole grain. 

    We are getting into the habit of 2 veggies with dinner and making sure the plate is more colorful with veggies than meat.  I used to take the kids to McDs once a week.  I was cringing yesterday in there. Totally skeeved me out.  This will have to be a grandma treat, cause I am having a hard time doing it now.  I took a bite of my son's burger last month, and couldn't swallow it.  I spit it out bc it tasted--well just so artifical to me now.  And I loved me a Big Mac.  Maybe its mind over matter--and that's just fine.  At least its a healthier choice to avoid.

  • AmyIsStrong
    AmyIsStrong Member Posts: 1,755
    edited January 2012

    Corinne- that description made my throat close up. YUCK! I never go to McD so it's not a problem fo rme, but STILL! NO ONE should be eating that.

    I just got back from a 4 day conference. Talk about bad food! I am so glad to be home. Tonight is steamed broccoli and brown rice. That's all.  I will need days to detox from that stuff.  All they would have for b'fst was a platter of donuts and danish. And so on through the day. Learned a lot at the conf but glad to be home with my own kitchen and bed!

    Amy 

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited January 2012

    Corinne, in my experience, once you get used to actual, real food, even if it isn't anything amazing, you lose your taste for most of the crap. 

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    I stopped going to McD 24 years ago when I married a foodie.  My kids both went vegetarian after reading the classic "Fast Food Nation." It features McDs a lot. 

    Right now McD is running an ad campaign featuring the farmers in our area who provide the farm fresh ingredients for their wholesome offerings...

    OK.  Today's real food includes organic chicken (hold the amonia) with lentils for lunch and multi grain pasta with steamed broccoli for dinner. 

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    Funny I was in Barnes and noble today browsing in the food section and picked up this book called eat this not that (I think). It was all about chain restaurant options. The difference between options was incredible. Restaurants really should have to post nutrition information on the. Menu. The one that I remember was the worst kids meal. It was the pasta Alfredo at cheese cake factory. It has 1800 calories. The "better" option was actually the McDonald's chicken nugget option. LOL. I forget the calories and fat in that, but it was with milk and fruit instead of soda and fries.



    I went to lunch with my sister and had a happy hippy quesidilla. It was portabello mushrooms, spinach and cheese on a whole wheat tortilla. Not much cheese, I think a pretty healthy option.

  • AmyIsStrong
    AmyIsStrong Member Posts: 1,755
    edited January 2012

    I gave that book to a young relative struggling to lose weight.  Before I gave it to her, we browsed through it. WOW what an education.

    Back at that time, we used to go to Applebee's occasionally (not any more). There was one salad I always got - thought it was a healthy choice. Turns out it was highlighted in the book as the WORST ITEM in the ENTIRE RESTAURANT.

    I just prefer to eat at home now.  Cheaper, easier, nicer, and we control what we are eating. I am convinced the obesity epidemic is because of the huge portions and hidden calories in restaurants. 

  • Kay_G
    Kay_G Member Posts: 3,345
    edited January 2012

    I was really just in total shock at the difference in fat and calories in choices. I didn't buy the book because we don't really go out to chain restaurants much and when we do, I tend to pick one of the "lite" choices with the nutrition listed. I usually also check the nutrition on line before we go and decide what to get before we get there for any place that has it posted. All the chain restaurants do. I think it should be a law to put it on the menu. It would help people decide what to order. It would also probably get the restaurants to cook healthier. But you're right, at home is healthier and cheaper. We go out less often than we used to.

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited January 2012

    Ah, first popcorn goes, now Cheescake Factory?!  They have some great salads there...now I have to decide whether to stay in denial or look it up online :-)

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited January 2012

    Chuckle, chuckle, I love all your comments! I went to McD while I was in chemo....on purpose.  Can't even drive into the parking lot now....hopefully that never fades!!!

    DH didn't work yesterday, so I came home to baked talapia (fresh - I'm having issues with frozen foods - in my head- chemo? idk) covered in lemon slices and fresh tomato, with roasted corn, mushrooms, and asparagus.  That would have been the perfect meal, but he also made me broccoli and rice....white rice....I just couldn't be rude! lol.  It was soooo good.  

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