Weight Watchers
#51766 - 03/18/04 06:53 AM
|
|
|
|
Hi everyone,
I read the thread about Weight Watchers. I'm thinking of going on it myself.
I am stable, and now want to lose some weight. I think I'm afraid to eat salad again, grain bread, etc.
Can we eat cooked vegs., soy, and everything we've learned here? Does the book tell you how many points soy is? What about bread?
I used to eat oatmeal bread when I first heard I had IBS. The nutritionist put me on oatmeal bread, etc. I guess what I'm trying to say is, is there a variety, as far as a reference to the food, and it's points, for people with IBS?
Did you keep stable while on WW? Thanks so much for your help on this. I do want to join, but want to ask how your tummy's feel.
Thanks Christine
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Christine,
There's no way I'm going to go back to rabbit food diets, now that I know what it will do to my tummy. I understand your hesitation.
The beauty of WW is this: you can eat whatever you want. I'm not kidding. If you weren't IBS and wanted to have chocolate cake and a pint of Ben and Jerry's for breakfast you can. HOWEVER: if that uses up your points for the day (and I'm certain it would), then you're up a creek and have to eat zero points food the rest of the day. That's the kicker. So eating everything and anything under the sun is OK on WW, whether it's soy stuff, bowl of rice, banana, chocolate milkshake... whatever!
As for getting the Points values for foods: they have books that have an astonishing array of supermarket foods and restraurant menus in them. They're pretty comprehensive. I looked up Silk Vanilla the other day and it was there. If you're eating something that's NOT in the cheat sheets or books, NO WORRIES! You get a little thing-a-ma-bob slider that's really easy to use that helps you figure out Points based on fiber content, calories, etc... So all you have to do is read packaging, and we're certainly used to that by now. In fact, I rarely use the books, just the slider. And it fits easily in your purse so you can just take it with you to the store and check out packaging while you're loading up your cart. Easy as pie (8 pts).
--------------------
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Jen,
Thanks so much. I'm off to WW
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
I do Weight Watchers Online since I never have time to go to any of the meetings. The beauty of the online site is that it will automatically calculate points for you, as well as give you the point values for foods and recipes.
Since its easy for me to insert the recipes into the website, if anyone needs a point value for a recipe, please let me know. I'm more than happy to help.
-------------------- - Jennifer
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Okay, squash is really NOT an English thing and it's not in my book of points! Please tell me it's 0 points like pumpkin!??? I love Heather's butternut squash pasta sauce and it's 3 1/2 points per serving (quarter of the recipe - BIG serving!) without the squash!
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Wow! Thanks for the offer! I would do it online, but it's more expensive than the meetings... for some reason. Plus, I have no desire to have a scale in the house.
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Linz, squash and pumpkin are really just different names for the same type of plant, so I would assume it would have the same number of points. Zero, woohoo!
-------------------- "Anyone can exercise, but this kind of lethargy takes real discipline." -Garfield
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Quote:
Okay, squash is really NOT an English thing and it's not in my book of points! Please tell me it's 0 points like pumpkin!??? I love Heather's butternut squash pasta sauce and it's 3 1/2 points per serving (quarter of the recipe - BIG serving!) without the squash!
My calculator shows 1 pt per 1 cup of butternut squash.
-------------------- - Jennifer
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Quote:
Wow! Thanks for the offer! I would do it online, but it's more expensive than the meetings... for some reason. Plus, I have no desire to have a scale in the house.
Yah, no problem! I have already 75+ recipes stored on there with the point calculations of IBS safe recipes (I have only 3-4 that aren't) and I'm hoping to add a section to my personal webpage soon that will have the recipes with their point values.
But if you have a recipe, just email it to me at sweetpea982@sbcglobal.net because might not catch it on the boards.
-------------------- - Jennifer
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
Hi, I just joined WW last week and I am doing fine on it, but when it comes to figuring out an IBS recipe, I find it challenging. Like, if I make the banana nut bread, I don't know how much I can have. Do you run into that problem?
-------------------- Everything somehow always works out for the best.
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
When I make a loaf of bread, I always cut the number of slices according to the number of servings in the recipe ahead of time. Most of my bread recipes are 2 pts per slice of bread, so I know that every slice I take I have to add 2 pts to my daily total.
-------------------- - Jennifer
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|
|
I would highly recommend you take a fiber supplement. You really can eat anything you want, but our soluble fiber comes with a high point value. Example a cup of pasta or rice = 4 points. You're only allowed 20 or so per day. So if you're going to reduce what you eat, then make sure you're still getting enough soluble fiber to keep you stable. Best way - a fiber supplement. Make sure you cook all your veggies well and puree your fruits. I love applesauce 1/3 cup is only a point.
-------------------- Formerly HanSolo. IBS, OCD, Bipolar, PTSD times 3.
Print
Remind Me
Notify Moderator
|