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. Join me in the Fasting Lifestyle.
In June of 1972, five men were caught breaking into an office in The Watergate, a modern business complex in Washington, DC. The office in question belonged to the Democratic National Committee. Who would want to break into their office, they queried? An investigation into the burglary seemed to implicate the president, so in August, it was announced that John Dean, White House counsel, had investigated and found no White House involvement. By May, 1973, Dean had been fired and was co-operating with the investigation. It turned out that the burglars were employed by the Committee to Re-Elect the President — his name was Richard Milhouse Nixon. Meanwhile, the Attorney General, a Nixon appointee, named Archibald Cox as Special Prosecutor for a Senate Select Committee to get to the bottom of all this. Things heated up for the president, and he refused to hand over documents and audio tapes to the Special Prosecutor. For good measure, Nixon told his Attorney General to fire Cox. Rather than do something illegal, the Attorney General and his deputy chose to resign on Saturday, October 20. By the next day, the firing and the two resignations came to be known as the “Saturday Night Massacre”. There was outrage throughout the US government and the public — for a president to demand that his employees flaunt the law was shocking and against the mores of society. Although Nixon continued to profess his ignorance and non-involvement, the Watergate Hearings showed his full knowledge of multiple wrong-doings. When Nixon resigned in 1973, to escape an impending impeachment, the nation heaved a sigh of relief — we had weathered a crisis that had threatened our democracy, and we had emerged intact. The Constitution and the balance of power in the government had worked! Today? not so much. Are our government officials brave enough to stand up for what is constitutional? Increasingly, no. Are the three branches of government going to provide the required checks and balances on the power of each other? That remains to be seen.
Legend has it that when something big is afoot concerning the government in Washington, DC, that late-night workers order out for pizza. So when pizza orders go up, some big announcement must be forthcoming. Hence, our pizza for dinner. Next morning, one guesses that breakfast and coffee would be in high demand. Thus, our simple breakfast scramble.
Herb Scramble: 145 calories… 9 g fat… 0.6 g fiber… 15 g protein… 8 g carbs… 80 mg Calcium… NB: Food values shown are for the ScrOmelette and fruit only, and do not include the optional beverages. PB GF Take a walk in the herb garden, then put the herb garden in the breakfast.
++ 3 two-oz eggs of which you will use 1½ eggs per person HINT: If you are serving one person, crack three 2-oz eggs into a small bowl or glass measuring cup. Whip up those eggs and pour half of their volume into a jar with a lid and put it in the ‘fridge for next week ++++ 3 Tbsp chopped herbs: chives, rosemary, oregano, thyme, lavender ++++ 3 Tbsp 2%-fat cottage cheese or 2 Tbsp part-skim ricotta cheese ++++ salt & pepper to taste ++++ 2 oz cantaloupe or 3 oz strawberries or 2 oz peach ++++ Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] ++++ Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories] ++
Whisk the eggs with cottage cheese, salt & pepper to taste. Pour into a hot pan sprayed with cooking oil. When bottom of eggs are set, sprinkle the herbs over the eggs, fold, and plate with fruit. Pour the optional beverages and you are good to go.
Cep Pizza: 274 calories… 6.4 g fat… 7 g fiber… 10 g protein 42 g carbs… 109 mg Calcium… PB Pizza on a Fast Day?? With a real crust?!? Yes. And it is made with delicious cep mushrooms, dried ham, and Parmesan for a feast of rich flavors. HINT: This one 8” pizza serves 2 [two] people — even though the photo shows it all on one plate.
++6-oz whole wheat pizza dough, at room temperature ++++ 1 oz cep/porcini mushroom, chopped ++++ ½ oz cooked spinach, chopped ++++ 3 Tbsp crushed tomatoes ++++ 2 Tbsp parsley, chopped ++++1/3 oz proscuitto, chopped ++++ 4 tsp grated Parmesan ++++ per person: one side salad with beets and cucumbers ++
Heat the oven to 490F. Have one rack in the middle and one rack at the bottom position in the oven. Brush a baking sheet with enough olive oil to cover an area 8” in diameter. Press and stretch the pizza dough into an 8” round on the oiled baking sheet. If the dough won’t cooperate, let it rest for 2 minutes. Combine the spinach, tomatoes, and parsley, and spread the mixture on the pizza crust. Top that with the chopped mushrooms and meat, then sprinkle with Parmesan. Place the pizza on the baking sheet in the oven for 3-4 minutes. Time to prepare the salad. Now open the oven and see if you can lift the pizza off the pan with a turner. If the pizza is too floppy, return it to the oven for another minute or so. When the pizza is baked enough not to be floppy, take it off the baking sheet and put it on the lower rack, with no pan at all. Continue to bake another 3 minutes, until the top begins to bubble. Remove the pizza to a rack to cool and ‘out-gas.’ It must be on a rack, not the cutting board or counter or plate. Remove the pizza to a cutting board and cut into 6 pieces. On each of two plates, place the salad and 3 pieces of pizza. A bit of Pizza Heaven on a Fast Day.



























