Religions: Methodism

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.

John Wesley was an Anglican from his birth in 1703, to his death on March 2, 1791. At Oxford, where he and his brother Charles studied religion, they formed a club which promoted a strict method of study among the members. John was convinced that this is what it meant to be a good Christian: observance of all the rules. The club members were teased by fellow students for being ‘methodists.’ Upon graduation, he was called to the pulpit of an Anglican church in Georgia, USA. On the ship on the way over, he met some Moravians who would be missionaries to the native population. During a storm, John was terrified but the Moravians were calm, pacifically singing hymns until the gale passed. When he asked them how they were able to stifle their fears, they replied, “Don’t you believe in Jesus?” Wesley sadly concluded that their’s was a type of faith that eluded him, and he began to doubt his calling. Once back in England, he went to Bristol to help a fellow clergyman with his growing congregation. His friend was a fiery preacher and John was uneasy at how the sermons could arouse the congregation’s emotions. But he saw the goodness of their faith and how they helped each other. Wesley believed that God’s grace was for everyone and not limited to a chosen few. John Wesley was superb at organizing the growing flock. The faithful were divided into ‘classes’ of 12, each with a lay leader. They would meet and pray and share experiences, then plan to help the needy. Lay leaders met potential adherents where they were: in the streets, the fields, the factories, the mines, and told them about how God’s love would free them from sin. The lay leaders helped to increase membership — but it was more of a social movement than a religious group. The only “Methodist Church” that Wesley started was in the United States, when he sent two leaders there to organize. John Wesley did not want to supplant the Anglican Church, but to improve and revitalize it. “Methodists” embraced the once derogatory name, and had a wide-spread influence on the zeitgeist: a.) The ideas of Methodists and their affect on people is illustrated in George Eliot’s novel Adam Bede, when Dinah Morris arrives in a village and begins to preach. b). Methodists were known for singing loudly, in and out of church, using any of the 6000+ hymns penned by Charles Wesley. c.) “Methodist Punch” means a drink that is non-alcoholic. Today there are 40 million Methodists in 138 nations and not one of them is an Anglican.

The mackerel and leeks are typical foods of western England where Methodism took root. In the American Heartland, Methodists are known for good, plain cooking — nothing fancy, but wholesome and delicious. Our dinner might appear at a church picnic. Wesley, not wishing people to succumb to the temptation of gluttony, advised his flock to “eat less than you desire.” He might have been on to something: this article in Barron’s tells of a study in which people who ate fewer calories aged more slowly.

Mackerel-Leek ScrOmelette: 157 calories 9.5 g fat 1 g fiber 12.6 g protein 6 g carbs [6.2 g Complex] 61 mg Calcium  NB: Food values shown are for the ScrOmelette and fruit only, and do not include the optional beverages. PB GF If you can’t find fresh mackerel, substitute another high-Omega-3 fish like salmon or arctic char. 

1½ 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  1 oz cooked mackerel 1.5 oz leeks ½ tsp Dijon mustard 1 oz strawberries  Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait[65 calories] or lemon in hot water   Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories]

Spritz a hot saute pan with non-stick spray and stir in the leeks and mackerel, to soften the leeks and warm the fish. Whisk the eggs with the seasonings and mustard. Pour into the pan and scramble to your taste or prepare as an omelette. Pour the beverages and plate the berries. Oh my!

Chicken Salad Sandwich: 283 calories 7 g fat 7 g fiber 26 g protein 35 g carbs 134 mg Calcium  PB GF – if using GF bread If you bought a chicken salad sandwich, it might ‘cost you’ 500 calories and 16 g fat. This sandwich is much less ‘expensive’ and tastes great.

2½ oz cooked chicken breast 2 Tbsp part-skim ricotta cheese 1 tsp yellow Sriracha  2 tsp chopped onion 2 tsp chopped celery 2 tsp chopped cilantro leaves salt + pepper to taste 2 slices 70-calorie whole-grain bread with seeds [such as Dave’s Killer ‘Good Seed’] lettuce + 1 oz sliced tomato ½ cup Swedish Cucumber Salad  

Shred or chop the chicken. Mix with the ricotta and flavorings, including Sriracha. Add more Sriracha if the mixture needs to be moistened. Spread on one slice of bread, lay on the lettuce and tomato. Top with the other piece of bread and plate with the Cucumber Salad. Good meal for a busy day.

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

pao de queijo hummus: chickpeas + tahini + garlic + lemon juice + onion
uncured baconwhole-wheat unleavened bread [or pita]
plain yogurtmelon
applesauce, unsweetened grapes
Optional smoothie
optional hot beveragewater

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

salt cod + fish stocklentils + bay leaf + thyme
bell peppers + scallion tomato sauce + carrot
tomato + garliccelery + onion
onionoptional: ham stock + ham + sherry
Sparkling waterSparkling water

Luddites

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 to webcoder who is now Following.

‘Ned Ludd’, in woman’s garb, leading the attack.

On 27 February, 1812, Lord Byron rose to address the House of Lords on behalf of the so-called “Luddites.” For centuries, young men would become apprentices at an early age and spend years to learn the skills of a trade: mason, carpenter, clerk, weaver. It is no surprise that these trades were so much a part of the fabric of society that they became last names. To be a skilled artisan could ensure the welfare of the man’s family and a move to the middle class. Having a skill was important. In the late 1700s, machinery was perfected to weave and knit fabric. With this device, a hastily-trained employee could replace several skilled workers and the workers were angry. They were not against new things, they were against falling into poverty because their jobs were replaced by machines. See? Nothing is new! Supposedly, a young weaver named Ned Ludd destroyed one of the weaving frames in 1779, hoping to get his job back. Whether or not there really was a Ned Ludd, his name was repeated by other angry workers who called themselves ‘Luddites.’ At first, Luddites tried to negotiate for higher wages, better working conditions, and a pension fund for workers. When the requests were rejected, factories and factory owners were attacked by angry mobs, and angry industrialists appealed to the government for help. The UK passed severe penalties for industrial sabotage, including the death sentence. Lord Byron hoped to change minds in his impassioned maiden speech, saying, “Are we aware of our obligations to a mob! It is the mob that labour in your fields, and serve in your houses—that man your navy, and recruit your army—that have enabled you to defy all the world,—and can also defy you, when neglect and calamity have driven them to despair. You may call the people a mob, but do not forget that a mob too often speaks the sentiments of the people.”  Today, one says, “I’m such a Luddite — I can’t unlock my iPhone.” The original Luddites did not want to stop or destroy technology, they wanted a fair work-place and good jobs. We use the term these days to mean someone who is unfamiliar with technology or who doesn’t like it. Not the same thing. The Luddite movement died out in 1816, suppressed by a government unswayed by Lord Byron’s pleas. By then the Industrial Revolution was winding up and there was no going back. Humans have always used technology — we just have to use it to uplift our fellow humans, rather than oppressing them.

Our breakfast might have been enjoyed by a cottager before he walked over to his loom to begin his workday. Oysters were a common food for poor folks near the coast, as they were inexpensive sources of protein. Cheese was the product of ‘cottage industries’ of the early 1800s. Put them together, and a wonderful dinner awaits.

Cottage Breakfast with Egg: 157 calories  7.5 g fat 1 g fiber 8 g protein 15 g carbs 38 mg Calcium  NB: The food values given above are for the egg bake and fruit only, not the optional beverages. PB  I wanted a breakfast that evoked a cottage in the English country-side, so here it is. The pan muffins are very good.

1 pan muffin** 1 oz applesauce one 2-oz egg: fried or hard-boiled or soft-boiled   Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 caloriesOptional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water

HINT: I prepared 8 pan muffins from the 10-grain mufffin batter, cooked them, and froze them. I made the remaining batter into muffins to enjoy on Slow Days. 

**PAN MUFFIN each: 71 calories 2.5 g fat 1 g fiber 2 g protein 11 g carbs 8.5 mg Calcium

These are a dandy little bread to add to a breakfast plate. You will see them also in Roman Breakfast.

1 cup dry Bob’s Red Mill 10-grain hot cereal mix
1¼ cup buttermilk/soured milk 
Combine cereal and milk in a small bowl. Let sit 10 minutes
1/3 cup butter 
1/3 cup sugar 1 two-ounce egg 
Cream the butter and sugar, then mix in the egg. 
1 cup unbleached flour
1 tsp salt 
1 tsp baking powder 
1 tsp baking soda
Add dry ingredients and cereal/milk mixture. Stir until just combined. 
Heat a griddle or flat-bottomed skillet to medium temperature.
2 Tbsp batter for each pan muffin Portion out batter onto hot griddle/skillet spritzed with non-stick spray. Cook on both sides.

Take one pan muffin from the freezer the night before and let it thaw. Cook the egg to your taste and warm the pan muffin. Dish the applesauce, brew the hot beverage, pour the smoothie. What a sweet and easy meal.

Oyster & Bleu Cheese Piepie filling only, 1 of 6 servings = 116 calories 8 g fat 1 g fiber 5.6 g protein 5 g carbs [3 g Complex] 88 mg Calcium  pie with crust, 1 of 6 servings: add 193 calories [the entire pie crust for an 8” pie plate = 1160 or fewer calories]  PB GF  NB: if you want a GF meal, do not use any pie crust – especially not a purchased GF crust which is very high in calories. The pie makes a fabulous, indulgent meal but it is low in protein and fiber. For a very special treat, it is wonderful. The left-hand column gives the recipe is for an 8”, full-sized pie plate, which serves 6. The center column gives amounts to prepare a 6” pie plate to serve 4. HINT: leftover pieces can be frozen.

8” pie pan with pie crust 6” pie pan +pie crustRoll out dough + fit into pie pan. Crimp edge. Blind bake 15 mins. Remove foil and weights + bake until golden, ~ 10 mins or so. 
SEE ABOVE NOTE ABOUT PIE CRUST
1 Tbsp butter 
½ c leeks
½ c fennel bulb ½ c tart apple
½ tsp ground black pepper pinch salt 
2 tsp butter
¼ c leeks
¼ c fennel bulb
¼ c apple
¼ tsp ground black pepper pinch salt 
Finely chop the leeks and fennel. Dice the apple. Melt butter in a skillet, add leeks, fennel and apple, and sauté on low until tender and translucent.
Season with a pinch of salt and pepper and remove from heat.
Heat oven to 400F.
12 oysters – we like East Coast oysters which are brinier

6-8 oysters



Put oysters flat in a saucepan with just enough water to cover. Heat pan on medium high until water reaches 131F/55C, measured with a food-safe thermometer. Shut off heat and let sit on burner 5 minutes. Remove oysters from water and cool in a bowl. Open shells + a remove oysters, doing so over a bowl to catch the juices. 
4 oz blue cheese 3 Tbsp reserved oyster juice
1 egg white
2 oz blue cheese 1.5 Tbsp oyster juice
½ egg white  
In a separate bowl, mash cheese and add reserved oyster juice. Beat egg white until softly peaked and fold into cheese.
Spread leek mixture in pie shell. Spread cheese mixture on top. Bake 20 mins.
fennel fronds
4-5 asparagus stalks/person
fennel fronds 
4-5 asparagus stalks/person
Take pie from oven, arrange oysters on top. Bake 2 minutes more. Strew with fronds. Let pie set about 10 minutes, then cut in portions and serve with steamed asparagus.

Saint Mildburh

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.

Mildburh was born to the King Merwald of Mercia and his wife Ermenburga, c. 635. Ermenburga and her sisters [Ermingitha and Ethelreda] were later proclaimed saints. Mildburh [or Milburga] had two sisters [Mildred and Mildryth] who also became nuns and lead saintly lives. The Saxon prefix ‘mild’ means ‘gentle and pleasant.’ From her youth, Mildburh was religious so it was not strange that she resisted the enticements of a neighboring king, who showed his affection by invading with an army to claim her hand in marriage. The maiden fled to France where she was trained by the Benedictines at Chelles Abbey near Paris. Returning to England, Mildburh founded/became Prioress of Wenlock Abbey in Shropshire. During that time, miracles were attributed to her. In one, a spring of healing water was created when her horse kicked a rock. In another, Mildburh prayed so earnestly over a dead child that she levitated into the air and the child revived. In February, farmers usually begin to plant barley in England. Mildburh blessed a newly-sown field one morning and the seeds began to sprout right away. The saint said that they would all eat the barley that evening — and they did. Her abbey flourished, in part due to her good reputation, and in part because she convinced the birds not to eat the seeds as they were planted. Hence, Mildburh is the patron saint of birds. Celebrate the Feast Day of Good Mildburh on February 23.

Since Mildburh ate barley, so will we. The barley cakes are accompanied by flavors that Mildburh and her sisters would have enjoyed. For a fine side-dish, try the barley pilaf. Or mix the pilaf in with other ingredients for dinner. Barley, Hordeum vulgare, is good tasting and good for you. It was domesticated from a wild grass 10,000 years ago, and is still popular today. Barley is full of antioxidants and has less gluten than wheat.

Barley Cake Breakfast: 224 calories 8 g fat 5 g fiber 8 g protein 42 g carbs 57 mg Calcium  NB: the food values given are for the plated items only, and do not include the optional beveragesPB  Barley flour has been used for centuries and it desreves a renaissance. These delightful cakes are the centerpiece of a very healthy breakfast with an English accent.

2 barley cakes** 2 oz apple or pear ½ oz Cheddar cheese 5 hazelnuts or almonds   Optional:blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water 

Prep all ingredients, then arrange as you wish on the plate.

**Barley Cakes  each cake = 51 calories 0.0 g fat 1.5 g fiber 1.6 g protein 16.5 g carbs 14 mg Calcium

24 barley cakesLarge griddle or skillet.
1½ c barley flour 
½ c white whole wheat flour 
¾ tsp baking powder 
¼ tsp baking soda
Combine thoroughly in a medium-sized bowl.
½ c fat-free milk 
½ c plain fat-free yogurt  
1 oz of egg 
¼ c honey, warmed 
To get only 1 ounce of egg, crack open a 2-oz egg, whisk it and use 1 oz. [give the rest to the cat] Whisk together in a bowl.
Combine wet and dry ingredients and let sit until wetted, while griddle heats on medium.
Cooking spraySpray griddle with cooking spray. Using a 1.5 Tbsp scoop, drop batter on griddle, then flatten slightly with wet fingertips.
Cook until browned on both sides and not squishy on the equator. Freezes well.

Barley Pilaf: ½ c = 160 calories 1.5 g fat 3.6 g fiber 7g protein 31.6 g carbs 10.6 mg Calcium   PB Barley is NOT GF This recipe is from Rush Hour Cookbook. It is a super alternative to plain rice or purchased pilaf.

makes 1.5 cupsneed: Heavy, medium-sized skillet
1 cup quick-cooking barleyIn skillet, cook barley over med-high ~5 mins, until toasted and golden. 
1 clove garlic, finely chopped Add the garlic and stir 1 minute.
1½ c. chicken stock Add stock and bring to a boil.
½ c whole-wheat orzo
1 Tbsp fresh thyme or 1 tsp dried 
Add to pot, stir, turn heat to low, cover and simmer 10 mins.
Take off heat, let sit 5 minutes.
2 Tbsp chopped chives or scallions
salt + pepper to taste
Add these, stir, plate

Chicken. Mushrooms, & Barley: 275 calories 9 g fat 7 g fiber 23 g protein 48 g carbs 55 mg Calcium  PB This serendipidous meal turned out to be a good one, using left-over pilaf and chicken in a hearty Fast dinner.

½ c barley pilaf** 1 oz mushrooms 2 oz roasted chicken, cut in bite-sized pieces 2 oz green beans 3 oz/44 g Brussel sprouts, cut in quarters

Slice mushrooms and cook them in a little water until most of the liquid evaporates. Add mushrooms, liquid, and chicken to barley pilaf in a small sauce pan. Heat gently, adding water if it becomes too dry or starts to stick. Cook vegetables, separately or together. Mix cooked sprouts in with the barley and chicken, plate with beans on the side, and serve.

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

1 two-oz egg1.5 two-oz eggs 
applesauce, unsweetenedmackerel, cooked
Pan muffin leeks + Dijon mustard
strawberries
Optional smoothieoptional smoothie
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

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

12 oysters + butter + leeks Chicken breast, cooked + part-skim ricotta 
fennel bulb + fennel frondsonion + celery + tomato + lettuce
bleu cheese + apple + egg white2 slices whole-grain bread + cilantro
Optional: pie crust – NOT GFSwedish Cucumber Salad  + Yellow sriracha 
Sparkling waterSparkling water

Hometown Heroine: Perth

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 to endureeverything who is now Following.

My grandmother, the family historian, told me the story of Catherine Douglass when I was a child. Since my gr-gr-gr-great-grandmother was a Douglass, my grandmother [she of the Christmas cookies] thought I should know how Catherine tried to save the King of Scotland and earned the sobriquet ‘Kate Barlass.’ When James I was King of Scotland, he did some things that earned him praise. He also earned the enmity of several powerful nobles [like his uncle and cousins] who determined to kill the king in order to advance their families’ agendas. On February 20, 1437, King James, his wife Joan and a few members of their inner circle were staying at the Blackfriars Monastery in Perth. A group of dissidents decided to use the occasion for assassination, and they had the help of the King’s steward. The King and Queen were in their room, getting ready for bed, attended by her ladies. One of the ladies was Catherine ‘Kate’ Douglass. A commotion was heard in the hall and the royal party guessed that danger was at hand. Someone knew that there was a sewage tunnel under the room, so the rug was raised and the King was lowered into a pit under the floorboards. Once, there had been a tunnel going out to the garden, but it had been walled-off because near-by games of lawn tennis were often interrupted when balls went into the tunnel. As the King hiding himself, Queen Joan told her women to secure the stout bar that would fasten the door to the room — but the duplicitous steward had removed it. Determined to buy time, Catherine put her arm in the brackets where the bar should have gone. Alas, a young woman’s arm is no match to 30 determined assassins — the door burst open, breaking Catherine’s arm. The murderers also knew about the sewage tunnel, the king was revealed when the floor was opened, and he was stabbed 23 times. In the mele, the Queen was stabbed and another lady was injured, but the women escaped to Sterling Castle. The exploits of Kate Douglass were written down in 1527, then repeated in translations throughout the century. Authors of the 1800s from Walter Scott to Dante Gabriel Rossetti amplified the story of Kate Barlass, and she caught the popular imagination. In a play by Sir Arthur Helps and in paintings, Catherine Douglass had her 15 minutes of fame. Her fame continues into this century with a fine song about Catherine and she lives on in the expression, “Katie, bar the door” which means “Watch out — trouble is coming.” That’s my grandmother’s story, and I’m sticking to it.

We don’t usually associate potatoes with Scotland, but both out meals have them as an ingredient. To make the potatoes more healthy, mix equal parts sweet potatoes and white potatoes to use in these recipes.

Tattie Scone with Egg: 145 calories 5 g fat 2.6 g fiber 8.5 g protein 18.4 g carbs 87 mg Calcium  NB: The food values given above are for the egg, scone, and fruit only, not the optional beverages.  PB  Tattie Scones have been part of a Scottish Breakfast ever since potatoes were considered fit to eat. Easy to make when you have left-over boiled potatoes.

One 2-oz egg 1 tattie scone*** 2 oz apple or pear  Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water   Optional: 5-6 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories]

Prepare the Tattie Scone [HINT: Do this the night before and cook them, too.] and keep warm or re-warm. Fry the egg to your liking. Prepare the fruit and beverages. Plate the scone, top with the egg. Plate the fruit and pour the beverages. Almost an instant meal, if you made the scone beforehand.

***TATTIE SCONES makes 3, each at 43 calories ½ cup mashed potatoes, no milk, no butter nb: I have made this successfully with half sweet potato/half white potato 1 Tbsp egg white 1 Tbsp white whole wheat flour 2 Tbsp milk ¼ tsp salt ½ tsp baking powder Stir all ingredients together – batter will look like thin Cream of Wheat. 

Measure ¼ cup portions and pour into a heavy skillet which is well-seasoned or has been spitzed with non-stick spray. Spread out the batter to about 4.5” diameter. Cook slowly on one side until the scones are cohesive enough to turn over. Cook on the other side. Cool and store until you need them.

Cullen Skink:  228 calories  4.5 g fat 3 g fiber 26 g protein 20 g carbs 161 mg Calcium   PB GF  We found this old Scottish recipe to be divine!! Despite the low calorie count, it is very satisfying. Comfort Food with a Scottish dialect.

3 oz finnen haddie [smoked haddock] 3 oz milk small pinch ground cloves bay leaf ¼ cup onion, chopped 2 oz potato, diced 1 oz peas -OR- 3 oz asparagus, cut in 2” slices 1 tsp butter parsley for garnish

Skin the fish and put it in a small pan with the milk and bay leaf. Cook gently until the fish is warm. Remove the fish from the milk and break it into large pieces. Add the onions, potatoes, and cloves to the milk along with a little water. Simmer, covered, until the vegetables are tender. Remove the bay leaf. Run the milk and vegetables through the blender [or use immersion blender] to a fine puree. Cook the asparagus. Return the fish to the pan with butter and the puree and heat. Add pepper to taste. Plate the fish and vegetable puree, sprinkle with parsley, and arrange the vegetable around the sides. You will want to eat this again!

Comparing Plans: Mediterranean Diet

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.

Dear Husband has decided, since his birthday is tomorrow, that he will shift his eating plan into a higher gear: in addition to Fasting two days each week, he would like the Slow Day meals to be more Mediterranean in nature. What a good idea! This ancient Way of Eating has been studied since the 1950s and causing double-takes for decades — how can they eat all that olive oil and wine and cheese and still be healthy??!?! It is not about what they do eat but what they do not eat: butter, cream, red meat, refined carbohydrates, processed foods, sweets. Is there any benefit to eating like a Mediterranean? Oh yes!! A large, long-term study in the US showed that a Mediterranean Diet lowers cholesterol, helps the body to regulate blood sugar, and reduces damaging inflammation linked to metabolic disease, all while keeping arteries flexible and free from plaque. AND it can promote weight loss. In sum, a Mediterranean Diet, along with other healthy lifestyle choices, seems to reduce early death due to heart issues by 80%. W.O.W. Dr, Michael Mosley, originator of the Fast Diet, highly recommends a Mediterranean Diet for everyone on Slow Days. How similar are the Fast Diet and the Mediterranean Diet? Let’s look at a comparison:

Is this food allowed on this diet…MEDITERRANEANOn Fast Days
Fatty Animal protein: beef, lamb, pork< 3 oz sv.Small servings
Lean Animal protein: chicken, turkey3 oz svYes, preferred
Eggs Up to 7 per week Yes 
Beer, wine, cocktailsYes to wineOn Slow Days
Oats, barley, quinoa, brown rice, whole-wheat bread/pasta Yesin moderation
Nuts + seedsYes, 3 sv/week in moderation
Beans, legumes: peas/kidney beans/lentils/chickpeasYes, 3 sv/weekYes 
Seafood protein, especially with Omega-3 fats3 sv/weekYes, preferred 
Apples, melons, pears, all other fruitsYes- 3 sv /dayYes 
BerriesYes Yes 
Leafy green vegetables: spinach, chard, kale, lettuceYesYes 
Dairy: Cheese, milk, yogurt fat-free preferredSome 
Vegetable oils: olive, canolapreferred sourcesin moderation
Animal fat: butter, lard, or margarine substitutesno in moderation
Root vegetables: beets, sweet potatoes, carrotsYesYes 
Other vegetables: onions, tomatoes, peppersYesYes 
Fat Only plant-based No 
Protein seafood-basedYes. lots 
Higher fiberYes Yes
Limit refined Carb intakeComplex carbs onlyComplex carbs only
Whole grains Yes !!Yes
Simple carbs: cookies, pastries, cake, bread, processed foodsNone or very limited amountsNot on Fast Day
Number of days per week to follow the regimin 7 of 72 of 7
Do calories matter?No Only 600 on Fast Days
Based on information from the Cleveland Clinic website.

There are many ways to add vegetables to your diet deliciously, such as Zucchini-Feta Fritters for breakfast [or dinner] and Felafel at dinner [or breakfast]. Try making changes to one meal a week, to conform to the new guidelines, then expand your repertoire to other meals.

Zucchini-Feta Fritters & Fruit: 178 calories….. 5 g fat… 3 g fiber… 8.4 g protein… 31.6 g carbs… 208 mg Calcium…  NB: Food values given are for the plated foods only, and do not include the optional beverage. PB GF – if using GF flour  Savory with the feta, sweet with the melon – a flavor adventure for breakfast.

++ 4 zucchini-feta fritters ** ++++ 3 oz watermelon ++++ 2 Tbsp plain, fat-free yogurt  ++++  Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories] ++++ Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] ++

Start the fritters the night before to allow the zucchini to drain thoroughly. Using 1.5 Tablespoons per fritter, place the batter on a hot griddle which has been spritzed with non-stick spray. Flatten the fritters, and cook on both sides until well browned. Plate with the melon and yogurt. Serve with beverage of choice, noting their calorie count. [Refrigerate the remaining batter until you have time to cook and freeze the remainder.]

**Zucchini-Feta Fritters makes 23-24  each: 34 calories 1.5 g fat 0.3 g fiber 1.5 g protein 3 g carbs 34 mg Calcium  PB These are a yummy treat, at breakfast or as a pre-dinner nibble. 1-1/8 pound [18 oz] zucchini salt 1 two-oz egg 4 oz feta cheese, crumbled or diced ¼ cup fresh dill weed OR 2 Tbsp dried 2 Tbsp fresh parsley ¼ c white whole wheat flour ¼ cup self-rising flour Grate the zucchini and put it in a collendar over a bowl. Sprinkle with salt and use your fingers to toss the zucchini to distribute the salt. Let sit several hours or overnight. Place the zucchini in a clean bowl and add the remaining ingredients. Combine well. Heat a griddle/large skillet and spray with non-stick spray.  TIP: I used a 1.5 Tbsp scoop, but a heaping tablespoon would do as well.  Make piles of the batter on the cooking surface, then flatten them, and cook until well-browned on both sides.

Felafel with Vegetable Salsa:  205 calories 5 g fat 7.5 g fiber 9 g protein 26.5 g carbs 139 mg Calcium  PB GF   The felafel recipe is from Molly Katzen’s Moosewood Cookbook.  Perfect for any time of year. Felafel is so convenient to have in the freezer for ‘instant’ meals.

falefel patties  ½ cup diced fresh tomatoes ½ cup diced orange or yellow bell peppers 2 Tbsp red onion, chopped 1 Tbsp lemon juice 

Combine the chopped vegetables with the lemon juice. Let sit while the felafel warms. If frozen, warm the felafel. Plate the felafel and the salad.  It’s that easy?!? Yes it is!

FELAFEL makes 26 patties each patty = 25 calories 

2 cups canned chick peas [if you use dried chickpeas, you will get a grainer product. Factor in the time to reconstitute and cook them] 1.5 cloves garlic, crushed [add as much as you enjoy!] ¼ cup celery, minced ¼ c. scallions, sliced 1 egg 1½ tsp tahini ½ t. cumin ½ t. tumeric ¼ t. cayenne ¼ t. black pepper 1.5 t. salt

Combine in food processer until ingredients form a uniform paste. Scoop into a bowl and chill 1 hour. Form into balls on a silicone mat or parchment paper on a cookie sheet. I used a 1½ Tbsp scoop and then flattened the patties. TIP: You don’t have to bake them now. You could freeze the patties on a cookie sheet, then put them frozen into bags to cook later. Bake at 400F for 10-15 minutes. The patties should be heated through and have an outside ‘crust’ which is firm to the touch. In most recipes, you will cook them further. At this point you want them to be firm enough to store well. There will be about 25 of them. Use now or cool and freeze for later use. 

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

1 two-oz egg + apple or pearbarley flour + white whole wheat flour
Tattie Scone: mashed potatoes1 egg + plain fat-free yogurt + fat-free milk
egg white + milkbaking soda + baking powder + honey
white whole wheat flour + baking powderdried fig + grapes or melon
Optional smoothiedeglet noor dates + salt
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

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

smoked haddock=finnen haddie cooked chicken + mushrooms
onion + potatoBrussel sprouts + green beans
butter + milk + bay leafBarley pilaf: quick barley + whole wheat orzo
parsley + peas or asparagusstock + thyme + chives or scallions
Sparkling waterSparkling water

Morocco

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 to ISKON 1111 who is now Following.

Do you play Worldle, the geography spin-off of the popular Wordle? What helps you to recognize Morocco when it comes up? I look for the flat line at the bottom. The shape looks like a leg in a rather baggy boot, the foot of which is flat on the floor. The Kingdom of Morocco is in a unique location, having coastlines on both the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. Archeological evidence shows that people have lived there since 300,000 years ago, when the region was a grassy savannah. Now, the population is made up of Berbers and Arabs and the climate is much drier. In the time of the ancient Greeks, Morocco was the site of one half of the Pillars of Hercules, which marked the Western end of the Mediterranean. In one old story, the Titan Giant Atlas, who was doomed to hold the heavens on his shoulders for all time, performed his task while standing in Morocco. The hero Perseus turned Atlas into a mountain range, now called the Atlas Mountains, which runs from Morocco to Algeria. During the Ordovician Period of geologic time, this part of Northern Africa was a warm, shallow ocean which abounded with creatures who’s shells are now embedded in the rocks of the Atlases. If you see a beautiful fossil Ammonite or Cephalopod in a rock shop, most likely it is the result of the lucrative trade in Moroccan fossils. In 150 BCE, the Romans appropriated the area which they called ‘Mauritania,’ but it was not officially part of the empire until 44 CE. The Arabs arrived in the 600s, bringing the Islamic religion to the Maghreb. For the next few centuries, the region was struggled over by factions of Muslims, with little cohesion or permanence. Bit by bit, the French arrived and worked their way into the fabric of the country, gaining control in 1912. Occupation by Germany during WW2, lead to Casablanca being an important hub of intrigue during the war. Independence arrived in 1956. The country has many place names that are familiar: Marrakech, Fez, Tangier. And some well-known people came from Morocco: actor Jean Reno; 14th century world traveler and scholar Ibn Battuta; Nobel Physicist Serge Haroche. Make sure you can recognize Morocco next time you see it — it is a place worth knowing.

Our meals for Morocco have the spices of the country at breakfast and a storied street-food for dinner.

Moroccan Bake: 148 calories 6.4 g fat 2 g fiber 7 g protein 16 g carbs 41 mg Calcium  PB GF The Moroccan spice Ras El Hanout is the key to this breakfast. The dates and melon make it even better.

1 two-oz egg 1 tsp Ras el Hanout spice blend 2 tsp tomato sauce 1 black olive, chopped 2 deglet noor dates 2 oz melon   Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 caloriesOptional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water

Spritz a ramekin [for 2 people, Dear Husband prefers to use a 4×6” oval casserole] with oil or non-stick spray and set the toaster oven at 350 degrees. Whisk the eggs with the spice, tomato, and olive. Pour into the oven-safe dish and bake 12-15 minutes. Plate with the fruit and an optional beverage.

Mhadjeb: 1 piece + fruit = 240 calories 4 g fat 3.5 g fiber 7.6 g protein 32.5 g carbs 20 mg Calcium  PB  Somewhere in the mists of time, a poor Algerian woman began to prepare this dish. She would send it out with her children to sell in the streets. It became a great hit and, not knowing what else to call it, the food was dubbed ‘mhadjeb’ or ‘mahjouba’ which means ‘honorable woman’ or ‘the unknown woman who never leaves the house.’ The recipe is adapted from one by Nympha Nzeribe. Leftover pieces freeze well.

Makes 6 Griddle for cooking
1 cup semolina ½ c white whole wheat flour
pinch salt
½ cup warm water
Combine flours and salt in a bowl, and add water gradually. Knead until ingredients are mixed into a soft dough.
Plastic bag large enough to hold doughTake a plastic bag and dip it in warm water, filling the bag. Dump out the water and put dough inside the wet bag. Wrap bag around dough and let it rest ~15 minutes.
Remove dough, knead lightly for a few minutes.
Oil your hands and form dough into 6 balls. Line up balls on a work surface, in the order you form them, making note of the order. Cover lightly, let rest.
1 tsp olive oil
1 cup onions, chopped
Cook onions in oil until transluscent.
14 oz tomatoes, diced
2 Tbsp green chile [New Mexico]
2 Tbsp catsup large pinch cumin + salt
½ cup carrot, grated
Dice tomatoes and add to onions along with all the rest of these. 
Cover and cook over low, stiring at whiles, until thickened.
Take off heat.
2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped Add egg, stir, and let cool to room temperature. Divide into as many portions as you have dough balls. 2 oz each ball.
Oil balls of dough cooled fillingOn a lightly oiled surface, roll out Dough Ball #1 as thinly as you can. ~9” dia. Spoon filling into center and spread it out a bit. Fold edges of circle to center, to form a square, covering all the filling. Repeat with other balls and filling.
Spray oil on a griddle. Move each package carefully to the griddle, lest the dough break open. Cook until each side is nicely browned. Let cool briefly.
clementines/ melon/ grapesServe with cool, fresh fruits on the side.

Procopio Cuto

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.

You might not know the name of Francesco Procopio Cuto, but if you have ever been in a “cafe,” you know his legacy. “Cafe” means “coffee.” The Spanish brought cocoa to Europe in 1528. The Dutch brought tea to Europe in 1610. The Venetians brought coffee to Europe in 1615. Procopio Cuto brought the coffee-house to Paris in 1686. Cuto was born in Sicily on 9 February 1651, into a family of chefs. His grandfather had a machine that would make an Arabian delight called “gelato.” Procopio decided to take the gelato machine and go to France to make his fortune. Stopping off in Venice on the way, he was introduced to the idea of a coffee-house. In Paris, Cuto obtained a license to sell ‘lemonade’ and other fruit beverages in a dark, tiny shop on Rue des Fossés-Saint-Germain-des-Prés, in the 6th Arondissement. Once he remodeled, with chandeliers and marble-topped tables, business picked up. When he added the exotic drink coffee, business was even better. Then the Comedie Francaise Theatre opened across the street in 1689, and all of the beau-monde came to the cafe, before and after the plays. Writers, statesmen, men of letters, actors, nobility — everyone sat down at Cafe Procope — to see, to be seen, and to drink the coffee. Thus, Procopio introduced the coffee-house to Paris. He also started making gelato, although with a slightly changed recipe. And it was a hit! He was the official gelato maker to the court of Louis XVI. Ladies, who had been absent at first, came to eat gelato or drink hot chocolate. Cafe Procope was the place to be! The cafe continued after Coto died in 1727. Even the Revolutionaries of 1789 met at Procope, to plot the overthrow of the monarchy. Benjamin Franklin was a customer, as were Thomas Jefferson [who introduced ice cream to the Americas], Napoleon, Victor Hugo and anyone you can think of. Obviously, the concept was much copied, as there were 30,000 cafes in Paris in 1900, indicating the democratization of the cafe scene. No longer for the elites only, everyone went to the cafe and it became a way of life. When in Rome, do as the Romans do. When in Paris, whether you order a citron presse or a cafe espresso, go to a cafe, and relax, and watch the parade of life walk by, just as Parisiens have been doing since Procopio Cuto showed them how.

The foods I chose for today are both light little meals which might be enjoyed at a cafe, along with a cup of coffee. Or at breakfast at home, along with a cup of coffee. The second meal can be a breakfast or, if doubled along with an added slice of bread, could be a lovely dinner.

Strawberry Crepe: 193 calories 7.5 g fat 2 g fiber 9.5 g protein 23 g carbs 211 mg Calcium  NB: Food values given are for the plated foods only, and do not include the optional beverage.  PB  Isn’t it a treat to enjoy ‘Strawberries & Cream’ once in a while? If you haven’t made the crepes already, this is a good reason to try them. Mine were ready in the freezer.

1 sweet crepe*** 2 Tbsp ricotta cheese 3 Tbsp vanilla low-fat yogurt 3 oz strawberries, sliced and put in a sieve over a bowl, especially if frozen 1 slice uncured bacon or 1 slice ‘Canadian’ bacon  Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water 

Stir the ricotta and yogurt together. Add most of the berries, saving some for garnish. If there is a lot of juice, cook it down slowly to make a little syrup. Cook the bacon. Place the crepe on the plate and spoon the cream filling onto it. Fold over the crepe and top with the extra berries and syrup. Plate with the bacon and prepare your hot beverage of choice.

***CREPES, SWEETmakes 16 eight-inch crepes  each = 53 calories… 0.8 g fat… 1 g fiber… 6 g protein… 8.5 g carbs… 38 mg Calcium… ++100 g white whole wheat flour+++54 g all-purpose flour+++14 fl oz/416 g skimmed milk+++ +++2 tsp vanilla sugar+++2 two-oz eggs++

Whisk the flour and sugar together. Add the milk and whisk until combined. Add the eggs one at a time. Whisk vigorously until the batter runs off the whisk in ropes. [If batter is too stiff, add water 1 Tbsp. at a time to thin it.] The batter can rest for up to an hour. Heat a small cast-iron pan or ceramic saute pan.  Lightly spritz with oil, then wipe out the pan. Dip a ¼ cup measure into the batter and let the extra drain off. Grasp the handle of the cook pan with one hand as you slowly pour the batter into the center of the pan. Tilt the pan in a swirling pattern to let the batter form a circle roughly 6” in diameter. Don’t get hung up on perfectly round or perfectly flat. Watch the crepe cook and look to see when the edges start to dry and curl a bit. Using a heat-resistant but non-scratching tool [I use my fingers], lift the crepe and turn it over. Cook the other side until done. Time will vary, depending on the heat of your pan. Lift out the cooked crepe, put it aside, and cook the next one. HINT: if storing them for later today or tomorrow, let them cool on a tea towel, then stack and store in a plastic bag. 

Prosciutto & Melon Plate:  125 calories… 7 g fat… 1 g fiber… 17 g protein… 13.4 g carbs… 135 mg Calcium…  NB: Food values given are for the plated foods only, and do not include the optional beveragePB GF  Once again the Inn at Saint Peter’s inspires a breakfast! Nothing beats the salty-sweet flavor combination of this meal.  HINT: For a quick breakfast, I plated everything the night before and stored the plates in zipper bags in the refrigerator. NB: If you wish to serve this for a dinner, then double all the ingredients and proceed as directed, except for the beverages. Add 3/4 oz whole-grain sourdough bread for a total = 309 calories.

4 oz canteloupe melon [Charentais melon would be fabulous!] 1 oz thinly-sliced prosciutto ¼ cup red onion pickle 0.1 oz shavings of Parmesan cheese fresh basil or mint leaves OR crumbled dried basil drizzle of balsamic vinegar reduction, optional  Optional:  5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 caloriesOptional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water 

Cut the melon into bite-sized cubes [8 pieces look well on the plate]. Cut the prosciutto into 8 long strips [mine were 1”x4”]. Arrange the melon and ham in a circle on the plate with the red onion in the center. Shave off curls of Parmesan and place them on top. If using fresh herb leaves, tuck them in here and there. If using dried herbs, rub the leaves in your palms to crumble over the plate. Drizzle with balsamic vinegar if you wish. Serve with your chosen beverages. Wonderful flavors, however you combine them on your fork.

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

1 two-oz egg1.5 two-oz eggs  + whitewrole wheat flour
Ras el Hanout spice blend zucchini + feta cheese
melon + tomato sauceself-rising flour + watermelon or other melon
black olive + dogleg door date plain, fat-free yogurt
Optional smoothieoptional smoothie
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

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

semolina + white whole wheat flours falafel patties 
onion + tomato + green chilisfresh tomato + red onion
catsup + cumin + carrotorange/yellow bell pepper
clementine/melon/grapes + olive oil
Sparkling waterSparkling water

https://standartmag.com/blogs/journal/paris-city-guide

Saint Dorothy

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.

Dorothy lived in Asia Minor [modern Turkey] during the early Christian Era. She was a convert, which was against the law, and pledged to be married only to Christ, who lived in Paradise where flowers and fruits are ripe all year long. Put on trial for her refusal to renounce her faith, she was sentenced to death. The prosecution lawyer, Theophilus, gloated over his victory and mocked Dorothy. As she was lead away to die, Theophilus called out, “Hey! Bride of Christ! Send me some fruit from your bride-groom’s garden in Paradise!” The crowd heard him and laughed heartily at the jest. Here the story diverges. In version 1) Dorothy takes off her head-dress before being beheaded and gives it to a small boy, bidding him give it to the scoffing lawyer. When the head-dress is delivered, it smells divinely of fruit. In version 2) Dorothy is killed. Soon afterward, a small boy finds Theophilus in the crowd and gives him a basket of fruit and flowers even though it is February. (I love Version 2.) At any rate, Theophilus was moved to recognize that Dorothy was a holy person; that her religion was better than his; and that he had to become a Christian forthwith. He declared his change of faith and of heart, was arrested and put to death. All of this happened on February 6, 311 CE. Dorothy was a popular topic for artists in the Renaissance. In paint and wood-cuts of Dorothy, her sweet story was told. Maybe she never lived at all. She is the patron saint of gardners, fruit growers, and brides.

We will celebrate Saint Dorothy with flavors from warmer climates: curry and coconut. Eat vegetables and fruit today.

Curried Vegetable Bake: 123 calories 5 g fat 1.5 g fiber 7 g protein 11.6 g carbs 41.5 mg Calcium  NB: The food values given above are for the egg bake and fruit only, not the optional beverages. PB GF  If you love the warm, spicy taste of curry, then feel free to add more to this dish.

one 2-oz egg ½ oz carrot, cooked and diced [HINT: use leftovers from a dinner]  ½ oz broccoli, cooked and diced 1 Tbsp Indian curry powder -OR- 4 Tbsp curry sauce  additional curry powder, salt, garlic powder, all to taste 2 oz applesauce   Optional: 5 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories] Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water

Spritz an oven-safe dish with non-stick spray and set the toaster oven to 350 F. Whisk together the vegetables, seasonings, and the curry powder/sauce until well blended. Whisk the egg into the mixture and turn into the dish. Bake about 15 minutes while you portion the applesauce and prepare the optional beverages. 

Halibut in Thai Coconut Curry: 258 calories 14 g fat 2 g fiber 21 g protein 10 g carbs 139 mg Calcium  PB GF  This is from Alaska from Scratch by Maya Wilson and it is delicious.

1 tsp olive oil, separated 3 cups spinach, lightly packed 1 Tbsp shallots, chopped ¾ Tbsp Thai red curry paste or more to taste ¼ cup chicken broth 3½ fluid oz light coconut milk pinch sugar 3 oz halibut fillet 2 Tbsp scallion 1½ tsp lime juice

Heat ½ tsp olive oil in a wide saute pan with 1-2 Tbsp water. Add the spinach with salt and pepper and toss in the oil until greens begin to wilt. Remove to a bowl and cover to keep warm. Put ½ tsp oil in the pan with the shallots and cook 2 minutes. Add curry paste, chicken broth, coconut milk, and sugar. Whisk to combine and simmer on low until reduced by half, about 10 minutes. Salt the fish and add to the broth in the pan, spooning some broth on top of the fish. Cover and poach 5 minutes per ½” of thickness of the fish fillet. Put greens in the serving bowl and top with fish. Stir scallions and lime juice into broth, turn heat up briefly. Ladle broth over the fish and greens.  Optional: ¼ cup brown rice.

>>>Have you seen this from the CBC? https://www.cbc.ca/radio/whitecoat/intermittent-fasting-1.6725799 Lots of good facts about Fasting and its benefits for your body.

La Chandeleur

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.

In the Christian Church calendar, first there is Christmas, when Jesus was born, and 40 days after that, there is the day that baby Jesus was presented at the Temple by his parents, according to Jewish religious law. In the Temple was an old and devout man named Simeon. All his life he had waited for the Messiah, hoping to have some word of the arrival of Yahweh’s chosen, before he died. When Mary and Joseph entered the Temple, Simeon approached and asked to hold the baby. He then said the words known as the nunc dimittis : “Lord, now let thy servant depart in peace…for my eyes have seen thy salvation…a light to lighten the Gentiles and the glory of thy people, Israel.” In pre-Christian Rome, there was a festival in mid-February called Lupercalia. It honored fertility and health. Naked men would run through the streets, and hook-ups would happen when girl’s names were plucked from a bowl. Candles were lit at midnight and people ate small flat cakes, hoping for the return of the sun and summer. During his four-year papacy, Pope Gelasius I tried to stamp out the pagan customs that were still practiced by his flock. In honor of the Presentation of Jesus, he held candlelight processions through the streets and used the occasion to dedicate the next year’s candles for the church. Gelasius called this festival “Candle-mass.” Why all the candles? Because Simeon called Jesus ‘a light’, hence the tie-in to candles during dark days. Gelasius also handed out crepes to pilgrims who came to Rome. When those pilgrims returned home, they told of the festival of candles and their own congregations adopted the idea. Brittany and Normandy, France, where crepes and galettes had long been popular, embraced the idea of celebrating February 2 by eating crepes. And once chocolate was introduced to Europe, enjoying chocolate crepes for La Fete de la Chandeleur became the rage. The first crepe to be cooked is always placed on the top shelf of the cupboard, to ensure luck for the next year. In Germany and the USA, February 2nd is Groundhog Day. Which would you rather eat on Candlemas: a chocolate crepe or a groundhog?

A breakfast of chocolate crepes, bien sur! And for dinner, savory galettes with a traditional and delicious French filling.

Chocolate Crepe Breakfast: 231 calories 4.6 g fat 5.5 g fiber 16.4 g protein 32 g carbs 191.6 mg Calcium  NB: Food values given are for the plated foods only, and do not include the optional beverage.  PB  Crepes! Chololate! Such delights at breakfast on Chandeleur. Make the crepes ahead for a very easy meal.

oops! forgot the bacon!

2 chocolate crepes** 3 Tbsp 2%-fat cottage cheese 3 Tbsp non-fat vanilla yogurt 3 oz strawberries 1 slice uncured bacon @ 30 calories/slice dusting of icing sugar   Optional: blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories]

Slice berries or thaw frozen berries in a sieve. Warm the crepes but only briefly, so they do not become dry. Stir together the cottage cheese and yogurt. Stir in some of the berries, saving some for garnish. Cook the bacon. Divide the strawberry cream between the crepes, roll them, and plate. Dust crepes with powdered sugar. Dollop with reserved strawberries, place the bacon. Yum.

**CHOCOLATE CREPES: makes 16 eight-inch crepes  1 crepe= 53 calories 1 g fat 2 g fiber 3 g protein 9 g carbs 38.6 mg Calcium Just what you need to celebrate Chandeleur on February 2nd.

A chocolate crepe, ready to turn over. Hold a gold coin in your left hand as you flip the pan so that the crepe turns over in the air and lands back in the pan. lol. This is to ensure food luck for the following year.
100 g unbleached flour
50 g white-whole-wheat flour  20 g unsweetened cocoa powder 3 tsp sugar
Whisk flours, cocoa, and sugar together.
14 fl oz milk [416 g]Add milk and whisk until combined. 
2 two-oz eggsAdd eggs one at a time. Whisk vigorously until batter runs off the whisk in ropes. 
Let the batter rest for 60+ minutes.
Cooking sprayHeat an 8” cast-iron pan or ceramic saute pan. Lightly spritz with oil, then wipe out the pan with a paper towel. Save the towel.
Dip a ¼ cup measure into batter and let extra drain off. Grasp handle of the cook pan in one hand as you slowly pour batter into center of the pan. Tilt pan to swirl the batter to form a circle roughly 6” in diameter. Don’t get hung up on perfectly round or perfectly flat.
Watch it cook and look for when edges dry and curl a bit. With a heat-resistant but non-scratching tool [I use my fingers], lift the crepe and flip it. Cook the other side. Time will vary, depending on heat of the pan. Lift out crepe, put it aside, and keep cooking.

Leek & Bacon Galettes: 260 calories 5.5 g fat 4.6 g fiber 10 g protein 37 g carbs 114 mg Calcium  PB  Joanne Harris writes in her French Market cookbook about buying these at a market stall in France. Now you can make them at home.  NB: It is easier/quicker if you prepare the galettes/crepes in advance.

buckwheat galettes/crepes  ½ cup Leek & Bacon Filling  2 oz fresh tomato, diced and seasoned with basil or thyme + salt

Gently warm the galettes and place them on a baking sheet. Warm the Leek&Bacon filling and divide it between the crepes, spreading it on one half of each. Fold the crepes in half, then in half again, placing them on the baking sheet so that the filled part is upper-most [this prevents unfolding in the oven]. Cut and season the tomato. Warm the galettes/crepes thoroughly in the oven.

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

1 two-oz egg + applesauce1.5 two-oz eggs 
carrot + broccoli
garlic powder
Indian curry powder  or  curry sauce
Optional smoothieoptional smoothie
optional hot beverageoptional hot beverage

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

3 oz halibut fillet + olive oilprosciutto + melon
fresh spinach + shallot + scallionsred onion pickle + Parmesan cheese
Thai red curry paste + chicken brothmint or basil leaves
light coconut milk + lime juicebalsamic vinegar optional: whole-grain bread
Sparkling waterSparkling water

Delicious!

Tortilla vs Tortilla

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 to [Captured] who is now Following.

If you saw the word ‘tortilla’ on a menu, what would come to mind? That depends on where you live. The difference among tortillas is as wide as an ocean. For 10000 years, the Aztec and Mayan peoples of Mexico had been growing maize/corn and grinding it into a flour. Balls of maize dough were patted into flat rounds and cooked on a griddle.  In the native Nahuatl language, these were called ”laxcalli”. Spaniard Hernán Cortés and his fellow invaders observed the making of laxcalli in 1519. In Spanish, the word ‘tortilla’ means ‘little cake.’ When the corn laxcalli was introduced to Spain, it was called a tortilla — that along with a bunch of other little cake-like things. In Southern Spain, chickpeas were introduced during the Berber invasion and occupation from 711-1492 CE. Originally, a flat cake of chickpea flour was made in Greece. It migrated through trade to the Levant and entered into Arab cuisine. Today, a fritter made with chickpea flour is popular in Andalusia and they call it a ‘tortilla’. Enter Tortilla Espanola. In the 1830s, a Navarese woman cooked up a quick meal of eggs, potatoes, and cheese. When she served it to a hungry army general who was passing through town, he saw the potential for serving many hungry solders with this quick, inexpensive, nutritious meal. It was named ‘tortilla’ and became a hit all over Northern Spain. So, what is a tortilla? That depends on where you live. If you see the word on a menu, consider first where you are, so you will know what to expect.

Spanish Tortilla: 150 calories 9 g fat 1.5 g fiber 10 g protein 11.6 g carbs 189 mg Calcium  NB: The food values given above are for the egg bake and fruit only, not the optional beverages.  PB GF  In Spain, a ‘tortilla’ is a vegetable-potato-cheese and egg dish, usually cooked on the stove-top. This one is easier because it is baked. HINT: This recipe serves two [2] people.

1 clove garlic 1 oz/1 scallion ¼ cup/1 oz bell pepper 1 oz potato [I used sweet potato for its higher nutrition], cut in a small dice 2.5 oz egg = US extra large 25 ml/0.8 fl oz plain yogurt 2 tsp chives, chopped 1 oz grated Manchego or Cheddar cheese 2 oz watermelon   Optional:blackish coffee [53 calories] or blackish tea or mocha cafe au lait [65 calories] or lemon in hot water   Optional: 5-6 oz fruit smoothie or berry-yogurt smoothie [88 calories]

Put the potatos in a small saute pan with a little water and cook until not-quite soft. Add garlic, scallion, and bell pepper and continue to cook until bell pepper is soft. In a small bowl, combine egg, yogurt, chives, and cheese. Stir in the cooked vegetables and spread in a baking dish that has been spritzed with oil or non-stick spray. Bake at 350F, 15-18 minutes. Plate with fruit and you are ready for an energetic day.

Corn Tortillas, homemade  makes 15 five-inch tortillas. 1 tortilla = 50 calories 1 g fat 0.8 g fiber 1 g protein 9 g carbs 12 mg Calcium

2 cups/185 g masa harina ¾ tsp salt 1.5 cups/340 g water 2 tsp oil 

Combine masa and salt in a wide bowl. Gradually add oil and water until evenly wetted. Knead 5-10 minutes until smooth and firm, adding more water if needed. Let rest, lightly covered 30 minutes. Portion into 15 pieces, each 30-35 g in weight. Cut two pieces of waxed or parchment paper each 6×6”. With a tortilla press, flatten each dough ball between the pieces of paper, until 1/8” thick and 4.5” in diameter. Cook on a hot, dry gridle 40-60 seconds, turning once. Freeze any that you are not using today.

Tostada for Dinner: 253 calories 13 g fat 5.6 g fiber 10 g protein 25 g carbs 119 mg Calcium  PB GF  Purchased tostada shells were the inspiration for this quick and easy meal. We will definitely enjoy this again!

1 tostada shell [fried corn tortilla @ 85 calories each]** 1/3 cup chili non carne   1½ Tbsp Guacamole ½ oz Cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese, grated ½ cup Mexican Vegetable Pickles

Warm the chili and grate the cheese. Plate the tostada and spread it with the guacamole. Spoon the chili on top and spread that to the edges. Sprinkle with the cheese and plate with the pickled vegetables. Ready in minutes, with minimal fuss.

**NB: if you can’t get tostada shells in your local market, here’s how you can make them from corn tortillas