Monday, July 9, 2012

Monday Charge!!! (July 9, 2012)

Finding a truly yummy treat that doesn't put you over your daily caloric needs is pure joy and I have a medal winner for you: Ice Fruit.  I've been told that it looks like Gelato - and I thought it very well might be until I looked up a recipe for Gelato. YIKES!  I had no idea that Gelato was made with eggs and milk (this explains a lot). So, no, this lovely bowl of deliciousness is not like Gelato at all:

Cherry Banana Ice Fruit (Vegan and Gluten Free)
It is also not exactly a sorbet, either - those have added sugar and water.  It is just ice fruit.  I read about the banana recipe on a friend's Facebook page.  I was very skeptical at first.  I saw the picture there - it looked so much like dairy ice cream.  Would it work?

Peach Ice Fruit (Vegan and Gluten Free)
I've added my own little twists to the recipes I've found on line.  First, I use dates.  Second, I use some coconut milk - just enough to allow my Vitamix to chop up the dates and provide a little liquid to get the fruit started.

I've ended up with something that actually tastes better than ice cream and will only set you back about 70 calories per serving (very roughly estimating).  Yes, 70 as in 7-0.  I feel like the proverbial cat (although being vegan I'd have swallowed catnip rather than a canary). Give this one a try - especially if you're looking for a post break-up binge.  You can go all out and still respect yourself in the morning.

The Recipe

Two cups of your favorite fruit, peeled (if necessary), chopped and frozen.  The riper the fruit the better.

1/3 cup Coconut Milk

3 dates, chopped

Chopped nuts if you wish.

Pour the coconut milk into a food processor or Vitamix.  Add the dates.  Chop until the dates are in very little pieces.

Add the fruit.  I put my Vitamix on the lowest setting to begin with and use the tamper it comes with to start gently pushing the fruit down on the blades.  This part of the process might take some patience - especially if your fruit has been freezing for some time.

As the mixture begins to soften, add the nuts.  Check the mixture from time to time until it reaches a consistency that pleases you.  Then, enjoy!!!

Makes 3-4 servings (or just one, if you are me).

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Fettuccine Alfredo Primavera (Vegan and Gluten Free)

Today's Epic Workout* has been delayed by rain.  I'd planned to be on the road by 7am. I even went to bed on time last night.  But, alas, my iPhone armband case thinggy is not waterproof - and so I wait.

In the meanwhile, here is a recipe for vegan and gluten free Fettuccine Alfredo Primavera.  I think the kids would call this a "mashup". It really doesn't take as long as it looks.  I'm a little chatty.  Read the recipe through first before following the steps.

I have used peeled almonds for the sauce although I really prefer (and suggest) cashew nuts.  Cashews were (significantly) out of my price-range this week so I have improvised.

Preparation begins the night before.  I prefer to peel the almonds and the best way to get that to happen is to soak them.  In fact, I end up soaking something every night - including my steel cut oats (YUM!!!).

Top: Steel cut oats, Middle: Almonds, Bottom: Pinto Beans
I soak everything on the counter rather than in the fridge.  Peeling the almonds is really easy and can be a lot of fun.  Be careful, though.  They tend to pop out of the skin and go flying.

Peeled Almonds

Ingredients: 


Gluten Free Rice Fettuccine (2 servings worth)
Olive Oil
Salt

Sauce:

Almonds (a small handful)
1 teaspoon Tahini (optional)
2 medium sized dates
1/2 cup of water (next time I'm trying coconut milk)
Salt to taste
1 wedge lemon juice
1/4 cup olive oil

5 Kalamata olive, sliced
2 tablespoons fresh cilantro, chopped
2 tablespoons fresh dill chopped

Primavera

4 medium-sized carrots, peeled and sliced
1 medium-sized zucchini, washed and sliced
(You can add a cup or so of broccoli as well - I just didn't have any)

2 cups mushrooms, sliced
1 medium onion, diced
4 large cloves of garlic, smashed and sliced
1 tablespoon fresh jalapeno pepper

Preparation:


1. Set the water for the Fettuccine to boil.  The sauce is for two servings, so cook two servings of Fettuccine or increase the proportions to make more sauce.

2. Wash, peel and slice the carrots.  Place them in a pot.  Wash and dice the zucchini.  Place in the same pot. Add salt to taste and enough water to cover the bottom of the pot well.  Set on a medium-high flame until the water just begins to boil then lower to a simmer so the veggies steam. Add olive oil just as they begin to be cooked.  Then turn off the flame and let them sit in the pot.

3. Peel and dice the onion. Heat some olive oil in a skillet.  When the oil is hot (never smoking) add the onion and season with salt.  Toss (if you can do this safely) and set to a low simmer so the onions caramelize.

4. Peel and slice the garlic.  As the onions get brown on one side, toss once then add garlic on top.

5. Slice the mushrooms. As the onions get brown on the other side, toss (so the garlic is now on the bottom) and put the mushrooms on top.

6. After about 3 minutes, add the jalapeno pepper and toss the mixture.  Allow it to cook, tossing occasionally, until the mushrooms are cooked.

Stir in the steamed vegetables.

At some point during this process, the water for the Fettuccine will start to boil.  Add the Fettuccine to the water, stir until the water starts boiling again, then lower the flame so the water simmers vigorously (but doesn't boil).  Cook with the lid partly off the pot.  I cooked it for about five minutes then turned off the flame and allowed the Fettuccine to sit in the water for another five minutes or so until done.


While the Fettuccine, onion and mushroom mixture and veggies are cooking (watch the veggies carefully), place the following ingredients in a Vitamix or blender:

Handful of peeled almonds
1/4 cup olive oil
1 tsp Tahini (optional)
1/2 cup water
2 medium sized dates, sliced
Salt to taste
Juice of one wedge of lemon

Blend until smooth.  Pour the mixture out into a bowl.  It should look like this:

Vegan Alfredo Sacue

Drain the Fettuccine when it is ready.  Top it with the cilantro, dill and Kalamata olives.  It should look like this:

Naked Fettuccine with Cilantro, Dill and Kalamata Olives

 Pour the sauce over the Fettuccine and mix.  It should look like this:


Dressed Vegan Gluten Free Fettuccine Alfredo

Of course, you could serve the Fettuccine Alfredo just like this.  But why do that when you can have a ton of wonderful fresh veggies to go along with it? The end result should look something like this:

Fettuccine Alfredo Primavera
Et voila!  Yum! This makes about two servings. The sauce is pretty high in calories, by the way.  But it is packed with awesome good fats that fight all kinds of evil nasties. Pile on the veggies but use the sauce in moderation.


*The Epic Workout is an outdoor approximately hour-long journey into masochism that involves a lot of stair climbing over about four miles total. 



Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Eating Out

The Good News

Where to begin? What a day for food.  First I greet with great joy the news from Dr. Oz: it is easier to lose belly fat than booty and thigh fat.  Do read this article.  You'll probably learn things about your body-type that you don't know. For example, it turns out that I am a hunter! (Of vegetables, of course). Since I like my booty and thighs just fine, this is good news indeed!

Shopping

I went shopping yesterday to do a bit of re-stocking.  The damage was higher than I'd anticipated: $26.72.  Today I added $1.50 worth of fresh dill from the farmer's market and 2 lbs of cherries (OH YUM!!!) for $5.00 from a fruit-cart vendor.  The vendor said I was beautiful and invited me back to visit again.  And I think he gave me extra cherries.  That totally makes up for the price. My current tally this week is $33.22.

At the Harlem Farmer's Market



 Altogether this is what I added to my stock 'o victuals:

July 3, 2012




In addition to the dill and cherries, I got steel cut oats (awesome with walnuts and dates!!!), almonds, kalamata olives, coconut milk, cilantro, tahini, dates, bananas and gluten free brown rice fettuccini.

So, here is the deal. The budget is $40.00 per week.  Whatever I don't use from the week before rolls over to the next week.  Last week I spent a total of $29.74.  Round up to $30.00.  Which means that I had $50.00 for this week leaving me $16.78 for the rest of the week.

Eating Out

Last week I chose to stick to only eating fresh food that I had made myself. Sticking to this in the long term is not possible since, as a small business owner, business development sometimes means taking clients or prospects out for lunch or dinner or attending networking breakfasts and so forth.

Still, there are plenty of ways to stay true to the spirit of the fresh food lifestyle: simply choose the right restaurants.  Today I visited one such restaurant: Massawa on Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan.  I love that place! Massawa is the best Ethiopian restaurant in the city.  They know me so well that they practically start preparing my order when I walk in the door!  Today I had lunch with my dear friend Kate.  Here is what we had:

My friend Kate :)))
I love Shiro (and the Wench look, apparently).



Choose the right restaurant.  Ethiopian, Thai, Korean, Japanese, and Vietnamese restaurants are usually really great options. Mexican and Chinese restaurants might require a bit more planning (I like to look at the menus online before I go) but there should be plenty of low-fat, low-sodium, totally fresh options on the menus. By the way, this was Kate's treat (she's such a darling) so my food budget was not impacted. Ha!





 





Monday, July 2, 2012

Monday Charge!!!

It is MONDAY!!! I've completed the week, I've lost two pounds, kept my dates with Marcus (Jim is my winter boo, apparently) and, amazingly, I have a TON of food left over! Actually, I was surprised.  I feel overwhelmed by how much food there is.  Look!

Basket of Leftovers July 2, 2012

Here is a list of what's in the basket:

2 cucumbers
1 zucchini
2 lbs of organic carrots
1 lb garbanzos
5 heads of garlic
3 onions
1-1/2 packages sliced mushrooms
3 tomatoes
3 apples
ginger
1-1/2 jalapeno peppers
2 yams

I did use ingredients that I already had in the fridge.  Here's a picture:



Stuff from the fridge


That's it (except the olive oil and oatmeal).  I bought $2.23 worth of bananas during the week for a grand total of $29.74 for the week. 

I figure I'll spend about $15.00 stocking up on a few items that I like (such as dates, olives, nori, cashew nuts and Tahini sauce) but, basically, I really don't need to get more groceries this week. At this rate I could be spending about $60-80 a month on food - eating *very* well. If I went 100% organic I estimate about $100.00/month. 

Revolutionize your wallet: eat healthy :))).

I didn't cook much over the weekend - I had plenty of left-overs to work with.  But I did make a cool dish that I'd like to share.  No cooking required if the rice and hummus are already prepared:


Nori (Seaweed)-wrapped Hummus rolls: Hummus, Brown Rice, Kalamata Olives

Friday, June 29, 2012

Addiction

This is the post I was going to put up yesterday - except that I felt too wretched to actually do it.

My body hates me.  We are told that processed food is addictive.  We say this rather glibly, I think.  Oh, yeah, soft drinks are addictive, the companies add stuff to keep you craving more.  I'm not sure how true that is, but I do know that nasty things can happen when you stop eating that stuff. 

Right now (about 48 hours in), I am exhausted, my skin is rough and scratchy, my stomach is screaming, and I have the runs. All because I switched to healthy food. Isn't this stuff supposed to make you feel *better*?!  I know it will pass (in a year, maybe?) but it still is an ordeal.  Beware, my friends.  You are taking a poison that will stalk you should you try to leave it.  Beware.

I still believe it - the stuff about addiction.  But now I'm wondering whether I'm just not made to eat raw tomatoes.  I didn't have any yesterday and today I feel fine.  Time for an experiment.  Meanwhile: Breakfast

Old fashioned oatmeal with a chopped black plum, walnuts and dates



 Hey!  Where'd the dates and oatmeal come from (they weren't in the basket).  Sorry, I forgot.  I already had them in the house. Amazing what one uncovers when one cleans out the fridge .  

I'm also celebrating meeting my fitness goal for the week: five days of at least one hour of exercise each day.  It is time for a break!

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Evening Update June 27, 2012

As promised, here is what the rest of the day looked like (through the lens of cuisine, of course).

Lunch:

Purple Cabbage Dal with Brown Rice


Snack:

Sliced Gala Apples with Hummus




Dinner:

Steamed Zucchini with Stir-fried Chickpeas, Mushrooms & Onions with Garlic, Ginger, Jalapeno Pepper,  Olive Oil and Lemon Juice.

Snack:

Shaved Cucumber Tomato Salad with chopped Onions, sliced Kalamata Olives, Lemon Juice and Hummus Dressing

I took my evening snack with me so I wouldn't gnaw my arm off.  Or bum-rush McDonalds for  french fries.




It worked. I walked right past a McDonalds and had no desire to enter because I had my snack with me. I ate it when I got home and added a Banana.  I've discovered that eating something sweet before sleeping is a "thing" for me.

Back on the Road Again

It's been a while since I've posted.  There has been some backsliding and avoiding.  On May 19, 2012, I decided to re-dedicate myself to a fresh-food lifestyle in a truly serious way.  I'm easing my way back into it and I'm really happy with the way things are going.

Yesterday I decided to challenge myself: eat only the foods that are in these baskets  for the next week.  If that means pre-cooking and packing some meals, so be it.

Food Basket June 26, 2012
By the way, this entire basket of food cost just $27.51. Even I was surprised.  Here is the grocery list with the prices:

1 3lb bag of apples - $3.99
2 8oz pkgs sliced mushrooms - $3.00
2.5lbs bananas - $2.01
2 Green squash - $1.48
1 160z pkg Chick Peas - $2.49
2 lbs Yellow Onions - $.99
2 16 oz pkgs organic carrots - $.99/each
4 Yams - $1.30
2 slicing tomatoes - $1.76
4 Plum tomatoes - $1.79
1 5pk Garlic - $.99
2 Jalapeno peppers - $.24
3 Cucumbers - $1.50
.25lb ginger - $.50
4 lemons - $1.60
5 black plums - $1.80


This basket is the stuff I already had in the fridge. Minus the olive oil - I forgot to put that in the picture.  Olive oil is a staple.

Stuff from the fridge
This basket contains:

Kalamata olives
Tahini Sauce (roasted)
Pinto Beans
1 head of Purple Cabbage
A quarter bag of walnuts
Nori
Brown rice
Shredded Coconut

I got some helpful equipment to help me stay on track.  These come from the container store.


I just LOVE the this set even includes chopsticks.


It's really easy to stick to the plan with this food storage system.  Be careful with liquids like soups.  These leak!

I'm also faithfully working out.  Although not with Jim.  I think Jim understands.  I'm seeing Marcus Garvey Park now.  At some point I'll share the EPIC workout, but for now the plan is 1 hour of exercise 5 days per week.

Today's breakfast was amazing - and so simple.  The plums are very tart, so I thought I wouldn't like them. But they contrast wonderfully with the very sweet bananas.

Breakfast June 27, 2012.  Banana Plum Salad

Look for an evening update cataloging the rest of today's meals.