Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Conquering the Late Night Munchies

I have gained four pounds.  I say this with great joy, actually. Since January, which is the last time I worked out, I have only gained four pounds. In the tussle for supremacy between diet and exercise, I must acknowledge that diet has won out every time.

I start working out again next week when the weather will be consistently above 50 degrees (or so we are told - this winter is tenacious!).

I haven't been perfect about eating clean. Those four pounds mainly come from a period when I was cocky and went on a Veggie Ho Fun bender. And then there were the french fries. And potato chips. BUT! As soon as I felt my pants feeling a little tighter, I stopped. That is the break through for me.

Prior to the October Juice Feast, I would have been binging by now, feverishly gaining back the 20 pounds I have lost (so far). Since I have not had any cheese or gluten since October, I also have not had urges to binge. I do still think about cheese but I don't experience that overwhelming primal fury that demands that I must gorge on it. I can leave it alone. So I do.

I still have other habits to transform. Eating late at night and eating potato chips and french fries have been two remaining habits that contribute to weight gain for me. Today I celebrate victory over the late night munchies.

The trick to stopping the late night munchies is really simple. Are you ready for this? Here it is:

Carob Banana Smoothie with Almond Milk

A smoothie or "custard" at around 5pm. Something about having a sweet treat in the late afternoon keeps the late night munchies away.

But that's not all. I have refined the Bento box idea, playing with ingredients and portion sizes and thus I have arrived at a way to eat that works perfectly for me. FINALLY.


Breakfast is two veggies and a protein in tomato sauce with onion and garlic, seasoned with turmeric, sage and cumin and some kind of rice/grain. The two veggies are sweet potato with either spinach, broccoli, or green beans. The proteins are eggs or organic tofu. When I use tofu I add Jamaican Curry Powder. In this photo I have used eggs.











I make enough for two servings so lunch is the other half of breakfast.












Pineapple Banana Custard.
Recipe: 1C frozen Pineapple, 2 fresh, ripe bananas

At around five in the afternoon I have a very sweet delicious banana based smoothie or "custard".  My three favorite flavors are blueberry, pineapple and cocoa (I use carob to avoid caffeine so it really isn't chocolate). When watermelon comes into season I'll probably add a huge bowl of fresh cubes to the rotation. In the summer, I will freeze the bananas and make ice cream.









Gluten Free Mac with Dairy Free Cheese and Peas n' Carrots
For dinner (which I eat around 7pm, at least 2 hours after eating the fruit) I'll either have a gluten free pasta with dairy free cheesy sauce (it is soooo good!) or some form of beans and rice with the cheesy sauce and two veggies: Carrots and peas or beets and peas, or beets and carrots.



I either use a salad plate or the Bento box for portion control.






Jumbo Medjool Date
The final piece is a huge, sweet and gooey date at around 8:30pm and sleep before 11:30pm, which is when the naughty food gremlins really come out.  I don't know why the gremlins come out at 11:30pm specifically, but going to sleep before then is essential.

As I was taking this photo, I noticed where the date originates. Because of my concerns about what is happening in Israel/Palestine (I love my Jewish friends but take issue with the Israeli government) I will likely be switching to figs and prunes from California.






And there you have it. What I eat in a day. For the past two days, anyway. It is about time I figured this out, too, because I have run out of "not from scratch" meals on my sticker chart. The orange smiley faces are days when I only ate from scratch.



Monday, March 3, 2014

400 Things in 28 Days from Scratch from Scratch

Ok - I'm back. I could have blogged the 28 days. Then school started and my focus went in that direction. And I made a more basic error.  While I did create a calendar for the month, it looks like this:




I never got the proper stickers! Took that little sticker in the March 1 box from a different project. It fell off. I tried using these as stickers.



They are left over from my moot court days. But they are too big and not very inspirational. Don't get me wrong - the month itself was not so bad. I stayed completely dairy and gluten free. But I ate restaurant food about four times rather than the twice I had challenged myself to do. And I didn't always observe the carb/veggie/protein ratios. It wasn't a disaster but it wasn't a triumph either.

Breakfast:
Oatmeal, Steamed Purple Cabbage, Scrambled Eggs.
We call this "Struggle Breakfast"
Steamed Purple Cabbage with Red Lentil Mash


Scrambled Eggs with Tomato;
Spinach and Mashed Sweet Potatoes 

Scrambled eggs with Corn Phutu; Steamed Purple Cabbage and Carrots
Finally got the ratios right

One lesson I have definitely learned is this: Losing weight really isn't about exercise. Exercise is about physiological health - muscle strength, cardiovascular performance, balance, agility, flexibility. Those kind of things. Weight loss is about nutrition. It is quite possible to lose weight and keep it off without ever breaking a sweat. I am not recommending that; exercise is essential. However (and I say nothing new here), one cannot hope to lose weight by exercising and eating junk.

No amount of exercise can compete with what you eat. I worked out once for ten minutes during January. That's it. Aside from the work of lifting boxes, I really have done no exercise since then and yet I have maintained my weight and still lost inches. What's that about boxes, you might ask?

Remember the 400 things project? I heard Dee Williams, a bright light in the Tiny House Movement, mention that she was inspired to simply her life following some time she spent in Guatemala. She sold her big house, built a tiny house (84 square feet), and reduced her possessions to about 300 things. I was intrigued and I wondered whether I could do something similar.

I have a storage unit full of a lifetime of junk and memories. I have things in for about six years. For many reasons (and I forgive myself for all of them) I have not been able to touch that storage unit . . . until now. The time has come for me to clean out the closet.

In September I moved from the large storage unit . . .



 to a smaller one.



The Much Smaller Unit
I started working on the storage unit around February 10th. The goal was to sort everything into shred, trash, donate and keep piles. I rented a much smaller unit for my keep items.



It just kept on going!
I looked into my medium-sized storage unit and thought, eh. Two weeks. I can do this in two weeks. And I set to work. When I thought myself half way done, I patted myself on the back, took a short break, and then moved a stack of boxes to discover, to my horror, that the unit was actually twice as deep as I had remembered it. I was in serious trouble.








My new plan is to finish by the end of March. I cannot afford to rent two units, so I am returning the smaller unit until I am done with the primary unit.


So, March is the month of the 400 Things in 28 days from Scratch from Scratch, proving that you can always start again.