Dinner Grades
aimeepricciardone
Posts: 1 Member
At the suggestion of my nutritionist, I will be giving myself a grade for dinner each night. I am aiming for a B. I will record them here to keep track.
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Replies
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Why not post it on your wall or blog?5
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All my dinners are As
What are the criteria by which you judge your meals?7 -
kommodevaran wrote: »All my dinners are As
What are the criteria by which you judge your meals?
I think a gymnastics rating system would be more fun. Extra points difficulty. Deductions if it sticks to the pan.19 -
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RelCanonical wrote: »
Yes, the peanut gallery (such as myself, apologies to the OP!) will weigh in since this is an open forum for discussion. If you don't mind that, though, nothing wrong with keeping it here.
If you're logging your food on MFP you can also use the notes section to grade each day right in your diary.3 -
Did this person give you a rubric that you're supposed to use to grade your meals?5
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If I were you, I would add the grade to the notes section of your diary so you can see tbe grade with the meal. Or do a blog.
I am also curious what criteria you have for each grade level if you do not mind sharing.2 -
kommodevaran wrote: »All my dinners are As
What are the criteria by which you judge your meals?
I think a gymnastics rating system would be more fun. Extra points difficulty. Deductions if it sticks to the pan.
Automatic F if it burns.4 -
RelCanonical wrote: »
Yes, the peanut gallery (such as myself, apologies to the OP!) will weigh in since this is an open forum for discussion. If you don't mind that, though, nothing wrong with keeping it here.
If you're logging your food on MFP you can also use the notes section to grade each day right in your diary.
Excellent idea.
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kommodevaran wrote: »All my dinners are As
What are the criteria by which you judge your meals?
I think a gymnastics rating system would be more fun. Extra points difficulty. Deductions if it sticks to the pan.
ah yes, several categories and than average out the score - eg presentation, taste, nutrition.
and then factor in degree of difficulty.
My dinner tonight: tinned soup and oven wedges with tomato sauce: degree of difficulty = 14 -
I think the dinners need an impartial judge for grading. Why don't you tweet photos of them to Alton Brown, Cat Cora, and Ted Allen and get them to grade them?3
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What is a dinner grade?0
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The Russian judge is going to hate everything.8
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Dear diary.....1
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I found a website for giving grade letters to ingredients:
http://www.befoodsmart.com/ingredients/aspartame.php
I am not sure that is what this is about.
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Sometimes I really love the mfp forums.0
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Will you include points for Artistic Interpretation?2
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paperpudding wrote: »kommodevaran wrote: »All my dinners are As
What are the criteria by which you judge your meals?
I think a gymnastics rating system would be more fun. Extra points difficulty. Deductions if it sticks to the pan.
ah yes, several categories and than average out the score - eg presentation, taste, nutrition.
and then factor in degree of difficulty.
My dinner tonight: tinned soup and oven wedges with tomato sauce: degree of difficulty = 1
Slightly swerve-ey, but what's an oven wedge made of? Hopefully not cast iron and firebrick.0 -
Potato wedges that you bake in the oven instead of frying. You can make your own or buy them ready made in bags in freezer. Don't you have them where you live?
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@paperpudding We (or at least I) would call those oven fries or potato wedges4
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Yes I would call them potato wedges too - or oven wedges. (Meaning they are baked in oven , not deep fried)
Interchangeable terms to me.
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Don't even get me started on chips and crisps and biscuits and puddings :laugh:1
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paperpudding wrote: »Potato wedges that you bake in the oven instead of frying. You can make your own or buy them ready made in bags in freezer. Don't you have them where you live?
But if I were to hand you an "oven wedge," you'd probably find yourself holding a triangular piece of wood to use for wedging into a balky oven door to keep it shut.1 -
I make notes on the recipes themselves. I don't assign grades, though, just things like "Yum!" or "DH says..." or variations to try next time.0
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Don't even get me started on chips and crisps and biscuits and puddings :laugh:
Or why is it cheesecake and not cheesepie as it's similar to pumpkin pie, lemon meringue pie, and sweet potato pie??? Note: US Pringles are "Potato Crisps", I just checked the package on some I have in my pantry.0
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