Today my good food choice was...

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  • SelenaWolf
    SelenaWolf Member Posts: 1,724
    edited March 2012
    sagina:  Yes, French cooking uses lots of cream - especially in soups and sauces - , but French serving sizes are so much smaller than North American, I don't feel that the added fat is a problem to good nutrition.  It's all balanced by the scope- and variety of vegetables, and very little red meat.  Everything in moderation... so to speak, which is a pretty good philosophy of Life!  But there are just as many recipes that don't use cream to choose from...
  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited March 2012

    My oncologist told me, that something about saturated fat- it brings reoccurence ...I avoid it since that.CaPcakies sent us a link about it, thank you! I send it to all my friends now...

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited March 2012

    Olgah, I was born in Denmark, lived many years in the US, but now live in Greece.

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited March 2012

    apple, I love, love, love roasted beets, especially golden beets mixed with other veggies.  Never could eat them before.  My DH and I were just reminiscing about how our Moms used to think they had to "kill" the veggies before serving them, by boiling them to death.

    Multigrain angel hair with finely chopped tomato, basil and garlic. 

    I was going to make eggplant parm but now I'm worried about the cheese.  It's organic but that doesn't do anything to mitigate the saturated fat content! 

  • CorinneM1
    CorinneM1 Member Posts: 539
    edited March 2012

    Wow...interesting about the sat/fat.  I will have to watch that as well.

    Today had 2 cups of green tea, an egg salad sandwich on a spinach wrap and and orange.

    Tonight we will have leftover indian that we made last night.  Organic chicken vindaloo, organic basmati rice and organic peas.

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited March 2012

    I heard this add on tv today, thought we might want to set our dvr's for Sunday.....60 minutes....

     "Sugar - A prominent doctor who treats childhood obesity believes the high amount of sugar in the American diet, much of it in processed foods, is killing us. And as Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports, new studies seem to support his theory that sugar is toxic. Denise Schrier Cetta and Sumi Aggarwal are the producers."

    I have really tried to stop eating sugar, reading every label.....it's in almost everything we buy.  

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited March 2012

    Sagina, I never ate much sugar, but after BC, I have been quite vigilant about cutting it out of my diet. The other day we were at a friend's house and she had melba toast on the table, that white, dried bread you buy like crackers or something. I ate a bite of it and it tasted unbearably sweet to me. It reminded me how much sugar gets put into all kinds of commercial food products.

    In general, I have always had the idea that it can't be good to mess with food unnessarily. Humans have made bread for millenia out of water, salt (optional) and flour, but supermarket bread has a list of ingredients a mile long usually. Until very recently, white flour was a luxury reserved for special occasions. Among Danish peasants, "cake" was bread made from white flour and eaten on holidays. When my husband was a kid in Greece, white bread was more expensive than whole wheat. Now it is the other way around, lol. Anyway, simple and least processed seems the way to go.

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited March 2012

    Momine, PM FOR YOU...

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited March 2012

    Olgah, not seeing it in my inbox, but will check back in a bit.

  • apple
    apple Member Posts: 7,799
    edited March 2012

    Momine..how do you pronounce your name?

    ( my dad used to joke before grace at meals.. omnimay omiday monimay.. something like piglatin for everyone sit down.. he used to teach Latin.. and in my head I am sure i am pronouncing your name wrong)

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited March 2012

    Apple, don't worry lol. It is a nick, and it is what my little brother used to call me because he could not pronounce my real name. So, mispronouncing would be entirely in the right spirit ;). In Danish, you would pronounce each syllable mo-mee-ne, the 'ne' at the end would be sort of like the 'ne' in 'shine'.

    One of my grandmas was Magdalene, btw, and I always loved that name. 

  • SelenaWolf
    SelenaWolf Member Posts: 1,724
    edited March 2012

    Saturated fats are a very necessary part of our diet.  They protect against viruses, as well as bacteria and yeast in the gut. Some saturated fats protect against stroke and heart issues, as well, and facilitates the absorption of Vitamin D into your bones.  We cannot live without saturated fat in our diets.  Where we go wrong is in the amounts we eat.

    The same with sugar.  Our bodies need it to function.  It's the amounts we have gotten used to that are, probably, not good for us.  And the link between cancer and sugar is indirect: it's not the sugar itself but how your body processes the sugar into insulin - which your body also needs to survive - without the necessary balancing fats, protein and fiber.

    Moderation - as always - is the key.

    http://www.caring4cancer.com/go/cancer/nutrition/questions/sugar-and-cancer-is-there-a-connection.htm

    My personal concern is that - in order to strip out all those things in our diets that are "cancer-feeders" - we are, also, stripping out those things that will kill us in other ways or make us more vulnerable to other deadly diseases.  Heart disease and stroke still kill more women than breast cancer.  We cannot control cancer - or it's reoccurrence - with the addition- or lack of specific food items.  It's the WHOLE diet that needs to be addressed: the proper amount of fats, the proper amount of protein, the proper amounts of vegetables and fruit, more fish less red meat.  Yes, minimise refined/processed foods and meats, and concentrate on whole foods, absolutely.  But there are certain things that our bodies must have to operate optimally, which - to me, personally -means helping me recover from cancer and move on with my life in the best health possible.

  • 1701jms
    1701jms Member Posts: 57
    edited March 2012

    HI!  Just tried a new food that gave me a jolt of energy - you ladies may have already mentioned it but in case not I thought I would mention it.  I sprinkled chia seeds over my salad....although they quite honestly look like fleas, I swear they gave me an extra boost of energy! They didn't have much flavor so it's easy to incorporate them into other foods.

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited March 2012

    Ha 1701, glad to see I'm not the only one who's a little creeped out at how chia seed looks on food!

    Elder DD is slipping into town for a few hours this afternoon so that means Indian food tonight! Saving up calories by having a bowl of soup and plain green salad with lemon for lunch. 

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited March 2012

    1701m, I sprinkle chia seed on my salads too!  I put in in my cheerios with almond milk too.  It soaks up the liquid and makes me feel full longer - the wonderful fiber for sure!

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited March 2012

    Ukrainian tomato- cucumber salad

    1 big fresh cucumber

    2 big delicious tomatoes

    chives, as much as you want

    garlic, just a little

    salt, black pepper, olive oil

    cut all the engredients in the bowl, mix them together and enjoy! There are no FETA cheese here ! Could be a side dish...Some people, who like red onions, put it instead of chives, but it is very strong...

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited March 2012

    That salad sounds refreshing olgah.  We ended up with Chinese instead of Indian.  I ordered chicken breast with green beans and black bean sauce.  No rice.  I know the soy is iffy but we don't have it that often and it was very yummy.  DD is back at school now after a dentist appt. and I miss her already.

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited April 2012

    Today (on our Costco trip) I discovered bolani, a stuffed Afghani flatbread.  We bought one with lentil and one with spinach and a set of dipping sauces (eggplant, jalapeno and a pesto.)  The crust is NOT whole grain, so that is the downfall.  Otherwise they were unbleached flour, low fat, low sugar and no cholesterol. Very good. Lunch (.75 bolani) was less than 170 calories of bolani and about 60 calories of toppings. I added a cup of tomato soup.

    Shopped for healthy snacks for an upcoming road trip.  Almonds, freeze dried fuit and water. 

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited April 2012

    I buy some bread in World Market, it is whole grain, rye bread. My q is: it is covered with plastic, can keep it a year,after opening it should be refrigerated...is it OK? Or it should be fresh, fresh, like just baked in Whole Foods?

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited April 2012

    Olga I have no idea on that one....but if it can keep for a year is it full of preservatives? 

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited April 2012

    just sat down to steamed cod, marinated in Meyer lemon and cooked in the zest and fresh dill, with a side of garlic and olive oil cooked green beans, leeks, mushrooms, and asparagus! yum!

    Olga, I have mushrooms and onions cooking for some beet soup!  I got too many beets in my CSA bag at the market, and I have an extra pound of mushrooms!!!! perfect! 

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited April 2012

    I was sabotaged!  My brother called me and asked me to make some of the baked goods our Mom used to make for Passover.  Well, it's been over a year since I baked, and I do confess that a little bit went into my mouth.  I'm worried about the holiday and my resolve to be healthy.

    I did make a good choice today too.  Egg whites on a multigrain tortilla with jalapenos for lunch. 

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited April 2012

    Sagina, please, Cod recipy... my favorite is Tilapia, but it mostly Farm raised...

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited April 2012

    With the holiday it's been a few days since making good food choices!  I did avoid the worst food choices last weekend, but we were traveling so I cut myself a little slack.

    Home again, and back on the wagon.  I made planks of seasoned and olive oil roasted yams last night, with black and brown rice and black beans.   

  • sagina
    sagina Member Posts: 1,219
    edited April 2012

    Olga~ I put turmeric in the beet soup - not sure what I was thinking - but it was strangely very cinnamon flavored?  I'll try again.

    A meyer lemon is a cross between a lemon and an orange.  I just zest some of it over the fish, then cut up some fresh dill over it too.  A tiny bit of olive oil, then add a bit of water and cover.  Steams in 4 minutes or so.  Tilapia is my favorite too.

    heading to the grocery store - any ideas for fish? 

  • Granuaile
    Granuaile Member Posts: 113
    edited April 2012

    Red pepper hummus, taboule, and homemade potato salad with celery (baby potatoes).  Also a little flax wrap bread.

     Yum.... 

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited April 2012

    Sagina, was it cinnamon in turmeric?

    I have a recipy of Lithuanian cold Beet soup. Perfect for hot days.

    We need:

    1 beet, cooked and grated or can of grated beets,

    buttermilk ( fat free is not deliciuos, but it does not have sat fat)

    2 boiled eggs

    1 big fresh cucumber

    chives ( 3-4)

    fresh

    dill, salt

    we need to cut everything hard into small pieces. Then pour buttermilk and some cold water.Taste it , put some salt. Separately as side dish - couple of warm  potatoes( boil them before) orcould be mashed potatoes, but it is not healthy...Lithuanians also put a spoon of buttercream to the soup, but we won't do it!

  • olgah34
    olgah34 Member Posts: 407
    edited April 2012

    Barley mushroom soup.

    we need: 

    1/2 cup of organic barley( whole foods has it )

    1 package of mushrooms

    spinach 1/2 cup

    1 big onion

    fresh broccoli

    salt, olive oil, parsley ( just a little)

    Put

    barley in pot, pour water ( about 4-5 cups) and boil about 20 minutes, remove the foam. Wash and cut musrooms.Put mushrooms there and boil for another 15 minutes. I do it on med. heat.

    Separately   put a spoon of olive oil in the pan and cook onion ( cut into small pieces) till it soft. Pour it in our soup, add spinach, fresh broccoli, parsley and boil couple of minutes.

    enjoy!

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited April 2012

    Dinner is root veggie bake, black beans, quinoa and chia mixture.  Lunch was soup and Kashi crackers.  Breakfast was cantaloupe and then Trader Joes low sugar cereal. I snacked on carrots, an orange, freeze dried apples and a wasa cracker with peanut butter. 3 cups green tea.  Now if I can only make it through the evening!

  • SAB
    SAB Member Posts: 1,498
    edited April 2012

    Yuck- the quinoa and chia was a bust! Had to make some quick brown rice at the last minute.

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