Showing posts with label diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diet. Show all posts

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Moving to the Broccoli Forest

I may have been going at this a bit backwards, but I am joining in the quest to eat "real food" ala Michael Pollan's "In Defense of Food" and others. I love food, cooking, food blogs (keep meaning to have a food blog roll) and really want to give my family a healthy diet. I was fortunate to have been raised by parents who jumped on the organic food bandwagon when they moved to California. We used to have to go to three different grocery stores. The "health food store" was for jelly, tofu, bread, cereal, grains, all sorts of bulk items like whole wheat flower, soy sauce, etc. but now you can get those things everywhere. We had a huge garden, bought a half cow each year and had friends share their fresh fish. The rules were no white flour, sugar or rice, and no preservatives, nitrates or other artificial crap. She wasn't (too) crazy though, ice cream and chocolate were okay. My mom didn't care what we ate at other's houses, but strove to make this "healthy" stuff yummy at home. I craved fruit roll ups instead of fruit leather, fruit loops instead of granola, individually wrapped slices of american cheese and pop tarts, which we'd buy as soon as we were allowed to ride our bikes to the grocery. I now appreciate the education they gave me when it comes to choosing healthy foods.

Somewhere along the line I fell into catering to my kids whims and became lazy and cheap, not to mention jumping on the sugar-free, non-fat bandwagon (my mom is still immersed in that). My first goal was to expand my kids palates, but I'm taking on the second of getting real food into all our bodies, which is not just good for our organs, but also the environment, the health of everyone and the farmers. I heard this interview on NPR (scary and interesting stuff) although I haven't watched Food.Inc yet and it really got me thinking. I then started noticing some bloggers who were either already on this path, like Composter Mom, or were getting into it now, like Musings of a Housewife, who in turn led me to Kelly the Kitchen Kop, who's got oodles of awesome information. I've ordered some of the books I want from the library, but in the meantime I've switched to whole milk, pastured eggs (when I can find them), butter (been pushing this for years) and a heavily vegetarian diet.

I'd already started going to the farmer's market, and can't quite get my kids into that, but they are loving the tomato bounty in the garden. I then dragged out one of my favorite cookbooks. So far I've made cauliflower souffle (no photos as my souffles never rise :) which was a hit with three out of four. The kids skipped the vegetable remoulade (julienned veggies in a mayo-pickle-spice sauce), but did chow down the plain veggies. Last night was the broccoli forest (above), yum and taquito's from Trader Joes served with spicy salsa from a local market, since the boys in the house do want their meat. Donovan ate two small pieces of broccoli, he's my work in progress. Keegan was not a fan of the rice part, but like they say, you gotta serve something 16 times to know if they really like it.

I just signed up for a CSA, now am on a quest for a supply of pastured eggs, when I don't make it to the farmers market, and better milk and yogurt.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Food, Glorious Food

I just clicked over to the Wishbone salad dressing contest on Blogher (it's over, btw) and boy did that salad dressing look good. So did the teriyaki burger from Carl's Jr (don't even go to that website - milkshakes!), the fosters chicken salad, and my husband's leftover carne asada quesadilla, oh it's making me drool. Why am I obsessing about food, you may ask (okay, maybe not)? I'm at the end of day 3 of the "Master Cleanse" (who of course are now following me on twitter, because twitter can read your mind. I seriously don't know how this works, but I make one post about skateboarding and I've got all these skate companies following me.

But the good news is, what with this second attempt at the "Beyonce approved" lemonade diet (good thing I own a ginormous lemon tree), going semi-vegan for a while, boxing with the Wii fit master and chasing my wild boys around every day, I have lost a total of 9 pounds. I actually reached the "normal" line on said Wii fit. I'm going to try to keep up this wacked out diet until my birthday on Thursday, then do my very best not to completely pig out. That should not be too hard, considering I'm the only one who cooks in this house, so not expecting anyone to surprise me with a cake that night.

I just would really, really, love some food.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

The Vegan Lifestyle, Day 2

Okay, I'm not really jumping on the vegan lifestyle, that's sounds a mite scary. I did go to the library for some vegetarian cookbooks (trying not to spend any money beyond food and toilet paper this month, but that's another story) and opted not to get the "Vegan for Dummies" book (actually, not sure of the exact title, but avoided all book referring to a lifestyle). Mollie Katzen's Vegetable Heaven has some delicious looking recipes, like Dreamy White Beans and Mushroom Barley "Risotto," some of which I'll have to save until I'm eating eggs and cheese, and others until I'm retired and can spend three luxurious hours making dinner. The first version of this cookbook is one of my all time favorites, but alas is in storage right now. I also got the "Moosewood Daily Special" and two for the kids: Cooking Rocks by Rachel Ray (nothing jumps out at me here so far), and Faster! I'm Starving - is that now an awesome title sure to appeal to busy moms with hungry kids. If I ever actually make the recipes I'll post the best ones.

My plans for friday went awry when I realized it was company picnic day, with an "Applied Idol" theme of all things, quite entertaining actually. So I ended up with a slightly different menu for that day.


Friday:
  • Lunch: Part of a vegetable muffalato sandwich (eggplant, olives and peppers, quite yummy), watermelon, german potato salad, water, iced tea and diet root beer
  • Dinner: All from Trader Joes: Cuban style beans and rice, asian salad, corn (added chicken burritos which the kids rejected, they stuck to corn for dinner)Midnight snack (I know, I know): almonds, apples and peanut butter

For exercise, I climbed a coconut tree climbing structure at the company party(that was it, I swear), and my arms are still sore, truly pitiful. Then ran a bit and attempted the "playground boot camp" at soccer practice.


Saturday:

  • Breakfast: protein shake and strawberries
  • Lunch: Salad and almonds and a few crackers
  • Dinner: Bean burrito with veggie cheese, olives and tomatoes, sauteed mushrooms and onions, cream of cauliflower soup (in a blender mix soy milk, steamed cauliflower and garlic, and threw in a couple artichokes and some of the sauteed onions and mushrooms)

Only exercise was swimming with the kids. Briefly considered giving up caffeine since I forgot to have any at breakfast, but headache was too bad. And I am craving sweets so off to bed.


Friday, September 12, 2008

Ready, Set, Cleanse

Yes, I am ready to start a cleanse/diet/exercise plan of some sort. I am really tired, literally, of not being able to keep up with the athletes in my family. I've even been getting more sleep, not working late every night. I really hate dieting, a lot of it due to being the chubbiest one in the family, which my mom never let me forget. Ironically I am now the smallest, but while I want to fit better in my clothes and spend a new clothing gift certificate on stuff that doesn't look like maternity wear, my goal here really is more energy.
I've just entered my fourth decade, yikes, and I'm loving my hair, got new makeup, and am ready for the body to follow. Working with young pretty fashionable women just gives me that much more motivation. As one co-worker (the person you would totally want to shop with, honest without being mean) said - "you don't need to lose weight, just tone up." I cried for hours (not really) but she's half right.

So here's my plan, which I'm writing down to help me stick to it. 21 days of "cleansing", which I'm only slightly embarrassed to say was inspired by dooce's cleanse, in turn inspired by Oprah. I can't afford (and would probably not read) the book, so I'm making up my own. My last real diet was eliminating all sugar and sticking to a diabetic plan for about 5 months while pregnant, so I think I can do this.
For 21 days I'm going to do my best to eat vegan (which I've never, ever tried and doubt I would again), minimize white flour and rice (pretty much do that now), eliminate sugar (probably the hardest for me) and alcohol, but not caffeine. I'm not going to put my family on this, I mean they are outside running around pretty much every single day, but I am curious how many vegan meals I can serve before they notice. I figure, they can not eat garbanzo beans as easily as not eating chicken. I am also going to work out in some form 4-5 days a week. My goal is to find a yoga or kickboxing gym, but with a bank account at zero that's on hold and my company gym will have to do. I suck at pushing myself so eventually I'll need something else.
I'll try to post the best of the vegan recipes I make, but that may be few and far between. I tried cooking for a vegan once, made this fabulous stuffed artichoke with walnuts, eliminated the cheese for him, which made this dish oh so much better. I personally might cheat and buy soy cheese, which for some reason does not seem to be vegan.
Day 1:
Breakfast: Orange and coffee with soy milk
Lunch: Salad with lots of beans for protein

Ending with this photo for no apparent reason.