Restaurants are the hardest! What i have been doing is this - Start going only to chain restaurants for a bit, ones that have nutritional information available, make sure you always look this when you order and start following it. After a while you start to get to know the carb amounts associated with those 'chain' meals, so when you happen to visit a place with information available you can use the values the chain places use (adjust up or down based on portion sizes, or if they have sweeter sauces and stuff).
After long enough you start to get better and better at estimating, and whenever you are in doubt just do your best to cut back on the carbs (salad instead of fries, don't have any free bread, stop ordering nachos, etc)
My second way is this - Go to whatever place you want to master, order whatever you want and take it home with a bottle of regular coke. Do you best at estimating the carbs through some research online or apps, or whatever else - write it down, wait 15-20min, and then eat your meal. After an hour test and give insulin if you need to but write that down as well - continue this testing and adjusting until youre stable. If you over shot, measure out some coke and drink it, but write down how many grams of carbs it was.
At the end of this adventure you should have 1) your initial estimate, 2) any corrections (up or down) that you had to give and they amount of carbs you estimated them to be. Add/subtract these numbers and you should have a fairly good idea of the amount of carbs in the meal you ate. WRITE THAT DOWN. Next time when you eat you that meal from that place - use that amount of carbs. If you do this for all your fav meals you will get really good ideas of how many grams of carbs are in each, and this exercise will give you a really good skill for being able to better estimate while out to dinner for other meals.
It sounds like a lot, but once you do it 2-3 times, you will really have a handle and will probably be able to guess really closely the first time while eating out.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?