Booker T. Washington

How this Fast Diet Lifestyle works: Eat these meals tomorrow, for a calorie total of less than 600. On another day this week, eat the meals from a different post, another day of eating 600 calories or less. Eat sensibly the other days of the week. That’s it: a simple way to lose weight and be healthier.

Booker Taliaferro was born in 1856, in Virginia, USA. His mother was the enslaved cook of James  Burroughs, his father was an unknown White man. For nine years, Booker was enslaved and worked on the farm. After the end of the Civil War, Booker’s mother moved her four children to Malden, West Virginia to join her husband there. The boy worked: packing salt, mining coal, then as a house boy — all before he was 12. The woman who’s house boy he was taught him to read and to write. Then he went to a school for the formerly enslaved. There he took the surname ‘Washington’ — either after his step-father or for the 1st president. In 1872, Booker walked back to Virginia to apply at the Hampton Institute. In his three years there, he was an outstanding student and he became a supporter of Samuel Chapman Armstrong, the White man who founded the school. After teaching for a few years back in Malden and at Hampton, Washington was recommended by Armstrong to head a fledgling school for Blacks at Tuskegee, Alabama. On July 4. 1881, the school had 30 students and classes were held in a donated outbuilding [described as a shanty]. Within 20 years, Washington had built it into a well-respected training school with 1100 students and 80 faculty. The curriculum was based on ‘industrial’ topics: farming, and skilled trades that Washington believed were more important for economic stability than learning the liberal arts. Some people, seeing how far he had come in his own life, thought that Washington was slighting the academic potential of African-Americans. He was certainly a trail-blazer — he was invited to speak in 1895 at a big conference in Atlanta, where he appeared on stage with White speakers. In 1901, he dined at the White House with President Teddy Roosevelt, which shocked Southern society. Booker T. Washington wrote seven books, the most famous being Up From Slavery. He worked tirelessly to promote the Tuskegee Institute, now Tuskegee University, and to empower Blacks to improve their lives and their communities. Was he too accommodating to White expectations? By modern standards, yes — but he lived in a post-slavery world where no one quite knew how to raise up the formerly enslaved within the hostile environment of the former enslavers. He did a lot for his people until the day he died on November 14, 1915.

Our meals are taken from the Teacher’s Room menu at the Tuskegee Institute. Washington proposed the menu himself to showcase foods produced at the Institute by the students.

Breakfast with Booker T.: 181 calories… 7 g fat… 4 g fiber…12 g protein…20 g carbs… 41 mg Calcium.. — PB GF — if using GF bread — The menu specifies ‘fruit’, but not what type. Melons grow well in the South, so I chose them. The bread might have been corn-bread, but I substituted the easier to standardize whole-grain variety.

++ 2 oz sliced ham ++++ 1 slice/1 oz 70-calorie whole-grain bread ++++ 2 oz melon of any sort ++++ Optional:  5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories] ++++ Optional: blackish coffee  [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [75 calories

Warm the ham in a pan, if you wish, toast the bread, and plate with the fruit.

Dinner at Tuskegee: ..304 calories… 5.3 g fat… 6 g fiber… 36 g protein… 26 g carbs… 29 mg Calcium.. — PB GF– A simple yet nutritious meal from the menu at the Tuskegee Institute, consisting of products of the farm.

++4 oz roast beef ++++ 2 oz tomatoes ++++ 1/2 cup green [English] peas ++++ 2 oz sweet potato slices ++

Peel the sweet potatoes, and roast at 400F for 15-20 minutes. Cook the peas. Slice the beef and tomatoes, and plate along with the other vegetables. Good tasting and easy to prepare.

Ingredients for next week: Breakfast, single portion for Monday …………………………… single portion for Thursday:

1 two-oz egg = US large + file powder1.5 two-oz eggs 
tomato, fresh or pureed + baconcooked spinach + black olive
onion + green sweet pepper + Cheddargoat cheese/chevre
Creole seasoning + apple or pearbasil + apple
optional smoothieoptional smoothie
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

Dinner, single portion for Monday:………………………….. single portion for Thursday:

shrimp, fresh or frozen + soy sauce + ginger2 buckwheat galettes: buckwheat flour, 2 eggs
oyster sauce + garlic + carrot + onionbeef, raw or cooked + red bell pepper
cabbage + 6-inch egg roll wrappers + tomatooyster sauce + chicken stock
canola oil + duck sauce + hot saucecornstarch/cornflour + asparagus
Sparkling waterSparkling water

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