Here we* go again

Every other month or so, LovelyWife will get into her mind that we need to go on a diet.*

When that happens, we find a diet cookbook that will become our bible for the next foreseeable future.

The latest installment in the Bible of the Month / Diet of the Moment book is this really great looking pink thing:

Clicking will take you to the book’s website.
Warning: May contain some French.

Of course the first order of business is to go get the book. And good luck with that. That book was published in 2007 – about three years ago for you math-impaired folks – and never reprinted. Of course, we couldn’t order a copy online through our favorite bookstore:

Fortunately, we found out that there was supposed to be seven in stock in a store near our workplace. So over lunch one day last week, we made our way to the bookstore to go grab a copy of the famous Bible of the Month. After only twenty minutes of looking all over the store, we found the elusive book and brought it home.

And so began our journey into this extremely awesome religious diet program. I’m sure you’re dying for our review of the program, right? Well I can’t really speak for LovelyWife, so you’ll have to make do with my first impressions – since we only got the book last Friday:

The book is pink.

Well, that’s not really a critique as much as a comment on the looks we got when we walked around the bookstore with a pink book under our arm.

The book is expensive.

27$ Canadian dollars might not be a lot, but if you really think about it you’re getting 8 weeks of recipes (with some repeats) that could be found for free on the Web for that price. I did not read the “tips and tricks” section, but i highly doubt there’s a pearl of wisdom in there worth 27$. Keep in mind that it’s a three year old book, and then read the next point.

The “food you’ll need this week” is out of date.

The food list relies on brand name items that don’t exist anymore. It makes it really hard to replace it with something equivalent while in the grocery store. I don’t know about you, but I’m a wealth of useless knowledge, just not about the calorie count of yogurt that has not been produced in over a year. Maybe it’s just me…

The “food you’ll need this week” is ridiculously expensive.

As I mention in the previous point, the book relies on brand name items instead of the generic version. Instead of getting “low-fat yogurt” at 2.29$, you have to get “Yoplait ultimate light yogurt with 120% more probiotics” at 3.79$. All snacks are individually-wrapped single serving items, like “Ficello cheese stick” at 9.99$ for 28 sticks – a total of 588g instead of buying a block of low-fat cheddar, at 5.99$ for 600g. The end result is that the food we bought this week cost us a record-high 450$ and some change instead of the usual 250$ average.

The meals (at this point) were nothing to write home about.

I won’t even write about them here, except for my usual meh.

The lack of protein for every single lunch menu wants to make me kill myself.

I’m a meat lover (hello Google hits!). I can do salad ever so often. In fact, I did salad at least three times a week when I bought my lunch at the university crapeteria – because salad was quick, cheap, and came with some chicken or ham. Now for the next eight weeks, my lunches will be nothing but salad, fruits, veggies and soup. Kill me now.

Anyways. I’ll keep you posted. I don’t expect to simply disappear while on that plan, but you never know.

*I’m not saying I don’t need to go on a diet. As of this morning I now stand at 273 pounds and I agree that it’s a lot of pounds. But (and that’s a big butt), 9 years ago I weighted 383 pounds and I had never been on a diet in my life. I went down to 278 pounds in about six months and then slowly gained back some pounds, keeping my weight around the 300 pounds mark for the last 8 years.  On July 6th 2009 at 6:35 A.M. I tipped the scale at 315 pounds. That means I lost 42 pounds in the last seven months WHILE NOT BEING ON A DIET. So we know that works… Why not stick with that?

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7 Responses to Here we* go again

  1. Finn says:

    So the really great-looking pink thing is the BOOK? :twisted:
    .-= Finn´s last blog ..Busy =-.

  2. Sybil Law says:

    Diets just don’t work – I don’t know why people don’t just say, “I’m not dieting! I am changing my life and how I look at food!”, or whatever.
    I feel for you. Protein is a staple with me – I love it. Cheese and meat – yum yum!
    .-= Sybil Law´s last blog ..Gutter Mouth =-.

  3. Lynda says:

    haha, I like what Sybil said. I did Weight Watchers, and when people ask me how my diet is going, I always kind of get snotty and say, “It’s not a diet. It’s a lifestyle change!” For me, it is.

    I don’t like any “diet” that deprives a person either.
    .-= Lynda´s last blog ..Famous On YouTube =-.

  4. LeSombre says:

    @Finn: Of course it is! What else could it be? :mrgreen:

    @Sybil Law: Protein Power!

    @Lynda: It just makes me want to “cheat”. I never cheat when not on a diet. :grin:

  5. delmer says:

    Chantal LaCroix.

    I’m glad the author is pretty because, if I’m not mistaken, “La Croix” is French for “The Crotch.” Being cute probably takes some of the sting out of that.

  6. martymankins says:

    I’m a big salad eater, but I can’t have salad without some sort of meat. Mostly lunch meat, but a lean turkey is better than just lettuce and tomatoes. Adding a few strips of deli meat to a salad not only helps, but it makes it palatable when you have it for at least 4 meals a week (the current diet my wife and I are on now).
    .-= martymankins´s last blog ..Snowy Sunday #20 =-.

  7. LeSombre says:

    @Delmer: I find her kind of scary to be honest. :mrgreen:

    @MartyMankins: I could totally live with that. I’m not really into beans and stuff like that. :sad: