Fudbutter
... smiling as the puppets dance
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2006
- Messages
- 41
Sorry to repost this, but I had this as part of a larger post and got no replies as to this particular aspect. Since we aree leaving Friday, I thought that I'd give to one more try here. So, if you can help ...
We love food. The wife was born in Venice and cooks like it. We got so large at one point, that we would take a trip to the West Coast and affect the tides. We couldnt go to the beach because Greenpeace would show up and try to push us back in the ocean. Finally, we bought a talking scale, I got on it and it said one at a time please, so it was off to the nutritionist. 2 years and 135 lbs lost between us later and we are each within both 20 lbs of our goal. I promised the wife dinner at Per Se (an excellent but ridiculously priced restaurant in NYC) when weve made it, so Im in no hurry to get there.
The point of all this is that we cannot gain weight on this trip. OK, stop laughing, we actually took an 11 day cruise and didnt gain and this must be easier. We love to walk and that will help on the park days, but only to an extent. What we try to do when we travel is to have a nice dinner in each city we go to and try to be good the rest of the time. We always choose the dinner by Zagats food rating. Not a foolproof method, but its worked well for us. In Orlando, they rate two restaurants "27" for food. Thats pretty high (30 is the highest, but Ive never seen a 30). One is V&A. The other is Le Coq au Vin in downtown Orlando, which looked a tich more appealing to us so well go there Fri. night (but V&A looks right up our alley). Oh well, no breaking the one city, one dinner rule.
Anyway, if you have ever been in our predicament, we can really use your advice. What we cant have is starches (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes) or fats (which cuts out anything fried or dairy related). If you dont think thats easy, consider the fact that shes of Italian descent and she cant serve up pasta, bread or cheese. Now that doesnt mean no cheating ever. You try to save that for "The Dinner".
Well have breakfast covered by a case of Fiber One bars so we need to cover 3 lunches and 2 dinners on park days. Ive seen someone eating a turkey leg, thats not too bad if you pull off the skin. Asian restaurants tend to have healthy choice. Otherwise, I am clueless.
Anyone with this experience out there willing to provide a tip or two?
A thousand thanks in advance.
We love food. The wife was born in Venice and cooks like it. We got so large at one point, that we would take a trip to the West Coast and affect the tides. We couldnt go to the beach because Greenpeace would show up and try to push us back in the ocean. Finally, we bought a talking scale, I got on it and it said one at a time please, so it was off to the nutritionist. 2 years and 135 lbs lost between us later and we are each within both 20 lbs of our goal. I promised the wife dinner at Per Se (an excellent but ridiculously priced restaurant in NYC) when weve made it, so Im in no hurry to get there.
The point of all this is that we cannot gain weight on this trip. OK, stop laughing, we actually took an 11 day cruise and didnt gain and this must be easier. We love to walk and that will help on the park days, but only to an extent. What we try to do when we travel is to have a nice dinner in each city we go to and try to be good the rest of the time. We always choose the dinner by Zagats food rating. Not a foolproof method, but its worked well for us. In Orlando, they rate two restaurants "27" for food. Thats pretty high (30 is the highest, but Ive never seen a 30). One is V&A. The other is Le Coq au Vin in downtown Orlando, which looked a tich more appealing to us so well go there Fri. night (but V&A looks right up our alley). Oh well, no breaking the one city, one dinner rule.
Anyway, if you have ever been in our predicament, we can really use your advice. What we cant have is starches (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes) or fats (which cuts out anything fried or dairy related). If you dont think thats easy, consider the fact that shes of Italian descent and she cant serve up pasta, bread or cheese. Now that doesnt mean no cheating ever. You try to save that for "The Dinner".
Well have breakfast covered by a case of Fiber One bars so we need to cover 3 lunches and 2 dinners on park days. Ive seen someone eating a turkey leg, thats not too bad if you pull off the skin. Asian restaurants tend to have healthy choice. Otherwise, I am clueless.
Anyone with this experience out there willing to provide a tip or two?
A thousand thanks in advance.