Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um…you’re pretty judgmental for someone who is pre-diabetic because of their own crappy American diet.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised how much resistance there is on this thread to the idea American food is less healthy. Shopping at a British grocery store it is clear the portion sizes are much smaller. Meat packages are smaller. Much smaller than here. You can buy junk at fast food places but there are also healthier, smaller portion options that includes a large portion of tasty veggies. You don’t have to search for that option. In Spain a hotel breakfast buffet includes vegetables and fruit and fish. For breakfast. There is a very very small cereal option off to the side for Americans who can’t live without there aren’t significant carb choices. Our food options are incredibly unhealthy. And our portion sizes are huge. It is a generalization, yes. You can bake your own chicken and bread. It shouldn’t be so hard to find good options when you don’t have time to make everything from scratch. Grabbed a container of chicken salad as a weekend lunch for me and kids recently. It had added honey. The store actually sweetens chicken salad.
Agreed. So much of our food has added sugar. I buy an organic whole grain bread for breakfast thinking it’s super healthy. I just looked at the ingredients (which I hadn’t done before because I wrongly assumed it was healthy) and lo and behold it has “organic cane sugar”. Why does bread need added sugar?! It’s ridiculous and just one of many, many, many examples.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised how much resistance there is on this thread to the idea American food is less healthy. Shopping at a British grocery store it is clear the portion sizes are much smaller. Meat packages are smaller. Much smaller than here. You can buy junk at fast food places but there are also healthier, smaller portion options that includes a large portion of tasty veggies. You don’t have to search for that option. In Spain a hotel breakfast buffet includes vegetables and fruit and fish. For breakfast. There is a very very small cereal option off to the side for Americans who can’t live without there aren’t significant carb choices. Our food options are incredibly unhealthy. And our portion sizes are huge. It is a generalization, yes. You can bake your own chicken and bread. It shouldn’t be so hard to find good options when you don’t have time to make everything from scratch. Grabbed a container of chicken salad as a weekend lunch for me and kids recently. It had added honey. The store actually sweetens chicken salad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swede again- plus, if you are actually European or even canadian you would have written ‘travelled’. Can’t believe no one else picked this up. It’s your spelling. Try harder next time, you sad little troll.
German PP here. You're probably correct about the troll, but I learned (yeah, not learnt) American English instead of British English, and have never used any other form. I'm not the only one out there. Thanks, JFK Schule
You literally went to a German-American school. Why are you posting here being all misleading like it’s normal to learn American English in Europe????
Why are you so upset by it? I said that in the first post. I never said it was normal, I said it's not unheard of for Germans to speak American English or a mix. Good grief. Why do you care? It's not disparaging you, or Sweden, or what form of English you speak.
I am posting from my game in Germany. It is very clear that you do not know much about this country. I am guessing you were here for a brief holiday, but it is clear you don’t know much about what it is like here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swede again- plus, if you are actually European or even canadian you would have written ‘travelled’. Can’t believe no one else picked this up. It’s your spelling. Try harder next time, you sad little troll.
German PP here. You're probably correct about the troll, but I learned (yeah, not learnt) American English instead of British English, and have never used any other form. I'm not the only one out there. Thanks, JFK Schule
You literally went to a German-American school. Why are you posting here being all misleading like it’s normal to learn American English in Europe????
Why are you so upset by it? I said that in the first post. I never said it was normal, I said it's not unheard of for Germans to speak American English or a mix. Good grief. Why do you care? It's not disparaging you, or Sweden, or what form of English you speak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Making your own bread and roasting your own deli meat is the equivalent of going off the grid, achieving a level of extreme self sufficiency on the food front. For me I have never been able to sustain the making my own granola, hummus etc energy for the long term. And yes the sabra yellow bean hummus has sugar in it. It is everywhere!
I’m hardly growing my own wheat, hunting my animals, fishing, or foraging. I even have an iPad for which I find recipes! Most of my meals I prepare in less time than it takes to order delivery with my iPhone! I taught myself how to cook when I got married. Taught myself about nutrition when I started seriously training in a competitive sport. I don’t spend a whole lot of money on food. I find it in the local store. Hummus is easy to whip up in the food processor.
Anonymous wrote:A small bottle of Gatorade has 34 grams added sugar- yep that drink parents hand to their kids during a soccer game or after a hike. Total crap
Anonymous wrote:Making your own bread and roasting your own deli meat is the equivalent of going off the grid, achieving a level of extreme self sufficiency on the food front. For me I have never been able to sustain the making my own granola, hummus etc energy for the long term. And yes the sabra yellow bean hummus has sugar in it. It is everywhere!
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised how much resistance there is on this thread to the idea American food is less healthy. Shopping at a British grocery store it is clear the portion sizes are much smaller. Meat packages are smaller. Much smaller than here. You can buy junk at fast food places but there are also healthier, smaller portion options that includes a large portion of tasty veggies. You don’t have to search for that option. In Spain a hotel breakfast buffet includes vegetables and fruit and fish. For breakfast. There is a very very small cereal option off to the side for Americans who can’t live without there aren’t significant carb choices. Our food options are incredibly unhealthy. And our portion sizes are huge. It is a generalization, yes. You can bake your own chicken and bread. It shouldn’t be so hard to find good options when you don’t have time to make everything from scratch. Grabbed a container of chicken salad as a weekend lunch for me and kids recently. It had added honey. The store actually sweetens chicken salad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even at the grocery store,why is there sugar in deli meat? Why is it so hard to find an unsweetened cereal? Even Cheerios have sugar in them. The idea that the best way to have healthy bread is to make it yourself or buy Ezekiel bread for six bucks a loaf. It is not that hard in other countries.
Don’t buy deli meat then. I roast my own chicken, turkey, beef, lamb, pork or whatever for a meal. Then slice meat leftovers for sandwiches or wraps for lunch. I bake my own bread and pitas and pizza doughs. I don’t spend a lot of time doing this either. From experience, I’m pretty efficient at cooking around my work schedule.
FFS people!! I can only assume you all are being wilfully obtuse. I'm not PP, but I'm 90% certain she wasn't looking for recommendations on deli meat alternatives but rather pointing out the ubiquity of bad food options. It shouldn't be as hard as it is. But I guess some of you are so bent on demonstrating your superiority you can't entertain the notion that there could be a better way...and that most people in other countries have access to it.
I’m not disputing that there are a lot of bad food options. I’m just saying that are plenty of inexpensive healthy options too if you learn how to cook.