TwoMisfits
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2002
- Messages
- 6,346
I did see a dietician a week ago and she said I could just in moderation
she was ok with what I told her I ate
she asked me how many cans of soda in a day
I told about her maybe 2 or 3 a week not day
so if I cant have normal bread what can I make a sandwich with then Im not a fan of wheat bread however
If you don't like to roll things up, and just do a roll up with meat/cheese/veg...
Lettuce leaves can be the "sandwich bread" or the "sandwich cup" if you can't bring yourself to eat wheat bread or a lower carb bread.
Another option is to make a sandwich filling into a small raw tomato (like a roma), a halved bell pepper, and/or an baby halved avocado and/or serve on top of cucumber slices (depending what it is you're having).
You can also do a sandwich as a salad. Since I have allergies, I can't have bread at Five Guys, so they make me a burger salad, which helps b/c it makes the whole meal heavier on the veg without the bun (aka, a bowl fits a whole lot more veg than bun). See Subway's ideas for their salads of how you take sandwich ingredients and make a salad.
I routinely make chicken salad (celery, grapes, mayo, seasoning, poached chicken - I have also sometimes added seeds and/or peanuts, but I'd prefer tree nuts if I could eat them) and never eat bread. I do the same for egg salad. I prefer both bread free.
You need to break the mental box of white bread with every meal and white bread sandwich as lunch. Your diet is still very light on produce and other carbs that bring your diet vitamins, minerals, and fiber vs just empty sugars - white bread, soda, and cheetos being the latter.
As for the nutritionist being happy, well, they want to encourage at the beginning, and know most folks have to start with baby steps b/c anything else would be overwhelming. So, they will cheer on every small change figuring in a few months, they'll get you where they eventually want you to be. They don't want you to stop after a change or two but keep making better and better choices for your long term health.