Hint: categorize = judge
Guess they didn't cover that at Olive Garden training.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's boring and white bread and there are healthier and more adventurous things to try. I never had them growing up, and I think they taste disgusting. It's sad when kids eat them at restaurants with good food.
They have their whole lives to branch out. As long as they are healthy, why do you care?
I don't really, just answering the question. I used to work at an amazing Italian restaurant and only the most annoying tables ordered buttered noodles for their kids--so my experience has colored this opinion.
I think about mess making when eating in a restaurant. Ordering buttered noodles is much safer than ordering red sauce in a restaurant.
But strangely enough, the buttered noodle families left the biggest messes and the smallest tips, and were whiny and critical to boot. The osso bucco families usually kept their tables tidy or left big tips to compensate, and were pleasant and relaxed. Small sample, of course, but enough to make me never want to be that buttered noodle parent.
LOL. Judgmental waitresses? WTF?
What do your kids order at amazing Italian restaurants?
Not judgmental; just observant. Food service employees get to see, observe (and, yes, categorize) a huge cross-section of people and their eating habits. If you think you're exempt from this, you're mistaken.
My kids eat the same foods the adults eat, off the menu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's boring and white bread and there are healthier and more adventurous things to try. I never had them growing up, and I think they taste disgusting. It's sad when kids eat them at restaurants with good food.
They have their whole lives to branch out. As long as they are healthy, why do you care?
I don't really, just answering the question. I used to work at an amazing Italian restaurant and only the most annoying tables ordered buttered noodles for their kids--so my experience has colored this opinion.
I think about mess making when eating in a restaurant. Ordering buttered noodles is much safer than ordering red sauce in a restaurant.
But strangely enough, the buttered noodle families left the biggest messes and the smallest tips, and were whiny and critical to boot. The osso bucco families usually kept their tables tidy or left big tips to compensate, and were pleasant and relaxed. Small sample, of course, but enough to make me never want to be that buttered noodle parent.
LOL. Judgmental waitresses? WTF?
What do your kids order at amazing Italian restaurants?
Not judgmental; just observant. Food service employees get to see, observe (and, yes, categorize) a huge cross-section of people and their eating habits. If you think you're exempt from this, you're mistaken.
My kids eat the same foods the adults eat, off the menu.
I guess all those Italians eating classic caccio e peppe are total boors ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll bet if they were house-made noodles with locally sourced fresh butter and shaved Parmesan, with a side of organic sugar snap peas served in artisanal bowls at Founding Farmers for $22.99, these people wouldn't have any problem ordering them for their kids (or themselves!)
+1
You'd get even more takers if the product was called Craft Butter and Artisnal Pasta w/ sustainably grown durham wheat from a cooperative in Kansas. Bonus points if the wheat was harvested using a vintage combine by a 30-year old liberal arts major who grew a beard in the last 3 years.
What if it was a STEAM combine??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's boring and white bread and there are healthier and more adventurous things to try. I never had them growing up, and I think they taste disgusting. It's sad when kids eat them at restaurants with good food.
They have their whole lives to branch out. As long as they are healthy, why do you care?
I don't really, just answering the question. I used to work at an amazing Italian restaurant and only the most annoying tables ordered buttered noodles for their kids--so my experience has colored this opinion.
I think about mess making when eating in a restaurant. Ordering buttered noodles is much safer than ordering red sauce in a restaurant.
But strangely enough, the buttered noodle families left the biggest messes and the smallest tips, and were whiny and critical to boot. The osso bucco families usually kept their tables tidy or left big tips to compensate, and were pleasant and relaxed. Small sample, of course, but enough to make me never want to be that buttered noodle parent.
LOL. Judgmental waitresses? WTF?
What do your kids order at amazing Italian restaurants?
Not judgmental; just observant. Food service employees get to see, observe (and, yes, categorize) a huge cross-section of people and their eating habits. If you think you're exempt from this, you're mistaken.
My kids eat the same foods the adults eat, off the menu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll bet if they were house-made noodles with locally sourced fresh butter and shaved Parmesan, with a side of organic sugar snap peas served in artisanal bowls at Founding Farmers for $22.99, these people wouldn't have any problem ordering them for their kids (or themselves!)
+1
You'd get even more takers if the product was called Craft Butter and Artisnal Pasta w/ sustainably grown durham wheat from a cooperative in Kansas. Bonus points if the wheat was harvested using a vintage combine by a 30-year old liberal arts major who grew a beard in the last 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's boring and white bread and there are healthier and more adventurous things to try. I never had them growing up, and I think they taste disgusting. It's sad when kids eat them at restaurants with good food.
They have their whole lives to branch out. As long as they are healthy, why do you care?
I don't really, just answering the question. I used to work at an amazing Italian restaurant and only the most annoying tables ordered buttered noodles for their kids--so my experience has colored this opinion.
I think about mess making when eating in a restaurant. Ordering buttered noodles is much safer than ordering red sauce in a restaurant.
But strangely enough, the buttered noodle families left the biggest messes and the smallest tips, and were whiny and critical to boot. The osso bucco families usually kept their tables tidy or left big tips to compensate, and were pleasant and relaxed. Small sample, of course, but enough to make me never want to be that buttered noodle parent.
LOL. Judgmental waitresses? WTF?
What do your kids order at amazing Italian restaurants?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boring and no reason to eat them...no nutritional value and they are just gross.
This. Missing protein component and micronutrients (eight the exception of the green beans)
You literally night as well feed them a snickers bar instead of the buttered noodles
Um...this might be a SLIGHT exaggeration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White pasta has little nutritive value. The protein in white pasta is not accessed by the body alone (just like the protein in rice needs something like beans to compete it. Butter is not a healthy fat; it is saturated as is cheese.
^^^ this person has been reading "nutrition" blogs. Or perhaps seeing a $150-an-hour bethesda "nutritionist."
All of my high-incomed, triathloning acquaintances are now experts! And they all sound the same.
It's your choice to be retarded but it's true. If you are not getting all the essential amino acids, then the protein you are consuming is processed like a carb. Which is why vegans have a hard time building muscle without a lot of planning.
It is a myth that you need all the essential amino acids in the same meal, or even the same day. A small amount of meat or dairy protein will go along way to helping maximize protein from grains.
Vegans may have difficulty getting enough food to build muscles for body building purposes, simply because it is hard to eat a ton of protein just from plant foods. The food fills them up, it is too bulky. Animal proteins have no fiber so you can eat more of them before filling up. So they do have to think about food intake if they are trying to gain muscles for body building or athetic purposes, but not because they have to carefully combine amino acids -- that theory went out about 20 years ago.
Also went away -- the R word. Stop using it.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not getting all the essential amino acids, then the protein you are consuming is processed like a carb.
By stating this, you are unwittingly proving that you have no actual knowledge about biochemistry but are, as I suspected getting your info from blogs about "clean eating" and other sources at your CrossFit-type gym. Your assertion is flat out incorrect.
(and yes, we know you're a child who's into working out, because you used the word 'retarded' in your PP)