I was thinking when I read that...that I probably would not be trying it. Why mess with perfection?? I have not found much of anything that is low calorie, low fat, or artificial that even comes close to the real thing in taste. It took me a while to get used to drinking Diet Coke...but I think that is the only exception to the rule I have found.
Nope..give me the real thing...or don't bother having pizza is my way of thinking. Laurie --- Greg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Wanna bet it doesn't taste as good Laurie? lol > > Interesting on another note also, when I was in > management at Domino's in Louisiana alittle tidbit > that I found surprising in their nutrition pamplet > listing the nutrition values of their pizzas. > Surprisingly ( for Domino's at least ) the thin > crust had more calories etc than the hand tossed. I > would have figured just the oppissite seeing as the > hand tossed has more dough. Something about the way > it's made I guess. If the same holds true for the > other chains, surpriseing Pizza Hut is only offering > the lower fat version in thin crust. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Charles > To: 'The Sandbox Discussion List' > Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2003 5:10 PM > Subject: [Sndbox] Pizza Hut introduces lower-fat > thin-crust pizza > > > Pizza Hut introduces lower-fat thin-crust pizza > advertisement > > Associated Press > Oct. 16, 2003 08:35 AM > > > DALLAS - To the menu of zero-calorie Slurpees and > low-carbohydrate margaritas, diet-conscious > Americans can now add lower-fat pizza. > > Pizza Hut, the Dallas-based restaurant chain, > plans to offer the "Fit 'N Delicious" pie at most of > their 6,600 U.S. locations by the end of the month. > > One slice of the slimmed-down version will have > 3.5 to 5 grams of fat, 25 percent less than a slice > of the company's regular thin-crust pizza. > > The new pizza will be available only on thin > crust. It can be ordered with chicken or ham - no > sausage or pepperoni - and two vegetable toppings. > > Pizza Hut is simply responding to changing > consumer tastes and desire for healthier food > alternatives, said President Peter Hearl. > > "Moms are looking to provide for themselves or > their family less-fat food options," Hearl said in > an interview. "They're not prepared to give up on > taste, but if they can get great taste and lose fat > grams, that's a winning combination." > > A nutritionist reacted to the announcement with > cautious approval. > > "Pizza can be healthy, if you eat one or two > slices of cheese pizza," said Gay Riley. "We eat too > much fat, and we get too many saturated fats from > dairy and meat. When they come up with a pizza with > Omega 3 (from fish), that would be awesome." > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > > ________________________________ > > Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, > digest) can be made by going to > http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net > > ATTACHMENT part 1.2 image/gif name=clear.gif > ________________________________ > > Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, > digest) can be made by going to > http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net ===== I wanted a perfect ending... Now, I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment, and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next. Delicious ambiguity. --Gilda Radner __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search http://shopping.yahoo.com ________________________________ Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, digest) can be made by going to http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net
