So, Vegas was fabulous. Aside from not getting to see my Eggy I had a completely excellent time. Lounging by the pool, manufacturing vitamin D, napping and sightseeing. I'm ready to go back already! Mom and I caught Love at the Mirage, which was really great. My uncle and I were able to keep the concert a complete secret until we were in the door! Caesar's didn't have any signage out on the strip or really anywhere in the Colesseum until right outside the front door. We both acted surprised and told her when the line thinned out we would go take a picture with the poster. We snapped her picture and then took her inside. She was so surprised and giddy and appreciative. It was really a fun surprise and fun to watch it all unfold. Stevie was awesome and her band could really rock. Nothing beats hearing the guitar riff for Rhiannon in person. Kinda makes me want to learn how to play the guitar...seriously!
We left Vegas and it was sunny and in the 90s. Returning home, uh not so much--cold, windy and rainy. Boo to that! I think the combo of no sleep, casino smoke, weather changes and traveling took its toll on me as I woke up completely miserable. Luckily, I had an extra day to recuperate and used it to do what I normally do on Sundays: groceries and cooking for the week. Grocery shopping was productive as I had coupons for half off of medicine (convenient, eh?) and lots of my favs were on sale like cucumbers, peppers, and Bob's Red Mill products. I am completely in love with Bob's Red Mill and @ 40% off, I used the opportunity to stock up my pantry. If you are a fan of Eggface (I love her!) and use her recipes, the Bob's Red Mill products work beautifully. I love his Multigrain pancake mix, almond flour and unsweetened coconut for her recipes. I have also fallen in love with his steel cut oats and grits/polenta. Seriously good stuff and the right kind of carbs.
I had 2 bananas and all of my lovely Bob's goodies, so I made a quadruple batch of Eggy's delicious banana mini muffins . In one pan, I added walnuts and in the other I sprinkled in chocolate chips (don't worry--2 chips/muffin is all). My kids (neighbor kids included!) absolutely go bananas (hahaha) for these things. The folks at work will be happy to see me tomorrow, too. I love sharing my goodies and I love when people love them. I also love that I am feeding them healthy, nutritious food and they have no clue it's pouch friendly as well.
Other items of the day: grilled chicken tenders, veggies (squash, zucchini, onions) and salmon for the grill. Can I just say Uber YUM?! . The leftover grilled chicken will be revamped into Spring Rolls later in the week. I'll do a post on that and include the recipe for you guys. These are one of my new favorites! While I was doing all of that chopping, I also made my standby shrimpo de gallo (just waiting for the avocados to ripen) and chopped extra onions for a batch of cottage cheese pancakes later in the week as well. I also used up some milk (to make room for the plastic ware full of goodness) and made SF Chocolate pudding w choc protein powder in it. So, I cooked just once and am loaded up with goodies for the week.
Meal planning keeps me on track nutritionally and cooking a big haul once a week keeps me on track sanity wise. It took me awhile to get my system down, but here's what works for me:
1. Stock up on containers--I got lucky and scored a TON of plastic ware at my local Dollar Tree. You can also save containers like from cottage cheese (which hold 2 cups by the way) or those take and toss kind. If you are early op, get thee to the Dollar Tree and stock up on those baby containers with lids and measure out the stage you are in i.e. 1/4 c or 1/2 c. Hit yard sales or hostess a Tupperware party. Buy the size that you will use. For me, I have a variety of sizes/shapes/depths. Get what works for you. It may be baggies, glass bowls, or cottage cheese containers...just make sure you have enough to store the amount of food you want to cook and that it will do what you need it to do i.e. use glass for red sauce so it doesn't stain or take and toss if it's extra stinky or you don't want to ever think about cleaning it. :)
2. The freezer is your friend--I love my recipes, but I am not a huge fan of eating the same thing day in and day out. I have learned that for me, I can cook a big batch and ration it out this way: enough for dinner that night + lunches the next day. The rest gets frozen into usable sizes i.e. enough for dinner or enough to grab and go for lunch. For example, if I make soup, I freeze containers with 1 cup if it's for lunch for me or 4 cups if I want to make it into an easy meal. Same goes with those muffins. No one needs 48 muffins in one week. I put a batch in my freezer for a quick snack later.
3. Waste not, want not--most of the time, my cooking gets inspired by what is on sale or what I have on hand that needs to get used ASAP. I hate wasting food/money, so I try to stretch every single thing I can and make the most of it. Small amounts of meat or veggies get chopped up and made into omelets or bites. If I can score an awesome deal on something, that comes into play. If a neighbor gives me some of their tomatoes, I will most definitely add that to the menu. This week, cucumbers were on sale 3 for $1. For $1 in produce, I was able to make: cucumber salad (cukes + balsamic + feta), sunomono, chopped cukes for the Spring rolls, and sliced cukes to have with hummus. They are also great with sour cream/greek yogurt & dry ranch mix or dill. Yum! Channel Tim Gunn and "Make it work".
4. Find your staples--There are certain things that I use a lot in my cooking: Bob's Red Mill products obviously, eggs, lean proteins, beans, cheese, pesto, cottage cheese, peanut butter, fresh produce and hot sauce. A lot of my favorite dishes use some combination of these ingredients. If there is something I'm really craving, I'll buy what I need for that dish and figure out a way to use the leftovers (see #3). Or, if I have something I need to use up, I can rely on one of my staples to help me out. Like that cucumber salad...totally just raided my cheese drawer and saw the feta and tossed it together into a quick salad. The same goes with your recipe box...find a handful of recipes that you can always rely on to make something healthy for yourself. For me, I can always find a use for leftover grilled proteins and veggies, so I make that nearly every week. I also always have some kind of soup in my freezer just in case. There is not a single fast food restaurant that can make anything as healthy as you can by reheating something from your stash.
5. Don't forget about breakfast--for me, breakfast has always been a challenge. Either I forget it totally, or (pre-op) I would pick something full of sugar and feel like crap the rest of the day. In order for me to make it out the door and to work on time, I need grab and go options. I always have protein powder for a quick shake, eggs, and cottage cheese. Sometimes, a warm breakfast is in order though. Every week, I also pick one "breakfasty" thing to make and freeze some servings of it. This week, I'll make cottage cheese pancakes...but in my freezer, you'll also find: breakfast burritos (low-carb tortillas + whatever guts you like, wrap in aluminum foil), protein powder pancakes, egg bites, and single servings of steel cut oats. I always eat a healthy breakfast this way.
6. Get inspired--nothing makes me want to cook quite like tasting something absolutely delicious and trying to recreate it...or getting my hands on a coveted recipe...or seeing a mouth watering food picture (food porn)...or going to Farmer's Market and seeing all of that gorgeous fresh local produce...or it being crab season...or it being fall (pumpkin + cinnamon!)...or it being sunny and total barbecue weather...or getting a great deal on something at the Grocery Outlet. You get the idea. Do what works for you. I am a total food dork, so I have a lot of tricks. I have a memo pad in my cell phone with ideas or my take on what I just ate (probably garlic and rosemary or try ginger next time or needs more cheese). I read a lot of food blogs. I taste a lot of things that other people make and ask (beg/plead/donate a kidney) for the recipe. I subscribe to magazines that help me: Rachael Ray, Sunset, Real Simple. I have an uncle that can cook, so I text him with questions. I swap secrets with other foodies. And the biggie...I take time to taste what I am eating. Pre-op, I was a "snarfer". (Snarfer (n): one who inhales their food without tasting it; one who eats like a ferocious animal; one who eats so quickly they do not chew. May also be used as a verb i.e. to snarf). I can now tell what is right (or wrong) with a dish. I can also figure out how to make it work for me (no pasta/no rice/no pre-packaged nastiness/no real sugar).
7. Good music always helps--I had an iPod dock radio thing in my office, which was really a waste since if I'm in my office, I'm probably on the computer and can listen to music on that. So, I moved said iPod dock radio thing to my kitchen and rock out while I'm cooking/prepping/cleaning. Good tunes also inspire small children to come into my vicinity and give me a much needed laugh or dance break. :)
So, that's it...the secrets to my success. Are there any other cooking for the week kind of cooks out there? Getting my stockpile has seriously saved my sanity on a few occasions and most definitely kept me from succumbing to a really bad (unhealthy) food choice too many times to count. It's hard to justify McDonald's when I can have a delicious bowl of Black Bean soup instead.
Take care of yourselves!
~K
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