> Do you think my local itamae (whom I know a little) will be
> offended or think I am crazy if I ask him to make me a
> handroll without the rice?
> I am on a diet, no carbs, and rice is a big no-no.
> I know, I could order sashimi, but I am really craving spicy
> tuna in a crispy nori cone.
> Opinions?
I can't see why you should not tell the chef that you cannot eat rice
but would like a handroll. I don't want to spoil things but is the mayo
in spicy tuna OK?
--
James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland
Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not
I would ask, and maybe they could put in cucumber instead for filler and
crunch.
--
Dan
> Lori wrote on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 09:24:45 -0400:
>
>> Do you think my local itamae (whom I know a little) will be
>> offended or think I am crazy if I ask him to make me a
>> handroll without the rice?
>> I am on a diet, no carbs, and rice is a big no-no.
>> I know, I could order sashimi, but I am really craving spicy
>> tuna in a crispy nori cone.
>> Opinions?
>
>I can't see why you should not tell the chef that you cannot eat rice
>but would like a handroll. I don't want to spoil things but is the mayo
>in spicy tuna OK?
My local place does 2 kinds of spicy tuna roll, one with
mayo/sriracha, the other with spicy sesame oil. Either is OK, carbs
are out, any kind of protein/fat is fine.
Thanks
Sounds great to me, cuke or avo would be fine.
Thanks Dan
I have diabetes, which I control with Thai herbs. Rice is like sugar to my
condition! I love sashimi and enjoy a good temaki. Going to a sushiya is a
rare treat for me, damnit. I take some extra herbs before I go.
Mayo is essentially carb free. Sake (make mine a Junmai Daiginjo) lowers
your blood glucose.
--
Nick, KI6VAV. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their
families: https://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/ Thank a Veteran!
Support Our Troops: http://anymarine.com/ You are not forgotten.
Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ USMC 1365061
Gobo gives it a nice crunch, too.
I also like Umeboshi or Natto temaki.
On 21 Aug 2009 21:40:54 GMT, Nick Cramer <n_cram...@pacbell.net>
wrote:
>"James Silverton" <not.jim....@verizon.net> wrote:
>> Lori wrote on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 09:24:45 -0400:
>>
>> > Do you think my local itamae (whom I know a little) will be
>> > offended or think I am crazy if I ask him to make me a
>> > handroll without the rice?
>> > I am on a diet, no carbs, and rice is a big no-no.
>> > I know, I could order sashimi, but I am really craving spicy
>> > tuna in a crispy nori cone.
>> > Opinions?
>>
>> I can't see why you should not tell the chef that you cannot eat rice
>> but would like a handroll. I don't want to spoil things but is the mayo
>> in spicy tuna OK?
>
>I have diabetes, which I control with Thai herbs. Rice is like sugar to my
>condition! I love sashimi and enjoy a good temaki. Going to a sushiya is a
>rare treat for me, damnit. I take some extra herbs before I go.
>
>Mayo is essentially carb free. Sake (make mine a Junmai Daiginjo) lowers
>your blood glucose.
Did they charge extra because there was more spicy tuna included to offset the
lack of rice?
Orlando
Sugar and rice are both carbohydrates. Other nutational concerns
aside 5 grams of rice carbs and 5 grams of sugar grams are EXACTLY
the same re affect on blood sugar.
All those people who have been avoiding hi carb candies, cake etc are
mistaken. As long as the total carbs consumed are below your goal,
you can merrily eat sweets instead of rice.
------------
There are no atheists in foxholes
or in Fenway Park in an extra inning
game.
____
Cape Cod Bob
Delete the two "spam"s for email
Exactly!
> All those people who have been avoiding hi carb candies, cake etc are
> mistaken. As long as the total carbs consumed are below your goal,
> you can merrily eat sweets instead of rice.
I love mango with coconut cream flavored sweet (sticky) rice. One
tablespoon each is my limit. Pizza is my downfall. One slice spikes my
blood glucose once a month.