Anonymous wrote:It is so hot outside, the last couple of days are brutal, but when you see what people are ordering in any given place it is hair raising.
Tons of breads, starches, gluten heavy foods and they load on them. Not everyone of course but many do and then the same people seem to leave the place holding their belly with both hands massaging it gently like they carry a baby and they waddle outside the place into the heat. What is the next step I wonder.. ER?
Why it is not a common knowledge that in hot heat and humid foods to limit or avoid altogether for the time of the extreme heat are:
- starches.. rice.. potatoes..
- gluten .. pastas.. breads..
- salty foods
- salt
- meat
- spicy food
Feel free to add to the list and add foods that are good and light.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am making a trip downtown today, and I will have a very spicy Mexican salad and salt-rimmed margarita in honor of OP.
Can't wait.
Might rub my belly in advance.
Touching yourself is disgusting. -OP
Agreed! That's why I have a flock of neutered sparrows do my hair in the morning, and I spray-paint on a full coverage outfit. It's very high tech.
The best thing I ever did, though, was have all my pores surgically removed. Secretions are for the vulgar.
Anonymous wrote:In 2006 in Serbia, 55.7% of adult population was overweight (19.0% of examinees were obese). I believe the study blamed bread and spicy food.
Anonymous wrote:In 2006 in Serbia, 55.7% of adult population was overweight (19.0% of examinees were obese). I believe the study blamed bread and spicy food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is so hot outside, the last couple of days are brutal, but when you see what people are ordering in any given place it is hair raising.
Tons of breads, starches, gluten heavy foods and they load on them. Not everyone of course but many do and then the same people seem to leave the place holding their belly with both hands massaging it gently like they carry a baby and they waddle outside the place into the heat. What is the next step I wonder.. ER?
Why it is not a common knowledge that in hot heat and humid foods to limit or avoid altogether for the time of the extreme heat are:
- starches.. rice.. potatoes..
- gluten .. pastas.. breads..
- salty foods
- salt
- meat
- spicy food
Feel free to add to the list and add foods that are good and light.
Have you met Mexico? Or any temperature-hot country?
Or India? Or SE Asia? Or parts of Africa?
I'm going to guess OP is white. Very white. Because they are clueless about the climates and cuisines of places that aren't European.
I'm guessing she's from an Eastern European country where women chain smoke, nibble on bland food, and drink vodka.
I couldn't tell you what other people eat at restaurants because I don't notice...or care...or judge.
Hey.. insult OP all you want, but I am pp from Yugoslavia and lived in Africa... I live off of spicy food, we eat hot peppers(not me allergic but everyone else), we don't drink no vodka, sljivovica and Irish Whiskey if we are being posh! My kids' first solid food was spicy chicken curry. I love, love as do my kids and dh spicy food, I add Tabasco and everything and my kids think Sriracha is ketchup!(ok, but jokes aside, people in Yugoslavia do eat spicy food more than other Eastern Europeans that I've met(so just speaking for those I know) and even in my country we are an anomaly, bland food sucks so, so much!)
[b]
You are the one who is insulting. I’m Eastern European and Yugoslavia isn't a country. The former Yugoslavia works, but don’t insult the rest of us easteen Europeans.
OK. Sorry, I am from former Yugoslavia, I was just joking. Do you eat spicy food in your country of origin? Do you forgive me?
If it was a country when you were there, it’s fine to say Yugoslavia. I don’t get people sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am making a trip downtown today, and I will have a very spicy Mexican salad and salt-rimmed margarita in honor of OP.
Can't wait.
Might rub my belly in advance.
Touching yourself is disgusting. -OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is so hot outside, the last couple of days are brutal, but when you see what people are ordering in any given place it is hair raising.
Tons of breads, starches, gluten heavy foods and they load on them. Not everyone of course but many do and then the same people seem to leave the place holding their belly with both hands massaging it gently like they carry a baby and they waddle outside the place into the heat. What is the next step I wonder.. ER?
Why it is not a common knowledge that in hot heat and humid foods to limit or avoid altogether for the time of the extreme heat are:
- starches.. rice.. potatoes..
- gluten .. pastas.. breads..
- salty foods
- salt
- meat
- spicy food
Feel free to add to the list and add foods that are good and light.
Have you met Mexico? Or any temperature-hot country?
Or India? Or SE Asia? Or parts of Africa?
I'm going to guess OP is white. Very white. Because they are clueless about the climates and cuisines of places that aren't European.
I'm guessing she's from an Eastern European country where women chain smoke, nibble on bland food, and drink vodka.
I couldn't tell you what other people eat at restaurants because I don't notice...or care...or judge.
Hey.. insult OP all you want, but I am pp from Yugoslavia and lived in Africa... I live off of spicy food, we eat hot peppers(not me allergic but everyone else), we don't drink no vodka, sljivovica and Irish Whiskey if we are being posh! My kids' first solid food was spicy chicken curry. I love, love as do my kids and dh spicy food, I add Tabasco and everything and my kids think Sriracha is ketchup!(ok, but jokes aside, people in Yugoslavia do eat spicy food more than other Eastern Europeans that I've met(so just speaking for those I know) and even in my country we are an anomaly, bland food sucks so, so much!)
[b]
You are the one who is insulting. I’m Eastern European and Yugoslavia isn't a country. The former Yugoslavia works, but don’t insult the rest of us easteen Europeans.
OK. Sorry, I am from former Yugoslavia, I was just joking. Do you eat spicy food in your country of origin? Do you forgive me?
[b]
Yes I do, and thank you so much for the apology. We may not agree on politics but we can all agree that op is definitely crazy. I love salt and spice and bread!
Thank you for forgiving me. Bread, right? I love bread, don't know what's with the bread police here? We ate it all the time and nobody was obese or even heavy.
We would go to the store every morning for fresh bread. I don’t understand the bread police! I think it’s because maybe we walk more? I love bread and will never give it up!
Anonymous wrote:I am making a trip downtown today, and I will have a very spicy Mexican salad and salt-rimmed margarita in honor of OP.
Can't wait.
Might rub my belly in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is so hot outside, the last couple of days are brutal, but when you see what people are ordering in any given place it is hair raising.
Tons of breads, starches, gluten heavy foods and they load on them. Not everyone of course but many do and then the same people seem to leave the place holding their belly with both hands massaging it gently like they carry a baby and they waddle outside the place into the heat. What is the next step I wonder.. ER?
Why it is not a common knowledge that in hot heat and humid foods to limit or avoid altogether for the time of the extreme heat are:
- starches.. rice.. potatoes..
- gluten .. pastas.. breads..
- salty foods
- salt
- meat
- spicy food
Feel free to add to the list and add foods that are good and light.
Seriously. Tell this to Thailand and India where they eat spicy food in the heat on purpose in the summer to stimulate the appetite, which otherwise flags when you live in extreme heat with no AC. Spice makes you sweat, which cools you off. (A tad.)
Have you met Mexico? Or any temperature-hot country?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is so hot outside, the last couple of days are brutal, but when you see what people are ordering in any given place it is hair raising.
Tons of breads, starches, gluten heavy foods and they load on them. Not everyone of course but many do and then the same people seem to leave the place holding their belly with both hands massaging it gently like they carry a baby and they waddle outside the place into the heat. What is the next step I wonder.. ER?
Why it is not a common knowledge that in hot heat and humid foods to limit or avoid altogether for the time of the extreme heat are:
- starches.. rice.. potatoes..
- gluten .. pastas.. breads..
- salty foods
- salt
- meat
- spicy food
Feel free to add to the list and add foods that are good and light.
Have you met Mexico? Or any temperature-hot country?
Or India? Or SE Asia? Or parts of Africa?
I'm going to guess OP is white. Very white. Because they are clueless about the climates and cuisines of places that aren't European.
I'm guessing she's from an Eastern European country where women chain smoke, nibble on bland food, and drink vodka.
I couldn't tell you what other people eat at restaurants because I don't notice...or care...or judge.
Hey.. insult OP all you want, but I am pp from Yugoslavia and lived in Africa... I live off of spicy food, we eat hot peppers(not me allergic but everyone else), we don't drink no vodka, sljivovica and Irish Whiskey if we are being posh! My kids' first solid food was spicy chicken curry. I love, love as do my kids and dh spicy food, I add Tabasco and everything and my kids think Sriracha is ketchup!(ok, but jokes aside, people in Yugoslavia do eat spicy food more than other Eastern Europeans that I've met(so just speaking for those I know) and even in my country we are an anomaly, bland food sucks so, so much!)
[b]
You are the one who is insulting. I’m Eastern European and Yugoslavia isn't a country. The former Yugoslavia works, but don’t insult the rest of us easteen Europeans.
OK. Sorry, I am from former Yugoslavia, I was just joking. Do you eat spicy food in your country of origin? Do you forgive me?
[b]
Yes I do, and thank you so much for the apology. We may not agree on politics but we can all agree that op is definitely crazy. I love salt and spice and bread!
Thank you for forgiving me. Bread, right? I love bread, don't know what's with the bread police here? We ate it all the time and nobody was obese or even heavy.
Anonymous wrote:I just enjoyed a grilled herb, cheese, and tomato sandwich with fresh cilantro, salt, pepper, and hot peppers on it. I’m not rubbing my belly.