Guest guest Posted November 8, 2001 Report Share Posted November 8, 2001 Hi all, Took me a while to post on this but I think I may be able to voice one man's approach to Cronning in a family. I have been on Walfords CRON diet since May 1, 2001 and have lost 35 pounds. Although my eating habits were not horrible compared to most Americans, it was definitely not CRON conscious, my wifes eating habits have always been terrible, and the kids were OK but probably not that great. As of May 1, the family has followed me into the CROn eating lifestyle. Here are a few comments/methods on how I did it. 1) I try to cook most dinners (definitely for my wife and myself), weekend breakfasts and lunches. My wife works three days a week so those nights we eat a weeekend prepared frozen megameal. There is very little talk on this forum regarding Walford's megameal and recipes but I swear by them and the family here would never have survived without them, both for taste as well as convienience. The days my wife is off I try and prepare simpler meals (pasta/fish/rice/steamed veges). There is always a supply of fresh fruit and healthy cereal for the mourning and cutup salad veges for lunch. Dinner for the kids are handled by the baby-sitting grandparents who may not understand CRON and nutritious cooking but have the common sense that vegetables/pasta and a meat at a meal are helthy. 2) I had a long talk with my wife regarding her eating habits and diet and convinced her that living 120 years just plain stinks without her there. I also reaffirmed the health benefits of these foods and the benefits of disease prevention (heart disease, cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure). She is in the health profession but sometimes she doesn't always follow the published medical advice on diet. I still must endure he wity humor about the meals as well as being called obsessed at least twice a week (and compared to alot of people on this board, I AM NOT OBSESSED). 3) Cooking CRON with 5 and 7 year old daughters. Flat out, they do not like mega-meals, so compromises must be reached. Some of the successful guidelines: my kids will eat almost any plain vegetable (raw or cooked) so I always prepare that (and mercifully they like sweet potatoes and brocholli); The kids have been successfully weened off regular milk onto skim milk (even the grandparents gave in here); When I make megameal, I try and make extra basics which the kids eat, example I cook excess pasta (using some for CRON baked ziti or muscles florentine)and have an opened jar of ragu in the fridge (they will not eat homemade sauce); We eat a good share of meat (mostly chicken) since I feel this is necessary for good kid health. 4) deserts: with 2 kids we always have deserts arround and we usually let them have a decent amount (yes and lots of halloween candy lately). My wife and I have either homemade muffins (CRON acceptable as the wife says) and not fat/no sugar added ice cream. I just make it a point NOT TO EAT any other deserts. After dinner and desert if the kids are hungry they are told to eat fruit or yogurt. 5) We eat out and yes we order piazza on occasion. He have almost completely eliminated Mcs from the kids diets though. I apologize if this has been long winded, but there seams to be alot to relate (and hoepfully not bore). CRONNING with a family is definitely possible. It was tricky at first, but it gets much easier as time goes by. When I finally reach my set point, perhaps 145-150 pounds (69 inches) from my current 170 pounds I may find more dificulty and I may end up making a decision like Francesca did about losing a little life length while gaining life quality but I do not have to make that choice today. Joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2001 Report Share Posted November 9, 2001 > Hi all, > Took me a while to post on this but I think I may be able to > voice one man's approach to Cronning in a family. .... > 3) Cooking CRON with 5 and 7 year old daughters. Flat out, they do > not like mega-meals, so compromises must be reached. .... > 4) deserts: with 2 kids we always have deserts arround and we > usually let them have a decent amount (yes and lots of halloween > candy lately). My wife and I have either homemade muffins (CRON > acceptable as the wife says) and not fat/no sugar added ice cream. .... > Joe Hi Joe: See the below and try MSG for all of you. Al. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=PubMe d & list_uids=9929637 & dopt=Abstract Ann N Y Acad Sci 1998 Nov 30;855:438-41 Effects of monosodium glutamate on human food palatability. Bellisle F. Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is a well-known flavor enhancer used in both western and Eastern cuisines. Responsible for the 'umami' (delicious) taste, it is incorporated into a large number of solid and liquid savory foods. Experimental studies have established that the presence of added MSG in foods influences palatability, preference and selection. Sensory evaluation tests have shown that both traditional and novel foods get higher palatability ratings if MSG is added at an appropriate dose. In young adults, behavioral tests have shown that the acquisition of a liking for novel foods is facilitated by the addition of MSG to the recipe. In institutionalized elderly persons as well as hospitalized diabetic patients, the addition of MSG to target foods in a lunch meal induced an increased intake for those specific foods, with a subsequent decreased intake of foods presented later in the meal. In both populations, only prandial food selection was affected by MSG, but meal size (kJoules) remained the same. Experiencing the positive effects of MSG is thus possible without inducing hyperphagia. In conclusion, MSG can be used casually by the consumer in order to increase palatability, and it can also be used selectively by nutrition experts in order to orient food selection toward a healthy diet composition. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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