How to not affect others while calorie counting??
rcoull75
Posts: 47 Member
I am just in my first week of dieting and calorie counting, for the first time ever!
I am managing breakfast and lunch ok, but finding dinner really hard to do without affecting the rest of the family.
My wife usually cooks dinner before I get in from work, so it is difficult to judge calories, and she wont separate out different meals for me, her and the kids, and weigh mine!
We would normally go out to eat once a week, and that is another problem I have. We were out last night, and I asked the waiter and manager about calories, and they looked at me like I was daft!
So any advice on (1) how to calorie count without affecting others in the family, and (2) how to manage going out to eat, would be very welcomed!
I am trying my best, and doing well, but dinner is a real challenge!
I am managing breakfast and lunch ok, but finding dinner really hard to do without affecting the rest of the family.
My wife usually cooks dinner before I get in from work, so it is difficult to judge calories, and she wont separate out different meals for me, her and the kids, and weigh mine!
We would normally go out to eat once a week, and that is another problem I have. We were out last night, and I asked the waiter and manager about calories, and they looked at me like I was daft!
So any advice on (1) how to calorie count without affecting others in the family, and (2) how to manage going out to eat, would be very welcomed!
I am trying my best, and doing well, but dinner is a real challenge!
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Replies
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When going out for food. Play on this site before going. It will show cal. and fats. Add and remove food till you find what works best. That way when eat out you won't have to ask. Most restaurant are on this site.
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I have taken to eating smaller, low calorie breakfasts and lunches saving the bulk of my calories for dinner, this has meant that I haven't really had to change the way we eat evening meals, other than being a bit more mindful of portion sizes.
The other thing I've done is taken more control over cooking, which you might not be able to do, my husband used to do most of the cooking before, but now that I'm calorie counting I do it more than he does.0 -
I would hope that your wife would be supportive enough of your effort to get healthier to at least tell you what is in the meals she prepares. Would she let you plate your own food so that you can weigh out things like meat and vegetables? It would be harder with casseroles and soups but at least if you knew what recipe she used you might be able to better estimate calories.
For restaurants, see if they list their calories on their website. If they don't, find something reasonably close in the database here. If I know we're going out to eat I will check calories in advance so I know if I need to eat lighter during the day to have enough calories left for dinner to order what I really want.4 -
So, my husband was in the Army and I purposely didn't want to make him feel like he was dieting because he definitely didn't need to be! I have always done low calorie breakfast, lunch, sometimes with an afternoon snack (if I can "afford" it), and then a pretty typical dinner. My dinner plates rarely look much different than my husbands and other than switching from using oil to cooking spray and trying to use a bit lower calorie items like light sour cream and things, the prep hasn't changed much at all.
As for going out to eat, my favorite thing to do is this: I go out for LUNCH instead of dinner. If I go out for dinner, I'm STARVING by the time I get to the restaurant and want the biggest, juiciest thing on the menu. If I go out for lunch, I'm much smarter and honestly, can usually get away with a half portion that fills me up for the rest of the day with maybe a small snack around dinnertime. If that isn't an option, take half your meal to go. At most restaurants I go to, the meals I want (because I LOATHE salad and grilled chicken and all the "healthy" stuff) are around 1,000 calories. If I just get half, it's about 500 which is actually a little less than a normal dinner for me. It depends what it is, could be 500-700, but you get the idea. Try some different tactics and good luck!!! :-)5 -
I'm not exactly sure what you're asking her to do. Do you want her to give you an entirely separate meal and weigh each ingredient? If so I think that's a little unfair. But can you put your own food on your own plate, ask to see the recipe and make your own calculations or find something that is very similar to what she's made and say, OK, that's close enough? I don't know how to relate because I am 100% in charge of the cooking, but the only time I'm not is when we go out to eat. I don't know what other people do, but my strategy is to carefully make my best guess on portion sizes, reminding myself that if I lie to myself and underestimate it is only hurting myself. For me, 60 lbs to lose, this close-enough strategy has been working. Perhaps if I was super-fit and trying to cut those last 5 lbs so my abs could show, maybe then I'd need to be more exacting in my measurements.0
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I am just in my first week of dieting and calorie counting, for the first time ever!
I am managing breakfast and lunch ok, but finding dinner really hard to do without affecting the rest of the family.
My wife usually cooks dinner before I get in from work, so it is difficult to judge calories, and she wont separate out different meals for me, her and the kids, and weigh mine!
We would normally go out to eat once a week, and that is another problem I have. We were out last night, and I asked the waiter and manager about calories, and they looked at me like I was daft!
So any advice on (1) how to calorie count without affecting others in the family, and (2) how to manage going out to eat, would be very welcomed!
I am trying my best, and doing well, but dinner is a real challenge!
I'm the cook in my house. I plan the meals. I make the grocery list. Quite frankly everyone in my house is at my mercy for food unless they step up and get involved in that process. I want people to be happy though. I didn't really change the way my family eats just my portion sizes. I sometimes swap out the rice my famy is eating for a salad.for me and we all eat the same main dish.
Get involved. You are partners and family sharing resources. Explain your goals/needs, ask questions, compromise, work together so everyone gets what they want. Express appreciation.
Make a meal plan together that works for everyone. Share cooking duties. Lots of people come home from work and cook. Cook in advance for the week. You don't have to eat food just because it is there. Let other people feed themselves and you feed yourself.
Does she use recipes? Put it in the recipe builder. Estimate the best you can.
Are you having mixed dishes every night or meat, potato, etc? If it is seperate you can adjust and weigh out your portion sizes easier.
Put more vegetables on your plate. Reduce your portion sizes of other food.
Eat lighter at breakfast and lunch and save more calories for dinner if you think it is pretty high calorie at home.
At restaurants if there is no nutritional info find a similar dish to log. It is better than nothing. Choose things like grilled meats. Get vegetables/salad. Go light or skip sauces, dressings, condiments, cheese, cream, butter. A vinaigrette dressing is usually lower cal than a creamy dressing. Drink water or no calorie drinks.
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Thanks for all the helpful suggestions.
My wife is very supportive, but I just meant for example, the other night I was late home. She had cooked mince and dolmio sauce, fed herself and the kids, and there was some left in the pot.
So I added up the nutritional info for the mince and sauce from the packets, but I didnt know how much everyone else had already eaten and if I was having 1/4, 1/5, 1/6th, etc.
I weighed my own pasta
It's just all very new, and I want it to be sustainable, so need to find the right balance.2 -
Now I understand. Yes, it can be difficult to get it right.0
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My suggestion is to put the recipes she uses into MFP and then log accordingly, I personally weigh everything. As far as eating out, take a look at their website, most places have menus and nutritional information available there.0
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As far home eating, yep that's a hard one. You can only do your best with it. Calculate as best as possible leaving a little "wiggle room". As far as eating out, if there isn't a website with nutrition available, I choose a different chain with similar choices. If it's not a popular chain restaurant, ask for sauces and dressings on the side, light on cheese, no butter, etc. If it's something that is high in calories, ask for a to-go box. Eat half and save other half for dinner the next night. Good luck!0
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My husband and I eat the same protein and veggies. He may or may not eat a potato ,rice, or pasta with his. He makes his breakfast and lunch and I make mine. So I am not much help on that aspect. He weighs his food, I don't weigh mine.
As for going out, check the restaurant menus. How about you choose one week so you can pick a more " healthy" place or a place with healthier options and your family can choose the next week.
Be patient with your spouse. It takes time for them to get adjusted to your way of eating. It took my husband a couple months and then he decided to get a good scale and watch what he eats.
Best wishes. One step at a time and one day at a time.0 -
@hypodonthaveme Love your profile pic. I have a Siberian husky.1
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I'm the primary cook at our house, and neither my husband nor my son are counting calories. For dinner, most of the time I cook a protein, a veggie and/or salad, and a starch. My dinner might be 6-8oz of steak and lots of veggies and salad. My husband and son choose their own portion sizes and have potatoes along with the steak & veggies. This makes it easy to cook one dinner that works for everyone.
I rarely make casseroles or "mixed" dishes anymore because I can't be bothered with the recipe builder on MFP. But I see plenty of people of MFP that do use it successfully. Perhaps your wife & you could build a few family favorite recipes in MFP together?0 -
Make your own dinner so you can count it accurately?0
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I'm in a similar situation. I ask Mrs Jruzer for the recipes when she has them - sometimes she gets creative. But in almost all cases I just estimate. The differences between 1/6 or 1/5 of the pot are fairly small for all but the most calorie-dense foods.
Estimate honestly and adjust when you need to.0 -
My suggestion is to relax a bit, just guess at it, and see if you're still making progress in two weeks.
If you're making progress, then congrats it's working and for now you don't need to be more accurate.
And kiss your wife and thank her for making you dinner.4 -
I know where you are coming from. All I can say is be as diligent as possible and just let it go at times and use smart portion control. It's a marathon so settle in for a long haul! Good luck.0
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I try to weigh everything. I then look for several similar items that are measured by weight and then pick a higher calorie one or a middle of the scale one as a match. You could also do this with cup measures.2
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One thing you can do is just use a small saucer for you meals, rather than a large plate. It's an automatic 66% reduction in calories.0
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I do all the cooking, so it's a bit easier for me, but I keep ready made veggies made up to fill up on and eat smaller portions. Look up the most comparable dish online and log the highest one. Don't starve, but if you are still hunger grab more veggies or a piece of fruit.
When we are out, we go where he wants to, so I snack on veggies in the truck and usually have some Greek yogurt in my cooler bag too. I always keep a fiber one bar if I need a chocolate fix. Where there is a will there is a way.
He is coming around to my wacky ways, but the eating out thing can be more of a challenge for me. I only eat half depending on where we go. Sometimes there are not great choices where we live. You just eat less and roll with it. Just not literally!0
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