dkabambe wrote: » Chinese is always a difficult one - obviously avoid the fried ("crispy") stuff. Soup (wonton or seafood soup maybe) would probably be good for an entree? Otherwise steamed vegetable dumplings (avoid meat versions to keep calories down)?
arditarose wrote: » You have a choice to make. You could get what you want, eat it all, and possibly blow your deficit for the day or even two days. You could fast and eat light during the day, eat what you want, and MAYBE stay in a deficit for the day. You could order what you want, eat half. You can get a plate of steamed sadness and really stay in a deficit. Sometimes I go for steamed sadness but that's usually when I NEED to hit my goal for the day but am too tired to cook, not when I really want Chinese food.
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: » dkabambe wrote: » Chinese is always a difficult one - obviously avoid the fried ("crispy") stuff. Soup (wonton or seafood soup maybe) would probably be good for an entree? Otherwise steamed vegetable dumplings (avoid meat versions to keep calories down)? AMERICAN chinese is difficult. I typically get beef and broccoli, or shrimp and broccoli. And ask for sauce on the side if I get anything else.
BDonjon wrote: » If you have a lot of weight to lose, eating "too much" (more so than eating the wrong things) is the problem. I'd say order anything you want but watch out for the portion size. If you don't have much to lose, THEN focus on eating the right things; go for anything vegetable-heavy with minimal sauce.
xvolution wrote: » Sabine_Stroehm wrote: » dkabambe wrote: » Chinese is always a difficult one - obviously avoid the fried ("crispy") stuff. Soup (wonton or seafood soup maybe) would probably be good for an entree? Otherwise steamed vegetable dumplings (avoid meat versions to keep calories down)? AMERICAN chinese is difficult. *snip* Most sushi is fairly healthy, but be wary of tempura sushi and sushi with sauces on them, as the sauce may be full of calories. Isn't the rice in sushi not so good? Every now and then we go to an all you can eat sushi place here at work (Kanda) and I never know how to log it...
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: » dkabambe wrote: » Chinese is always a difficult one - obviously avoid the fried ("crispy") stuff. Soup (wonton or seafood soup maybe) would probably be good for an entree? Otherwise steamed vegetable dumplings (avoid meat versions to keep calories down)? AMERICAN chinese is difficult. *snip* Most sushi is fairly healthy, but be wary of tempura sushi and sushi with sauces on them, as the sauce may be full of calories.
arditarose wrote: » Sometimes I go for steamed sadness but that's usually when I NEED to hit my goal for the day but am too tired to cook, not when I really want Chinese food.