Wakey, wakey! Time for breakfast!
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wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 00:56 last edited by George K
This morning I had to run an errand, and Mrs. George asked, "Hey! As long as you're out, can you pick up breakfast from McDonald's for me? Get me a coffee, a small orange juice and a 'Big Breakfast.'"
So I did.
The "Big Breakfast."
1300 calories? Really?
I try to stay under 1800 calories per day. That doesn't leave a lot of wiggle room for (cheap) Scotch, let me tell you!
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wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 01:04 last edited by
Unsurprising; fast food has tons of calories.
(I probably go through 2500 or so a day.)
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Unsurprising; fast food has tons of calories.
(I probably go through 2500 or so a day.)
wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 01:19 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in Wakey, wakey! Time for breakfast!:
Unsurprising; fast food has tons of calories.
(I probably go through 2500 or so a day.)
Of course.
But, just for a sense of perspective, a Big Mac and medium fries is about 870 calories.
Add some OJ for breafast, and you're North of 1500 calories, I'd be.
I was shocked.
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wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 02:02 last edited by
Speaking for Horace, yes, that is really food that will make anyone fat.
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wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 03:25 last edited by
Sorry Rainman, I can't hear you over the sound of how fat you are.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Wakey, wakey! Time for breakfast!:
Unsurprising; fast food has tons of calories.
(I probably go through 2500 or so a day.)
Of course.
But, just for a sense of perspective, a Big Mac and medium fries is about 870 calories.
Add some OJ for breafast, and you're North of 1500 calories, I'd be.
I was shocked.
wrote on 17 Aug 2020, 03:30 last edited by@George-K said in Wakey, wakey! Time for breakfast!:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Wakey, wakey! Time for breakfast!:
Unsurprising; fast food has tons of calories.
(I probably go through 2500 or so a day.)
Of course.
But, just for a sense of perspective, a Big Mac and medium fries is about 870 calories.
Add some OJ for breafast, and you're North of 1500 calories, I'd be.
I was shocked.
It's better to not think of that stuff as "food," which, David Burton attestations notwithstanding, isn't really the best way to describe it.