Showing posts with label whole foods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whole foods. Show all posts

September 24, 2016

Asian Goulash


My dad had a tradition of making Matheny Goulash—named for our family. I clearly recall the aroma and anticipation. He used whatever he found in the pantry and fridge, and created a simmering pot of goodness! Rice, beef, and tomatoes were staples in the meal, but no 2 goulashes were the same.

I am not eating rice these days, but riced cauliflower provides a perfect base for anything! This dish has a decidedly Asian flavor! I used only what I had on hand. All measurements are approximate because I cooked instinctively. I also used my Pampered Chef Food Chopper to achieve texture.

ASIAN GOULASH


INGREDIENTS
  • 1 tablespoon of butter
  • 1 pound of ground beef—not lean
  • ½ cup chopped onion
  • ½ cup chopped raw zucchini
  • ½ cup chopped red bell pepper
  • 1 clove of garlic, finely chopped
  • 1-2 tablespoons of grated fresh ginger
  • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • 1 package (about 3 cups) of Trader Joe's Organic Riced Cauliflower—thawed
  • Coconut aminos
  • Salt and pepper to taste
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Heat the butter up in a wok and add the ground beef. Add salt and pepper. Cook just until the pink disappears.
  2. Add the onion, zucchini, red bell pepper, garlic, and fresh ginger. Allow the small pieces to become tender.
  3. Stir in the toasted sesame oil.
  4. Introduce the cauliflower. Drizzle an ample amount of coconut aminos over the top of the goulash and stir.
  5. Cook long enough for the flavors to marry.
Serves 4
CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO WEIGH IN.

August 28, 2016

Curry Cauli-Rice Salad


A well-stocked fridge, freezer, and pantry can spark some amazing dishes! Since I hate to be wasteful, I frequently improvise with what I have. This can sometimes sacrifice color, but never flavor. 

Hint: Do not hesitate to tweak leftovers if you feel that the original can still be enhanced. Some of our favorite meals were toyed with before I was satisfied.


CURRY CAULI-RICE SALAD

  • 2 packages of Trader Joe's frozen Organic Riced Cauliflower (yields 6 cups)
  • 2 heaping tablespoons of Chosen Foods Avocado Oil Mayo
  • 1 tablespoon of natural stone ground mustard
  • 2 nitrite/nitrate free hot dog weiners, sliced
  • ½ of a large onion, diced
  • 1½ cups of mixed small red and yellow tomatoes, sliced in halves or quarters depending on size
  • 1 heaping tablespoon of curry (I used Muchi curry)
  • Italian seasoning to taste and a little for garnish
  • Maldon salt to taste (I rub it between my fingers while sprinkling)
  1. Follow the directions on the riced cauliflower to defrost in the microwave.
  2. Allow the riced cauliflower to cool. 
  3. Add the remainder of the ingredients. Stir well and refrigerate to allow flavors to marry.
Again, I used what I had. I plan on adding red and green bell peppers along with some fresh herbs next time. The mayo and mustard dressing makes a wonderful base, not to mention the healthful benefits of avocado oil.


CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO WEIGH IN.

August 20, 2016

3 Ways to Menace Mosquitos


Mosquitos and fleas have loved me since I was little. No summer was complete without a series of welts begging to be itched. Yet, for the first time ever, I have not suffered one mosquito bite this season!


So, we slather ourselves with diethyltoluamide and the DEET is done. Not so quick! DEET has side effects. Manufacturers warn against using it under clothing due to possible irritation. Other repercussions include coma, seizures, and slurred speech, largely because the product has been ingested or applied for 3 or more consecutive days. Our skin absorbs everything.

We call our wounds mosquito bites, but this is not accurate. The female sticks a part of her mouth—called the proboscis—into our skin. She then injects her saliva into our bloodstream. The proteins in her saliva keep our blood from clotting as she dines. The itching, redness, and swelling are actually caused by these proteins.

I recently attended a progressive dinner in the mountains. At dusk, I was seated on a log bench next to a pond. Mosquitos appeared like party crashers. Women were swatting. Insect repellent upstaged the night air. Surprisingly, the mosquitos were ignoring me and I was not wearing protection.


The bites were so bad during my first summer in Idaho, that I wrote the following militant poem.

Memo to Mosquitos

Listen up mosquitos! I declare WAR!
Your assaults leave me itching, scratching, and sore!

Regardless of mission, whether hungry or bored;
I refuse to be your adored smorgasbord.

You dine without invite, with little decline;
And tip me with welts needing calamine.

Be advised. Be aware. Remember this day!
I'm closing down your all-day buffet!

Say good-bye to this flesh for which you are smitten,
For "Vengeance is mine," says the Bitten!

—Karen June Miller | July 2011


I have been low-carbing for almost a year. My diet no longer includes grains, sugars, high carb fruits and vegetables. Did my body chemistry change?

Sure enough, after research, I discovered that other low-carbers have made the same discovery! When we lower our carbohydrate intake, there is not enough glucose to burn for energy. We switch from being a sugar-burner to a fat-burner. Fats are broken down for energy. This results in a buildup of acids known as ketones, which act as a natural mosquito repellent.

It never dawned on me that low-carbing would make me impervious to mosquitos! Perhaps my Memo to Mosquitos was prophetic.

Click HERE to read another low-carber's mosquito experience.

CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO WEIGH IN.

August 19, 2016

6 Tips for Meaningful Meals


MEANINGLESS

I have been guilty of fast-food frenzies and driving-while-eating. Anticipation was far more exciting than the food ever was! I finally hit the brakes when I recognized that mealtime had become meaningless and rushed.

I then pursued more natural, organic choices that included whole grains and my unwillingness to dismiss sugar. It was a start, but not the remedy.

LOW-CARB TO THE RESCUE!

While low-carbing is restoring my health, energy, and common sense, I still have a challenge with timing. My family is too busy to coordinate a set dinnertime. Since eating later slows down my weight loss, I dine alone . . . a lot!

Solo meals, however, do not have to be mundane. Replace the "M" with an "F" and you have FUN-dane! Every meal should be celebrated and here are 6 ways to accomplish that.

SATISFY THE SENSES

Keep it visual...
Add personal touches such as favorite linens, place settings, or a small floral centerpiece. Use herbs for garnish. Employ simple food styling. Example: I used a tonal camera filter on this photo to emphasize the crosshatch slice on the sausage.

Relish aroma...
Make sure your spices are fresh and potent. Taste-testing is essential, but aroma should be a discernible precursor to the meal.

Flirt with flavor...
Allow the 5 basic tastes (umami, sweetness, sourness, bitterness, and saltiness) to throw a tastebud party! Do not forget FAT—the low-carber's best friend. Fat adds flavor.

Remove distraction...
A meal is a short journey. Turn off the TV. Put the book, project, and smart phone aside. Have a prepared and relaxing playlist ready to listen to. Avoid anything causing stress—like politics!

Focus on the food...
When is the last time you chewed slowly and thoughtfully? Try putting the fork down between bites (not as easy as it sounds). Pretend you are a food critic and identify all that you are tasting. 

Understand satiety...
Okinawans practice hara hachi bu which means “eat until you are eight parts (out of ten) full” (Wikipedia) or 80% full. This requires stopping the meal before the stomach has stretched to make room for it. Satiety does not occur because your stomach is full. It has more to do with the brain reacting to the chemicals in your food, which takes about 20 minutes to kick in. The chemicals then rise and stay elevated for 3 to 5 hours before hunger is experienced again. 

The beauty of a low-carb lifestyle is that satiety is easily achieved when meals find a balance between low-carb vegetables, moderate meat, and plenty of high quality fats.

NOTES
  1. The Smoked Andouille Chicken Sausage is precooked and nitrate/nitrite free. After slicing it, I microwaved it for 45 seconds. (It will naturally open up when heated.) I nested the sausage in a salad comprised of cucumber, tomato, and feta cheese—with Pomegranate Vinegar drizzled on top. 
  2. The sausage and the vinegar were purchased from Trader Joe's. I also find sausage deals (Aidelle's) at Grocery Outlet. Of course those are hit and miss.
  3. Check out Still Tasty for spice shelf-life information.
CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO WEIGH IN.

July 17, 2016

Getting Spicy | Ras al Hanout

Ras al Hanout | Wikipedia
Photo by Sarefo
I enjoy stirring up culinary creativity—especially when the ingredients are easily accessible! My July 8th post, Playing With My Food, mentioned a Trader Joe's exotic spice set called The Spice Route. I promised that I would explore each of the 4 spices, starting with Ras al Hanout. (Read the post for further information.)

FACTS:
  • Click HERE for pronunciation.
  • North African spice mix that is similar to garam masala in India.
  • The name is Arabic for "head of the shop" or akin to the English "top shelf."
  • It is most commonly associated with Morocco.
  • The mixture often contains over a dozen spices—the proportion of those spices varying from region to region.
  • It is used as a rub on meat and fish—couscous and rice.
  • Traditional ingredients include cardamom, cumin, cloves, cinnamon, allspice, mace, nutmeg, coriander, chili peppers, ginger, turmeric, fenugreek, paprika, and peppercorn. Often regional ingredients like chufa, galangal, and monk's pepper will be used.
  • It once contained aphrodisiac properties.
As a low-carber, I will be trying each of The Spice Route blends on riced cauliflower or cauli-rice, primarily because it can be transformed with little effort. I also intend to experiment with spiralized root veggies, in addition to meat dishes.

CRUSTED SEARED SALMON WITH RAS AL HANOUT
Adapted from a recipe by Tanya Holland
Show: Melting Pot

INGREDIENTS:
  • Grapeseed oil
  • 4 (6-ounce) salmon fillets, skin removed
  • Trader Joe's Ras al Hanout
DIRECTIONS:
  1. Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a sauté pan. 
  2. Season fish with salt and pepper and roll in spice mixture, using just enough to lightly coat fillets. 
  3. Sear over medium high heat for 3 minutes on each side. Fish should be medium rare.
Spicefully Yours,
CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO LEAVE FEEDBACK.

July 8, 2016

Organic Mango & Chile Black Tea



My secret weapons with low-carb are lots of fat and flavor. Thank God that I have moved beyond tasteless diets that never satiated me!

Beverages are a biggie with me and I especially love tea. Year round, I usually buy bottled Tejava and add it to tall glasses of ice. However, I enjoy brewing flavored teas as well.

As a fan of Trader Joe's, this newcomer caught my attention. Here is how TJ's describes it...
A long, long time ago we started selling Dried Chile Spiced Mango. Something about the combination of sweet, juicy mango and the heat from dried red chiles made this product irresistible. And now, with Mango Season upon us, we transformed these flavors into a unique, new product: Trader Joe’s Organic Mango & Chile Black Tea. 
Our Organic Mango & Chile Black Tea is made of high-grade black tea, and then flavored with organic dried mango pieces and organic dried red chile. All three of the ingredients in this tea are grown and processed in Sri Lanka, the world’s fourth largest producer of tea—so they really know their stuff. 
The dried mango pieces give a tropical sweetness to the classic, strong flavors of black tea leaves, while the dried chile adds a little kick to the finishing taste. These three ingredients—and only these three ingredients—are mixed and sealed in pyramid-shaped bags that allow for excellent steeping. 
To brew this tea, pour boiling water over one tea bag and steep for 5-7 minutes. Add a splash of Trader Joe’s Coconut Creamer or Coconut Milk for a creamy tropical twist. Or, brew as an iced tea—a sweet and spicy summer treat! 
For $3.49, you can pick up a 1.4 ounce tin (20 bags) of Trader Joe’s Organic Mango & Chile Black Tea. Or two. Or three. This special, limited item will be gone in the blink of an eye—or in the sip of some tea, if you will.  
INGREDIENTS
Organic Black Tea, Organic Dried Mango, Organic Dried Red Chile. 
NOTE: Since posting, the details of this item may have changed due to fluctuating market prices, federal regulations, currency rates, drought, pestilence, bandits, rush hour traffic, filibusters, clowns, zombie apocalypse, punctilious product developers... Contact our Crew for current price and availability.

CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO LEAVE FEEDBACK.

July 2, 2016

My Story | Removing the Carbage


Like many of you, I have battled the bulge for most of my life. It was an obstacle course. Yet, ironically, my journey dropped me off right where I started.

I was a chubby toddler. It was considered “cute” in the 50s and 60s. I lost most of the baby fat in elementary school, although I was never slim. My personal struggle with weight arrived with puberty. 

At 5 feet, 6½ inches tall, I typically felt obese, especially when comparing myself to peers. Yet, my highest teen weight remained below 145. I laugh now that I have been 90 pounds heavier.

In the summer of 1973, I was a 15-year-old preparing for high school. My wrestling match with weight had pinned me down. When my mom purchased “Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution” (published by Bantam in 1972), I felt like she had tossed me a life preserver.

Carbohydrates had been my friend longer than I knew what a carbohydrate was. Carbs were my go-to food, but my indulgence was not without guilt. I reasoned that binge-and-purge was my own invention. I developed an unhealthy relationship with food and I rarely ate 1 serving of anything.

I favored the “P” words: pastry, pasta, and potatoes. I loved buttered white bread and plates piled with pasta. I sought out bakeries featuring scones, croissants, and anything chocolate. I had a little tea with my sugar; kept a perpetual stash of watermelon hard candies in my school locker; and I knew where Mom hid the good stuff.

The Dr. Atkins’ program worked amazingly well! (I majored more on the protein aspect and not the fat.) I trimmed down in time to turn heads at the high school, although I soon surrendered to social eating. I had become bored with ground beef patties, hot dog wieners, tuna, egg salad, cheddar cheese, and iceberg lettuce. In a family of 5, steaks were not often on the grocery list.

My biggest weight gain occurred with my first pregnancy in 1987. Fish made me ill, yet I had no issues with carbs. I often craved a capacious bowl of mashed potatoes pooled with butter. My weight soared to 180, dropped while nursing my daughter, and then climbed back to my top pregnancy weight. 

I will not burden you with the names of diets, but I have spent the last 4 decades experimenting with most trending weight loss systems. Despite practicing food-combining, cutting the fat, and emulating the French and Greeks, I just kept adding pounds. I actually woke up to the exact same weight for 1 year, no matter how carefully I had eaten!

My husband frequently observed me preparing organic and natural meals that Whole Foods would have applauded. The nagging question was, “How could we go wrong with brown rice, whole grain breads, and pasta?”

In 2015, a friend told me she had gone gluten free. I knew I was not celiac, but I was experiencing considerable bloating when I ate grain products. I eliminated gluten and felt better. I lost only 10 pounds. Then, in August of that year, I discovered Jimmy Moore’s “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show” via podcast. I had an AHA moment!

Eliminating gluten had begun to clear out the usual suspects, but I needed to acknowledge that low-carbing was the only thing that had ever worked for me! So, I returned to my point of departure, only the landscape had changed dramatically. 

My first foray into low-carbing was in a world without internet. Now the resources are almost overwhelming! There is no shortage of support! I have adapted to a LCHF (Low-Carb-High-Fat) plan which includes moderate meat, healthy high fats, and low carb vegetables. I am keeping my carbs closer to a Keto diet, although I have not invested in the equipment to monitor ketone readings. And, as of this posting, I have lost 37 pounds!

I enjoy creative cooking and that includes my passion for ethnic cuisine. I have made some sacrifices—but not with flavor. Fat is now my friend! And butter is back, baby!

"CARBE" DIEM!
CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO LEAVE FEEDBACK.

Betty Botter



Butter and I go way back! I enjoyed it long before I was a low-carber. (I detested its plastic imposter.) I never want to how many slices of white bread I lavished with this fatty goodness! 

Well, as a young teen, I was babysitting. The kids were taking a nap, so I memorized this tongue twister. The ingredients of my batter have changed, but the butter is better than ever!


Betty Botter bought some butter;

“But,” said she, “this butter’s bitter!

If I put it in my batter,

It will make my batter bitter;

But a bit of better butter

Will but make my batter better.”

So she bought a bit of butter,

Better than her bitter butter,

Put it in the bitter batter,

Made her bitter batter better.

So ’twas better Betty Botter

Bought a bit of better butter.


Ya "butter" believe it!

CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO LEAVE FEEDBACK.

June 28, 2016

Why do it if I don't have to?



[NOTE: This post first appeared on my blog, eye-dyllic, in January of 2015. It was an important step toward embracing my low-carb lifestyle.]

I am fortunate to not be celiac or gluten intolerant. Some friends—suffering from celiac disease—have legitimately questioned why I would eat gluten free when I don't have to. Well, having lost weight by cutting out gluten, I reintroduced small amounts of wheat products during Christmas of 2014. I gained weight faster than a chicken lays eggs! I immediately experienced major bloating, discomfort, and sluggishness. My body put me on alert. 

I am definitely gluten sensitive. As long as I don't replace gluten with unnecessary carbs, I enjoy greater health, energy, and sharpness. Plus, eating whole, organic, and locally sourced food is quite satisfying.

I have ridden the diet roller coaster. It had its ups and downs and when I got off, my weight mostly went up! I want to eat real food. I just need to listen to what my body is telling me.

X-glutton for gluten,
CLICK ON "COMMENTS" BELOW
TO LEAVE FEEDBACK.