Side By Side: The Partner Program 8 Week Program SBS - Week 2 - The New Kitchen
Side by Side™ — Week 2: The New Kitchen
Side by Side · Partner Program
Week 2 of 8
Week Two

The New
Kitchen

“Food at home has changed permanently. Here’s how to make it work without making every meal a production.”

35 min read
🍽️ Practical kitchen guide
🛒 Pantry reset
💻 Zoom call this week
🔷 Kitchen badge
8-week program
25%
This Week

Food used to be simple.
Now it requires a new approach.

Before the surgery or medication, meals at home were probably unremarkable. You ate what you ate. Nobody thought much about it. Now food is the center of a significant adjustment — and if it isn’t managed thoughtfully, it becomes a source of daily friction in a relationship that already has enough to navigate.

The good news: this is mostly a practical problem, not an emotional one. The kitchen can be reorganized. Meals can be adapted. Restaurants can still happen. Most of the friction that builds around food at home comes not from the food itself, but from unspoken expectations, misread signals, and habits that haven’t been updated yet.

This week is the practical briefing that clears all of that up.

🌿
A note from Melissa

“The hardest moment relating to our food journey as a couple was when we finally went out to dinner the first time months after surgery. It was a “date night” and we always enjoyed going out to a restaurant and enjoying a good meal. Well, date night now involves researching the restaurant to see what I can eat on the menu. That part wasn’t very hard. What was hard was that the experience itself was completely different. Instead of my pre-dinner cocktail, I was sitting there because I couldn’t drink alcohol or drink anything within 30 minutes of the meal. Then when the meal came, I took my obligatory 3 bites and then sat there. My partner felt rushed because the whole rhythm of our date was thrown off. We both felt it. We just didn’t have a way to talk about it yet. Week 2 is about building that language before the silences get louder.”

Your Partner’s Track

The practical realities differ
by track. Select yours.

🥄
Portion Size Is Permanent
Your partner’s stomach holds 2–6 oz per meal — roughly a small ramekin. This is fixed anatomy. Cooking the same amount as before and expecting your partner to eat a portion of it is fine. Noticing, commenting on, or tracking their portion is not helpful.
⏱️
Meals Take Longer
Your partner needs to eat slowly — 20–30 minutes for a small meal is normal. Rushing the meal, clearing the table early, or visibly waiting signals that their pace is a problem. It isn’t. Adjust your expectations and let the pace be what it is.
💧
No Drinking During Meals
Your partner cannot drink while eating — fluids take space from food and cause discomfort. They sip water between meals instead. Keep a water bottle accessible at all times. At restaurants, order their drink but understand it won’t be touched until after the meal.
🥩
Protein Comes First
Every meal starts with protein, eaten before anything else. This isn’t fussiness — it’s the single most important nutritional habit post-surgery. When you cook, make protein the centerpiece and everything else a side. This works for both of you.
🧠
Appetite Suppression Is Real
Your partner may genuinely forget to eat or feel no pull toward food. This isn’t an eating disorder and it isn’t a mood — it is the medication working. The challenge is ensuring they eat enough protein even without hunger as a cue. Small, protein-rich meals throughout the day is the approach.
🤢
Some Foods Cause Nausea
Fatty, greasy, or very rich foods often cause nausea on GLP-1 — especially early in the protocol. Your partner’s food preferences may shift significantly. Dishes they used to love may no longer be appealing. This isn’t personal and it isn’t permanent — it tends to stabilise as the dose adjusts.
📅
Plan Around Injection Days
Side effects are typically strongest in the 24–48 hours after injection. Learn the rhythm and plan low-key meals on those days. Soups, soft foods, and lighter options on injection day and the day after. Save the special dinners out for mid-week.
🚫
Sugar Undermines the Medication
GLP-1 works partly by improving insulin sensitivity. High-sugar foods spike blood sugar and directly counteract that effect. Your partner avoiding sugar isn’t cosmetic restriction — it’s how the medication achieves its purpose. Having less of it in the house makes this easier for everyone.
The Pantry Reset

What to always have.
What to quietly reduce.

You don’t need to overhaul the kitchen overnight. A few intentional shifts make the daily reality significantly easier for your partner — and often improve the household diet across the board.

Pantry and Fridge Guide
The New Kitchen Staples
You don’t have to remove everything — just shift the default
Always Stock
  • Chicken breast or thighs
  • Eggs (always)
  • Plain Greek yogurt
  • Cottage cheese
  • Salmon or white fish
  • String cheese or babybel
  • Quality protein shakes
  • Non-starchy vegetables
  • Avocado
  • A water bottle always accessible
Use Sparingly
  • Bread and pasta (your partner can’t eat much anyway — make them a side, not the main)
  • Rice (small amounts, occasionally)
  • Fruit (high in natural sugar — fine, but not the focus)
  • Crackers and chips as snacks
  • Heavy sauces and gravies
  • Cereals as a breakfast default
Quietly Reduce
  • Sugary drinks on the counter or in the fridge door
  • Candy and sweets in visible spots
  • “Diet” processed snacks (often high hidden sugar)
  • Juice (even “healthy” juice is concentrated sugar)
  • Flavoured yogurts with added sugar
  • Ultra-processed convenience meals
💡
You don’t have to stop eating things you enjoy. The goal is to shift what’s most visible and accessible — not to eliminate everything. Your partner’s willpower is finite and the environment does a lot of the heavy lifting. Keeping triggering foods out of direct eyeline and easy reach is a practical act of support, not a sacrifice.
Cooking for Two

One household. Two very
different appetites.

The biggest mistake partners make in the kitchen is creating two separate meal tracks — “the diet food” for their partner and “real food” for themselves. This creates a dynamic that feels clinical, isolating, and exhausting to maintain. The better approach is a single, adaptable cooking framework.

1
Build every meal around a protein centerpiece
Grilled chicken, baked fish, ground turkey, eggs — whatever the protein is, it goes at the center. Your partner eats the protein first and fills their small capacity with it. You eat the protein plus whatever sides you want. Same meal, different emphasis. No separate cooking required.
2
Add your carbs and sides separately
Cook the pasta, the rice, or the bread as a side — not the base. Your partner skips it or takes a very small amount after their protein. You eat it normally. This reframing requires almost no extra effort and eliminates the “diet food vs real food” dynamic entirely.
3
Batch cook protein on the weekend
30 minutes on Sunday — grilled chicken, hard-boiled eggs, a batch of ground turkey — means your partner always has protein available on the days when appetite or energy is low and cooking feels like too much. This one habit reduces mealtime stress dramatically for both of you.
4
Use smaller plates and bowls for your partner
A small portion on a large plate looks sparse and draws attention. The same portion in a ramekin or small bowl looks full and appropriate. This is a tiny shift that changes the visual experience of every meal. Keep a set of smaller dishes on hand — it matters more than it sounds.
5
Don’t wait for them to finish before you move on
Your partner eats slowly. If you finish first, that’s fine — clear your plate, get up if you need to, do whatever is normal. Don’t sit in pointed silence watching them finish. And don’t clear the table around them while they’re still eating. Let the pace be unremarkable.
Eating Out

Restaurants still work.
A few things to know.

Going out to eat is still possible and still enjoyable — it just looks a little different. Most partners find restaurants smoother once they stop expecting the experience to look the same as it used to.

SituationWhat to expectYour move
Ordering Your partner will order an appetizer, a side, or a half portion. Some restaurants allow this; others require a full entree. Your partner may ask the server to box most of it before eating. Order normally for yourself. Don’t comment on what they order or how small it is. If the server asks, let your partner handle it.
“Is everything okay?” from the server When two-thirds of the meal is untouched, servers often check in. Your partner will field this. It happens a lot and they develop a response over time. Let your partner answer. Don’t explain on their behalf. Don’t look uncomfortable on their behalf either — that makes it bigger than it needs to be.
Leftovers Your partner’s restaurant portion almost always becomes a second meal. A single entree can last two or three sittings. Always take the leftovers home. Never let the server take an uneaten plate unless your partner is done with it. Those are tomorrow’s lunch.
Drinks Alcohol hits differently after bariatric surgery — faster and harder. On GLP-1, alcohol tolerance also changes. Your partner may drink less or not at all. Order what you want. Don’t pressure your partner to drink. Don’t make a thing of it when they don’t. If they do drink, watch the pace — they may not feel the effect until it’s significant.
Long meals and tasting menus Multiple small courses can actually work well — your partner takes small amounts of each. Extended meals with long gaps between courses are fine. Long dinners out are still a good option. The format of small plates and shared dishes suits this lifestyle particularly well.
The Conversation Guide

Kitchen situations.
What to say and what to skip.

You worked hard on a meal and your partner eats almost none of it
✗ Don’t say
“I spent an hour on this.” / “I made this specifically for you.” / “You barely touched it.”
This puts your partner in the position of apologising for their anatomy. Their portion size isn’t a judgment of your cooking.
✓ Do say
“Good?” — a normal meal check-in. Or nothing. Eat your food. Take their leftovers for tomorrow.
Cook to make a good meal. Your partner will eat what they can and leave the rest. That’s the new normal. It has nothing to do with the effort you put in.
Your partner says they’re not hungry at dinner
✗ Don’t say
“You have to eat something.” / “When did you last eat?” / “You need to keep your protein up.”
Compliance monitoring at mealtimes feels like parenting, not partnership. Your partner’s medical team and program handle this. Your role is support, not enforcement.
✓ Do say
“No problem — I’ll leave a plate for you later.” Then do that. Make it easy for them to eat when they’re ready.
Keeping food available without pressure gives your partner agency over their own body. That’s what support actually looks like here.
You want to eat something your partner can’t or shouldn’t have
✗ Don’t say
“Is it okay if I have this?” (repeatedly) — performative guilt that puts the burden on your partner.
Constantly asking permission makes your partner feel like they’re restricting you — which creates resentment on both sides over time.
✓ Do say
Eat what you want without making a production of it. A quiet “I’m having ice cream — want anything?” is enough. They’ll say yes or no.
You don’t owe your partner deprivation. Eating what you enjoy, normally and without drama, is healthier for both of you than performative solidarity.
Family or guests comment on your partner’s eating
✗ Don’t say
Explaining your partner’s medical history to the table without being asked.
Their story is theirs. Sharing it — even helpfully — takes that choice away from them. Some people are open about their journey; others are private. Follow their lead.
✓ Do say
Let your partner respond. If they look to you: “Light eater — it’s just how they eat.” Then change the subject.
A brief, normalizing response and a redirect is enough. Your job is to make the moment smaller, not explain it.
Week 2 Check-In

The kitchen audit.

Week 2 Worksheet
The New Kitchen
Save as you go
1. What’s the biggest source of friction around food in your household right now — and what’s actually driving it?
Be specific. “Mealtimes are tense” isn’t specific enough. What happens, exactly?
2. Which of the five cooking strategies from this week are you most likely to actually use?
Build every meal around a protein centerpiece
Add my carbs and sides separately
Batch cook protein on the weekend
Use smaller plates and bowls for my partner
Stop waiting / watching while my partner finishes eating
3. Is there a specific meal or food situation that has caused tension — and what would handling it differently look like?
4. What’s one kitchen or food habit you’re going to change this week — specific enough to report back on Thursday?
Saved privately to your account.
Before the Zoom Call

Two questions worth sitting with.

Reflection — Week 2
“Has food in your household become a source of tension — and if so, what’s the real thing underneath it?”
Bring This Wednesday
“What’s one mealtime habit you’ve had for years that doesn’t work anymore — and what would replacing it look like?”
This Week’s Live Call

Kitchen real talk.
What’s actually happening at home.

Week 2 — The New Kitchen: Partner Round Table
Wednesday · 7:00 PM CT · 60 min
🍽️ Format: Round Table + Problem Solving
  • 0–8 min
    Check-in: the specific mealtime habit that doesn’t work anymore, and what replacing it looks like
  • 8–18 min
    Mini teaching: the one-kitchen approach, batch cooking, restaurant navigation — the practical framework
  • 18–48 min
    Round table: each member shares their biggest food friction and gets the group’s take. Melissa facilitates, reframes, and offers specific fixes.
  • 48–60 min
    Close: one kitchen change committed to before next week. Specific. Reportable.
Join This Week’s Call
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