Tea party for two

We read a lot of Fancy Nancy. I think she’s marvelous. That’s fancy for quite enjoyable. A tea party, a real one, with actual tea, would be something Fancy Nancy would do. Figured this would be a good thing for a rainy day. It’s been raining a lot lately.

Kid’s plate: baby carrots, turkey/croissant mini sandwich, grapes, olives, apple slices, Babybel, multigrain wheat thins. Minty hot cocoa.
My plate: quick chicken salad/cucumber and croissant sandwiches, grapes, carrots, apples. English breakfast tea.

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We spent tea time talking about books we’d read (Fancy Nancy and the Delectable Cupcakes) and movies we’d seen (Mr. Peabody and Sherman, for her). We ate with our pinkies extended. She spilled cocoa on her ruffle skirt. Everything was delectable.

Water

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Do you drink 64 ounces of water daily? That’s the recommended daily level. Here’s what that means for me:
8 oz before I leave for work
2 of the water bottles on the left, while I’m at work = 32 oz
1 of the pink bottles, after work = 24 oz

This means I’m peeing all the time. But whatever. If I don’t meticulously track my intake in this way, I don’t make quota. Makes weekends really hard since I’m not sitting at a desk with bottles in front of me. But I’m trying. All of this water leaves no room to drink anything else. Maybe that’s the point.

Why all this talk about water? Another nutrition challenge at the gym must be in my future … To be continued.

A food post, San Gabriel style

Let’s review what I ate while visiting my parents, shall we? Most of these dishes have names that, if forced at gun point, I might try to pronounce. But since I’m not being forced to, I’m not even going to name them. I’m just going to describe them, and if you are so inclined you can include in the comments (if you know the names) what these dishes are called. Only in Chinese, okay?

Hot pot .. At a Japanese restaurant. For anyone not in the know, this is where the server brings a burner to your table and the soup, veggies and meat are cooked in front of you. In some cases you put the raw meat in yourself. I can’t remember if this was the case, as I had a plate of sashimi in front of me.

Hot Pot

Fish (including the head), vegetables, fish balls, etc

And here it is. The sashimi dinner, which the kid devoured. The fish was really fresh.

Sashimi plate ... or what's left of it

Sashimi plate … or what’s left of it

We walked around some mall in Santa Anita. It had a carousel, play area AND a Sanrio store. As you can see it was a trip meant for the kid. Including lunch at the food court. She ate a slice of cheese pizza from as Sbarro. I went to Chipotle, of all places. Chicken bowl, without most of the non paleo stuff. I did add black beans and the guacamole, but man was it not exciting.

Food Court lunch: Chipotle chicken bowl, no rice, no cheese, no sour cream. No, really.

Food Court lunch: Chipotle chicken bowl, no rice, no cheese, no sour cream. No, really.

I showed the sign to my Dad so he had to try it. He had the won ton soup. He was not impressed.

Just because.

Just because.

This was breakfast, talk about comfort food. Talk about sooo non-paleo.

Hot unsweetened soy milk, mixed with salty/pickled goodness, and a bread sandwich to dip. It is fried dough sandwiched within a toasted sesame seed bread. Seriously good.

Hot unsweetened soy milk, mixed with salty/pickled goodness, and a bread sandwich to dip. It is fried dough sandwiched within a toasted sesame seed bread. Seriously good.

On our first night there went ate out at a Chinese restaurant, no surprise. The meal itself was what I would expect from my parents ordering … Steamed ginger chicken, honey walnut prawns, string beans, crispy chow mein noodles. To top it off, the wait staff provided this at the end of the meal. It’s the thing I remember eating at the end of big, fancy, important meals as a kid.

dessert soup

It’s sweet, it includes beans and some kind of mushroom or funghi.

I fully expected to eat a lot of Chinese food when visiting the parents. Definitely did that. When we got back, nothing sounded better than some Kidd Valley. Mushroom burger.

Kidd Valley - Mushroom Burger

Kidd Valley – Mushroom Burger – the not-so-ideal antidote to end my weekend in SG

 

WODs of February

Valiantly tried to remember to take photos. I think I did okay this time:
Doubleunders make most WODs longer. I was able to string more than 10 once. Want to know how? I watched Sam, in our class. He’s good at everything. He jumps up straight, but higher. I tried the same thing and lo and behold. Doubleunders. They still are not a favorite and when I’m tired I still stumble around, but hey, I figured it out.
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Fortunately this running one landed on a morning it was not raining.
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Six minutes? Quickie.
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This year I’ve noticed some wrist soreness on my right wrist. Could be crossfit overuse, could be keyboard/poor ergonomics, could be walking a maniac dog, or all three combined. Danielle suggested wrist wraps, which I got from Amazon. I use them for front squats and other overhead movements (at Liz’s suggestion). After weeks of daily wrist mobility, I noticed this week the pain and soreness had mostly disappeared. Nice.
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Valentines Day workout. It included partners, but there was an odd number of us. Guess who was the third wheel? Moi. “The Breakup” was fun, though. They are hard but I mostly like those minute deadline ones.
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I missed the day everyone was going for box jump height PRs, but suddenly my 20″ box is everyone’s 20″ box, so I went up to 22. It was awkward but I finished.
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I’m not remembering this one much. I remember the skill work a little more, because I was unable to get the kipping pull-up done. I’m not upset. I’m not fond of the kipping, I’d rather just do strict whenever, whereever.
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Single-arm is really effective. Always harder than anticipated.
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This was the last WOD of the month (why these are not in order, no idea). I was trailing Molly, about to head out for the run and Mitch said, “go catch up to Molly” ah ok, good idea. So I sped up to do just that. Narrowed the gap, but not enough.
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This was good. I made up time during the row, and lost time in the Doubleunders. It all evens out. Still the DUs are looking better.
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This was like parallel universe, sine Jess taught, but in the main box, and the 5:30 class. Whoa! On this day Jess demonstrated a push-up supported by the back of her hands, fingers facing each other. WHOA. Wrist mobility.
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The one pic that’s missing is the day we showed up and the power was out! A few of us stuck around to erg in the dark. I erged for about 15 min but a) erging bores me to tears these days (did I really do 40-min pieces?) and b) didn’t want to make our poor coach wait in the dark for us to finish.

So, there you go. Short month, but lots of pics. Phew.

Breakdown on the #Whole30 highway

… And 209 hours after I started the Whole30, I had a slice of sausage mushroom pizza from Pagliacci. I wish I could say it was the best tasting pizza ever, but it was a little too hot and eaten too quickly to be enjoyed. The next day I had 2 Manny’s Pale Ales and a dinner of breads hummus, nachos, and you get the gist. But this post isn’t about my downfall. That’s the next one. This one is about the highs before the lows. It’s about winter squash.

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Last week the kid and I ventured out to the U-District Farmers Market and came home with squash. One spaghetti, one acorn and one pumpkin, at least I think it was a pumpkin. The pumpkin was something the kid wanted, but didn’t want to eat, and which I found in her room getting mushy and threw out.

The acorn I used to make 4 Ingredient Acorn Squash Candy as a side to this chicken dinner from last Sunday. For the chicken I decided to try to “roast” in the slow cooker (just Bing “slow cooker roast chicken” and you will run into a handful of recipes). Probably won’t do that again, but it was handy because it left the oven free for squash experiments.

The experiment being the acorn squash. I don’t think I like acorn squash. Maybe a lot of butter and sugar make it taste better, but the bacon I added didn’t do the trick (and Paleomg repeatedly said it would taste like candy. It did not.)

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This is the plating of the slow-cooker roasted chicken, squash and green beans. The chicken could have used a little more flavoring, or some basting throughout. But uncovering to baste defeats the “let it be” philosophy of the slow cooker, and requires you to add more time in the cooker, which I didn’t have.
The spaghetti squash was used for lunch, and was the best tasting of the different things I made that day. And was easy peasy. Squash + marinara sauce + leftover chicken breast = lunch for a week.

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Spaghetti squash, for anyone that doesn’t know, doesn’t taste like spaghetti. It tastes like squash. You know what tastes like spaghetti? Spaghetti does. So keep this in mind when you make yourself this plate and you’ll do just fine.

So. Whole30 is more or less over, though my kitchen is full of paleo ingredients, and there are still more paleo recipes to come on the blog. And a few kinda sorta paleo recipes as well.

Meet my new bestie, Chia Seeds

I’m going to put 2 points on the board for you, here in the first 12 seconds of this blog post:

In a blender, … 1/2 banana + 1/2 cup lite coconut milk + splash of vanilla extract = heaven in a glass.

Also known as one tasty banana shake. Growing up, I was in Brownies (remember Brownies? The pre-k for Girl Scouts). I don’t remember much, but I do recall we made banana shakes one day. The recipe was something like, 1 c milk, 1 banana, 1 tsp vanilla, 3 – 4 ice cubes and like 1 CUP of sugar. Okay, it probably wasn’t a cup, but why do i remember it like it was a cup? Maybe because I was in second grade at the time. At any rate, it was a shake recipe that I still remember to this day, and made on may occasions. This heaven in a glass took me right back.

Okay, back to the topic at hand. The first time I remember trying chia seeds was when I was on a business trip in New York. My hotel was a couple of blocks from a raw juice bar (a bar that was, like next door to Dunkin Donuts). At the time I was trying to stay grain-free as much as possible, and dashed in there to see what it had to offer. In their to-go cold shelf was some chia pudding. Yes, it was delish. Later that trip I was in Whole Foods and picked up a chia-seeded yogurt. They were both after-dinner treats that hit the spot for me. (For the record, that NY business trip did not stay grain-free, as i very well recall visiting both that Dunkin Donuts AND the Bouchon Bakery at Columbus Circle, where that Whole Foods is also located). I just looked up that juice bar for you. It was Juice Generation. I know you were dying to know. And yes I remembered correctly, there is a DD right near it, too. I can’t forget the DDs.

So where was I. Ah, yes! Chia Seeds. Now, on your own search “benefits of chia seeds” to read all about why everyone is goo-goo-ga-ga about these little things.. Here is the 3-second replay: “Maximum nutrients for minimum calories” (I got that from Dr. Oz). Plus, when mixed with liquid they acquire this very cool gel, so it acts like a thickener. Which presumably is why in Paleo and Whole 30 worlds you’ll see chia seeds in recipes for puddings and stuff.

To be clear, according to the Whole30 masters, chia seeds are not encouraged, but not banned. That might be the case in some Paleo-circles as well. I’m going to take a wild guess that you are going to be better off with a Banana-Chia Seed pudding than an artificially flavored Strawberry Pudding from a box. Just thinkin’ out loud here.

Speaking of Strawberry Pudding … here’s the next score, a surprise kick return for a touchdown to start the second half.

Strawberry-Coconut Chia Seed Pudding aka Strawberries on a Cloud. Oh yes, I went there.

  • 4 – 6 medium sized strawberries
  • 1 cup coconut milk
  • 3 tbsp Chia seeds

Put it all in the blender and blend till smooth. Pour into a jar or container of some sort. Use a spatula to get all the goodness in there. Chill overnight or at least 4 hours. I did a check at hour 3 and my eyes were like “WHA THIS IS AMAZING”. The next morning, my second taste test and still yum. I took a scoop and laid it on top of the last of my Apple-Raisin-Concoction, brought it to work and still yum. Winner.

Stawberry-Coconut-Chia Seed Pudding

Stawberry-Coconut-Chia Seed Pudding

Final score, a pick-six because your team is THAT good: This Banana-Coconut Chia Seed Pudding is adapted from this recipe.

  • 1/2 banana
  • 3/4 cup lite coconut milk
  • 3 tbsp chia seeds
  • splash of vanilla (optional … is this Whole30 approved? I keep meaning to check)
  1. Blend.
  2. Pour
  3. Chill. Sometime in the middle of the fridging, take it out and stir it up, making sure that the seeds aren’t clumping up.

My other recommendation is to enjoy within 24 hours (so chill overnight, then enjoy). Otherwise the bananas take on that “I’m a banana that’s been in the fridge for a couple of days” taste. You know the taste I’m talking about? When I researched different pudding recipes, it was during my quest for a sweet Whole30 treat. Many of the recipes I found included honey or maple syrup, so I was trying to find a fruit or ingredient sweet enough that it didn’t require a sweetener. Bananas are perfect for that, however for best taste it needs to be enjoyed somewhat quickly.

Initial thumbs up from the kiddo. But when I asked the next day if she wanted some she declined. Must have known about the banana-a-day-later taste.

Ultimately it’s not artificially flavored pudding consistency for me. More like a porridge. Which, for me, is a nice alternative on those mornings where I’d like a bowl of something. If I plan properly, I could wake up in the morning and have just that. A sweet bowl of pudding-porridge.

One note about playing with your ch-ch-ch-chia pet – I mean seeds. When washing up, man those seeds get everywhere. And because thay have that cool gelling action, when they stick to everything. Sponges. Blenders. Sinks. Just letting you know ahead of time.

Don’t be daunted by the price. They’re expensive. At Metropolitan Market it’s something like $16 a bag. At PCC they had them on sale, and on top of that I was there on member discount day so together I think I was able to save $5. But, do the math. How many tablespoons are in this big bag? How often do you by a pound of medjool dates for a recipe? Price it out per recipe and I think you’ll see it’s not much different (perhaps even more cost-effective) than buying a can of coconut milk or that other special ingredient.

Additional research and inspiration (yet to be tested):

 

Looking for a sweet treat on the #Whole30 highway

Here is why Whole 30 is treating me better than Paleo: I am not spending my days and nights dreaming up some random concoction of almond flour, applesauce and agave syrup to create an excuse of a muffin or something that will keep my weird dessert/sweets cravings at bay. Instead, you just have to give in to the fact that these things don’t exist. And, somehow you survive.

I can tell, however, that I’m beginning to obssess about the food thing a little bit. That’s coming from late night Pinterest surfing and recipe searching. I did decide that it was time to try to find something that might be acceptable to both the Whole30 and to me as a “dessert”. Those bacon-date thingies, those were actually pretty darn good. What else is there?

I tried out two recipes that I’ll share with you. I can’t say that either of them were a huge success out of the gate, but I’m not going to give up on either of them just yet.

Let’s start with the “Slow Cooker Baked Apples”. The inspiration came from this recipe. I made swaps and substitutions based on what I had in the kitchen.

Apple-Raisin-Coconut Concoction

Apple-Raisin-Coconut Concoction (dress rehearsal. Needs some work)

The result was a little dry for my taste. Kid didn’t like it. Husband didn’t like it. Oh well. I put the leftovers in the fridge and slept on it, so to speak.

In the mornings, 6 days out of 7 I will have eggs for breakfast. If I’m not following Paleo it’s more like 5 days out of 7. Usually, that seventh day I’m just sick of eggs and I can’t do it. So it’s toast if I’m not on Paleo, and random meat stuff if I am. This morning, the day after the baked apple fail, I scrounged around, and took out the apple concoction. From the pantry I grabbed a can of lite coconut milk and unsweetened dried coconut and my (new) bag of chia seeds.

And, you know what? A real improvement to this dish. I sprinkled some chia seeds on top and found what I was looking for. Oh, and since I had a can of coconut milk open, let’s pour a little bit of that in my black coffee. Great idea! This made the morning better, and somehow kept me full (alongside some mixed berries) until lunch.

Apple-Raisin-Coconut Concoction Finale

Apple-Raisin-Coconut Concoction Finale

It goes something like this:

Apple-Raisin-Coconut Finale:

  • 6 small apples (I used Pink Lady), peeled, cored, chopped
  • 1/2 cup raisins
  • 1 tbsp cinnamon
  • 1-2 tbsp coconut oil, plus more to grease pot
  • 1/4 c coconut flour
  • 3/4 c chopped nuts of your choice (i used walnuts & almonds)
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp nutmeg

Top With (measurements are to your liking):

  • 1/4 c coconut milk
  • 1 tbsp coconut flakes
  • 1 tsp chia seeds (optional)
  1. Grease the slow cooker with some coconut oil.
  2. Combine apples, raisins, tbsp cinnamon together. Melt the tbsp+ of coconut oil. Once melted mix in the flour, nuts and spices until you create a crumble top. Add it on top of the apples in the slow cooker
  3. Set the slow cooker to High for 2 hours, then turn to low for the last 30 minutes (if you want a drier crumble top, take the cover off for the final 30).
  4. To serve, pour some coconut milk into a ramekin, enough to just cover the bottom. serve out about 1 cup of apple concoction. Then drizzle more coconut milk over and top with dried coconut and chia seeds.

Voila! You can see how easy it would be to mix and match, fruits, toppings, etc.

That open can of coconut milk will come in handy for my next sweet treat experiment. To be continued…

My funny #Whole30 valentine

whole30-friendly valentine dinner

whole30-friendly valentine dinner

We don’t really “do” Valentine’s Day. Just not into it these days. But this, this was something super awesome that the Husband did for me. He is great, though sometimes frustrated with these weird diets I venture on every now and again. Bread goes bad because I stop eating it. Edamame uneaten. Milk sour. OK, I don’t think the milk has ever gone sour in this house because I’ve never been a big milk drinker, but you get the gist.. But tonight, he did this, and it was perf. First, T-bone steak (“the best one at the store,” he says). It was smooth and rich like buttah, i tell you. On the side, some mushrooms, slightly spiced shrimp and steamed green beans. A really great Whole30 meal. Made just for me!

Now, I don’t think I can remember the last time a Valentine’s day has ever gone by where I didn’t indulge in some kind of chocolatey treat. Whether it’s Dilettante, or Ghiradelli, or just plain old Metropolitan Market, there was something. Just because I don’t like Valentine’s day doesn’t mean I don’t love sweets, right?

Until TODAY. Today I walked by the chocolates, just gave a cursory glance to the bakery shelf. Today the kiddo and I made a fun treat: Bacon-Wrapped-Dates, stuff with an almonds. Super-simple, even for this girl, who doesn’t know a lick about bacon.

Now, you might be thinking, well that sure sounds more like an appetizer than a dessert. To that I say, have YOU been having raisins and walnuts every night pretending it was dessert? No? Then sit down.

bacon-wrapped dates

bacon-wrapped dates

Actually, as I slightly burnt the these under the broiler, the dates took on a burnt/caramelized flavor, which I just loved. Chewy, sweet and delicious. I may need to go and get me another one. I’ve already had 4 of ’em. Just because I’m not enjoying chocolate doesn’t mean I won’t overindulge.

Literally, this is how easy it is:

Bacon-Date Candy (ok, it’s technically an appetizer)

  • 8 dates (Medjool, please)
  • 3 slices of bacon
  • 8 almonds
  1. Pit the dates and add in an almond where that pit used to be. Dates are mushy so you can almost reseal the date like the almond was always there.
  2. Wrap the date in some bacon. I’m not a bacon expert, but I trimmed the excess fat, and probably used about 1/3 of the bacon piece to wrap it around.
  3. Place the bacon dates on a baking sheet, and put them under the broiler about 10 minutes. I turned them at the 5 minute mark.

I’m kind of excited to make these again.

 

 

Nian Gao 2013

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A little celebration for the lunar new year, which happened at the end of January. My sis mentioned she was going to try to make Nian Gao, aka New years cake and that triggered the idea for me, too. It helped that for once I had the ingredients on hand. I did another baked version this year, though someday I will try the steamed version. The recipe I tried was an individual cake recipe, so I used a muffin pan. I didn’t get the brown chewy crust like it should have. They were okay, not great, possibly due to the changes in pan. Steamed next time. For reals.

For comparison here is last year’s cake.

Slow cooker diaries: Morrocan Chicken

I’ve made this one before, and even made the comment that it wouldn’t take much to Paleo-ize the recipe. And so, here it is:

Morrocan Chicken

Morrocan Chicken

  • chopped red pepper
  • red onion
  • 1 can diced tomatoes, drained
  • 1 can (more or less) tomato paste
  • 1.5-2 lbs chicken thighs
  • raisins
  • Cauliflower florets
  • 1-2 tsp cumin seeds (I mashed them with my mortar and pestle first. How awesome is it that I am using our mortar and pestle)
  • Pinch of paprika
  • Almond nut butter

Combine them all but almond butter with chicken on top in your slow cooker. I start with a half the tomato paste, then add the second half later on in the cooking process. I like my sauce/gravy thick. Cooked on high for the first hour, then low for 5 – 6 hours. Instant thermometer read 180 degrees before I decided it was ready. At that point I swirled in a big fat tbsp of almond butter.

Husband served it to little one with delicious, fresh, wonderful Parpadelle noodles that I did without. Mmmm … noodles.

So, this was my dress rehearsal to my Whole30 experiment. I bought myself a “last-supper” piece of chocolate to enjoy as my swan song … which I forgot to eat last night. Grrr.

Recipe adapted from NYMSCC.