29 November 2025

Food

Lunch today: Tinned mackerel in a spicy tomato sauce with
 baby broad beans and a mug of instant chicken soup

The last month has been quite weird for me in terms of the food I have consumed. In the previous seventy two years. I ate and drank what the hell I wanted and there were no significant constraints placed upon me either by my inner voice or any health professionals I encountered. Nobody ever said to me, "You need to lose some weight!"

And so I carried on with breakfast cereals, rounds of toast, bacon sandwiches, potato crisps, curries with rice, generous Sunday dinners, fish and chips, stir fries with noodles, stews, pies, plenty of vegetables,  salads, puddings, fruit and biscuits. My appetite was often ravenous. Onlookers might have whispered, "My - he likes his food!"

And through the decades there were pints of beer and bottles and cans of beer at home.  Pubs and clubs and holidays. Guzzling beer like a champion. Of course, beer is also a foodstuff.

High blood pressure and the daily consumption of anti-hypertension pills led me to the obvious conclusion that I needed to lose weight. If successful, this would surely make the pills less necessary and help me to stave off the possibility of slipping into Type 2 diabetes. Less weight could therefore mean a longer life.

For the last month I have been on the weight loss reduction medication "Mounjaro" which I have to self-inject once a week. Since the start I have had no bread whatsoever apart from two mini-nan breads with chicken curries I made.

Breakfast has mostly been a mug of unsweetened tea, a banana  and a handful of dried fruit or grapes. Occasionally, I have had two boiled eggs without toast.

My lunch menu has been more varied. Sometimes soup without bread or toast, sometimes tinned mackerel or sardines with vegetable  accompaniment. There have been no snacks between meals and at night no supper apart from an occasional rice cake. However my evening meals have been as per normal with reduced carbohydrate content.

"Mounjaro" has certainly affected my appetite. The old cravings for food have been driven back into their kennel. The medication is helping me to look at food differently and to be much more wary about what I eat and my portion sizes too.

This past week I have deliberately not drunk any beer since Sunday night at the pub quiz though I have drunk five glasses of red wine and some Baileys cream liqueur.

Summing up - I am happy with way it has gone so far. Change is happening. It is as if I have grabbed myself by the scruff of the neck and said, "Wake up Mr Pudding! Your old relationship with food cannot carry on as before!" But these are early days with "Mounjaro". We will see where we are beyond Christmas.

12 comments:

  1. Your experience is very similar to mine. It's not a magic cure, but in a way, it is magic because it gives me the space between food and myself to truly consider what I am eating. It has made a huge difference in my life. I'm glad it seems to be doing the same for you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I also need to grab myself by the scruff of the neck and haul myself away from snacks. Foodwise I don't do too badly, it's the snacks and the amount of sugar in my coffee where I do badly. I'm learning to like tea with honey instead and the amount of honey is less now than when I first began. With summer coming I will be drinking a lot more water instead and if I stay away from icecream I will be okay.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I, too, have only recently learned to ditch the fatty stuff and enjoy a healthier diet. It took a medical problem to kick start my education.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Congratulations for acknowledging a desire to change and acting on it. Changing the habits of a lifetime is an enormous challenge and getting to the first day is often the toughest step to take.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Didnt you give up alcohol a while back?
    I hope the mounjaro keeps working for you, a healthier life is what we all hope for.

    ReplyDelete
  6. You were lucky to get away with it to the age you are, as that former diet sounds like a licence to kill. I am surprised your wife, as a nurse, did not pick up on this, or maybe you refused to listen. I must say that picture above does not look appetising and I am sure there are many more attractive ways of reaching your goal. Have you looked at Michael Moseley recipes as they are full of the good stuff and appetising too?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hearing people describe this drug and its effects is so interesting -- the way it apparently diminishes the desire for food or even thoughts about eating. I don't drink much beer but I do drink wine, which also has plenty of calories. (Not to mention the occasional martini!)

    ReplyDelete
  8. I think eating less and lots of exercise like regular walking helps keep the Wight down and makes you fit.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Eat the things you enjoy, in moderation.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I got myself a Japanese cook book the other day and have been making Miso soup for lunch, really just a broth with plenty of vegetables. Why don't you eat mackerels in oil rather than the tomato sauce?

    ReplyDelete
  11. mmmmm Broad beans! not often seen here in Canada.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Whatever works! Glad you are feeling better.

    ReplyDelete

Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

Most Visits