Hash

The title word is used a lot in our language: hashtag; make a real hash out of that; corned-beef hash.  The word itself is from the French verb << hâcher >> meaning to chop. When we ‘hash it over,’ we cut it into small parts to analyze.  I bring this up because the breakfast proposed here is a sort of hash, made of ham. Looks like corned-beef in the photo, but it is ham. On a similar note, another French word is used in the kitchen: “mince.”  We use the word mostly to mean that something is cut finely, or to mince words. But the adjective << mince >> in French also means “thin,” something to which many aspire. You can use both those words as you prepare dinner. Bon appetit!

Ham Hash    303 calories  3.3 g fat   3.9 g fiber  20.3 g protein   48.8 g carb                                                                   I know what you are thinking: where is the fruit on that plate?!? This ‘hash’ has the fruit as an ingredient.  Ham Hash1 and 1/2 oz ham, chopped                                                                                                         1/4 cup fat-free cottage cheese                                                                                                   1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce                                                                                                1 slice 70-calorie bread, shredded into crumbs   do not use dry bread crumbs                  crumbled sage leaves + salt+ pepper

Combine all the ingredients in a bowl.  Spoon into a lightly-oiled or spritzed non-stick pan or well-seasoned cast iron pan. Bake 20 minutes in a 350 degree oven. All done.

 

Greek Chicken Salad   295 calories   12.8 g fat     4.8 g fiber    23.7 g protein    26.5 g carb     240.3 mg Calcium                            PB   GF                                                      This recipe was clipped from a magazine and stored in the recipe file. When I saw it, I recognized that if most of the olive oil were removed, it would make a smashing Fast meal. We like this one a lot.Greek Chicken Salad

1 and 1/2 oz chicken, roasted and shredded                                                                                                    1 and 1/2 c. shredded romaine or 3 oz salad greens                                                                                      1/4 c garbanzo or small white beans                                                                                                                       2 and 1/2 oz tomato chunks or 1 c cucumbers, cubed                                                                                   3 black olives, pitted & sliced                                                                                                                                  1 oz feta cheese, crumbled                                                                                                                                 3/4 tsp lemon juice          1/4 tsp olive oil             1/2 tsp each of mint, oregano, parsley

Prep the meat, greens, tomatoes, and olives as described. Measure the lemon juice, olive oil, and herbs into a salad bowl. Whisk together. Add the greens and toss to combine. Add the chicken, beans, tomato/cukes and toss gently. Top with the olives and feta.

 

Keep on trying

If you had made a resolution this year to do better at being healthy, how’s it going? Is it difficult some days? Keep on trying! After all, the Fast Lifestyle involves only 2 days a week, and surely you can find the resolve to stick to that. Hang in there. Eat your veggies.*  Keep the faith. Lower the fat and carbs. Get back on the plan tomorrow and you will thank yourself later.

Shirred Egg    284 calories    8.4 g. fat     12.25 g. protein     25.7 g. carb   PB, if you eat only 3 eggs per week [GF if you use GF bread]    I learned to prepare this dish when working on my Girl Scout ‘Cooking’ badge. I still eat it because it tastes so good. Peter says, “this is my favorite FAST breakfast!” Shirred EggOne 2-oz egg                                                                                                                                                              1 Tbsp half&half                                                                                                                                                    1/2 Tbsp Parmesan cheese                                                                                                                                half a slice of 70-calorie bread, toasted                                                                                                             2 oz apple slices                                                                                                                                              blackish coffee or blackish tea or lemon in hot water                                                                               5-6 oz fruit smoothie, green smoothie or natural apple cider

Heat the toaster oven to 325. Spritz a 1-cup ramekin with cooking oil or spray. Break the egg into the cup, and pour the half&half on top. Sprinkle with cheese, add salt and pepper to taste. Bake for 12-15 minutes, then let sit 2-3 mins. Plate with the toast, apples. Serve with your choice of black-ish coffee or tea, or lemon in hot water.

Spinach-Fish Timbale   264 calories    7.4 g. fat    6.6 g. fiber    37.8 g. protein    19.2 g. carbs 341.8 g. Calcium     PB [GF if you use GF bread]                                                                                      Seen in cookbooks, this recipe lends itself well to our uses. The calorie count looks low, but you will find it to be filling and satisfying.

Spinach-Fish Timbales w: gr beans

½ cup blanched spinach [this used most of a 4.5 oz bag of fresh leaves] nutmeg, salt 1 Tbsp onion/shallot, minced 1 wedge Laughing Cow cheese 5 oz sole or ocean perch fillets, skinned [this is 2 small fillets] ½ slice 70-calorie bread, ground to crumbs HINT: use fresh bread crumbs: dried crumbs have more calories + carbs per volume 3 oz green beans

Heat the toaster oven to 400 degrees. Rinse the spinach but do not dry it. Put into a wide pan and put over medium heat with a lid. Check the spinach frequently and remove from heat when the leaves are wilted. There might be some liquid still in the pan. When the leaves are cool enough to handle, remove by the hand-full and squeeze the liquid out, saving it in the pan. Coarsley chop the spinach leaves and put into a bowl with the salt and nutmeg. Add the cheese to the warm spinach and stir until the cheese mixes in.

In the pan of spinach water, cook the onion/shallot until the water is gone. Combine the onion, bread crumbs, and spinach.

Lay the fish fillets out so that they make one long line, over-lapping by about an inch. Spoon the spinach stuffing on the fish to cover it. Spray the inside of a 1-cup ramekin or custard cup with oil or non-stick spray.

Roll up the fish as compactly as you can and put it into the ramekin. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes. Cook the green beans. When the fish is baked, hold the ramekin in one oven-gloved hand while you invert a plate over the ramekin. Flip it all over so that now the ramekin is upside down. Lift off the ramekin. Plate with the beans.

 

* Meet Your Daily Veggie Quota

My long-term resolution is to get five to six cups veggies (raw or cooked) daily for good health and energy. Yes, even dietitians can have days when they don’t meet their veggie quota! Increasing veggie intake not only boosts general health, it helps to prevent disease, too. Plus, veggies also make excellent hunger tamers. Deeply colored veggies naturally suppress appetite and increase fullness from their fiber and essential fatty acid content, making these nutritional gems something you should aim to include at every meal! — Lauren Minchen MPH, RDN, CDN

Mex-Moroc

Hundreds of millions of years ago, North America and Africa were side-by-side in the giant continent of Pangea.  Today we celebrate that proximity with foods from Mexico and Morocco. Why not?

Tostada : 308 calories 7.6 g. fat 18.1 g. protein 39.7 g. carbs GF PB Use some of the chili non carne [See November 4 posting for recipe] to give this simple breakfast rich flavor. It will keep you going for hours.Tostada

one 6” corn tortilla                                                                                                                                           one 2-oz egg                                                                                                                                                              2 Tbsp chili non carne                                                                                                                                          2 tsp Monterey Jack or Cheddar cheese, grated                                                                                    hot beverage of your choice – hold the cream and sugar                                                                       5-6 oz green smoothie or fruit smoothie or unpasturized apple cider

Heat the toaster oven to 350. Put the chili in a custard cup and put it into the oven to heat. Warm a dry cast iron skillet over med-high heat. Warm the tortilla in the pan on both sides until it is warm and pliable and starting to brown. Remove the tortilla and keep warm in a dish towel. Spritz the skillet with non-stick spray and fry the egg until it is done as you like it. Remove the egg. Spread the chili on the tortilla and return the tortilla to the skillet. Put the egg on the chili and sprinkle with the cheese. Put the pan into the hot oven until the cheese melts. Brew your beverage, pour the smoothie and wake up your mouth.

Morrocan Tuna: 278 calories   1.4 g. fat    8.7 g. fiber     34.9 g. protein     PB GFMorrocan Tuna w: beans, clementines

4 oz tuna steak [When I see frozen tuna steaks at the supermarket, I get a few]                                    Moroccan spices or ground cumin                                                                                                                    1/3 cup white beans, rinsed [Goya brand is always reliable]                                                                            1 slice preserved lemon OR 1 slice fresh lemon                                                                                                  4 oz green beans                                                                                                                                 1 or 1/2 clementine [they originated in Morocco]                                                                  cilantro

Rub tuna on both sides with Moroccan spices. Chop the lemon and stir into the beans. Bake the tuna on a cast iron skillet for 4-5 minutes per side in a 400 degree oven. When the beans are cooked, drain and stir in the cilantro. Plate with fruit.

You may have noticed that I focus on made-from-scratch foods. This way you know what you are eating and can control for fat, sodium, and additives.  But don’t just take my word for it:   1. Cut Back on Trash— Literally Resolve to cut down on the amount of trash you produce from food boxes, bags, plastic bottles and take-out containers. This simple act will not only decrease waste but it will also help you clean up your diet. You’ll start planning more, eating more real foods, ordering less take-out and spending more time in the kitchen! You will get healthy, decrease your carbon footprint and save money in the process.” — Katie Cavuto MS, RD, dietitian for the Philadelphia Phillies and Flyers

https://www.yahoo.com/health/10-resolutions-diet-experts-want-143451460.html

Isn’t it about time?

Its time to take charge of your lifestyle and stop saying ‘someday’ you will improve your health and maybe lose a little weight.   Today is the day to take a little time to stock the freezer with some foods that you can use for many future meals. [The batter for crepes and the crab cakes freeze well] Today is the first day of the rest of your life. Today is the day to get serious about following the Fasting Lifestyle.

Breton Breakfast:   310 calories               PB                                                               Here is one way to use the crepe batter which we made on October 14, 2015, and you stored in the freezer. You need one crepe per serving. Make some extra for a lunch or dinner later this week.Breton bfast w: apple

1 crêpe                                                                                                                                         1 two-oz egg                                                                                                                            ¼ cup diced zucchini                                                                                                           ¼ cup diced tomatoes                                                                                                                ¼ cup diced bell pepper, any color you want                              ¼ cup diced tomato                               1/4-1/3 tsp curry powder [seafarers brought a lot of spices to Brittany’s ports]                                                                                                                       1 and 1/2 oz apple                                                                                                  5-6 oz green smoothie or fruit smoothie or apple cider                                blackish tea or coffee or hot water with lemon

Put the 3 vegetables and the curry in a small sauce pan with a bit of water and cook uncovered until the veg are soft and the liquid has almost evaporated. HINT: do this the night before to save time at breakfast. If your crêpe was cooked previously, warm it a little to take off the chill. Cook the egg by frying it in a lightly-oiled non-stick pan. Spoon the vegetable on the crêpe, put the egg on top. Hold briefly, if needed, in a warm oven while you pour the smoothie and warm beverage, and while you slice the fruit.

Crab Cakes w: beans

Crab Cakes:        250 cal     4.7 g fat     24.0 g protein     14.2 g carbs           Rock and Jonah crabs abound on the coast of New England and they are grand as crab cakes. This recipe is from Todd English’s Olive’s Table cookbook. Note: this is the full recipe and makes 5 cakes – more than you will eat at one meal. Prepare them all and cook as directed. HINT: This will provide a few future meals.

½ pound crab meat, not ‘imitation crab’                                                                        2 T [1 oz] plain nonfat yogurt                                                                                              1 tsp Dijon mustard                                                                                        2 Tbsp. chopped green or white onion                                                                           1 T. parsley, minced                          one 2-oz egg                    1 tsp salt & ¼ tsp pepper                                                                                                                                                 1 slice fresh 70-cal bread, crumbled in a food processor if you have one            4 T. flour                               2 tsp oil                      5 oz asparagus OR green beans                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Aioli Dressing: 1 tsp low-fat mayonnaise + few drops of lemon juice + pinch each of tumeric and garlic powder 

Gently combine 1st 8 ingredients in a bowl. Dust a large plate with the flour. Using a 1/3 c. measure as a mold, form the crab cakes and turn them out onto the flour. There should be 5 cakes. Dust the top of the cakes with some of the flour. Heat a non-stick skillet and add 2 tsp olive oil. Handling them carefully, cook the crab cakes until they are beginning to brown on the top and bottom. Cook the beans. Plate the crab cakes and vegetable, and serve with a dab of aioli.

One Fast Day serving = 1.5 crab cakes. Cool the others, wrap in cling wrap and freeze. Reheat in a toaster oven until warm. [the cakes will have been previously cooked]

“If You Want To Lose Weight, Hack Your Living Environment Like Skinny People”         http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/02/02/if-you-want-to-lose-weight-hack-your-living-environment-like-skinny-people/

New Year’s Eve

Yup, sure enough — New Year’s Eve is on a Thursday, a Fast Day, this year.  What to do? You have choices:           1] blow off the diet, splurge to your heart’s content, and hate yourself on Jan 1;                                                           2] observe a Fast Day on Wednesday or Friday instead of Thursday;                         3] eat strategically on Thursday so you can ‘have your weight loss and eat it too.’   Here’s how:

Vegetable Omelette: 283 calories…  9.5 g. fat…  19.5 g. protein…  30 g. carb PB  [GF if you eliminate the piece of bread or substitute a GF bread]  Take advantage of the goodness of vegetables and use up some left-overs at the same time! Win-win.

++ 1 ½ two-oz eggs 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, crack three 2-oz eggs into a jar with a lid and put it in the ‘fridge for next week ++++  1/2 tsp Parmesan cheese, grated ++++ 2 tsp red onion, chopped ++++   1 oz cooked summer squash/ green beans/ broccoli, diced ++++   HINT: prepare extra vegetables at dinner on Wednesday or Sunday and save for this meal the following Fast Day ++++  ½ slice 70-cal bread ++++ salt, pepper, herbs of your choice ++++  1.5 oz strawberries ++++  5-6 oz fruit smoothie or green smoothie or natural apple cider  ++++ blackish coffee or blackish tea ++

Spritz a fry pan with olive oil or non-stick spray and stir the onions until they are soft. Dice the cooked vegetables and add to the pan to warm. Whisk the eggs and pour them into the pan, stirring to mix with the vegetables. As bottom of eggs begins to set, put the cheese, salt and pepper on the eggs. Cook to your liking, fold and plate with the fruit and toasted bread. Pour your beverages and have a great day.

Now make sure that you drink lots of water today or tea to avoid being hungry or dehydrated.  SKIP LUNCH, just as you would on any Fast Day.

AT THE PARTY:  Stick to the shrimp cocktail.  Fill half your plate with the shrimp and half your plate with vegetables from the veggie platter. Do not eat the veggie dip!  Cocktail sauce is OK, and try dipping the veggies in it too.  About drinking: Sparkling wine has 88 calories per small glass, so have some. Avoid the mixed drinks, the hard alcohol, and the punch — too many calories.  Are your hosts considerate enough to provide sparkling water?  Good for them! Alternate your glass of bubbly with glasses of water. [You do know that a hang-over is mostly due to dehydration, don’t you?]  Less booze means more will power. Just saying.

NEXT DAY BREAKFAST: try the Nordic Breakfast, September 20, 2015. Easy to prepare and very filling.

Happy New Year to you all.  Keep following in 2016 for more new recipes and tips. Tell your friends.  Please remember that the Fasting Lifestyle is not only about losing weight — it is about improving your over-all health while safely losing 1-2 pounds per week. You might find this reading useful:

http://mashable.com/2015/12/28/body-positive-new-year/#g5OgjZ7ptkqd               With a new year comes the all-too-familiar pressure to lose weight. As the ball drops at midnight, the diet industry gears up to welcome women who mark Jan. 1 as the day they will begin restricting and training their bodies into the slim ideal. It’s all a part of the “New Year, New You” mantra we have been taught to value as gospel.

While the pressure to shrink your body is a constant for women year-round, the value of thinness is especially emphasized when New Year’s resolutions are thrown into the mix. It’s a time of year when hating yourself is made easy, packaged and sold by the diet industry as flaws in need of fixing. Many of us buy into it — but we don’t have to.

Body positive activists are constantly advocating for radical body love, but that work takes on undeniable significance this time of year. These women shout above the negative noise, working to build up collective body confidence and self-love in a world where women are constantly marked as needing improvement.

“It’s time for us to stop setting New Year’s resolutions altogether and to start setting revolutions instead — to, rather than resolving ourselves to ‘self-improvement’ defined by systems set up to oppress us, revolt against them. Set goals in terms of treating yourself with more compassion, take more fashion risks, enjoy more time at the beach, go out for brunch more — do all the things that you keep promising yourself you’ll do when you lose ‘X’ number of pounds.

“You don’t need to lose weight to experience your best self. You just need to resolve yourself to living the life you imagine –- in exactly the skin you’re already in. You’d be amazed at how that mental shift can be the best choice you’ve ever made in terms of health and happiness.”  Melissa Fabello, managing editor at Everyday Feminism and body acceptance activist

 

Simple Pleasures

Ah! the virtues of the ‘simple life’!  If ‘simple’ means easy to prepare, easy to cook, and good to eat, then this is the day for simple pleasures.  If you prep the Yorkshire Pudding batter the night before, then the breakfast is very quick.  The dinner is as easy as can be.  Welcome to the simple life. Dieting can be that simple while following the Fast Lifestyle. but what about the other days?  I found this on the Yahoo front page, and thought you might profit from it:  25 Things You Did Today That Sabotaged Your Weight Loss Goals

http://news.yahoo.com/25-things-did-today-sabotaged-211858480.html

Toad in the Hole 293 calories     12 g. protein                                                          This whimsically-named meal is of old English origin – shades of Kenneth Graham and Beatrix Potter. The recipe is from the Fannie Farmer Cookbook.Toad in the Hole w: berries &amp; Gr Smoothie

It begins with a Yorkshire Pudding batter which you need to prepare in advance. The Yorkshire Pudd recipe is from the King Arthur Flour 200th Anniversary Cookbook. HINT: make the batter the night before to save time in the morning.

Y. Pudd batter:     one 2-oz egg                           1 cup flour                    ½ tsp salt                                 ½ cup water                       ½ cup fat-free milk

Mix all the ingredients together and let the batter stand at room temp for 30-60 minutes or in ‘fridge overnight. You will need 1/3 cup of the batter per person. HINT: The remainder can be frozen in 1 cup or 1/3 cup batches for future meals. When it is time to use the batter, beat it with a rotary beater until it is frothy.

To prepare the breakfast:                                                                                                   1 breakfast sausage     [I like the Al Fresco brand chicken with sage @ 50 cal/link. Not the calorie count and stick to it!]                                                                 1/3 cup Yorkshire Pudding batter, well beaten                                                               ½ of a pear or apple   [strawberries are shown but are not in season now]                                                                                                                 5-6 oz fruit smoothie or green smoothie or natural apple cider                           nearly-black coffee or tea; or lemon in hot water.

Heat the oven/toaster oven to 425. Cook the sausage, preferrably in a small oven-proof pan. If you have a small cast iron fry-pan, that would be a good choice, using a tiny bit of oil in the bottom of the pan since the sausage will render no fat. Dice the sausage.  Beat the batter until it is foamy. Pour the batter into the pan then sprinkle  the sausage over the batter. Pop the pan into the oven for 15 minutes. Slice the pear, shake your smoothie [if saved from last meal], brew your beverage, and settle down to a quick meal.

Feta Nicoise Salad  293 calories  22.9 g. fat   12.5 g. protein  10.7 g. carb PB GF

  1 and 1/2 romaine leaves                                                                                                  ¼ cup green beans cut in 1″ pieces                                                                                1 scant cup cucumber, diced                                                                                           1/2 c feta cheese, crumbled or diced                                                                           1.5 black olives                                                                                                                       1 tsp olive oil                                                                                                                          1 tsp white wine vinegar

Steam the green beans; drain, cool and set aside. Slice the lettuce crosswise into 1” pieces. Prepare the other ingredients as described. Pour the oil and vinegar into a wide, shallow bowl and whisk briskly. Put all the other ingredients in the bowl and toss gently to coat with dressing. Welcome to southern France for fine dining.

Meat

Some people cannot bear to try a new diet if they think that they will have to give up meat. A friend’s husband once told her that she could try cooking ‘gourmet food’ as long as he got his gourmet meat with his gourmet potatoes.  Well on Fast Days the potatoes are out, but today meat is in.

Ham Omelette   291 calories   8.8 fat   15.9 pro    25.1 carb    GFHam omelette w: cider + apple

3 small eggs of which you will use 1 ½ 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.                                           1 oz. ground or chopped ham                                                                                            2 oz of melon or 1.5 oz apple                                                                                       blackish coffee or blackish tea or lemon with hot water                                            5-6 oz green or fruit smoothie or natural apple cider

Chop the ham, slice the fruit, brew your hot beverage. Heat a cast iron or non-stick pan and spritz it with oil or cooking spray. Whisk the eggs and pour into the pan. When the bottom begins to set, distribute the ham over half of the eggs. Fold the omelette and cook to your favorite degree of doneness. Shake up the smoothie, pour your beverages, and you are off to a good start to your day.

Bison Burger  293 calories

Bison Burger
bison burger, curried catsup, mushrooms, green beans, beets

one 4-oz bison patty [not beef. Venison is a good substitute if you have it]    1 oz sliced mushrooms                                                                                        1.5 tsp of catsup                                                                                                    ½ cup green beans                                                                                                    2 oz pickled beets

Sprinkle a small, hot, ungreased skillet with Kosher salt.  Cook one 4 oz bison burger  on one side for about 3 minutes. Flip it and cook until done as well as you’d like.  Put on a plate to stay warm. Sides: Add some water to the pan and stir/ cook the mushrooms until soft.  Meanwhile, in a separate pan, cook the green beans until soft.  To serve, put the ketchup on the burger, top with mushrooms. Arrange those colorful sides on the plate and get ready for some good eating.

Anna Meets the King

One of my favorite musicals was The King and I, wherein the proper English governess goes to Siam to teach and is involved in culture clashes of epic proportions.  Today’s menu juxtaposes  the English poached egg  with a butternut squash soup with Thai flavors. A happy meeting.

Poached Egg on Toast   303 calories                                    PBPoached Egg on Toastone slice of 70-cal bread                                                                                                                  one 2-oz egg                                                                                                                         one and 1/2oz of apple or 2 oz melon                                                                               5 oz fruit smoothie or green smoothie or unpasteurized apple cider        blackish coffee or blackish tea or lemon in hot water

If using an egg poacher, lightly spray the egg cup and heat the water to a simmer. Toast the bread. Poach the egg for 3-4 minutes, according to your preference. Slide the egg onto the toast, season to taste, and enjoy with your hot beverage, fruit, and the smoothie.

Thai Butternut Squash Soup   260 calories/ one cup    GF PBThai butternut squash soup

Found in the newspaper in Nova Scotia, this recipe makes a lot of delicious soup. It freezes beautifully, so you can enjoy it again and again. Don’t forget to add 3 oz of chopped shrimp to each serving.

HINT: makes 8 cups of soup. Save out one cup for dinner and freeze the rest in portion-sized servings.

2 Tbsp vegetable oil                                                                                                              2 cups chopped onion                                                                                                           2 cloves garlic, chopped                                                                                                            1 tsp salt                                                                                                                                       1 Tbsp fresh ginger, peeled and grated                                                                                      1 tsp Thai red curry paste, or more to taste                                                                      2.5 pounds butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and chopped [about 6 cups]             3 cups water or unsalted chicken broth                                                                           1 lime, zest and juice                                                                                                             1 cup unsweetened coconut milk                                                                                         per bowl: 3 oz chopped shrimp [raw or cooked – it will cook as the soup is heated]                      1/4 cup baby spinach cut as chiffonade [strips]

Heat oil in large soup pot over medium-low heat. Add onions, garlic, and salt. Cook about 10 minutes or until onions have softened. Stir in ginger and curry paste. Cook for a minute or two longer. Add squash and water/stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until squash is tender, about 15-20 minutes.

Zest and juice the lime. Put 1 tsp of zest and 1 tbsp juice in the pot. Save remaining zest and juice. When squash is tender, stir in coconut milk. Puree the soup in a blender or food processor until smooth.

Return to pot, reheat, adjust flavor with more lime juice and/or curry paste. For each serving, stir spinach and chopped shrimp into hot soup. Serve when spinach is just wilted.

North Meets South

Different cuisines have always fascinated me: how the flavors and the textures vary with available ingredients and the climate.  With the Fast Diet, variety is the key to staying interested.  Keep with it and reap the rewards. Breakfast from the South of Europe, dinner from the North.

Creamy Greek Omelette 309 calories 10.3 g. fat 18.9 g. protein 30.9 g. carb The feta lends a tang to the eggs, while the cottage cheese gives a wonderful melting texture. A real treat.Creamy Greek Omelette w: S-Bs

1 ½ two-oz eggs 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.                                                                                                                                      3/8 oz feta cheese                                                                                                                    1 ½ Tbsp cottage cheese                                                                                                Greek oregano, salt, pepper                                                                                                 ½ slice 70-calorie bread [I like Nature’s Own multigrain]                                                one and a half oz strawberries or apple                                                                          5 oz fruit smoothie [March 15, 2015] or natural apple cider                                                              blackish coffee or tea or lemon in hot water

Mince the feta and combine with cottage cheese and oregano. Spritz a non-stick skillet with oil or non-stick spray and heat the pan over medium-low heat. Beat the eggs well with 1 spoonful of the cheese mixture using a rotary mixer. Pour the eggs into the pan and let cook undisturbed until the edges set. Lift the edges gently to allow the uncooked egg to flow underneath. Before the top surface sets, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Put dollops of the cheese mixture on half the omelette and make an attempt to spread it out. Fold the omelette in half and continue to heat in the pan. Filling will heat and may ooze out a bit. Brew and pour your beverages. Plate the fruit and the omelette. Oh yum.

 

Baltic Hot Dog Dinner:   302 cal     12.1 g fat    11 g protein   27.3 g carbs Believe it or not, this is 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!!hot dog:kraut in pasta bowl

2 low-fat hot dogs [I like Hebrew National reduced-fat]                                      ¼ c sliced onions                                                                                                                   ½ cup sauerkraut, fresh or from a can or from a bag                                                    ¼ c pickled beets                                                                                                                   ½ tsp horseradish                                                                                                                  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. 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 the hot dogs into 5-6 pieces and put them back in the pan until all ingredients are heated through.

Saint Nicholas

Today is the Feast of Saint Nicholas, the father of the Christmas stocking and the origin of the traditional “Father Christmas” and “Santa Claus.”  He was a bishop in Turkey, possibly being of Greek origin. On this day in Holland, Germany, Hungary, and many other countries, Saint Nicholas himself visits houses leaving presents for children.  Give yourself the present of good health and long life. Stay with the Fasting Lifestyle today, even though you celebrate a Feast Day with a breakfast from Holland and a dinner from Greece.

Dutch Breakfast    308 calories     6 g fat       10.7 g protein       22 g carbDutch b-fast w: S-Bs + Ruskone 2-oz egg, hard-boiled or coddled HINT: the hardboiled egg can be made days before                                        [that’s a baked egg in the photo]                           ½ oz ham, low-fat from the deli                                                                                           ½ of an Arnold Multi-grain Sandwich Thin [50 cal] OR ½ slice 70-cal bread [35 cal]                                                         OR one “Holland Rusk” [35 cal]                                                   1/8 oz [1/2” cube] cheese if you used less bread, you could have more cheese                     2 oz melon or apple or pear                                                                                               5-6 oz fruit smoothie [March 15, 2015] or green smoothie [June 10, 2015] or unpasturized apple cider        blackish coffee or blackish tea or lemon in hot water

Warm the ham in a skillet, toast the bread, brew your beverage, slice the fruit, cube the cheese. Prepare the smoothie or take the other half of the smoothie recipe from ‘fridge and shake it to mix.

Meze Meal  297 calories  10 g. fat   36 g protein   21.8 g carb   PB GFMeze Meal w: shrimp, ‘Meze’ is the Greek equivalent of Spanish Tapas. Very ‘Mediterranean Diet.’ Well, we don’t live on a vast inland sea, but we’ll take good low calorie, low fat, delicious food where ever we can find it. There are lots of good recipes in the book Meze by Rosemary Barron.

1/4 cup white beans    &   ½ Tbsp capers                                                                      1 oz marinated mushrooms                                                                                                3 oz tomato, cubed   &   generous pinch Greek oregano                                            3 oz cooked shrimp [or 2 oz cooked chicken breast]                                                           1 oz mozzerella cheese [or use feta, same amount]                                                      1 ½ oz lemon-marinated carrots                                                                        marinade: 1 tsp olive oil + 1 tsp lemon juice + pinch of granulated garlic + pinch oregano

Combine the white beans with the capers in a small bowl. In another bowl, combine the tomatoes and the oregano. Slice the carrots into small logs or coins and cook until tender. Drain and combine with the marinade in a small jar with a lid. Shake well, remove the lid and let the carrots cool in the marinade. Attend to the shrimp by cooking it and removing the shells, if necessary. Drain the marinade from the jar and pour it over the shrimp. Plate the ingredients to please the eye. Look at photos of the Agean Sea….and try to imagine Santa Claus in that setting.