Anyone have tricks and tools for when they go to Restaurants and how to resist temptation?
ChelseaSmile22
Posts: 31 Member
I learned a few tricks and tips when I had started my first attempt at dieting a few years back. Some of my go to strategies when I have to eat at a restaurant are to help resist temptation and ensure portion control. We all have that work lunch or birthday dinner to go to so how do we not let that impede our diet success?
1) I always see if I can look up the menu online and try and scope out the healthy options I can choose from before going to the restaurant. This way it is easy to resist temptation when ordering and have more time to think about your option.
2) When I go to a restaurant where I know the portion are bigger than I should be consuming, I ask for a take out box as soon as I get my food and immediatly cut my meal into reasonable portions and put the rest in the to go container and seal it. Out of sight and out of mind, this helps to stop me from mindlessly picking at my plate even when I am not hungry anymore.
What are some of your go to strategies??
1) I always see if I can look up the menu online and try and scope out the healthy options I can choose from before going to the restaurant. This way it is easy to resist temptation when ordering and have more time to think about your option.
2) When I go to a restaurant where I know the portion are bigger than I should be consuming, I ask for a take out box as soon as I get my food and immediatly cut my meal into reasonable portions and put the rest in the to go container and seal it. Out of sight and out of mind, this helps to stop me from mindlessly picking at my plate even when I am not hungry anymore.
What are some of your go to strategies??
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Replies
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Don't let them place the bread on the table.11
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I never thought of it as avoiding temptation. I'm ordering something that I think will taste good.
I generally figure out what I am going to eat in advance if possible.
I know that if a dish has very large portions, is fried, breaded, covered in cheese, cream, butter, dressings, gravy or sauces it has more calories.
I might split a higher calorie item with someone.
Common sense tells me that ordering a triple bacon cheeseburger, large fry and peanut butter shake are not going to fit in the same day with other food for me. A regular burger, smaller fry or side salad with vinaigrette dressing and unsweetend iced tea is pretty easy to fit in my day without changing my activity or other meals at all.
I drink mostly water or unsweetened tea. Most places have that.
If it is a special occasion I will probably have a maintenance calorie day.
I might look at my weekly calorie goal.1 -
I practice IF usually when going out to eat, and have a higher protein low carb meal if the meal I’m eating out is later on in the day.
Sharing appetizers/desserts
Log ahead of time and look up the menu for what I wanna eat.
Drink water, etc2 -
A couple of the restaurants that I go to have Facebook pages. I've messaged them politely asking about lower-calorie options. They aren't chains and don't know the calories, but at least they can give me an idea of what to order. (Then I look for similar in the database.)3
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I know what I am going to order ahead of time If I can. I also try to have some protein before I go in.2
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I don't eat out all that often, so I just get whatever it is that I'm wanting from that particular restaurant. I eat out maybe 3-4 times per month at most...there's no way that 3-4 meals in a month is going to have any meaningful impact on my overall diet.3
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cwolfman13 wrote: »I don't eat out all that often, so I just get whatever it is that I'm wanting from that particular restaurant. I eat out maybe 3-4 times per month at most...there's no way that 3-4 meals in a month is going to have any meaningful impact on my overall diet.
Same boat here... I make better at home. Long time no post wolf.... missed your insites.1 -
OMG so funny that I stumbled upon this post just as I was stressing about a family dinner next week at a Chinese restaurant I googled ''chinese food healthy options'' and then searched for the menu and figured out my best option will be beef and broccoli so I pre-logged it for that day already! Done!4
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psychod787 wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »I don't eat out all that often, so I just get whatever it is that I'm wanting from that particular restaurant. I eat out maybe 3-4 times per month at most...there's no way that 3-4 meals in a month is going to have any meaningful impact on my overall diet.
Same boat here... I make better at home. Long time no post wolf.... missed your insites.
Vacation in Mexico and then out sick for a bit.5 -
For me it's simply the 5 minute enjoyment I get from *insert food here*, followed by 3 days of being pissef at myself for having said food vs the 5 minute pain of denying a craving but no derailing of goals.
#2 usually wins out.0 -
I’m another one that doesn’t really see restaurants as a huge challenge. I’ve lost almost 60 pounds and I eat out easily 3-5 times a week. My biggest realization was that every meal out isn’t a special occasion worthy of 3 courses and cocktails. I stick to ordering an entrée and if an appetizer is ordered by anyone, it’s shared with the group. Appetizers are pretty rare though. I’m ambivalent about dessert, so that gets ordered even less often. I also try and stick to lower-calorie options. Things like street tacos instead of rolled tacos or souvlaki instead of moussaka.
I generally check out menus beforehand and have a couple of reasonable options picked out. That way I’m not swayed by hunger or seeing and smelling all kinds of food going by. With very few exceptions (tasting menus, small plates, dim sum, etc.), I automatically plan on any restaurant meal to be 2-3 meals for me. I don’t ask for a takeout box right when my meal comes though. I usually just visually decide how much I can eat when the plate arrives and maybe separate the portion I plan to eat from the rest of the meal. It helps that I go out to dinner most frequently and dinner is my smallest meal of the day, so I’m not as tempted to keep eating like I would be earlier in the day.
When I’m logging my food, I can usually find a similar entry from a chain restaurant. I’ve found those to be close enough. I just figure that there are only so many ways to add calories to say, a 1/3 pound hamburger (toppings held constant, of course). My guess is that since I’m automatically cutting the total calories into a couple of meals, that covers me if I’m off by a bit.
For me, since I knew I wasn’t going to give up going out, I just had to make new habits. Now it’s become so automatic that I don’t think much about it all.
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I look at the menus ahead of time and have a plan of what I'm going to eat.
Banking some calories from earlier in the week helps.
Intermittent fasting works for me too. I'll eat lighter the rest of the day and eat what I want when I go out and still able stay near my calorie goal.
I don't drink calories and use those calories towards the meal.
This took me a while to learn, but I stop eating right before I get full. I no longer stuff myself or eat things because they are free (i.e. complimentary bread or nachos). I'll ask for a takeout box early on and put my food away which makes it out of sight, out of mind.
Lastly, I no longer freak out when the scale jumps up the next day. I don't overeat and still try to stay in control of my calories so I know it's mostly water weight from the excess sodium.
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Same. I save calories beforehand and plug everything into MFP beforehand as well. Pace yourself and enjoy the meal. Make it last longer.1
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Don't be overly hungry when you get there.
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My biggest realization was that every meal out isn’t a special occasion worthy of 3 courses and cocktails.
This is also my technique. If I'm in a new city or it's a my birthday, that's a special occasion. Regular Friday night date with my husband, it's special because I'm with him . . . but it's no reason to go all out, especially when it's a place we go to fairly often.4 -
My "go to" strategies actually kind of happened to me by circumstances. My wife can't have dairy/gluten and I eat the same. If you eliminate dairy, gluten and vegetable oils from your list, pretty easy to eat healthy out. Also, if you eat meat, you really learn which kitchen/restaurants really know how to cook and which just bury crap with cheese and butter (or deep fry it). Really hones in on food quality and taste of fresh vegetables more.
I don't eat a ton of red meat any more but one pricy steakhouse in town we went to served my wife a horrid steak. Every steak on their menu had butter sauce or blue cheese, etc. for a reason it turns out. I've had better quality meat at a Longhorn, yet people are paying $40 or $50 for steaks that are terrible when you take all the buttery sauce of them.
This is the main reason we like Thai as our favorite cuisine now. Amazing flavors, without deep frying, cheese or butter (or milk).2 -
OMG so funny that I stumbled upon this post just as I was stressing about a family dinner next week at a Chinese restaurant I googled ''chinese food healthy options'' and then searched for the menu and figured out my best option will be beef and broccoli so I pre-logged it for that day already! Done!
It is great you were able to find some strategies to help. Chinese food is often a hard one for me to decipher whats healthiest. Beef and Broccoli is always my go to aswell. Drink lots of water too because there is a ton of salt usually.0 -
Don't let them place the bread on the table.
This is so smart. Never thought of this but honestly my self-control when it comes to hot bread serveed with butter is very limited lol. I can just ask th waiter to take it away and then I wont be tempted to have another bread roll. Will definitly be using this trick. Thanks.0 -
1. Plan ahead. If the place has a menu online, look for better choices.
2. Split a meal. Most choices are enough food for two, so split with your spouse.
3. Make smart substitutions. I have to limit my carb intake due to T2D, so I ask for slaw instead of fries or a green veggie like green bean, Brussels Sprouts or Asparagus instead of a potato or pasta.
4. Get a to-go box and put half the meal in there before you start eating it. You really don't need to eat everything on your plate and if you need to stash it away beforehand, do so.
5. Fruit for dessert or as a side. Nothing wrong with a bowl of fresh fruit as a dessert.
For example, went to Cracker Barrel last week while on a last minute trip to a customer site. Lunch on the road at Cracker Barrel was the grilled trout, green beans, carrots (yeah a few more carbs) and the fresh fruit. Had them keep the biscuits and corn bread off the table.
I saw so much fried food around me, and everyone eating it looked the part.
The trout was really well done, and no guilt. I'm pretty sure the whole lunch was less than 600 calories with coffee as my drink.
My wife and I just did a 4 day weekend in LA and we used many of the strategies above.
That way, no guilt when we did the obligatory visit to Randy's Donuts for dessert after a meal.4 -
If I can't find the menu online then I order a grilled chicken breast and a vegetable side. You usually can't go wrong with that.3
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I usually skip dessert because it's rarely worth the calories (I'm a dessert snob). I don't get drinks or appetizers either.
Then it depends.. if I'm craving something specific, and it's not something that's easy to make at home, I get it and try to be mindful of my portion. If not, I go for whatever seems lower calories on the menu (often some steak or chicken with veggies, and I get some potato as a side as well because it fills me up).
Honestly though, nowadays I mostly go out when I crave something specific anyway (or really don't want to cook). Just crazy to spend $20 on a steak, veggies, and potatoes, when I could make the same thing for half as much at home (and have extra to boot). That being said, I'm a hungry person, and don't really like chains, so I don't often have leftovers.. just no way I could make 2 meals of most of the portions I typically get.0 -
I don't eat out that much so I just order what I want. And what I want isn't usually something ridiculous with 5000 calories so it's really not a problem anyway. I only order water at restaurants and I just try to stay mindful and quit eating when I get full. If there's bread or rolls at the table, I eat one and that's it.0
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I actually eat out a lot, even while losing 50 lbs.
1. I have certain go-to low-calorie and delicious options at certain places: (avocado and sweet potato rolls at Japanese places, southwest chicken salad at Wendy's, 2 street tacos with onions and cilantro at the Mexican place, grilled chicken caesar salad at the Italian place, burger with a lettuce wrap and side salad at the local bar, etc).
2. If it's a new place, I look up the menu beforehand and choose what sounds reasonable and delicious and will fit in my goals for the day or week.
3. I'll eat a little lighter that morning if I can.
4. If the entree portions are too big, I'll order a side-salad and a small plate (think tapas, small appetizers, cups of soup or chili, etc).
5. I usually don't have appetizers, desserts, or drinks (once in a while, I'll have some vodka and seltzers if I have the calories for them).
6. I expect the scale number to be high for next few days due to the sodium, even if I stayed within the calorie goals.
6. If it's a new and special occasion with a type of food I've never tried before, I treat it like an EXPERIENCE and just order it! These occasions are very rare so it's nice to be able to partake and not have to worry about it becoming a habit.0 -
Look at the menu before you go to determine what you will be having. This helps me avoid temptations. Also, never be afraid to ask for substitutions (veggies instead of fries, etc.).0
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If it's a night out, party, or another "special" occasion (even just meeting friends for dinner) I prefer to bank some extra calories and just enjoy the meal. Unless there are special events several times a week, this has worked pretty well for me in general.
I'm terrible about "resisting" what I actually want to eat, and find that battle (and sitting there jealous of everyone else's delicious meals) to be far more painful than shorting myself a few days before and after to make up the difference.
I'll also "bank" that day by having very light (if anything) other meals.0 -
My favorite strategy, when going to Mexican food, is to bring along celery and carrots to dip in the salsa, instead of chips. This lets me indulge in the flavor of the salsa and the urge to do something with my hands before the meal, plus it fills me up with vegetables so I don't need to eat as much of my entree. I know technically we shouldn't bring our own food along to a restaurant, but I've never had a server say anything about it before. (I usually bring enough to offer to share the veggies with my friends. They never take me up on it, though, so I just take it home to dip in hummus the rest of the week.)
Come to think of it, this would probably work at Chili's or Applebee's or somewhere if the group ordered chips for the table.1 -
My favorite strategy, when going to Mexican food, is to bring along celery and carrots to dip in the salsa, instead of chips. This lets me indulge in the flavor of the salsa and the urge to do something with my hands before the meal, plus it fills me up with vegetables so I don't need to eat as much of my entree. I know technically we shouldn't bring our own food along to a restaurant, but I've never had a server say anything about it before. (I usually bring enough to offer to share the veggies with my friends. They never take me up on it, though, so I just take it home to dip in hummus the rest of the week.)
Come to think of it, this would probably work at Chili's or Applebee's or somewhere if the group ordered chips for the table.
This would not work at Applebee's. It's actually a health code violation to bring in your own food. I work at Applebee's and have asked people to get rid of outside food and beverages. If said person were to get sick/food poisoning from the outside food it could then be blamed on the restaurant (in this case Applebee's). Unless it's a small child (toddler) having snacks to keep them quiet, I usually will say something, politely of course. I completely understand where you are coming from and wanting to make healthy choices. As a server, we have sides of celery and carrots that we can sell as a side option if that is something you prefer.
Not related to the subject, but I had one table bring in tortilla chips from Chipotle next door and try to eat that as their appetizer at Applebee's. Uh... no, just no. Don't do that. The table got pissed and left when I asked them to put them away. Oh well.1 -
I usually look up menu and then figure out how much over the selections will put me, then do a workout before going enough to make up the difference and eat guilt free.1
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