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Author Message
25 new of 588 responses total.
remmers
response 364 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 26 22:27 UTC 2003

Breakfast at the Flim Flam, our friendly neighborhood fambly restaurant.
I had eggs, oatmeal, OJ, and coffee.
anderyn
response 365 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 00:16 UTC 2003

Today we had some Scottish meat pies (round pastry shells with minced beef
inside, possibly mixed with oatmeal) and I had a butter tart. Yes, we were
in Canada for the weekend. :-) We stopped at "Uncle Jimmy's Scottish Bakery".
keesan
response 366 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 01:06 UTC 2003

Jim stir-fried what was in the refrigerator, which today was red cabbage,
onions, daikon, and frozen peppers.  On rice, with tofu.
jmsaul
response 367 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 01:40 UTC 2003

You guys brought meat pies with beef in them back from Canada?
bhoward
response 368 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 01:55 UTC 2003

Unless their bodies process food extraordinarily quickly, the
answer is almost certainly yes :-)
jmsaul
response 369 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 02:03 UTC 2003

Doh.  I guess that's probably how they did it.
dah
response 370 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 02:17 UTC 2003

bash-2.05a$ last jaklumen
jaklumen         ttyp7                     Sun Oct 26 01:41 - 02:50  
(01:08)

wtmp begins Wed Oct  1 09:00:42 GMT 2003
dah
response 371 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 02:21 UTC 2003

See?  On M-NEt!  He signed up just to see M-Netters making fun of 
him!  But apparently he didn't find the item, agora 5.
other
response 372 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 03:41 UTC 2003

I had a butter tart today too, and I didn't have to leave Ann Arbor to 
get it.  (Big City bakery has really wicked good ones.)
jaklumen
response 373 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 06:53 UTC 2003

resp:371 very astute of you, oh Phillie boy.  But you still fail to 
grasp that I still had great fun along the way.  Sorry, you still lose.

Dinner was a bacon cheeseburger and fries with beer-battered 
mushrooms... yes, oh, so decadent.  Go ahead and make fun of me, you M-
Netters.  I really don't give a motherflying fuck.
jaklumen
response 374 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 07:05 UTC 2003

Yep.  Still don't.  Or maybe I should say I do.  Should have realized 
it would be in the parody of the conference.  Pretty fucking funny.  
Thanks, dah.  I should buy you a pizza, man.
scott
response 375 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 13:51 UTC 2003

Pancakes with homemade pear butter, Earl Grey tea.
anderyn
response 376 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 14:34 UTC 2003

Yes, we ate them in Canada. I would have liked to have brought some haggis
back, but Bruce said we couldn't.
keesan
response 377 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 15:43 UTC 2003

Oatmeal with fresh-picked apples from our favorite tree.  Lunch will start
with two tylenol and one benadryl and progress to three more pills for nausea
and may include a hospital blueberry bagel during infusion.  Last time Jim
found half a chocolate cupcake in the patient kitchen.
edina
response 378 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 16:40 UTC 2003

Re 373 and 374, people that go out of their way to say they don't care, really
do care.  Duh.
tod
response 379 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 16:48 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

happyboy
response 380 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 18:26 UTC 2003

lol
keesan
response 381 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 02:41 UTC 2003

Jim ate the bottom half of the cupcake.  Someone else probably pulled off the
top half.  Today he found two entire ones.  Lunch was all those pills, and
bread and cream cheese, and half a blueberry bagel and three juices and two
apples.  Things I could eat left handed.
jaklumen
response 382 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 03:21 UTC 2003

okay.

Today our larder was a little bare, so I had my father come over with 
a little food to tide us over until we could find some foodstuffs 
elsewhere.  He brought a half a head of Napa cabbage, some apples, and 
some Asian pears.  Julie made the cabbage into coleslaw, added some 
sunflower seeds, which I had for lunch with one of the Asian pears.

Right now, I'm having some steak with cucumbers and rice... we're 
trying to use the rice in our storage.

Oh yeah, I *am* heavily lampooned in the M-net parody of this cf, of 
this very item... well, quite a few items aren't altered much.  
Apparently not many believe in low-carb.  *shrug*  It's an 
experiment.  I know I've lost some inches-- that's what matters.

Breakfast is pretty damn funny when it's pretty much the same thing 
over and over again.
slynne
response 383 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 03:56 UTC 2003

If what you are doing is working for you, never mind what people think 
about it. 
bhoward
response 384 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 03:58 UTC 2003

Ogo's again today: laulau, ahi poke in a mayo and chili oil sauce,
fruitcup with coconut pudding, pine apple and mandarin orange, ice
kona coffee.

Promised myself to take a break on laulau - already made it twice at
home recently, but when Ryoji mentioned he had taken delivery of fresh
kalo leaves today...
mynxcat
response 385 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 14:31 UTC 2003

I admit, I'm pretty sceptical about low-carb diets, especially when 
they're substituted by high-fat diets. I understand that you should 
decrease your carb-intake, and protein is good, but when you have a 
lot of food that has high fat in it, I begin to wonder if that's 
really effective. It seems it's a heart-attack just waiting to happen.

But, as slynne says, if it works for you, that's what really matters. 
As long as no long-term damage is done, it's all good.
edina
response 386 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 15:24 UTC 2003

I personally believe that the word "buffet" is not part of any healthy eating
plan.
mynxcat
response 387 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 16:03 UTC 2003

Well, you could go to a buffet and pick out the less greasy stuff. And 
less of everything. Though, when it comes to me, I don't seem to work 
that way.
keesan
response 388 of 588: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 16:04 UTC 2003

Restaurant food in general is not healthy - it is usually full of fat and salt
and meat and not enough vegetables.  But a buffet at least lets you eat more
of the (salty fatty) vegetables.

High protein diets are bad for the kidneys and liver, which have to filter
out lots of protein breakdown products.  If you are eating a high-fat diet
and burning as many calories as you eat, it might not hurt you.  I read a
magazine article yesterday which seemed to say that 1/4 of Americans have
insulin problems and cannot eat large amounts of carbohydrates that put
glucose into their bodies too fast (refined carbohydrates).  Whole grains
digest much more slowly.  If jaklumen is in this group, I would suggest brown
rice, 100% whole wheat bread, rather than biscuits or jelly donuts, also a
lot more vegetables and fruits, which are not refined (whole fruits, not
sugary juices).  Cooking vegetables releases more vitamins (but don't boil
them and throw out the water -steam or microwave or stir fry).
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