Leftover unhealthy food
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When I want pizza, I just have one slice, or I get an individual pizza and make it fit in my day (even at 1200 calories).
We have leftover pizza occasionally but then my kids eat it (I never order a whole pizza) so it's not really a problem.0 -
DebLaBounty wrote: »If it's pizza and I'm sharing it with friends, I ask them to take the leftovers with them. I'm usually a frugal person and hate food waste, but here's how I think of it: If I bought a $14 pizza, that's about $1.75 per slice, assuming 8 slices per pizza. If I've eaten all I want, and there are two pieces left, I ask myself: Would I pay $3.50 to stay within my calories today? If I would, I throw both pieces away. Or I throw one piece away and save the other one for the next day, when I can plan to have it within that day's calorie budget. Just because I have it doesn't mean it needs to go in my mouth. I'm not a garbage disposal.
Yeah, this is a sensible way to think about it.
I had some tortilla chips left from a thing where I had people over. I didn't really want more of them, but them being there, leftover, was bothering me and my mind was doing the "must eat them" thing because tossing them feels wrong. Then it just hit me how crazy that was -- if I don't want to eat them, how is it better to eat them than throw them away? (I don't think anyone else wants my opened bag of chips).
Now if I actually wanted and would enjoy the pizza, that would be different -- 2 slices of pizza are not a bajillion calories and for me a quite satiating meal around the size of a normal meal. Plus, they can always be paired with low cal vegetables. But if you don't want them, don't eat them and stop telling yourself you can't just toss them.2 -
I have had food in my house that I just give away to friends or family. If I have any pizza which I had last week, it lasted a breakfast and a lunch next day.. I didn't make a big deal out of it.. didn't hurt my weight loss. but I have been tempted outside and then I did count the cost of eating that much calories and so I was able to talk myself out of it. I just don't purchase pizza so that I wont have to deal with what the OP was talking about.0
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I paid $80.00 for my son's Pokemon birthday cake to a local baker... it was delicious and calorie dense af. There were 3 pieces left over, and then I ate them all. The end19
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I always portion out leftovers before I put them in the fridge or freezer.0
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If there has been a gathering where people have brought in pizza and cake and chips and whatever, part of the goodbye process is me giving them their doritos and cookies back to enjoy at their homes.2
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ellejaymonae wrote: »How do you deal with having something like leftover pizza? I had a huge box of margherita pizza leftover and of course I finished the last 2 slices today that ended up being a bajillion calories. For some reason I feel horrible for throwing away bad food, and if it's in the house I of course eat it! Any advice? Thanks in advance
If it's something I don't want to eat later plus I know I have no control, I throw it away. I am not a human trashcan. I am not responsible for eating everything in sight.3 -
Usually I try to pawn it off on a guy friend if it's leftover pizza/Chinese/what-have-you. However if it's cookies or cake or something, I will take it to work and leave in the kitchen for the vultures to scavenge. The food will definitely not get wasted at the office0
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DebLaBounty wrote: »If it's pizza and I'm sharing it with friends, I ask them to take the leftovers with them. I'm usually a frugal person and hate food waste, but here's how I think of it: If I bought a $14 pizza, that's about $1.75 per slice, assuming 8 slices per pizza. If I've eaten all I want, and there are two pieces left, I ask myself: Would I pay $3.50 to stay within my calories today? If I would, I throw both pieces away. Or I throw one piece away and save the other one for the next day, when I can plan to have it within that day's calorie budget. Just because I have it doesn't mean it needs to go in my mouth. I'm not a garbage disposal.
I love this! We are not GARBAGE DISPOSALS!!!
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mrsnattybulking wrote: »I paid $80.00 for my son's Pokemon birthday cake to a local baker... it was delicious and calorie dense af. There were 3 pieces left over, and then I ate them all. The end
Good for you!2 -
I freeze anything yummy leftover, but after a couple of weeks in the freezer- it ends up looking so bad that I eventually toss it!1
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If you are single you could buy a smaller version in the grocery store instead of getting a fuller size pizza or like someone else said - freeze it.
In my house it all gets eaten since we have 3 kids eating and my husband.1 -
mrsnattybulking wrote: »I paid $80.00 for my son's Pokemon birthday cake to a local baker... it was delicious and calorie dense af. There were 3 pieces left over, and then I ate them all. The end
Gotta eat 'em all!9 -
I have no problem throwing leftovers out if I don't want them. They'll either go in the compost to help me grow more food next year, or a critter will eat it.0
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Normally, I don't have to worry about it because my husband or son will come and "clear out" all the more calorie dense foods I normally want to eat, however.. when my husband isn't around, I usually just end up parceling it out and doing that whole "I can overcome this with willpower" thing. So for pizza: I eat the one slice I know I really want and then eat something most would consider better for you.. like fruit or a small salad. If I still really want more pizza, then I just eat it, count it and eat less later on in the day.. or I make that particular day my "heavy eating" day and make up for it somewhere else during the week.0
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I have no problem throwing away food. We have a lot of parties and end up with a lot of food I don't want. I ask people to take stuff but if they don't in the trash it goes. Especially if it's something that's going to take up a lot of my meager calories.0
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I give all my "leftover" food to my chickens, the worse it is, seems the more they like it. Let them turn junk food into nutritious eggs :-)
That's funny you mention chickens. I raise them as well as a few of my friends do. One in particular gives their chickens everything! I always just stick to veggies for them. I would think that meat is probably not good for them, buy hey, what do I know.0 -
I give all my "leftover" food to my chickens, the worse it is, seems the more they like it. Let them turn junk food into nutritious eggs :-)
That's funny you mention chickens. I raise them as well as a few of my friends do. One in particular gives their chickens everything! I always just stick to veggies for them. I would think that meat is probably not good for them, buy hey, what do I know.
I too have chickens and stick to fruit and veg and some bread stuff for them. They are definitely meat eaters (mine are ardent mousers) but I don't feed them anything from the kitchen meat-wise just because it's usually been seasoned or whatever. I did have one bird pass from fatty liver disease and the vet advised less kitchen scraps, so that's always on my mind.
/thread hijack over/1 -
I know it's a cliche and sounds silly but I tell this to myself every time:
"better in the waste than on your waist".
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Second and third the "you are not a garbage disposal".
Do you have food recycling where you live? If so the discarded food will be turned into compost so will not be wasted after all.
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gebeziseva wrote: »I know it's a cliche and sounds silly but I tell this to myself every time:
"better in the waste than on your waist".
My cliche statement is "a moment on the lips, a lifetime on the hips"
And to OP - I guess I lucked out. Whenever I have trigger food in the house, I usually end up giving the leftovers to the dog so long as it's safe to do so. Otherwise, in the trash it goes if I don't feel like it's worth budgeting calories for the next day! Ive worked too hard to get where I am to let food control me. Don't feel obligated to eat something that you don't want to eat - good mental prep work for parties and get togethers when you have to say no to others instead of just yourself.
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mrsnattybulking wrote: »I paid $80.00 for my son's Pokemon birthday cake to a local baker... it was delicious and calorie dense af. There were 3 pieces left over, and then I ate them all. The end
This is probably the most honest and truest reflection of myself I have ever heard in relation to food. Bonus points for a Pokemon cake. Kinda want to see a picture of it now.0 -
For pizza, we food saver each individual piece and freeze0
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Toss it if my husband doesn't eat it within a short time frame.0
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Really wondering what kind of margherita pizza you're eating that is so calorific. If it's traditional, it's one of the most calorie friendly choices at an Italian restaurant.
In fact, I just ate at a new little wood fired Neapolitan place, my husband and I split a Caesar salad, and a margherita pizza with prosciutto and arugula added, and I had a glass of wine. I estimate about 1000 cals for that dinner. Lots of ways to cut it back, but in fact, I had cinnamon gelato too.4 -
My SO and I struggle with this all the time. We will completely smash sweets and "bad" food when we have it. We try our best to combat this by simply not bringing it into the house. When we do, we try to get smaller portions to avoid leftovers.
Just keep in mind, two days of pizza aren't going to destroy a month's worth of calorie deficit. After water weight has stabilized, you likely won't even notice it. Just don't make it a habit.
Intermittent fasting is a great tool for days when you know you're going to eat high calorie food. I lost most of my first 60 lbs eating a huge meal before work and a light "snack" when I got home.0 -
Divide it into meals and freeze, like a fast food version of meal prep.0
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We try to minimize our wastage so tossing food because its high calorie is nothing that we do. If we overeat due to a party n too many leftovers we'will just eat less the next few days to balance it out.
Chips n chocolate do usually not spoil so best to keep it till you feel like eating it again. If unopened we bring to the next party
We try to freeze very ripe fruit either as piece or pureed for smoothies to avoid throwing them. Especially for banana since the batch is either over ripe or raw.
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CanesGalactica wrote: »mrsnattybulking wrote: »I paid $80.00 for my son's Pokemon birthday cake to a local baker... it was delicious and calorie dense af. There were 3 pieces left over, and then I ate them all. The end
This is probably the most honest and truest reflection of myself I have ever heard in relation to food. Bonus points for a Pokemon cake. Kinda want to see a picture of it now.
It probably looked better before it was eaten.0
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