In the middle of a long, snowy winter, you look forward to a meal — that’s why people overeat in February. They think they are going to hibernate. Then there is Valentine’s Day… And Mardi Gras — you know that translates as ‘Fat Tuesday’ don’t you? But it doesn’t mean boring food to battle the bulges. Tomorrow’s menu really tastes good! [sorry about the formatting — it would not change for me]
PowderMill Scramble 247 calories 9.3 g fat 17.6 g protein 34.3 g carbo This recipe is straight out of Jerry Willis’ Powder Mill Pond Restaurant where it was a favorite. Alas, brunch is not served at Jerry’s Marzano’s Tratoria, but you can enjoy this at home. Can’t believe the flavor of this!
1 ½ 2-oz eggs HINT: If you are serving one person, crack three 2-oz eggs into a small bowl or glass measuring cup. Beat up those eggs and pour half of their volume into a jar with a lid and put it in the ‘fridge for next Thursday. ½ oz smoked salmon 1 Tbsp chopped chives or scallion greens 1 clementine OR 1 ½ oz apple 5-6 oz fruit smoothie or pure apple cider black coffee, black tea, lemon in hot water
Whisk the eggs [salt and pepper may not be needed depending on
the seasoning of your salmon]. Pour into a pan which has been sprayed briefly with cooking spray. Before the eggs set, add the salmon and scallions. Scramble to taste. Brew your beverage and take the previously-made smoothie from ‘fridge. Plate with fruit of choice. HINT: This would be a wonderful dinner, as long as you didn’t eat eggs for breakfast.
Baltic Hot Dog Dinner: 302 calories 12.1 g fat 11 g protein 27.3 g carbs Believe it or not, this is adapted from the book Two Fat Ladies Obsessions. The meal has wonderful Eastern European flavors and is so simple to prepare that I assembled it in 16 minutes since the ingredients are ‘off the shelf’ :
2 low-fat hot dogs [I like Hebrew National reduced-fat @ 100 calories each] ½ cup canned sauerkraut, drain it but save ~1/2 c. liquid ¼ c pickled beets ¼ c sliced onions ½ tsp horseradish from a jar 2 Tbsp white beans, drained and rinsed
Put the hot dogs [frozen or thawed] and onions in a saucepan with a little water or some juice from the sauerkraut. Let cook until the dogs are cooked and most of the liquid is evaporated. Remove the dogs and add remaining ingredients to the pan to heat. Add more liquid if needed. Cut the hot dogs into 5-6 pieces and put them back in the pan until all ingredients are heated through.

could prep this the night before, cover the ramekin in plastic, and pop it in the ‘fridge for morning. Bake at 350º for 18 minutes. While it is baking, cut and plate the fruit, brew your beverage, and make your smoothie [or take it from ‘fridge if made last week]. 271 calories; 6.7 g. fat; 13.9 g. protein; 22.2 g. carbs
sp curry powder [more if you wish] and 3/4 tsp dry mustard over the vegetables and stir to combine. Add a bay leaf and 2½ c. chicken stock. Cook down until the mixture measures 2½ cups. If you are serving one person, you will use 10 fluid oz. of the sauce; double that if serving 2 people. HINT: Freeze the remaining sauce, either in 10 oz portions or 1¼ c. portions. To continue. Steam 1 oz carrot slices and ½ c. cauliflower florets. Boil ¼ c. yellow lentils until cooked. [You will need ¼ c. cooked lentils for this dish, so use any leftover another day.] Add the cooked vegetables to the curry sauce along with 2 Tbsp green peas. Add ¾ oz cooked chicken and heat the sauce to warm all the parts. Serve with the lentils on the side and a garnish of ¼c. diced tomato or diced cucumber. 288 Calories

on-stick spray and break one 2-oz egg into the container. Add 1½ tsp grated Parmesan cheese, salt, pepper, herbs, and screw on the lid. Lower the coddler into barely-boiling water and simmer 4 minutes. Turn off heat and leave the eggs in the water 1-2 minutes longer, depending on how you like your eggs. Meanwhile toast ½ slice of 70-cal bread. Mix ¼ c. blueberries with 1 Tbsp yogurt and serve on the side. Coffee or tea. Fruit smoothie [Blog Post #1] or 6 oz apple cider.
Shrimp Stir-fry with Soba Noodles:
il the bottom is set but the top is still moist. Sprinkle on ¼ oz grated cheese — we like Gruyère or Cheddar. Fold and plate. Meanwhile toast ½ piece of the 70-calorie bread, pour the smoothie out of the jar where you stored it since last time, and sit down to enjoy this with your nearly [or totally black] tea or coffee. If you don’t want the toast, serve with 2 oz apple slices. If you don’t make the smoothie, then make this omelette with 2 entire eggs. It will come out to the same calorie count.
low heat. Remove hot dogs and add 1/3 cup baked beans from a can. Is this not fast and easy? Heat the beans in the pan where the franks cooked to get all their flavor. Meanwhile slice 1 c. zucchini or summer squash and heat in a little water until soft. In the photo you see bits of red pepper in there too. Add a dab of relish [10 more calories] and 5 celery or carrot sticks [not enough calories to mention] and there you are. If that took longer than 15 minutes, I’d be amazed.
up blueberries or strawberries over it all and sprinkle with 1¼ tsp chopped pecans. Serve with tea or coffee, nearly black. By now you know that I like a smoothie with this, but you could substitute 2 more Tbsp of cottage cheese instead. I think of this as the Spa Breakfast!
salmon for a prior meal, say a few Friday’s ago, save out 3 oz, wrap in plastic and freeze to have this meal later. Cook and cool 2½ oz of green beans. Slice or quarter a hard-cooked egg [HINT: use half today and make the other half part of tomorrow’s lunch] and cut 3 black olives in half. Arrange the beans, egg half, olives, and 5 cherry tomatoes over and around the fish. A few slices of radish make a pretty garnish. Another Spa Meal! Do try these sometime soon — they are delicious, attractive, filling, and packed with protein.
bowl and whisk with favorite herbs, salt, and pepper to taste. HINT: IF YOU ARE SERVING ONE PERSON: Beat eggs up with a rotary beater and pour into a measuring cup. Pour half of the beaten eggs into a small jar, put a lid on it, and refrigerate it for next week. Pour the eggs into a heated skillet which has been sprayed with non-stick cooking spray.
arm. 
oz [that’s 3″ at 1″ diameter] diced carrot. Cook until the carrot is almost soft. Add 2 oz chicken or turkey white meat, 1 oz broken spaghetti noodles, 1/4 cup canned white beans, 1.5 oz [1/3 c.] green beans and 1/2 oz [1.5″ x 3″] cubed Canadian bacon [back bacon for friends in Canada]. Simmer until the noodles are cooked, adding water if the soup looks too thick. 10.1 g Fat; 19.9 g Protein; 28.3 g Carbs

