Croissants

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.

When in Portland, Maine, we always buy croissants like this at Standard Baking Company.

The croissant is practically synonymous with eating in France. Of course, they are made around the world now, from supermarkets to premium bakeries. What is the origin of these tasty, toasty, flakey pastries? In the 13th century, there was a yeasted, crescent-shaped bread called kipferl [crescent] that was popular in Austria. Legend has it that while the Ottoman Turks were besieging Vienna in 1683, bakers, at work in the predawn, heard digging and thus thwarted an attack on the city walls. For their assistance, the bakers were granted the right to bake their rolls in a crescent shape [the crescent is the sign on the religion of Islam]. Probably apocryphal, since the crescentic rolls predate that. Stories abound concerning how the kipferl came to France. Did Marie Antoinette import them from her homeland? Did Viennese bakers, striking for higher wages, move to Paris? No, and no. In the early 1800s, a baker named August Zang set up shop in Paris. At his ‘Boulangerie Viennoise’, he sold the pastries of his home city, including a flakier version of the original kipferl, made with brioche dough. The locals enjoyed ordering those ‘croissants’ [crescents], as they dubbed them, and the tradition began. A century later, Sylvain Claudius Goy recorded the recipe that made the croissant what it is today — laminated puff pastry layers that melt in your mouth and make an excellent vehicle for Brie or fruit jam. oh. Sorry….I’m supposed to be promoting FASTING. But with the Fasting Lifestyle, you can eat croissants on Slow Days. BTW, the pastries with chocolate inside are not ‘chocolate croissants’ — they are chocolotines or pains au chocolate, depending on where you are in France. And the general word in France for edibles of this sort is ‘Viennoiserie’, just so you know. FYI: In the King Arthur Cook Book, there are two different methods for making the dough these days: Croissants de Boulonger [with yeast and fewer laminations] and Croissant de Patissier [full-on puff pastry].

January 30, 2025 is International Croissant Day. One might not think it possible to eat croissants on a Fast Day, but here are some menus to do just that. In both meals, they are paired with figs — very French. I’m not sure that I would eat both of these meals on the same day, due to their low fiber and protein, but you can decide.

Croissant & Fig: 186 calories… 8 g fat… 2 g fiber… 5 g protein… 23.5 g carbs… 37.5 mg Calcuim… PB  Who would have thought that one could even think of a croissant on a Fast Day?!? How ’bout half a croissant with some figs enrobed in dried ham? Ooh-la-la! That is a good breakfast! Dear Husband loved the fig-ham combo.  HINT: This recipe serves 2 [two] people.

++ 1 plain croissant weighing 2.5 oz ++++ 4 fresh figs or 4 dried Turkish figs [total weight = 2 oz/80 g] ++++ 0.7 oz Prosciutto ++++  Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories]

Hours before: soak dried figs in water until they are soft. [Not necessary if you have fresh figs.] Gently heat the croissant. Slice the Prosciutto into four lengthwise strips and wrap them around the figs. Cut the warm croissant in half cross-ways. Distribute the food between the two plates, and enjoy with a hot beverage.

Goat Cheese with Figs: 287 calories… 20.6 g fat… 2 g fiber… 18.5 g protein… 25 g carbs… 57.5 mg Calcium…  PB Joanne Harris, in her French Market cookbook, offers this as a salad. But we saw it as a Summer dinner and we were very pleased with it. Easy to prepare – as long as you can find fresh figs.

++ 3 fresh figs, each ~½ ounce ++++ ½ oz Bayonne or Serrano ham ++++ 1 oz chevre cheese, a creamy type ++++ 4 fresh mint leaves ++++ salt & pepper ++++ ½ plain croissant

Cut the stems from the figs. Cut down into the fig, from top to almost-the-bottom. Make another cut at right angles to the first, so that the fig now is a bud with four petals. Slice the ham into ¼” slices and chop the mint leaves. Cream together the cheese, ham, and mint, along with some flavorful salt and pepper. Divide the mixture into 3 equal portions. Open the petals of the figs and spoon the cheese mixture into the center. Warm the croissant and plate it with the figs.

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

1.5 two-oz eggs 1 two-oz egg  + crab meat
apple or orangesoy sauce + ginger
New Mexico roasted green chilisbean or other sprouts
garlic powder + pear + scallions
optional smoothieoptional smoothie
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

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

Slice 70-calorie multi-grain breadbeef liver + soy sauce
canned tuna + onion + celerysesame oil + sugar + fresh ginger
Reduced-fat mayonnaise or Bechamel saucecanola oil + oyster sauce
Swiss cheese + side salad + tomatosnow peas OR cabbage-garlic-soy sauce-fish sauce
Sparkling waterSparkling water