Week Recap

Happy weekend! Here are the links from the last few days in case you missed something!

Monday: Cookie Makeover these are delicious

Tuesday: Food Finds

Wednesday: Observations

Thursday: Go Bananas most popular post of the week!

Friday: TGIF

TGIF

Hi friends,

I hope you liked my banana post. I don’t get many comments, but I can tell when my blog has a good day! You should say hi sometime so I know who is reading and can tailor what I write to what you want to read!

In fitness news, my swimming is going, well, swimmingly? Have I used that pun yet? I really like it, I think I’m getting better, and I am excited for my race in a few weeks. I can successfully swim 300 m without breaks repeatedly. If my goggles behave, my laps are even better.

I exchanged the shoes I bought for some new ones. I haven’t tried them out yet but hope to on Saturday. I am trying Asics again, but this time the shoe has support in addition to my orthotics. My poor, messed up legs. Why must I torchure them and when will I get the courage to try cycling?

After I was told I am “slow” at my CrossFit workout on Mondy, I have also tried to pick up my pace and maintain my good movements with decent weight increases. I kept that in mind on Wednesday and  am supposed to make myself uncomfortable for those short workouts. New challenge there.

Here is a recent day of eating. I purposely did not buy deli turkey this week because I have been bored with it, so I have had a lot of veg meals without really meaning to. After cooking the block of tofu this week, it lasted me for three meals!

Overnight Oats:

one container Plain Chobani Yogurt (5 oz)

1/3 C Quaker Old Fashioned Oats

1/4 C milk

cinnamon shakes

drizzle honey

big pinch chia seeds

Half banana added in morning

Lunch:

1/2 Sweet potato

1/2 avocado

lettuce

1/2 tomato

few carrots

1 hard boiled egg white

1/2 Orowheat Sandwich Thin with PB and J

Cup filled with 4 strawberries and 1/2 banana

Dinner:

Tuna and salmon rolls and Broccoli Crunch from Whole Foods

Dessert:

Banana ice cream with a cookie on top

Go Bananas

After reading this post, you will have no excuses for not being able to make something fast and healthy…unless you don’t like bananas.

I am a relatively new blogger, so I didn’t catch the craze in June 2009 when this post went up on Choosing Raw called “This post will change your life.”

Really? Change my life? Frozen bananas –> ice cream with one ingredient? No way.

I finally froze some bananas that were on their way out, and then I whirled them away in the food processor.

Banana Ice Cream

Ingredients:

3 bananas in chunks. Yes, that is all.

Optional add ins: pecans, salt, honey, chocolate chips, strawberries, peanut butter, the list goes on! Can’t wait to try some of these combinations.

Instructions:

Place frozen banana chunks in food processor and turn on. Hold onto your Cuisinart for dear life. I have never seen the thing  jump like that! It stopped jumping after the pieces were broken up. Let whirl for a while, and stop to scrape from sides once. Whirl again until consistency is like ice cream, or frozen yogurt.

1.5 bananas makes about 2 ice cream scooper-sized scoops.

Spoon into bowl, on top of oatmeal, over fruit salad, with cookies. The list goes on!

Banana Nut Ice Cream

Ingredients:

3 frozen bananas in chunks (makes about 4 single scoop servings)

1/4 C pecans

dash of salt

drizzle honey

Instructions:

Add all ingredients to food processor. Hold on and let whirl.

OMG delicious. The nuts add a lot of flavor and texture. Yes, you have to like bananas. But I was licking the spatula and not feeling guilty. It’s JUST BANANAS.

I didn’t create this magical concept, but I wanted to share with my readers! Enjoy!

Observations

Not every week can be stellar in regards to exercise and exciting foods, even for a fit blogger.  In lieu of exciting recipes and fitness news, here is what I’m thinking about currently. I welcome your thoughts too!

1. The quantity vs. quality debate. Not about food, that’s old. This is about fitness. When do you place speed (quantity) over distance (quality), or doing a workout fast (quantity) above adding weights (quality)?

For example, is running a fast 3 miles better than a slow 5? Which would you pick? What about doing a whole workout fast but using lower weights vs. a whole workout slow with heavier weights? I don’t know the answer. I’m not sure which is best. Perhaps a mix.

2. Outside vs. Inside. Would you choose to run slow outside in the heat, dripping lots of sweat, or faster inside where you could go longer too? In Houston, I choose inside. But am I setting myself up for a harder training program when it cools down outside since I’m not used to uneven terrain and hard pavement?

3. Here’s an observation that I appreciate: The athletic store where I buy my running shoes has a 30 day return policy. I changed brands a few weeks ago to see if a new shoe would help with leg pain, and now I have new pain. So I’m thinking of going back to the old brand, or trying something else. 30 days is kind, and enough time to really try out a shoe.

4. Push vs. Pull. When do you know when to push on and when to say no? Do you wait for a bad pain to say no? Do you know where your max is? What does it take to make you say no, or to make you say yes?

Pan Seared Tofu with Cous Cous and Vegetables

I made a delicious and filling dinner to make use of leftover cous cous, a block of tofu that I bought this week, and some fresh vegetables. I am getting more confident at experimenting in the kitchen. This time, I used the tofu instructions I read from Emily’s blog (refer to this post where I tried tofu her way for the first time) that I tried a few weeks ago, but cooked them as slices instead of cubes.

Ingredients:

1 block Nasoya Tofu

1 squash

1 zucchini

cous cous

feta

scallions

salt, pepper, garlic powder

Stir Fry sauce (or any marinade sauce–I used garlic ginger)

Instructions:

Cut tofu block into six long slices. Lay on towel and press with something heavy for 10 minutes. Place in hot skillet seasoned with salt, pepper, garlic powder.

Let brown on both sides. I put a garlic ginger sauce on one side with the back of a spoon. Just a little.

In another skillet, brown zucchini, squash, and onion slices seasoned with salt and pepper.

Heat up leftover cous cous, top with vegetables, tofu, scallions, and feta cheese. Enjoy!

This was really filling, the tofu was super tasty–crispy outside, cooked well inside. And feta pulls everything together. It was also a good use of leftovers, fresh ingredients, and odds and ends from the refrigerator.

Food Finds

Here are some recent grocery store finds and my reviews of these yummy products. Can you tell I like bread? At least I know how to find better alternatives.

Vitatop Blue Bran: Homemade muffins are always best, but if you don’t have any in your freezer, or want a change from what you’ve been eating, Vitatops are a good second place. These individually packaged muffin tops (Seinfeld, anyone?) have 100 calories, 4 g protein, 1 g fat, and 5 g fiber. They don’t taste processed, and are a good size for crumbling in yogurt or eating with eggs. Only complaint is that they are a little sticky. Grade: A.

 

 Brent and Sam’s Chocolate Chip Cookies: These cookies say that they are made from scratch (but aren’t all cookies made from something?), and gourmet. They are sold at two upscale grocery stores in Houston, so I guess they are supposd to be high-end. I thought they were extra crunchy (I tend to like soft), and crumbly. They were a good size, but tasted like boxed cookies to me. Can’t compare to the real deal, even for something that is “made from scratch.” Grade: B

 

 

  Annie’s Snack Mix: This was the first Annie’s product that I have tried, and it was like a snack mix of cheesy crackers like goldfish, pretzels, and other things you ate as a kid. But these are all bunny shaped. I like the Annie’s brand statement–Planet to Food. Food to People. People to Planet. Nice, right? Very tasty for being a clean and wholesome food with no additives, and 140 calories and 5 g fat for 45 pieces. Remember that the pieces are smaller than bite size, but that is still not bad for a snack. Annie’s also makes cereal, mac and cheese, and other snack varieties including some with chocolate (like teddy grahams I assume). They publish info about the farmers they buy from, and seem committed to giving back. Always nice to support companies that care. Grade: A

 Ezekiel Cinnamon Raisin Bread: I had been looking for a good bread to keep in my freezer. I am a bit of a carb lover, so if bread is in the house, it will most likely look like a rabbit has been biting off pieces of it. I also wanted a loaf that would not go bad quickly, since I’m the only one that would eat a cinnamon raisin bread. I tried this one by Food for Life. One slice has 80 calories, 5 g fat, 18 g carb, and 3 g protein. This bread is “sprouted” with a lot of grains, but don’t worry about that–just means it’s extra good for you. I like mine with PB and J, or for breakfast by itself. I also like that I know I won’t nibble on frozen bread. Just won’t. Grade: A+

What have you found lately? Anything from my blog?

Cookie Makeover

This weekend concludes the calm before the storm of busy August weekends, and then we are into football season, high holidays, and other things which mean fewer weekends at home! But for cooler weather, I’ll take it.

I took advantage of my weekend at home with a 5 mile treadmill run on Saturday. It’s been great that I can do consecutive Saturdays with runs of 5+ miles. I really surprise myself. Then went to the Houston Galleria for a long walk. I have probably mentioned before, but the Galleria here is an L shape, and it makes parking and walking the mall long and tedious. I miss the square of Northpark Mall in Dallas. After a run and walk, the inside of my lower right leg was killing, so I iced and hoped for the best. Again don’t know why each week I have new pains, but I hope the go away!

On Sunday, I swam for an hour. It was great, but I lose track of my laps. Need to start using a lap watch! I timed 300 meters twice (300 m is the distance of the aquathlon in 3 weeks), and a lot of paying attention to my front stroke in between that. I also snagged a few pointers from the swim coach and learned that my overall stroke is good (hooray!), and I should focus on keeping my head down, not lifting my head as much when I breathe, and pausing my front arm when I breathe before pulling it down. Make sense? I’ll practice.

Our Sunday night dinner was a repeat of a Chicken with Tomatoes, baked asparagus, and a 4 ingredient cous cous.

4 Ingredient Cous Cous

1 box cous cous, any brand (I used Near East). Cook as instructions say. After cooked, add scallions, feta cheese, sliced apricots, salt and pepper. That’s it!

Oatmeal Cranberry White Chocolate Chip Cookies

Onto the cookie makeover. Jeffrey says that the cookies and muffins I make taste too healthy. Like the PB Chocolate Chip Cookies made with teff flour, or the Oatmeal Raisin Muffins with sweet potatoes and bananas in them. So I found a recipe from a normal magazine with real butter, sugar, and eggs to make for him. But I decided to try and make it a little better. Shhh don’t tell him.

makes 35 cookies

Ingredients:

1/2 C butter or margarine (original recipe called for 2/3 C)

1/2 C brown sugar (original recipe called for 2/3 C)

2 eggs

1 1/2 C old fashioned oats

1 1/2 C whole wheat flour (original called for white flour)

1 tsp baking soda

1/2 tsp salt

6 oz Craisins

2/3 C white chocolate chips

I added 1/2 tsp cinnamon and 1/4 C flax seeds (not in original recipe)

Instructions:

Preheat oven to 375*. Combine butter and sugar in medium mixing bowl using electric mixer. Beat in eggs. Combine oats, flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and flax seeds in separate bowl. Add to butter mixture in several additions. Stir in craisins and white chocolate chips.

Make balls of the dough and drop onto ungreased cookie sheet or Silpat. Bake for 10-12 minutes or until golden brown. Cool and enjoy! And PS: If you aren’t using a Silpat or haven’t heard of them, you must look it up. The cookies never stick, and I literally picked each one up with my hand after they had cooled to place them on the rack. No scraping cookies off a sheet.

Week in Review

Hope you are having a great weekend! I break from adding posts on the weekends (but find me on Twitter!), so recap what I wrote earlier in the week if you missed out. See you back on Monday with more recipes and updates.

Longest Run–I ran 7 miles and have a new respect for distance

Book Review and Turkey Loaf–read a book you normally wouldn’t pick up

Puppy Pics and Lunch Sandwich–nothing cuter than a wet pup

How To: Once Per Week Grocery Shopping–I love writing “how to” posts–check this one out!

Progress–about swimming

Progress

On Thursday morning, I tried my first “brick” workout. A brick is when you do one exercise after another to train your body for the real thing on race day. My race is three weeks away, and I’ve been practicing my swimming and running separately, so I needed to try them together to get prepared. And don’t discount the transition! I needed to practice that part too.

I swam for about 25 minutes and did a short warmup, then 300 meters with short rest after each 100 to catch my breath and dump water from my eyes, then did 300 meters with no breaks. First time for that! I was very proud and a little surprised. I also got new goggles (bye Nike, trying Speedo this time), and they were much better at doing their job.

After that, I got out of the pool, tried to dry off, put on my running clothes over my bathing suit quickly and ran around the gym’s outdoor track for a little over a mile. The first steps out of the pool were definitely a shock to my legs, and drying my body off was pointless. I was damp the whole run, but at least my feet were dry.

I ended up swimming twice the race distance and running half today. It was good practice, and I’m all about being prepared since this will be totally new to me!

Now that I’ve been swimming for a few weeks, I really like it mixed into my week. On Thursday I was so sore from Wednesday’s Crossfit workout (squats and lunges are not to be underestimated), but jumping in the pool makes all the soreness go away. It is just so kind to your body. And not to be cheesy, but it is really peaceful to be outside as the sun comes up.

Here is a recent overnight oats breakfast that was delicious–

1/3 C Old Fashioned Oats

1/3 C milk

1/2 C Vanilla Oikos

1 big pinch chia seeds

big shakes of cinnamon

Let refrigerate overnight. In the morning, add blueberries and Galaxy Granola Not Sweet Vanilla.

And here’s how to eat healthy at Pei Wei. I think their menu is confusing, so I just ask for what I want. It seems that’s what you’re supposed to do–pick a meat, pick a sauce, pick rice or noodles, make your own bowl. So I asked for Tofu, Mixed vegetables (carrots, snap peas, broccoli), and Brown Rice, with Teriyaki sauce on the side. It looked plain, I could have made it at home. But it was such a big portion that I had half left over for lunch the next day in a salad. Making two meals out of one is a win.

How To: Once Per Week Grocery Shopping

First—I’m still looking for a few guest posts while I’m on vacation! If you’d like to write something for my site, please let me know. You don’t have to be a blogger.

Onto a new How To post. And be sure to check out the other How To’s that I’ve written on its own page here.

 

One of my favorite parts of the week is going to the grocery store on Sundays. (foodie dork here!) I try to get all my shopping done for the week in one day, and here are some tips of how I do it. It does involve planning, but not to the extent that I write down 5 days of dinner menus.

A little background–I only have to feed two people, and one of us eats most meals from restaurants. When planning and buying, I pay attention to expiration dates or overbuying so things won’t spoil.

How to get your grocery shopping done in one day for one week:

1. Have an old-fashioned list. I keep a list going all the time in the kitchen. Make sure you add things that you run out of right when you run out of it! Jot down new foods to try from things you read (like my blog!) Then at the grocery, stick to your list. It will keep you from overbuying. However, there are some days when I like to browse the aisles and look for new things to try, or produce that is in season.

2. Think about your week. Do you already have plans to eat out? Are you packing your breakfast every morning or will you have time to eat at home? Same with lunch. For me, I always pack breakfast and a snack, and my lunches are similar within a week. Keeping lunches similar keeps your grocery bill down. Buy a bag of cherries one week and then mixed berries the next. Use pantry items to change it up, like buy turkey, and alternate in tuna or beans for salad protein.

3. Get to know your grocery store. The annoying part of wanting certain brands or fresher produce is going to multiple grocery stores. I usually go to my local Randalls and Whole Foods every Sunday. However, I can be in and out of a grocery quickly because I know where things are and what each store may or may not carry. For instance–I will not find the turkey or yogurt I like at Randalls, so I don’t need to spend time looking for it!

4. If you go to multiple grocery stores, go to the one that will be cheaper first. By this I mean that I will look for produce at Randalls before Whole Foods because I know it will be cheaper. If the quality is poor at Randalls, I’ll get it at Whole Foods.

5. Use Costco! (or Sam’s Club) My weekly trips to the grocery are for what we need for the week. We leave our cleaning supplies, some freezer items, dry snacks, and waters to buy in bulk every 6 weeks or so.

6. Plan to make use of your Sunday afternoon. Every Sunday, I hard-boil 6 eggs–to use for breakfast or chopped into tuna salad or on a salad. Sometimes I bake chicken to have for a few days. Sometimes I bake muffins to freeze for breakfast. And then I make dinner for Sunday night with plans to have leftovers for Monday lunch or Monday night. Or if I make chicken, I will use it in a different way during the week.

7. Planning a basic dinner: It doesn’t always have to be about creating a recipe! You just  need things on hand to satisfy the carb-protein-vegetable ratio, in my opinion. For instance, sweet potatoes, vegetables to roast (brussels sprouts, broccoli, squash, zucchini, mixed peppers) can always be paired with canned baked beans, 90 second rice, grilled chicken or your protein of choice for a well-rounded meal.

8. The freezer is for more than ice cream and ice. Use your freezer to store baked goods, then defrost in the refrigerator overnight for breakfast. You can cook soups ahead and defrost before work for dinner that night, and let meats thaw all day. Planning is the hard part. If you make the decisions ahead of time, all that’s left is to execute when you get home at night.

Happy cooking!

How often do you shop? What are your once/week tips?

Puppy pics and New Lunch Sandwich

This is what happens to a 7 pound puppy whose hair is heavier than her body when it’s rainy outside.

And this is what that puppy looks like when she is not wet. I hope she doesn’t get mad that I posted pictures of her after a rainstorm. My hair doesn’t hold up so well in this weather either!

I am looking for guest posts! Please contact me if you would like to write a post to be published on my blog at the beginning of August. You don’t have to have a blog. You can write about food tips, a how-to, a different kind of exercise that I don’t write about, or something Houston related if you live here.

Check out this article about the CrossFit Games that were held last weekend. Some incredible athletes doing things I could never dream of, but the article talks about how CrossFit has become widespread within a short amount of time and what the draw is to this type of exercise.

From Forbes Magazine:

The CrossFit Games: An Action Sports Investment Opportunity in the Making

A swimming update: My aquathlon is a little over 3 weeks away! I have been practicing my swimming and really enjoy it after the initial shock of cold water. It is really nice in the summer heat to take a day off from actual sweat and be gentle to my body. The race is 300 meters, and I have been mostly working on technique of swimming laps (self-taught, don’t know if it’s all correct), keeping water out of my eyes, and taking fewer and shorter rests between laps. I swim for about 50-60 minutes on days when I don’t do a second exercise like spinning, so hopefully I will be ready to swim for 9 minutes. For my next swim, I plan to swim for a shorter amount of time and then take off on a short run. My legs feel like jello when I get out of the pool, so I need to practice transitioning to the run! Can’t fall over on race day.

Anyone have race day tips? I know this race is short and will be over fast, but it’s a good intro race for me!


Tweaking the Tuna:


I know that packaged tuna is a love it or hate it food, and I totally understand that! But it is a great on-hand lunch item to alternate in the mix, especially when you add good ingredients to plain tuna.

Orowheat Sandwich Thin

1 wedge Laughing cow Garlic and Herb

spinach leaves

small plum tomato

4 oz package Chicken of the Sea light tuna

pickle slices

mustard

salt and pepper

1/2 avocado (small side)

1 hard boiled egg white

Here’s how it goes and why it’s great:

Spread the wedge of Laughing Cow cheese on both slices of the Sandwich Thin. If you haven’t tried Laughing Cow, you must. Great to spread on apples or crackers, and 35 calories per wedge.

Combine tuna, chopped egg white, mashed avocado, pickles, mustard, salt and pepper. Mix mix mix. It makes the volume of the tuna so big.

Put spinach and tomato on one side and the tuna on the other. Wrap and foil and it’s great for the next day!

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