Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was raised on Weight Watchers recipes because my mom spent most of my childhood dieting and since she was the one cooking, we ate whatever was on the diet plan that night for dinner. She had this deck of cards with bizarre names (lots of things had the word log or snack in the title) and she would deal them out each week as she planned her menus. As a result I spent most of my childhood eating weird diet versions of regular food without realizing it until I went to college. You haven't lived until you've had an "enchilada" open-faced on a piece of whole wheat bread with cottage cheese on top.
Remember when cottage cheese, bread, and canned fruit were "diet" food? What was that all about?
Bread? I remember the "diet plate" at restaurants as being a plain hamburger patty (no bun), a scoop of cottage cheese and fruit. "The Diet Plate."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was raised on Weight Watchers recipes because my mom spent most of my childhood dieting and since she was the one cooking, we ate whatever was on the diet plan that night for dinner. She had this deck of cards with bizarre names (lots of things had the word log or snack in the title) and she would deal them out each week as she planned her menus. As a result I spent most of my childhood eating weird diet versions of regular food without realizing it until I went to college. You haven't lived until you've had an "enchilada" open-faced on a piece of whole wheat bread with cottage cheese on top.
Remember when cottage cheese, bread, and canned fruit were "diet" food? What was that all about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was raised on Weight Watchers recipes because my mom spent most of my childhood dieting and since she was the one cooking, we ate whatever was on the diet plan that night for dinner. She had this deck of cards with bizarre names (lots of things had the word log or snack in the title) and she would deal them out each week as she planned her menus. As a result I spent most of my childhood eating weird diet versions of regular food without realizing it until I went to college. You haven't lived until you've had an "enchilada" open-faced on a piece of whole wheat bread with cottage cheese on top.
Remember when cottage cheese, bread, and canned fruit were "diet" food? What was that all about?
Anonymous wrote:I was raised on Weight Watchers recipes because my mom spent most of my childhood dieting and since she was the one cooking, we ate whatever was on the diet plan that night for dinner. She had this deck of cards with bizarre names (lots of things had the word log or snack in the title) and she would deal them out each week as she planned her menus. As a result I spent most of my childhood eating weird diet versions of regular food without realizing it until I went to college. You haven't lived until you've had an "enchilada" open-faced on a piece of whole wheat bread with cottage cheese on top.
Anonymous wrote:My mom is a hippie all natural organic everything vegetarian so nothing you wouldn't now find at whole foods but that was super weird to other kids. Think almond butter on whole wheat bread, seaweed salads, tofu hotdogs, kefir, etc. I would pick Wonder Bread at any friends house to get my fix.
Anonymous wrote:My dad made "shells 'n' tuna". Which was pasta, a jar of sauce, and a tuna salad. He said it was protein (tuna), veg (sauce), and carb (pasta).
Sometimes I think it would be fun to make a higher end version and see what that's like.
Anonymous wrote:My mom would mix sour cream and sugar together and serve it as dessert. It was my favorite.