So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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Sandy, I had to smile..when I was low carbing, all I could think of was carbs. When I can eat carbs, I wonder how "healthy" all the protein I eat can be. OY! I will say, I had a weight stall for THE longest time; decided to try the 16 hour intermittent fasting and dropped weight. I had been doing 12-13 hours, or there-abouts, but 16 seemed to be the magic number for me. Who knows how long that will last, but I am eating carbs--trying not to over-eat and go nuts, but pretty much eating till full...My onco has been doing low-carb and dropped a ton of weight. I'll be seeing her May 11th, so I'll ask her how she's doing.
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My physical medicine doctor recommended intermittent fasting as well. I’ve also been doing the 12-13 hours and getting nowhere in the last few weeks. Wallycat, you’ve inspired me to try again.
Tonight was leftover rice and burrito filling. I made tostadas instead of burritos so it wasn’t a complete repeat of last night.
I’ve been doing spring cleaning in the evenings. One room a night is all I can manage. I’m doing walls, ceilings, windows….the works. This is the first time I’ve had the motivation to do deep cleaning since I was diagnosed. (I had some help during treatment so the house wasn’t a complete disaster.). It feels like life might be almost normal again. What a blessing! I’m going to cherish this time as much as I can.
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Funny how most of us like Cheetos (and orange fingers). I managed to eat 1/2 a bag of Ruffles last night. Oh my. Dinner tonight was cheerios & a way too soft banana. I've had lots of computer reports to prepare & I just never stopped to fix a meal.
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Last night's dinner was pork piccata with quinoa instead of the usual brown rice. And a large tossed salad.
I cannot do fasting. I'm borderline diabetic and feel like I am going to pass out when I get really empty.
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Wc, interesting about the parsley/citrus to replace cilantro. IMO, parsley is a rather mild herb, where cilantro is quite strong.
Wallycat, I too have heard about the Vicks for the nails, forgot about that one.
LOL on everyone and their salty snacks. My DH always ate some chips after dinner, said he wanted the salt. As for me, I munch on them occasionally, but it's because I want something crunchy.
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Carole, I am prediabetic and I have had reactive hypoglycemia since my 20s. If I do not eat anything, my blood sugar will not react. Once I start eating, all hell breaks loose. If I push breakfast out, my body seems to be OK with that. After breakfast, if I don't eat regularly, I can literally get shaky and sweaty from the reactive hypoglycemia. A real pain when I am out on a walk. I always, ALWAYS carry food with me.
Last of the open-enchilada and I'll flesh it out with a side of slaw.
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DH has had an issue with fungal toenail issues and in the past used Lamisal which did not cure the issue. The dermatologist he is seeing now suggested he use the yellow Listerine, white vinegar and water. So the proportions are 1/3 of each and to soak his feet twice a week (can reuse liquid for the week) for 20 minutes each time. It is working much better and he can still enjoy caffeine and alcohol. So it is worth a try but will warn the yellow Listerine is never on sale and it's pricey. We buy white vinegar by the gallon. Side effects so far: none.
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Our oncologist told DH to use iodine ointment or an iodine footbath...that is what her DH uses for his toenail fungus. Generic listerine is the same ingredient list. I'll mention this to DH..looks less messy. I still prefer the vicks. Easy and zingy.
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Just had my first (half) grapefruit since 1/1/16, when I started letrozole. Worth the wait!
The half-avocado in the fridge was looking a tad dingy, so I made guac with it (adding fresh pico, lime, cilantro and avoc. toast seasoning). Spread it on a small piece of low carb hi-fiber toast, topped with chopped shallot, grape tomatoes, more cilantro and a Happy Farms heritage egg. We're going to Regalia tonight, late (Bob won't be home till 9). Probably have carpaccio, salad and chicken saltimbocca (or spatchcocked & pan-roasted) with veg. instead of potatoes. Must...resist...pasta...
Speaking of heritage (and other pasture-raised) eggs, it looks like even the "pasture-raised" hens will be confined for awhile (per VitalFarms, Egg Innovations, and Pete&Gerry's press releases) due to avian flu. Geese are spreading it (and, sadly, have already "decorated" my newly-stained deck a la Jackson Pollack), so pasture-raised eggs may be a thing of the past unless H5N1 burns itself out. The geese & ducks that carry it don't get sick, though--so the bug won't "cull" their flocks and may be here to stay, affecting the industry and our animal-welfare-friendly eating intentions. (VitalFarms stock price has taken a nosedive).
Stopped eating last night at 9:30, didn't have brunch till 1:30. 16 hrs.--my jeans seem a tad looser than a couple of days ago. Could also be from increasing my water intake. Last night's dinner was pan-seared sable over arugula, with a small Caesar on the side; yesterday's brunch was a 2-jumbo-egg omelette with spinach, mushrooms and a slice of Swiss cheese, all sauteed in a little EVOO.
I think as long as I can keep 2/3 of my plate veggies and not snack between meals I'll be okay and not gain more. Gotta do something about my L foot so I can exercise in anything other than UGGs or flip-flops. (My neighborhood L.A. Fitness is not stellar--it's small, crowded, the staff are surly and the hygiene leaves something to be desired. May drive to the one up in Evanston, which has a pool and a women's-only section. Bummer about having to pay for parking, though).
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At Regalia tonight, we split: grilled octopus with caponata & arugula; tuna tartare with jalapeño; house Mediterranean salad; and a trio of tournedos (tenderloin filets) with truffled balsamic glaze, over sauteed spinach & grilled eggplant. Could have had blueberry mousse for dessert, but Bob wanted to spend his calories on brandy (Christian Bros., which I consider worthy of only setting on fire) to hang with our favorite bartender (who used to work at Cellars, Pumping Co--which burned down--and Hugo's/Gibson's downtown) who recently moved to Regalia. When we got home, I had a Delta-8 peanut butter dark chocolate truffle (no sugar, just monkfruit) from the health food store. Will let you know tomorrow how it affected me.
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Dinner was not memorable. Chicken pieces from two leftover curried chicken thighs, leftover quinoa, asparagus cut into lengths, fresh-made white sauce, curry powder and cumin. I sprinkled pepper flakes on my serving. A large tossed salad.
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The Delta-8 truffle gave me major munchies until nearly 3am, so never again. You know the munchies are major when you find yourself eating plain shmura matzo (the "bread of affliction" for which you pay through the nose to be afflicted) and savoring it...nibbling one "row" (between perforations) at a time. At least I ate mindfully instead of gobbling. Not eating today till at least 1:30, maybe 2. (See below).
Brunch this aft. will be keto lemon ricotta pancakes. I add an egg (separated, white whipped and folded in), a T. of whole milk ricotta, and a squeeze of lemon juice to 1/3 c. mix and 1/4 c. water or unsweetened vanilla almond milk. May grate in some nutmeg before griddling the batter in a large skillet greased with coconut oil. (I use a small ice-cream "disher" to portion the batter). Will sprinkle on Lakanto granulated or powdered monkfruit rather than syrup, which would deflate and cool the pancakes. Maybe a few blueberries too.
Bob is working late, and we didn't bring home leftovers last night (we were hungry and we shared). So I will make soft tacos or burritos out of almond-flour tortillas, leftover guac from yesterday's toast, creme fraiche or Greek yogurt, chopped lettuce & tomato, and Niman Ranch sauceless pulled pork.
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Sandy - I have hard time wearing anything but Uggs and my Adidas sandals, I use them for walking too, as I cannot find anything comfortable enough. My You Walk Skechers were good, but I wore them out and can't find them anywhere.
Last night I went out to dinner with my mom, we had Mexican and a shared a parrillada (think fajitas but with short spare ribs, chicken, carne asada, and chorizo). I didn't have any of the rice and beans and had one corn tortilla. Had more than enough to bring home. My son ate it for lunch.
Going to Brewers vs Cubs game tonight so dinner will be whatever is being served in the suite and tomorrow the Celtics vs. Bucks game, stadium food, which is delicious, but not the healthiest. My first major outings since the pandemic started (other than traveling to PR), but will be wearing my mask.
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Heritage red rice as the bed for a "poached" cod in cream/soy sauce along with wilted baby spinach and mushrooms (just canned buttons--didn't think far enough to use some of my dried beauties). New technique I used, mainly to prevent smell of fish since we are having guests in a few days but also, my cod didn't thaw completely. I set the pieces on a plate and added 2 or 3 TBS of sake over them and let them sit in that for 1/2 hour or so. NO smell. And the fish...like butter...the creamiest, tenderest fish I've ever made at home. I'll have to try this again to see if it was the sake or the cream as a poaching medium.
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Mada a choucroute instead--had to use up some kraut. Right now we're between storms and under tornado watch till 10 pm. (Sorry about the Cubs game, Serendipity). We are also under a water-dept. "overflow protocol," being asked to delay washing dishes, laundry, showering and even flushing lest the sewers get overwhelmed. Oh, joy--the only "safe space" (interior, away from glass) in our house is a tiny patch of basement...which has a 50-50 chance of flooding before this is over. And it starts all over again Tuesday.
As to temps? Here by the lake Tues. & Wed. will be in the 40s, due to winds blowing in off the lake and our being at the edge of the polar jet stream. Thanks to climate change, this pattern has happened here every spring & summer since 2020, and is likely to continue, just as local health authorities are urging people in the 'burbs to eat outdoors as much as possible because they've transitioned into "medium transmission" for COVID. Chicago is still "low," but not for long. So much for patio dining season--and once again, eating inside a restaurant will be a gamble. I don't mind wearing a mask to go shopping (never stopped), but the thought of having to go back to ordering delivery or curbside pickup enrages me. And once again, plans for our next vacation (and the kids' delayed honeymoon) are on hold.
The ONLY reason the new variant is increasing is because there are still enough anti-vaxers and anti-maskers to form a pool of walking Petri dishes. We dropped mandates too soon, and nobody will comply if the authorities try and reinstate them.
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I had too much going on today to cook before a friend came over at 6pm for a G&T to get away from her husband for a bit. He is NOT recuperating gracefully from his torn meniscus surgery. So late afternoon I downed a bowl of cottage cheese & canned peaches. Then I had a snack as I watched a Mercury play a Mozart string Quartet & a Mozart Clarinet Quintet - radishes, 1/2 an English cucumber & a handful of black olives. I'm so grateful that while the orchestra is performing in person again (this concert was set in the Museum of Fine Arts), they are still live streaming all the concerts. Probably 150 people sitting right on top of each other and only 3 or 4 wearing masks.
Tomorrow I'll make the shrimp fried rice I had to skip today.
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We went to a church fair in Ponchatoula (20 miles drive) yesterday afternoon and sat for an hour in the hot sun to watch and hear a great niece perform. Not sure of her age, maybe 11 or 12 but she looks like a mini 20 year-old. Plays the guitar and sings. On the way home we stopped at a Popeye's and bought fried chicken and mashed potatoes and coleslaw. The meal was our "dunch," to use Minus's word.
This was our Popeye's "fix," which we enjoy at least once a year.
There are enough leftovers in the refrigerator for dinner along with a salad.
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Leftovers tonight.
DH's brothers are flying in tomorrow for a few days. I was so excited until I saw the covid rates going up again. They are all getting up there in years and with DH's condition, wanted to see each other..well...in case...so no idea what the meal plans will be for next week.
As an aside, I'm re-doing my labs tomorrow and having some meltdowns. Oh to be brave, like some of you ladies.
Carole, I don't know if there are any Popeye out here; I'll keep my eyes peeled. I think Anthony Bourdain said it was his fav mac and cheese from there.
Sandy, hope no tornado touchdowns or floods. I remember the midwest summer storms.
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We sign the sales paperwork tomorrow, so tonight is the last night at the house...but we are sleeping in the camper that is parked in the driveway.
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Eric, best wishes to you and Sharon as you begin a new chapter. I look forward to your sharing some of your future experiences.
I had Popeye's leftovers for lunch yesterday and wasn't hungry for dinner. DH fended for himself and enjoyed pasta leftovers.
Tonight's dinner will be a frozen eggplant lasagna and a tossed salad.
I need to inventory the much-reduced contents of the freezer as May 19 gets very close.
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Frozen burgers, frozen sweet potato fries and a can of green beans. And we are off to pick up DH's brothers.
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Oh Eric - I hope everything went smoothly. We're all waiting to hear about your new excitement.
And Mae - are you settled in the mountains?
I heated up the rest of the large cold boiled shrimp tonight with pasta & butter. Dessert was an apple. Thanks for the tip that leftover pasta freezes beautifully. Can't remember if that gem was from Carole or Special K. I'm still looking forward to Naan pizza. I actually took the Raos out of the freezer a couple of days ago, but I still have to finish the leftover shrimp fried rice tomorrow.
Avocados on sale today for $0.67. Of course they're very small specimens. What really blew my mind was greeting cards. Trying to find Mother's Day cards for my nieces and there was not one under $6.99. WOW.
Meeting a friend for lunch Thursday that I haven't seen in a year. Her choice was P.F. Changs. They're OK, but last time I went I thought the quality had gone down hill. In any case, it will be great to see my friend.
And to round out this rambling missive - I HATE the new hearing aids. Hard to get in. Fall out easily. Impossible with a mask & not great with glasses. The fit has already been 'tweaked' once and I go again next week - and that's before we even talk about sound or volume. URGH. I would like to just flush them down the toilet.
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Carole, great minds think alike: last night's dinner was also CauilFlour brand frozen lasagna. Pretty good. Had part of a spinach salad Bob brought home Fri. night.
Brunch today was a French omelette with herbs & Boursin, plus a salad of arugula, sunflower greens (weird--some of the leaves still had shells clinging to them), mushrooms & tomato dressed with a few drops of 12-yr-old "tradizionale" DOP Emilia-Romagna balsamico (Acetaia Dodi orange label) that I got for my birthday in 2019. I have roughly half a tsp. remaining in the bottle (the bottom of which I run under hot water to thin it out enough to sprinkle). More about that stuff in a minute.
Bob's working late and eating at the office, so I cooked for myself: asparagus seared in EVOO and supermarket (Lucini) balsamic vinegar; and a branzino filet steamed (nuked) in parchment 90 sec., with julienned red & yellow peppers and herbs (thyme, lemon thyme, dill, parsley, tarragon & windowsill scallion).
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Now, back to the balsamico. I always keep a bottle of the supermarket stuff (Lucini is better than the Pompeiian or Alessi "industriale" fake balsamic dreck, the "balsamic glaze" is thick because it's mostly a tart sugar syrup, and the IGP stuff is okay if I didn't have the DOP) for cooking & grilling, but I like to dole out the occasional droplets of real DOP tradizionale balsamico on a Caprese, strawberries, Gorgonzola or a few chunks of Parm-Regg. IGP is aged only up to a few years and can have up to 6% acidity--and it's made in Modena. DOP tradizionale is made only in Emilia-Romagna (inverted tulip-shaped bottle) and Modena (round bottle with a square or rectangular base). Both types of DOP are sold in bottles no bigger than 3 oz. The Emilia-Romagna stuff is aged 12 yrs (orange label), 16 yrs (silver) or 25 (gold); the DOP from Modena is either 12 yrs old (vecchio) or 25 (extravecchio, gold cap). Bob said it was okay after 3 yrs. to get a new bottle, so this time I went with the Modena version, 25 yrs old. (If I'm gonna spend and dole it out like caviar or fresh truffles, I get the best I can afford--and unlike caviar or truffles, it keeps for years if you store it away from heat & light).
One thing about my soon-to-be-empty Emilia-Romagna bottle has always puzzled me. The similar 12-yr-old bottle I had before that (for >25 years), was so thick it was basically crystallized sludge. I didn't know about heating the bottle in hot water, so like an idiot I diluted the sludge instead. When I got the Acetaia Dodi bottle in Jan. 2019, it came with not only a glass-topped pouring cork with a tiny cork plug, but a strange glass bulb-shaped thing that fit over the top but didn't seal--it just sat there loosely, in danger of falling off & shattering in case I were to carelessly nudge it. Its capacity is scarcely bigger than a tablespoon, but I had no idea what it's for--never saw another before or since. My new Modena bottle came with the same pouring-cork and tiny plug, but not the glass bulb.
I went deep into the Internet rabbit hole looking for answers but came up dry. I deduced that maybe it's s "tasting" glass--it is slightly pointy on top so you can't set it down until you've knocked back what you poured into it. A couple of Italian sites featured ceramic tasting spoons (like for caviar, metal other than vermeil is a no-no); it's called "balsamico" because it was traditionally sipped as a health tonic. So maybe I'll try tasting it that way--though to me it's too costly to try to sip straight. One thing I won't do is cook with it--you should never heat tradizionale balsamico lest you ruin the unique taste.
Why is it "tradizionale?" Well, the way it's made (from unfermented cooked grape must) is akin to a sherry or Madeira solera system: decanted over the years into ever-smaller barrels of different woods, the set of which is called a "batteria" which used to be part of a 19th century N. Italian bride's dowry. (The stuff was not produced for commercial sale till the 20th century). Every year the largest barrel gets topped up with that year's batch, and so on down the line. There's a lot of evaporation through the wood's pores, called the "angel's share" (much like when aging Cognac or Scotch), so the contents get thicker as they age. It must have less than 3% acidity to be sold as a tradizionale DOP A 25-yr extravecchio requires a much larger batteria than does a 12-yr old; there's an intermediate product from Modena called "saba" which is usually aged up to 10 years but is understandably less viscous. The cheaper but still decent-quality IGP-designation gets aged but not progressively decanted. The supermarket stuff can be diluted with red wine vinegar; and the cheapest "industriale" stuff is essentially sweetened red wine vinegar.
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The eggplant lasagna was delicious. And so easy. I wish I had another dish in the freezer to take out for tonight. I will probably get out a package of veal thin fillets to go with asparagus and/or yellow squash.
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We signed the paperwork yesterday.Technically the house is ours until the sales deed is recorded, but we left as soon as the real estate agent checked to make sure we had not accidentally left anything.
We spent last night at Fools Hollow State Park (near Showlow, AZ) and we will be at the park until Thursday morning.
Dinner was ham and cheese sandwiches.
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Congrats, Eric, may your new home bring you lots of joy.
Made black cod with broccoli and emperial black (forbidden) rice.
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Wally - I bought some black rice a couple of weeks ago but haven't cooked it yet. Thanks for reminding me.
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eric - very exciting! Keep us posted! When can you move to the new digs?
wally and minus - I too have black rice - I should make some tonight! I have some boneless pork chops and was considering making shaved Brussels Sprouts slaw with Dijon mustard dressing - the black rice would add some contrast to the plate. Brown rice would make for a beige looking situation.
Dinner on Mon. was kale and napa cabbage salad with chicken, yellow pepper, scallion, and cashews with Ken's Steakhouse Asian Sesame dressing. It has more sugar than I was happy with and the ginger in it was pretty strong - I am thinking I can combine it with another dressing with almost no sugar and not lose flavor. Dinner last night was chicken and black bean quesadillas for DH and nothing for me, I did have some GF toast later. Tummy was not happy yesterday. Tomorrow morning, at the crack of dawn, I am having some remediation surgery on my tooth implant. For whatever reason - nobody is sure why - I have lost bone just under the gum surface and now have a significant hollow on the side of the gum and the implant screw is exposed. This procedure is an implantoplasty with another bone graft. Should be interesting. This is the same doc that did the implant initially, selected by my dentist because he is a maxillofacial surgeon and I had six years of Prolia. The doc does not think this is related to Prolia, and neither was the initial bone loss problem - I had a very old crown (had since high school!!!) that should have been replaced earlier, and the bone loss occurred slowly and was not detectable on x-ray, until there was a visible issue which was only corroborated by cone beam CT. He is great, super competent and forward thinking, and I trust him completely. I am thinking dinner tomorrow night may be oatmeal. Dinner may be oatmeal for a while since I have to be on antibiotics for a week afterward and this particular one does not do my stomach any favors. I should figure something out that I can make ahead for DH because I am thinking I may not be in the mood for dinner making.
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specialk, sorry to hear of your dental/bone issues. I hope you don’t have too much pain.
Last night was baked salmon, roasted cauliflower, asparagus, and scallion mashed potatoes. Tonight will likely be leftovers with tilapia instead of salmon. I have a lot of leftover roasted cauliflower that I’ll probably modify with some crumbled feta and parsley. Last night I parboiled the entire head and then basted the head with a Dijon, honey, garlic and olive oil dressing before roasting. The recipe called for balsamic vinegar but I forgot to add it since my cooking was derailed by a tornado watch that ended up just being a thunderstorm. Another option for the leftover cauliflower might be to purée it into a soup. We’ll see what strikes my fancy come dinner time
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