Bread...what to rep...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Bread...what to replace it with/alternatives

157 Posts
53 Users
0 Reactions
425 Views
Posts: 3450
Full Member
Topic starter
 

A work colleague is trying to reduce their calories and is looking to drop the bread from their diet but with you what?
So all the folk who have reduced bread r gluten in their diets what have you done differently.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:39 am
Posts: 36
Free Member
 

crackerbread/ryvita.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:40 am
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

Toast.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:41 am
Posts: 0
 

Rice cakes, oatcakes, ryvita, real rye bread which is a bit dense though, probably laden with calories along with the goodness, and Staffs oatcakes when I can get then.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:44 am
Posts: 6978
Free Member
 

er, i just stopped eating bread. not sure i understand the question.

no sandwiches, no bread rolls, no bagels, no cake, no donuts...

so my saturday bacon and egg sarnie = bacon and scrambled egg
my banana and peanut butter sarnie = banana and peanut butter
last nights tuna mayo.... bowl of tuna, mayo, olives, beetroot and some pickle.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:46 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I changed the way I think about meals, had to adjust the mindset a bit to think of lunch as not a sandwich, I make big salads with mackerel etc, plenty of protein to make you full, or soups with lots of meat too. I feel pretty rubbish and 'gurgly' if I have bread etc now, I do sometimes have a bit, go out for pizza or have a biscuit or ten, but I do feel rubbish after, I see it like a hangover of sorts, not great all the time but sometimes it has to happen! But mainly lots of protein, raw almonds on my desk for snacks too.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:46 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

The point about not having bread to reduce carbs is to reduce carbs - so replacing it with something else defeats the object!

Unless you mean what else to have for lunch instead of sandwiches? Well for me it's salads or something like scrambled eggs if I'm at home, or a hearty soup. If out - then I try and find whatever's as low GI as possible. Brown bread sandwiches are best or something with a tortilla. Or if you have access to some soup or a palatable salad from a takeaway, that.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:47 am
Posts: 31206
Full Member
 

A work colleague is trying to reduce their calories and is looking to drop the bread

While bread does contain carbs/calories, unless they eat a LOT of it then I'd suggest the problem lies elsewhere.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:47 am
Posts: 3450
Full Member
Topic starter
 

It is a stepped approach, literally what can they have to reduce their intake but gradually.....so they replaced lots of food with diet bars and shakes....all fructose and sucrose sugars.....trying to give healthy alternatives like rice cakes and so on.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:16 am
Posts: 905
Free Member
 

The only way I can think of eating bannana and peanut butter without bread is to smear the peanut butter all over the outside of the bananna. 😯


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:33 am
Posts: 43345
Full Member
 

I can tell that's exciting you.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:35 am
Posts: 8652
Full Member
 

pigyn, you need the help of a beautiful assistant. One with a built in banana holder....


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:36 am
Posts: 17
Free Member
 

try a balanced diet, cutting out 1 food sounds like a fad approach rather than understanding what they eat vs what they expand


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:40 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

He needs to replace the bread with pastry. Obviously!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:42 am
Posts: 3450
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Agreed mike trying to stop the fad and balance bug struggled to suggest bread alts


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:43 am
Posts: 17
Free Member
 

less of some stuff and more veg?


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:46 am
Posts: 31206
Full Member
 

[url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-15752918 ]Toast sandwich[/url] - cheap and good for you apparently 😀


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:47 am
Posts: 19434
Free Member
 

Replace with porridge.

In the far east noddles and rice.

😀


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:48 am
Posts: 6978
Free Member
 

pigyn - Member
The only way I can think of eating bannana and peanut butter without bread is to smear the peanut butter all over the outside of the bananna.

Jesus F Christobel - you can peel the banana!
grab banana, begin the peel, open the peanut butter, using teaspoon apply some peanut butter to the open banana, nom, spoon, PB, nana, nom, spoon, PB, nana, nom. geddit.

do not hold me responsible for the increased calories of consuming this much PB

EDIT - i guess you could peel the whole nana, slice down the middle and apply a layer of PB which would stick the nana back together *plans*


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:50 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Replace with porridge.

That makes for a rubbish tuna melt sandwich.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:50 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:50 am
Posts: 8652
Full Member
 

peel the whole nana, slice down the middle and apply a layer of PB

You have just reminded me of something I saw on TV. It was a device that you stuck up an unpeeled banana and it injected a filling of your choice. You could then peel and eat the banana as usual but with filling. (downside was the hole in the bottom of the banana oozing filling down the presenters arm as they ate the banana)


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:54 am
Posts: 8652
Full Member
 

Here you go

[url= http://destapabanana.com/en/a-gadget-that-turns-a-banana-into-a-world-of-possibilities/ ]http://destapabanana.com/en/a-gadget-that-turns-a-banana-into-a-world-of-possibilities/[/url]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Unless for a medical reason i can never understand why people always seem to cut bread from there diet. Any dietician worth there salt (not too much salt though) will tell you that there aren't many foods around with that many nutrients for less than 100 calories, always in moderation though.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:59 am
Posts: 43345
Full Member
 

There's a lot more to dieting than counting calories. I'm off bread due to the carb content


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:04 am
Posts: 17
Free Member
 

want to elaborate scotroutes? There is a lot more to an explanation that a statement


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:06 am
Posts: 3450
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Please elobrate on the carb count


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:28 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Any dietician worth there salt (not too much salt though) will tell you that there aren't many foods around with that many nutrients for less than 100 calories

Really?

Meat
Broccoli
Cabbage
Cauliflower
Peas
Eggs

I reckon all have lots of 'nutrients' in. Depends which ones you are after of course. But if you want nutrients in general then filling up on veg with a bit of meat is FAR more nutritious than filling up on bread, and low GI with it.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:28 am
Posts: 1617
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:33 am
Posts: 1048
Free Member
 

Just substitute vegetables for bread. Your calorie/carb intake will have to drop. e.g:

Baguette, French, Tesco
Calories in 100g of baguette:

Calories 240.0kcal
Carbohydrate 49.5g
Protein 7.8g
Fat 1.2g
Fibre 3.4g

Broccoli, Boiled, Average
Calories in 100g of broccoli

Calories 24.0kcal
Carbohydrate 1.1g
Protein 3.1g
Fat 0.8g
Fibre 2.3g

So to eat the same amount of calories in a baguette, you are going to have to eat a kilogram of brocolli. And still have only eaten a fifth of the carbs.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:46 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I find cutting bread out of my diet makes me feel far less bloated


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:54 am
Posts: 16025
Free Member
 

As a nation, we eat less bread than many other countries, yet on average they are slimmer than us.

I suggest bread isn't the problem.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:56 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Just sub in good wholemeal / wholegrain bread, ideally homemade and eat a bit less of it. Still have a slice with my boiled eggs, not a problem. Stick to Vogel if there's none made and in a hurry.

ryvita is bloody dangerous, I took out a tooth with a seed from one. I'm assuming it wasn't in the best of health to start with 🙂


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:00 pm
Posts: 16025
Free Member
 

Just sub in good wholemeal / wholegrain bread, ideally homemade and eat a bit less of it.

I find good quality bread fills me up far quicker than mass-produced crap, so eating less of it is never a problem.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:08 pm
Posts: 4961
Free Member
 

ransos - Member
As a nation, we eat less bread than many other countries, yet on average they are slimmer than us.

I suggest bread isn't the problem.


Perhaps the crap that is put into the bread in the country is the problem. The bread we have doesn't deserve to be called bread compared to that in Denmark.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:08 pm
Posts: 10567
Full Member
 

There are several good reasons for excluding cereal products (bread, pasta, rice, biscuits etc.) from what you eat. It's awkward to feel satisfied by a meal without these things though. So chickpea flour and quinoa are useful to include in your died. Also a few other legumes.

If you think that's going to be boring, think of what's made with them: falafel, bhajis, pakora, poppadoms.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:20 pm
Posts: 16025
Free Member
 

Perhaps the crap that is put into the bread in the country is the problem. The bread we have doesn't deserve to be called bread compared to that in Denmark.

Well yeah, I was alluding to that. Mass-produced bread is loaded with extra fat and additives, to reduce the fermentation time.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:28 pm
Posts: 12865
Free Member
 

Any dietician worth there salt (not too much salt though) will tell you that there aren't many foods around with that many nutrients for less than 100 calories
Is this a troll? Except for white rice & pasta I'd struggle to think of any food less nutritionally dense than bread.

The only point of grains is as a cheap/plentiful food to feed a (too?) large population. As "rich" westerners arguably we don't need them as staple foods although obviously a nice bit of (preferably home-made) bread is a tasty treat!

Certainly if you were looking to lose body fat there is no need to eat grains/bread at all.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:42 pm
Posts: 14
Free Member
 

wholemeal seeded bread. more nutrition and takes longer to digest= feel full longer= eat less other crap. also doesn't have the same gi spike as white bread.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:45 pm
Posts: 1617
Free Member
 

this thread is making me want another slide of my nice freshly made bread - 50:50 white/wholemeal 1tbsn each of poppy, sesame, pumpkin, sunflower and linseeds. Yum.

Actually this one is more like 55:45 in favour of wholemeal as I slipped.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:49 pm
Posts: 17834
 

Google Gary Taubes, also Robert Lustig.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 12:57 pm
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 

I stopped eating so much bread this year, a necessary thing now am going on two hmm-dread and hmmmty pounds in weight. Except for one day a week when I can have a sarnie.
I replaced it with more of other food, ie a ham sandwich is now 6 rolls of ham with mustard in the middle, rather than two slices of bread around two slices of ham w/mustard in the middle.

Porridge rather than toast for breakfast.

Bacon and eggs rather than bacon and egg butties.

Dont know what the science is for or against but have done it before and I lost weight/felt better.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:13 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

Any dietician worth there salt (not too much salt though) will tell you that there aren't many foods around with that many nutrients for less than 100 calories

Pfft! Read it and weep sucker!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:14 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Slight tangent:

I'm looking for an alternative to wholemeal bread. I've been eating wholemeal pitta for lunch every day for ages now. I like the taste, it's filling and it's convenient for taking around with me wherever I happen to be working. But it makes me bloated and a short while after my tummy seems to be doing somersaults.

What would make a good, healthy alternative for lunch that does the same job.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Mass-produced bread is loaded with extra fat and additives, to reduce the fermentation time.

It's not really that different. Fat's added to lots of traditional breads in similar (around the 1-2% mark) or significantly greater proportions to chorleywood (and the like) processed loaves. It uses a fair bit of yeast - but again, plenty of traditional loaves are heavily yeasted - about double what you'd reckon for a standard home baked white loaf.

Sure there are some emulsifiers in a lot of loaves and then there's typically something like 1% "improvers" of which ascorbic acid's the main other ingredient - again, not uncommon amongst more traditional bakers and the rest is largely enzymes which increase proving speed these days but it's not in quantities that you could reasonably call "loaded".

The main difference with mass produced loaves isn't the ingredients but that they effectively have air whipped into them to avoid having to be left to rise.

As it happens I'd wager there's more fat, salt and sugar in the homemade Vollkornbrot that I just had for lunch than in your average cheap white bread.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:19 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

What would make a good, healthy alternative for lunch that does the same job.

[img] [/img]

All 4. For starters. Then maybe

[img] ?identifier=549bacbf5c16a1094d4fdffc1ed08500[/img]

No bread! 😀


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:24 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Molgrips - how many vitamins and minerals are in a piece of meat at a value of 100 calories? My point is as a single piece of food there arent many foods out there that provide an amount of many different vitamins/minerals for what is only a hundred calories. As many people have pointed out there is an alternative to manufactured white bread all with vast amount of vitamins etc. i advocate meat,veg,seeds and nuts etc but it seems people like to partially blame bread for it all.
As for an alternative to bread why not keep the humble sandwich but replace bread with large lettuce leaves, filling of your choice.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:29 pm
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 

[url= http://empoweredsustenance.com/no-bread-sandwiches/ ]15 no-bread sarnies[/url]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:35 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Molgrips - how many vitamins and minerals are in a piece of meat at a value of 100 calories?

CBA to google it, you tell me.

But - you know that calories aren't all the same, don't you? And different foods have different effects on satiety.. both in the short and long term.. it's complicated you know.

Bread's not a bad way of getting plenty of carbs down you, but do we all need plenty of carbs?


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:36 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Been gluten free for the past 26 days and this article has helped with it tremendously:

http://www.buzzfeed.com/ailbhemalone/15-mouthwatering-no-bread-sandwiches#.vugyOkMjv

Ones I have tried are:
[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]

I've not noticed a physical benefit to going gluten free. However, what I eat is much more varied due to it.

Another tip is to use large lettuce leaves in place of wraps. It works quite well if you don't mind getting messy on fajita nights!


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 1:54 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Molgrips - yeah i know about the varying ways in which calories come in and out. I think dieting and the whole good food bad food debate is quite evocative and there are a lot of myths and bad information out there. Bread is not bad for you but by the same token there are better things for you and of course its best in moderation. My friend has given up bread as he has said its making him fat but it has since become apparent he was averaging 9 slices a day. The point i was sort of trying to make was that bread isn't the issue but the quantity but people are too quick to blame bread for this. Bread has far more good properties than bad and thus shouldn't be eliminated altogether.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:23 pm
Posts: 43345
Full Member
 

[quote=blader1611] Bread has far more good properties than bad and thus shouldn't be eliminated altogether. Bread [i]can[/i] be eliminated entirely because there's nothing in it we can't get elsewhere.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:24 pm
Posts: 12865
Free Member
 

^^^ that cucumber "baguette" looks great, seeing as I can quite happily munch a whole cucumber like it's an apple! I bet that is awesome stuffed with loads of cheese & bacon!

I'm also a fan of a burger wrapped in a nice crisp iceberg lettuce leaf. I thought it would be rubbish, but if you have a proper good juicy burger it really makes that stand out. Obviously don't bother trying it with a birdseye frozen one!

I've tried various paleo "bread substitute" recipes with coconut flour, etc, and whilst some are very tasty I don't think any are [i]really[/i] a substitute for bread.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:26 pm
Posts: 4336
Free Member
 

It's not really that different.

rubbish. I'd go with some proper sourdough over the chorelywood method crap you get in supermarkets.. Alloxan anyone?

[url= http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/03/26/The-Little-Known-Secrets-about-Bleached-Flour.aspx ]
Bleached flour[/url]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:33 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Bleached flour is not in any way exclusive to chorleywood bread and most of that article seems to relate to bleaching methods not used in the EU.

Edit: Also, Alloxan is produced in utterly minute amounts as a side effect the bleaching process - as an aside it also happens in naturally oxidised flour too as far as I'm aware - and there's no evidence of it building up in the human body or causing harm. Just because it's a scary chemical doesn't mean that it's killing you.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:36 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

What you want is this....

[img] [/img]

😀


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 2:59 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

@zilog6128

Only bread substitute I've tried so far that was ok was a pita bread. All the others taste quite powdery. Also, the rice flour used in the alternatives remind me of bland Indian cooking.

It would be a cinch in India/sub-continent though!


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 3:26 pm
Posts: 0
 

Just out of curiosity some months ago I tried giving up wheat, all wheat, for a week. The results were such that I've avoided it ever since. Occasionally I realise I've eaten something with wheat in it, way down the list of additives perhaps. It's a guts thing, and might be linked to hay fever.

I wouldn't eat a sandwich or a pasty if you paid me.

This was after realising that life was better if I stuck to sourdough and avoided Chorleywood bread.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 3:32 pm
Posts: 12865
Free Member
 

Just out of curiosity some months ago I tried giving up wheat, all wheat, for a week. The results were such that I've avoided it ever since.
A lot of people say this. I personally found my asthma got noticeably better when I ditched wheat entirely (I do eat it again now but way way less).

Of course avoiding wheat due to intolerance or another health reason is a separate (and easier!) issue than giving it up just because you want to lose some weight.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 3:42 pm
Posts: 0
 

Mostly I agree with you zilog, but wheat turns up in an awful lot of things, biscuits and cereals sold as 'oaty' for instance, one reads a lot of contents small print. It's not easy to avoid.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 3:49 pm
Posts: 12865
Free Member
 

Yep you're quite right - it's insidious! When I said "easier" I meant from a psychological/willpower point of view i.e. the health improvements far outway missing the taste so you're not really tempted to eat it.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 3:56 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Bread is not bad for you

No of course not, but there's a whole spectrum of bad and good effects depending on what you want to do and what your requirements are.

Lots of carbs can cause weight gain, and reducing them can help weight loss. And bread, along with the other starch components of traditional meals, contains a lot.

In addition, it seems anecdotally that gluten causes a lot of undesirable effects in people even if they are not coeliacs. Not me though!


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 6:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I have found that reducing my daily bread eating from six slices total to two a day, say two slices of bread for breakfast and then maybe a salad at lunch (in a wrap) 😆 has actually helped me to loose weight substantially, that and days when I have no ridden a good half hour forty five minute walk.....
And when something is labelled as a portion for two we split it 50/50, not one pack each.
As for Wotsits, you haven't had a cheese puff until you've tried Marks and Spencer's Cheese Puffs......not as greasy as Wotsits and out cheeses them 100%..... 😆


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 7:15 pm
Posts: 8527
Free Member
 

Binners attempts at getting a rise throughout this thread are quite commendable!.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 7:23 pm
Posts: 204
Free Member
 

What about replacing white bread with rye bread ?

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 7:46 pm
Posts: 5560
Full Member
 

wholemeal pitta or wholemeal wrap

Our white breads just pure crap as said by others not really sure why they make white flour since it involves removing all the good stuff.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 8:38 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I cut bread out of my diet as it seemed to give me really bad indigestion. Whenever I have a sandwich now I just use Tortillas, either bought or make my own. Feel a lot better for it.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 8:43 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Binners attempts at getting a rise throughout this thread are quite commendable!.

Let's be honest, if a food thread didn't have such contributions from Binners it simply wouldn't be cricket, would it.

Additionally, and I know it's totally wrong, but I salivated at the pic of those Peperami. I wouldn't touch 'em nowadays, obviously...but I have.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 8:47 pm
Posts: 1014
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:14 pm
Posts: 8392
Full Member
 

Some French relatives were concerned about their bread intake a while back, kicked up a bit of a stink about it too, they were advised to increase their intake of non yeast based baked goods to compensate.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:21 pm
Posts: 13192
Free Member
 

I like peanut butter sandwiches, with the peanut butter so thick you can squidge it out the sides to nibble on before devouring the centre, I can have 3 on the bounce without stopping to inhale.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:07 pm
Posts: 1442
Free Member
 

If you are not fat and have no weight to lose and don't feel bloated after a sarnie or some toast is it o.k. To carry on eating your wholemeal or that Vogels wholemeal and oat bread?
Is bread is really that bad for you?


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:56 pm
Posts: 0
 

Try going without for a week or three: then you'll know.


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:06 pm
Posts: 17
Free Member
 

bread = death & devil

I go through spells of eating it or not eating it, I can never really tell the difference. Though when I don't eat bread I'm more likely to be sad as I like bread. If that is not a pure scientific reason for eating bread then I'm not sure what is.....


 
Posted : 26/01/2015 11:10 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The Mrs and I have stopped eating bread potatoes pasta and white rice. We are eating a more varied diet that includes more fresh vegetables, nuts, fruit, beans and pulses. Its good and variety is the greatest benefit.
Simple carbs are great as they fill you up but it is very easy to meet your calorie requirements but not much else.


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 7:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The Mrs and I have stopped eating bread potatoes pasta and white rice. We are eating a more varied diet that includes more fresh vegetables, nuts, fruit, beans and pulses. Its good and variety is the greatest benefit.

Then why not eat an even more varied diet by also including bread, potatoes, pasta and white rice?


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 8:03 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Cos they fill you up and are bulky and I find I am less inclined to make the effort to eat as varied range of foods as I am presently eating.
My diet is more varied for not eating bulky carbs - simple. You don't have to do it, but I am quote enjoying it.
Other things I am not eating at the moment - cheese, milk, yoghurt, biscuits, crisps and breakfast cereal.


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 8:20 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Oh and I ain't fat but could happily loose my 42 year old muffin top! Oh and I am getting 10 portions of fresh fruit and veg as there is room and desire to eat them cos I ain't full of pasta.
And I was never really a big bread eater. 5 slices a week? Not had sandwiches for work packed lunch for 6 years.


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 8:24 am
Posts: 13330
Full Member
 

God damn fad diet crap. It's really not difficult at all, eat whatever you want but follow a few simple guiding principles:
Avoid if possible processed food.
Eat more fruit and veg.
No carbs after 5pm.
Drink more water.

A wholemeal bread sarny is no bad thing at all.


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 8:41 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

I'd have no chance of packing in bread, and stuff. I work right next to the Warburtons factory where they make these...

[img] [/img]

Which are ace! And these...

[img] [/img]

Which are acer! The smell of both constantly drifts into the office. Its like torture. I really want some buttery crumpets now. 😥

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 27/01/2015 8:48 am
Page 1 / 2

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!