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 sapient, who is now Following.
A characteristic of humans is that we want to understand how things work and why. The Sicilian/Greek philosopher Empedocles in the fifth century BCE proposed that all things were made of 4 Roots: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. Plato later called them ‘elements’, believing that the smallest unit of matter was an element. [Later, that smallest unit was called an ‘atom’.] In the fourth century BCE, the Athenian philosopher Aristotle [384-322 BCE] made careful observations of the natural world to try to figure out why things were as they were. He concluded that the natural world was composed of combinations of five basic elements: Earth, Air, Fire, Water, and Ether. The first four made up earthly things, while Ether made up celestial objects: the sun, planets, stars. Items that contained the Earth element had the properties of being cold and dry and solid and heavy. As a Platonic Solid, the Earth Element’s shape was a cube. Rocks and soil were made of 100% of the Earth Element. This is why a rock will fall to the ground if you throw it: the rock returns to its Element. Humans and land mammals were mostly Earth [they walked on the ground and decayed into soil upon death], although they also contained Fire, since they were warm-bodied. The Earth Element was associated with agriculture and fertility; with Autumn and melancholy; with goddesses such as Demeter and Ceres. This is how we got “Mother Earth”. Our planet is named after the Element, because agriculture depended on it. The 4 Elements were such a clever idea, that the concept endured for generations, until it was replaced by the thinking of Paracelsus (1493-1541). Eventually, scientists found out more about chemistry and biology, and the idea of the 4 Elements was discarded.
Foods are described as having an ‘earthy’ flavor. It is deep and rich and savory. Mushrooms and beets form the basis of our breakfast and our dinner, as we savor the flavor of the Earth Element.
Egg-Mushroom Galette/Crepe: 153 calories… 6 g fat… 2 g fiber… 9 g protein… 17 g carbs… 39 mg Calcium… NB: The food values given above are for the plated foods only, not the optional beverages… PB This is yummy. The eggs are creamy, the mushrooms are earthy, and the crepe is nutty.
1 galette/savory crepe ++++ one 2-oz egg ++++ 1 oz mushrooms, chopped ++++ 1 Tbspchives, chopped ++++ 1 tsp thyme ++++ generous dash of granulated garlic ++++ 1 oz strawberry OR ½ oz apple ++++ Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] ++++ Optional: 5-6 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories]
Warm the galette. Spritz the non-stick saute pan with oil or spray and gently cook the mushrooms. Put the chives, thyme, garlic, salt, and pepper in with the egg and beat it up. Scramble lightly with the mushrooms, keeping the eggs moist. Turn egg out on the crepe and fold the galette over the egg. Plate the fruit. Sip your beverages and have a very fine day.
Baltic Dinner: 293 calories… 5.5 g fat… 7 g fiber… 6.6 g fiber … 13 g protein… 33 g carbs… 86.4 mg Calcium… GF Believe it or not, this diet dinner is adapted from the book Two Fat Ladies Obsessions. The meal has wonderful Eastern European flavors and is so simple to prepare that once I assembled it in 16 minutes!!
++ 1.5 low-fat hot dogs [I like Hebrew National reduced-fat] ++++ ½ cup canned sauerkraut ++++ ¼ c pickled beets, drained ++++ ¼ c sliced onions ++++ ½ tsp horseradish ++++ 2 Tbsp canned 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. Heat until the dogs are cooked and most of the liquid is evaporated. Remove the dogs and add remaining ingredients to the pan to heat. Cut hot dogs into 5-6 pieces and put them back in the pan until all ingredients are heated through.



























