Time Zones

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. Welcome to Claudia D’Arcadia who is now Following.

When people traveled on foot or by boat or by horse/coach, time did not matter much. When you set out, and traveled three hours, when you arrived it would be indeed three hours later at your destination. When the world became larger in 1492, people still traveled slowly. Timepieces were set at noon, which was defined as the moment when the sun was at its zenith. Everyone everywhere had a noon, but when it was noon in New York, it wasn’t noon in San Francisco — in fact, the sun was barely up. With the advent of faster travel, such as the railroad train, time and distance created a dilemma. Faster communication methods, such as the telegraph, exacerbated the problem. Setting a train schedule for a vast nation such as Canada was a conundrum. When a railroad engineer missed his own train, he realized that time had to be standardized. Sandford Fleming was the engineer, and he proposed four ‘time zones’ for Canada. All locations within a given zone would set their clocks to the same time. The width of a zone would be 15 degrees of the 360 degree circle of the Earth. That was arrived at by dividing 360 degrees by the 24 hours that it takes the Earth to revolve once. Fleming’s idea was adopted first by railroad lines in Canada and the US, and was implemented on November 18, 1883. Prior to that date, there were 144 different time regions in North America! A very large country like Russia has 11 time zones. Please note that this has nothing to do with Daylight Savings Time, which came later and is a silly idea. But it does explain why you have to reset your analog wrist watch when you drive across the border from Texas to New Mexico.

Our breakfast is from the Gulf Coast of the USA, which is 1 time zone West of my present location. Travel 12 time zones West from there, and you arrive in eastern China, home to our dinner.

Creole Bake: 137 calories… 6.5 g fat… 2 g fiber… 8.4 g protein 11.6 g carbs… 67.3 mg Calcium…  NB: The food values given above are for the egg bake and fruit only, not the optional beverages.– PB GF – Creole flavors add zip to the morning eggs.

++ 1 two-oz egg ++++ 1 Tbsp tomato dice or puree ++++ 1.5 tsp onion, minced ++++ 1 Tbsp bell pepper, minced ++++ 1 Tbsp bacon, chopped and measured raw ++++ 1.5 tsp Cheddar cheese,finely grated ++++ Pinch file powder ++++ 1.5 tsp creole seasoning ++++ 2 oz pear or apple ++++  Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories] ++++  Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] ++

Put the tomato, onion, bell pepper, and bacon in a small pan and cook until the bacon is mostly cooked. HINT: You could do this the night before. Spritz an oven-safe pan with non-stick spray and set the oven to 350 F. Whisk the egg and then stir in the cheese, vegetables, and seasonings. Pour into the prepared pan and bake for 12-15 minutes. Prepare your beverages of choice and slice the fruit.

Shrimp Egg Rolls:  238 calories… 3.5 g fat… 2.5 g fiber… 15.6 g protein… 29 g carbs… 46 mg Calcium…  – PB – I learned to make egg rolls when I worked for Jerry Willis at his first restaurant. These have always been a favorite. But they are NOT deep-fat fried, which keeps their calories and fat down to permissable levels.  HINT: This recipe makes 4 rolls and one serving = 2 rolls. Put 2 in the freezer for another day or eat for lunch later in the week.

++ 3 oz shrimp, fresh or frozen, shells removed ++++ 1 Tbsp oyster sauce ++++ 1 Tbsp soy sauce ++++ one slice of ginger, minced ++++ ½ garlic, sliced ++++ 2 oz carrot, sliced ++++ 1 oz onion, sliced ++++ 3 oz cabbage, sliced ++++ 4 six-inch egg roll wrappers ++++ 1 tsp canola oil ++++ 3 oz tomato slices ++++ duck sauce + hot sauce [wasabi or Sriracha] ++

If shrimp are frozen, thaw them in advance. Then slice in half across the body and mix with the oyster and soy sauces, the garlic and onion. Prepare the vegetables and put them all into a hot wok or wide saute pan with ¼ cup water and a squirt of Sriracha. [If the pan gets too dry, add a bit of the marinade combined with a few spoonsful of water.] Stir-fry the ingredients for 4 minutes or until the vegetables are just a little shy of done. Add the shrimp and marinade and stirfry about one minute longer – shrimp should be thoroughly cooked. Put everything from the wok into the food processor and run until coarsely chopped. [If a lot of liquid remains, cook it down some more until it is thick and add back to the ingredients.] Lay one of the wrappers on a flat surface and moisten the edge farthest from you with water. Measure out 1/3 cup of the filling and roll up the wrapper. There are usually diagrams on the back of the package to show you how. Put the oil in a clean, flat-bottomed pan and heat it. Put the egg rolls in the pan and roll them around to coat with the oil on all surfaces. Heat until the rolls are beginning to get brown and blister-y on one side, then turn to cook on the other side. You could continue in this way or you could put the pan in a 375 degree oven until they are crispy. Plate with the tomato slices and the dipping sauce.

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