Drive thru
libbie_Jean
Posts: 6 Member
How do i stop eating fast food?! I eat it almost everyday. I buy groceries every week and yet i find my self wasting them because it takes too much time to make a meal when i can take 5 min and go get fast food.
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Replies
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It's your decision. You're an adult and do whatever you want. If you can't be bothered to cook, you'll make do with fast food. Be happy you have money to burn.10
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When you go grocery shopping your job isn't done when you get home. You don't just put them away. You need to plan to prepare food for the coming week. Chop vegetables and put them into containers that make it easy to grab for a snack. Set fruits in visible places. Portion your meats and determine quick cooking methods. It's easier to put 30 minutes of work into all of that when you get home than to put it off and get fast food.7
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Eating well costs time. It's not more expensive to eat nutritious, healthy food. It takes time to plan and prepare it.
We have a fast food culture because they are good at marketing. It's cheap to buy and cheap time-wise. So they convince you eating their food is a win for you. Sounds like they have you suckered in big time.
It's good for you to eat nutritious food. It is also good for you psychologically to be bothered to think about it and invest the time it takes to prepare a meal. Make a decision about the sort of life you want - whether you feed the one body God has given you, or slowly destroy it with fast food, and then live with the consequences.1 -
Buy things that are easier to prepare. Instead of a meal that takes 2 hours to prep and cook buy something you can throw together in 10 minutes and be done. Food prep on the weekends if you need to for even less time to get dinner made during the week.6
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I don't like cooking on weekdays, other than maybe Fridays. I cook up a big batch of something Sunday and/or Saturday, portion it out and freeze. I try to have 4 different dinner options that I can either thaw overnight and reheat or just pop in the microwave right from the freezer.
2-3 minutes in the microwave is faster than fast food, and I'm home most of the day on the weekends anyway - might as well cook!
Also, baking a chicken breast and/or potato is nearly effortless, if a bit time-consuming. Coat a pan with oil/seasonings, drop in chicken, rinse off the potato and stab holes in it with a fork, place potato on the rack and let it all cook at 400F for 40 minutes to an hour. Boom, done, and it takes less than 5 minutes to prep.
~Lyssa2 -
Another thought - crockpot meals - then you can't do the drive thru because your dinner is ready and waiting for you!7
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Sometimes all you have to do is say NO to yourself.
If you crave the fast food, either work it into your daily calories, buy lower calorie options instead, buy less, or find recipes for similar dishes online. Replace sugary drinks with diet.1 -
I went through a period like this before successfully losing weight. Really, it was just me being lazy and also that I wasn't ready to commit.
There are alot of meals that take less than 15 minutes to make. Or maybe prepare meals ahead of time and heat them when you need. Or Crockpot meals.
Either way, you do have to put in some effort. That's not to say you can't have fast food though. I have lazy days where I order a pizza out or swing by a Wendy's at lunch. But it's more moderated these days.2 -
Your an adult act like one. Food prep doesnt have to be hard, Get out of the mindset of you need to cook 100% healthy huge healthy recipes and realize even a frozen burger from home is less calories and time thn driving to a fast food place. Pick your battles and stop blaming "it is easier" or "i dont have time..."6
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I draw up a budget for myself every year. Buying food for breakfast and lunch in the office cafeteria, or at Panera/Pret a Manger ... could cost me $75 a month, when, like you, I was also buying food at the grocery store. Now I do what others here have done: buy what I like at the grocery store, do a big prep on Sunday, freeze, and pop in the microwave in the morning. Other benefits are knowing how much salt, etc. I'm dealing with, what the portion size really is, and the control over these factors makes me feel good. It takes a little while to get into the rhythm, but then you do, and that's nice, too.1
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I work 24 hour shifts every third day. I have to plan ahead or I would be spending $150 a month eating out just because of working away from home for 24 shifts. $15 a day=roughly two meals out each day at 10 days out of a 30 day month. It hurts my budget to eat out, so I don't. It hurts my body to eat those foods, so I don't.
I also do not frequently meal prep but when I cook I always make a double batch. I always have left overs to bring to work that way. Take advantage of having the freedom to eat what you want and eat several smaller things that don't need time to prepare. I eat lots of frozen fruit bars. I eat a ton of yogurt because it's convenient and has good protein. Fruit and veggies can be bought in smaller quantities, so as not to go bad. I will portion out a serving of oatmeal bites cereal and eat it without milk. I like protein bars, fiber one bars, granola bars, and nutri-grain bars. Sometimes I get a spoon and weigh my peanut butter jar and then weigh it when I'm done snacking on it. I will cook up a package of turkey bacon and put the rest in a baggie to snack on for the next few days. I buy bricks of cheese and eat a couple slices. I'll buy deli meat and just eat that without bread. A meal doesn't have to be big or "put together". Most of my meals are several individual portion healthy snacks eaten together to make a "meal". It's fast and easy. Plus when I eat several different smaller items I get variety and I also don't keep eating until the plate is empty. If I have frozen fruit bar and some yogurt and then a protein bar and I'm full I stop and don't go back for more.
The old saying "if a juicy apple or a tender steak doesn't appeal to you then you're not really hungry, you just want to eat" applies here. Bring an apple and if you don't eat the apple and you get a Big Mac then you can make yourself wait until you get home. If you can't and you eat then apple, great then you can make it home in time to open a yogurt and have a couple slices of deli meat and a few pieces of cheese. (Insert your own convenient foods of choice).
Priorities and good habits.1 -
kommodevaran wrote: »It's your decision. You're an adult and do whatever you want. If you can't be bothered to cook, you'll make do with fast food. Be happy you have money to burn.
Yep, you have to decide to eat like a grown *kitten* adult. The average American watches 4 hours of TV a day. Use some of that time to meal prep.2 -
Fast food was (is...) a big weakness of mine. I agree with what everyone else here has said, but there is definitely a period of retraining both your brain and your tastebuds that needs to be acknowledged. You can absolutely do it, but the first week or two is going to be a little tough. Some people can just stop, as if flipping a switch. I am not one of those people! I found it helpful to keep little hard candies in my car, and I would make sure I had one in my mouth if I was hungry leaving work and make it last as long as I could. It gave my mouth and tastebuds something to concentrate on while driving home. And I bought nice ones, so it felt like a treat and I wasn't tempted to eat 5 at a time. It's gotten much easier but I still have that candy in my car for those times when I just really want a fudge sundae on the drive home!
And yes, 100%, prep ahead. And at first, when you really have to bribe your taste buds to want what you have at home, make your favorite thing. Better to have a 400cal serving of homemade mac and cheese, or whatever, than a Big Mac with fries and a Coke0 -
Fast food isn't cheap. This reasoning always puzzles me. I spend £50 per week on groceries for a family of three. That means, even if that were all spent on food (it isn't, it covers cleaning supplies etc) it would be £2.40 per person per day.
Even at McDonald's, which is probably the cheapest fast food option, I'd spend more than that for one meal. Other options, like Domino's or a Chinese or Indian takeaway, end up costing more like £20-£30, which is a whopping £7-£10 each, for one meal.
It just isn't cheap. It isn't. Sure, it costs less than eating at a sit-down restaurant, but it isn't reasonable money to spend on a routine meal. Fast food falls under our "fun" budget, not under the food budget. It has to be an occasional treat, both in terms of calories and money.5 -
Buy an already roasted chicken and some frozen vegetables and instant rice. Boom! Dinner!3
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Get simple no-cook foods. I get some greens, canned tuna, some low fat/cal dressing or hummus and if you shop at Whole Foods their in-house Pico de Gaello and the Mango Pineapple salsa is top-notch. Throw all that in a bowl, grab a fork and eat.
Or... if you can't turn do the drive thru. Get "healthier" items.0 -
Personally, I find it easier and quicker to cook than what it is to go through driver thru. Frozen vegetables are great. They are picked ripe, so they taste good and you can just throw them in the microwave or into a pan on the stove. For instant mashed potatoes you just boil some water to mix into the flakes. Meat is just a few minutes on the stove. Steak works very well. When I come in from a bicycle ride I'll brown a steak on both sides and throw it into the over, so it is cooking while I'm taking a shower. I'll do the same with pasta or rice. I would much rather cook because I can do other things while I'm doing it. For me, drive thru takes me out of my way and is just more time sitting in traffic.1
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Tiny_Dancer_in_Pink wrote: »Buy an already roasted chicken and some frozen vegetables and instant rice. Boom! Dinner!
This also works with 2-minute noodles instead of rice. 2 minute dinner!/lunch!
And the ravioli!0 -
I'm a single mum working full time. My eldest works and I have to drive her and pick her up plus both kids do sport. So I don't have much spare time either. I used to think "getting something easy" like take away was quicker and easier but seriously, it takes 10-15 to cook some meat and put together a salad. Good luck on your journey0
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It takes to much time? That's an excuse! You just need to set your priorities straight.1
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If you know you're going to stop at a drive thru, and that's your preference, why don't you plan your calories accordingly and stop wasting money on foods you know you won't cook and eat?1
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