Support for low-fat high-fiber diet

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  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    yep, me and ned just keep wildly dancing...

    right on!

    laura
  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006
    laura!
    Congrats! Keep dancing another year!

    Organic farming is interesting, there is a lot on it right now. Our goats are meat goats, cabrito is popular in Texas. Goats are the fastest growing Ag crop in the USA.

    I am about to feed goats, and cook some cabbage. I am so hungry for cabbage! Good thing trash pick up is tomorrow!
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    This is good, it came from the Mayo Clinic site, and is pretty close to what we got at the Baltimore Museum.

    Ingredients
    1 medium-sized fennel bulb, thinly sliced
    1 large Granny Smith apple, cored and thinly sliced
    2 carrots, grated
    2 tablespoons raisins
    1 tablespoon olive oil
    1 teaspoon sugar
    1/2 cup apple juice
    2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
    4 lettuce leaves



    Directions
    In a large bowl, combine the fennel, apple, carrots and raisins to make the slaw. Drizzle with olive oil, cover and refrigerate.

    In a small saucepan, mix together the sugar and apple juice. Place over medium heat and cook until reduced to about 1/4 cup, about 10 minutes. Remove from the heat and cool. Stir in the cider vinegar. Pour the apple juice mixture over the slaw and stir to combine well. Chill thoroughly. Serve on lettuce leaves.
  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006

    It sounds delious thanks for sharing!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    crap i feel guilty posting here i ate so BAD this weekend...
    love the salad, rose///will definitely try this week...do you really think it needs the sugar...

    man why is the diet so hard to follow these days of parties, celebrations and downright decadent living?

    sorry but post bc dx i feel guilty and sad about precious little!


    happy monday!
    laura
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006

    Well, I'm not a chemist but I think the sugar makes the sauce stickier when it cooks down. Certainly the apple juice is sugary, maybe you could reduce it without the sugar with the notion that you might need to use more so it reduces right.

  • ginger2345
    ginger2345 Member Posts: 517
    edited June 2006
    Laura,

    I know what you mean by post bc not feeling guilty about things. But i do feel guilty about blowing my diet too if I do it too often because it's part of my "war" against recurrence. exercise is the same--though I don't skip that too much.

    Just need to put the blowing the diet behind us and get back on tract--it's Monday!!
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    I think that's where a regular exercise program is important.

    We can't just starve ourselves. It's not healthy physically or emotionally. So if you have a regular activity program you are expending as well as taking in, and can eat, mindfully, like a sort of regular person.
  • ginger2345
    ginger2345 Member Posts: 517
    edited June 2006
    Well, today our paper has the newest American Heart Asso. recommendations on transfats--

    They recommend limiting trans fats to less than 1 percent of our total calories. And they suggest we get in the habit of cooking with healthier oils and not concentrating so much on all fats, but the bad fats. In addition to transfats, they recommend we limit saturated fats to no more than 7 percent of our daily calories (they state most Americans consume 11 percent daily.) Saturated and transfats raise LDL--the bad cholesterol.

    They've got lots of other recommendations too. They look like the suggestions we've been making to each other here on this thread. Guess we're right in step with the Heart Association. DH (former president of our state's Heart Asso.)is one of those docs who's had us doing this for years.

    Within the last year, I think, the amount of transfats in our processed foods from the grocery store has to be on the label. But I can't remember when I've seen that on a sack when I buy donuts--for my mother, of course. She says she's too old not to eat what she wants.

    It's an AP article--probably in your local paper, too.
  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006
    I have noticed more labels with no trans fat on it. But you know that is food I should not eat anyway!

    When at my mom's I found old pictures of me, I now know I am old and Fat! Not one picture except after I was having kids did I look this fat!

    This is war, I am going to get this fat body where it needs to be. I saw how all my family has gained but my gains somehow seems more to me.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    i put my money on you cowgirl in the war against fat...

    you can do it and let the little hottie within sashay around the great state of texas...

    what do you need from us, how can we help!

    if this is what it takes to make you feel real good about yourself...
    game on!

    i would feel better if i put on your excess lbs...
    so

    i will try and gain the first fifteen pounds you loose...

    deal?

    laura
    too skinny, borderline anorexic
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    i so can't wait till i am an old hand here...

    i am working on it!
    laura
  • KariLynn
    KariLynn Member Posts: 1,079
    edited June 2006

    I so wish there was an easy way to pound-swap! I know people who need to keep it on and just can't and I'd be willing to donate to them (hopefully this offer is only good for a few mre months!!)

  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006

    Those extra pounds like to stick together in friendly places.

  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006
    I need Tex Mex that is good and yet healthy laura! I know I need to make better choices but Tex Mex is Delicious!

    Somehow right now with me running to moms every day I am eating very unhealthy, as well as my family.

    I need to plan out meals, and get my head in the game(sorry I really do adore football). I am like a player looking around wondering why we are loosing and not helping any at all.

    I am still off soda, down to two cups of coffee a day. But my food is whatever I can grab and eat in two minutes. Course I am barely cooking, and my veggies were rotten. So I threw those out yesterday.

    I guess I am needing something I can eat quick and easy but tasty.
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    Think EFFICIENT.

    Take a day and don't go to Moms. Don't clean or do anything.
    Sit down with one of your cups of coffee and write the days of the week down the side of a paper. Across the top write 'breakfast', 'lunch', 'dinner'. Then do down and fill in the blanks. Be sure you have frozen pizza one day because I always do

    Make your grocery list from that. Sandwiches are good for on-the-run. Go to the store and get what you need. Try not to make repeated trips to the grocery store - it puts you in temptation's way.

    You don't have to go low-fat, you just need to get what you're going to eat under control, and then watch portions.

    Put the list on the fridge, and consult at mealtimes.

    You can't help being busy, and having to have stuff for teens to eat. But you can have a roadmap. The idea is to reduce grab-and-snack eating.

    PS - apples are good in-the-car snacks.
  • KariLynn
    KariLynn Member Posts: 1,079
    edited June 2006
    I do the weekly plan thing too and it works great. You can plan to have stuff that needs to be fresh at the beginning then stuff that can be in the freezer at the end of the week. I shop on Wednesday night so will be doing next weeks meal plan later this afternoon. Is a great way to stay on track.

    Trying to decide what to cook is always the hardest for me - if that's done I can do the rest pretty easily.
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    I'm no Martha Stewart.

    I've been known to keep the same meal sequence a couple of weeks in a row. Then I'll see something in the paper or a magazine and try something else.

    Food and a family is a marathon experience. When my single sister comes she always seems to get such happiness from cooking something up. My take is that she's not 'cooking something up' 7 lunches and nights a week so it's fun to do it.
  • ginger2345
    ginger2345 Member Posts: 517
    edited June 2006

    I was just mentioning to my son that the hardest part of cooking is coming up with the ideas. He gave me the same suggestion--get it planned out in advance for a week. I'm so unorganized in a grocery store that if I've got a plan I don't have the stuff. Summer is easier: when in doubt, salmon on the grill!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    this time of year, there is so much good stuff to choose from...

    really liking the little peeled carrots for snacks and also little tomatoes....the carrots are crunchy and the tomatoes are just yummy...

    seems like body craves more water based things in the summer...

    laura
  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006
    Thanks gals you know what works! Sunday I will do some planning, that is the day I am not going to Moms.

    My portion control is way off too Rose, you are so right. It is a thing that I have to do portions first then lowfat.

    Thanks so much!
  • KariLynn
    KariLynn Member Posts: 1,079
    edited June 2006
    My little bit of anal-ness that really helps - I made an excel spreadsheet with my grocery list (stuff I usually buy) organized by how the store is organized. I write the meals on the back then circle the stuff to buy (also left blank spaces throughout for different things.)

    This really saves time and I'm less likely to forget stuff (when I'm really on my game I put it on the fridge to note things we run out of during the week.) Also makes shopping fast as it's in order - don't have to backtrack.

    A little organization goes a long way!!! (This is what stay-at-home moms who used to be computer nerds do for fun!!!)
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    I think you come out ahead to speed shop. They design the whole darn store to sell you stuff!

    The more you wander around in the store the more likely you are to impulse buy. Even though you tell yourself you'll only have a few chips or cookies or ice cream, if you buy it you'll end up eating it!

    I used to work for a woman, a Math Stat, who made shopping lists for two weeks at a time. She had a big freezer. She would stop and get more milk at the gas station, but otherwise it was to the store twice a month. I'd have lunch with her and she's pencil the whole thing out...
  • KariLynn
    KariLynn Member Posts: 1,079
    edited June 2006

    I can't do two weeks - don't care for frozen meat (no idea why) so like to get it and use it quickly (will do frozen grd. beef - a lot of spaghetti toward the end of the week!) Also would need more bread, fruit, salads - have to go to the store! If I did more frozen foods - maybe.

  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    That woman was not low-fat/high-fiber, if you go heavy on processed it's easier to stock up on things. She had a crock pot and did a lot with that. Any crock pot devotees here?

    I have a seperate freezer but it's not plugged in. We bought a new fridge that had a bigger freezer section and I didn't need it anymore. I'd freeze stuff and forget about it since it was in another part of the house.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    crock pots are great in the winter as long as you find other things then salt...
    this time of year there is so much fresh great stuff, i know i am in ca but geez really...??..hellow texas?
    tomatoes, melons berries, corn, peppers, what is not in season...
    okay fine toss a little animal in and have a great meal...
    kids love it..
    onions, garlic, pepppers, lots to spice it up...
    i say summer is cooking fresh and fast!

    i will bring my crockpot back out, acutally romertoff, and actually clay pots i got in france when it cools off and i want to heat up the house againg...lol...

    turned the air on today...GOT NEW CARPET IN EVERY ROOM YESTERDAY...

    kinda feel like a princess...

    don't get me wrong, son and i went out for burgers after putting all the furniture back...

    i am going to get a freezer but mostly fopr organic meat...
    tomatoes and peppers yes...
    love mine...

    summertime and the living is easy!

    laura
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006

    Yeah - new carpet. Is this a house you're going to sell soon?

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    yep...no more red wine till i move..haha...

    made myself a promise, from now on i am not going to wait to move to enjoy this new carpet thing...everything is painted too...

    it looks beautiful...
    that year of laying in bed and watching hgtv finally is paying off!

    laura
  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited June 2006
    We had a leaky roof that used to cause us to have to sleep in the living room when it snowed a lot. When we went to sell the realtor insisted we fix it. It didn't cost much at all and I wished we'd done it sooner.

    So the next house had an old roof. We had it re-roofed before it even started to leak. I've learned that lesson myself!

    This clay pot cooking - a california thing?
  • cowgirl
    cowgirl Member Posts: 777
    edited June 2006
    You gals have hit the nail on the head. I miss my crockpot, and my outdoor grill is busted. I usually do meat and veggies on the grill in the summer, and have a big salad! Well I got a mini forman grill from mom. I will do what I need with that.

    You gals are so intuitive.

    Sweet corn is over, only field corn left. Locally melons, tomatoes and peppers are in season. Peaches are gone too. Texas heat burns them up quickly.

    I will study the section at a bigger store this week, the small stores just don't have much to choose from for variety.

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