Monday, May 30, 2011
One more kilo gone!...
Friday, May 27, 2011
Carb cycling...
Breakfast was 3 rashers of lean bacon and 2 fried eggs with one slice of Low GI seeded bread and a scraping of butter. Lunch was lentil and cracked wheat soup and an awesome new quiche recipe from a low GI cookbook. The filling was a huge surprise and completely different to any quiche I have ever made before. The crust comprised high fibre cereal soaked in a little 2% milk, flour, baking powder, salt, a little oil and an egg. It made a great crust, which was the first surprise, especially with the cereal.
The filling was the really big surprise though. The lean bacon, onion and tomato were quite normal as was the egg, milk, and maybe the yogurt...but the big difference was the tin of baked beans in tomato sauce! This was blended with the eggs, milk, yogurt, flavourings and spices and when cooked it was great! My lunch guests loved it and couldn't believe there were baked beans in it. I will definitely be trying out something along the same lines. An invention test?
Tonight my husband is grilling some chicken sosaties on the electric barbecue right here in the TV room while we watch Masterchef Australia. We love it and I get quite emotional, especially at elimination time. Watching the contestants improve and grow is such a treat and of course some of the dishes are so good, and then some of them are just plain weird.
Tomorrow I shall do my own cooking test, learning how to make naan bread from Anjum Anand's TV programme Indian Cooking Made Easy from BBC Lifestyle. I shall also make a curry to go with it. The coriander is growing beautifully in a pot outside my kitchen door and will be used to top the naan bread. The curry leaves from the curry bush will go into the chicken and vegetable dish which will be spiced with coriander, cumin and cardamom. I love my herb garden and more than that I love cooking with them. Simple joy.
Cook on!
Thursday, May 26, 2011
What a good day, and an excellent night too:)
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Low Fat Smoked Haddock Chowder...
Here in our little part of Africa the winter is drawing in, although today was a high 29°C! What winter I wonder? We will be lucky if we get two months of it.
Soups are a favourite of many and I am trying out, inventing and collecting low calorie recipes for my restaurant. I have not yet found a restaurant or bistro which offers slimming recipes with calorie counts - certainly not in my little town. I am hoping that it will be a great service to many dieters. They will be able to buy take aways and frozen dinners as well.
Unfortunately diabetes and obesity is on the rise everywhere and we all need some good healthy food. The aim is to try and encourage everyone in the family to change their eating lifestyle. Since I am on the path to slim and healthy, I thought it would be a good thing to put my kind of dishes on the menu. I shall also be offering cooking classes teaching about cooking with healthy, fresh ingredients that are great on taste and flavour. We re-open on the 1st of July. Not long to go now.
Here is today's dish...
Low Fat Smoked Haddock Chowder
1 tsp grapeseed oil (this has a high smoke point and is flavourless)
1 medium leek (50g) finely chopped
1/2 onion (50g) finely chopped
2 or 3 Tbs water
200 ml 2% milk
200 ml vegetable stock (I use an MSG free stock powder)
1 bay leaf
1 medium potato 60g diced
250 gm smoked haddock cut into bite size pieces
Heat the oil in a pot and add the leek and onion
Cook gently for about 5 minutes
Add 2 or 3 Tbs water and cook for a further 5 minutes
Add the stock, milk, bay leaf and potatoes and simmer for 10 minutes or until the potato is cooked.
Now add the haddock and cook for 3 to 5 minutes or until haddock flakes easily.
If the soup is too thick, add boiling water as desired.
(I think I will mash the potato next time before I add the fish...)
Makes 2 generous 1 cup portions.
Calories 222.5: Carbs 15.3g: Fat 5.2g
Tomorrow is another cooking day and I fancy a protein vegetable delight...who knows?
Watch this space:)
Monday, May 23, 2011
Lost another two kilos...YAY!!!
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Getting used to it now...
There are at least twenty recipe books with sticky notes in them lying on my bed. This is my bedtime reading and I love it. I have more than enough recipes now to make up a fabulous menu for dieters coming to my café/art gallery. There will also be Low GI frozen dinners and take-aways with the calorie, carbohydrate and fat counts available for diabetics and slimmers. There is nothing like that in town at the moment so I aim to corner that market, however small or large it may be.
Yesterday's exercise session has left me a little stiff in the shoulders. It was the weights:) No matter. Tomorrow will be aquaerobics in the pool and that always feels so good. It is lovely to feel so weightless. I run on the spot and tread water a lot, pumping my arms, and also do jumping jacks and then swimming in between exercises to get the heart rate up. It is winter here but the water is refreshing and it is never cold for long after starting to exercise. At least I don't feel the sweat.
Today's calorie count was good and I feel great after drinking water all day. My goal weight date is 21 June 2012, winter solstice, and I can just see the party and feel the new dress. Love it. I aim to make a vision board (play like a child) and cut out some great photos and outfits and make a poster for my wall. I can taste and feel the success:))
Go girl go!!!
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Day of research...
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Keeping on track...
Came in just right for most of my nutritional tracking, however a little over on the fats. It must have been the chicken pie although it was only the filling as I took off the pastry and didn't eat it. It was a home-made pie at a friend for lunch so I really guessed the calories and used the tracker to take a stab at it. It will not be as high in fat so maybe I was better than the report says!
I am getting stronger every day about not drinking alcohol and have my new drink instead - sparkling mineral water with Angostura bitters in it. Refreshing and pink! It also contributes to my water intake.
The one area I really need to improve is my vegetable intake. To that end I have stocked up on the green stuff! Broccoli, green beans, salad leaves, green yellow and red peppers, snap peas ~ and I am also growing my own organic spinach and lettuce, as well as various herbs. I made a delicious butternut and apple soup last night topped with snipped coriander leaves from my garden. Yum!
At present I am looking through as many recipe books which have calorie counts in them. Fortunately there are enough of them to last a good few months of meals and I take great delight in putting sticky notes on the pages with enticing recipes with the right number of calories. There are now many little colourful sticky papers encouraging me to cook good low calorie meals. I do so love to cook (and eat of course!) and to find delicious slimming recipes is a joy.
My sister turned me on to Rosemary Conley's Amazing Inch Loss Plan on which she has lost 5 kg in 3 1/2 weeks and oodles of inches. As suggested in the book, I have taken an unflattering picture of myself (ugh!) and also noted down my measurements. That was pretty scary actually. The diet is very low in fat which is really hard for me as I am not a really big fan of low fat. I believe we need it. I use mainly grapeseed and olive oil which are healthy oils and if I use butter it is a mere scraping. The calories in the first two weeks are only 1200 - although I am aiming at between 1200 and 1550. I am happy with that and I am losing.
It has taken me just over a week to get into this way of eating but I feel I am in it now. The afternoons are the worst part of the day as I feel really hungry around 4 or 5. If I have a protein shake/smoothie it becomes a little easier. I add psyllium husk, berries, a little yogurt, a scoop of protein powder and some ground flaxseed. I may also add a teaspoon of xylitol, although I have recently learned that too much of that can affect the kidneys, or was it the bladder?
Isn't it strange how one day a certain foodstuff is a good thing and the next someone discovers something negative about it. Like margarine and butter, or eggs and cholesterol. One year it is good and the next it is not. Our parents didn't know anything like what we know today and they survived! In fact my gran and grandpa lived to their 90s and they ate everything. Lamb chops with fat, chicken with skin, pastry rich pies, creamy desserts, cakes and cookies...and my gran could cook up a storm. The Sunday lunch table was a sight to behold. If you didn't eat all your food she would say that you didn't like it - and if there was nothing left on the table, she felt she hadn't cooked enough! You couldn't win:)
I look forward to tomorrow and a new recipe, and lots of veggies. Bring it on!