Anonymous wrote:Calorie counter back. Each one of those cheese biscuits is 150 calories. http://www.calorieking.com/foods/calories-in-sides-cheddar-bay-biscuit_f-ZmlkPTEwMjYwMQ.html

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that's just after the Rockefellers were hanging out in Maine. We have a house in Maine. Lobster in Maine is different. It's fresh there.
Actually, that is not true. A lobster fisherman in Maine told me that as long as a lobster is kept alive, it is the same quality if you order it in a restaurant in DC or in Maine. Obviously that is not the case with other seafood but lobster is different because it is cooked alive.
Anonymous wrote:I actually like Red Lobster, because I appreciate that there are a reasonable number of lower calorie options on the menu and a few different plain vegetable sides. I like when I can eat out without having to have a 1000+ calorie meal. Chain restaurants are often my pick for that reason - nutrition info is available on the menus in some places, or online for others. Not to mention, it's a whole lot easier to take my toddler to those kinds of places than to a more upscale restaurant, even if we're having dinner at 5:30pm. If I want a really nice meal out we'll go somewhere different (without the toddler) and I'll enjoy my meal without worrying about the calories, but for an average Sunday evening when I don't feel like cooking, but we feel like having a sit down meal instead of ordering from a counter? Red Lobster or Outback works great.
Anonymous wrote:Believe me the lobster does taste better in Maine. Really it does. I suppose you'd have to go to Maine to understand. Keeping an animal alive to ship it in some grungy water or on ice probably does affect flavor. Kind of like free range vs. caged meat. There's a difference there too even though both options involve butchering live animals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe me the lobster does taste better in Maine. Really it does. I suppose you'd have to go to Maine to understand. Keeping an animal alive to ship it in some grungy water or on ice probably does affect flavor. Kind of like free range vs. caged meat. There's a difference there too even though both options involve butchering live animals.
I have been there many times. As long as the lobster is kept in decent water, it tastes the same. Lobster are not kept "on ice".
Anonymous wrote:Believe me the lobster does taste better in Maine. Really it does. I suppose you'd have to go to Maine to understand. Keeping an animal alive to ship it in some grungy water or on ice probably does affect flavor. Kind of like free range vs. caged meat. There's a difference there too even though both options involve butchering live animals.