Well, this has finally caught up with us. I've gained about 3-5 lbs and D has gained some as well. Also, his blood pressure shot up sky high this past weekend after we had spent the whole week with the grandkids taking them out to various places. There was healthy food involved, but there was also a lot of bad food involved as well.
So, it's back to cooking at home for dinner and I am also packing D's lunches again. Right now, he is getting mostly raw stuff in his lunch to help bring his blood pressure down, because raw foods have very little sodium. It seems to have worked after the first day. It's not down low, but it's out of the big red danger zone that it was in the other night.
This also means that I am back to buying and using fresh veggies and herbs in the dinners we cook. `tis not bad, just more work. When using fresh food, preparation and chopping is usually involved and it can be time consuming for those who don't have an 30 minutes just to chop the needed ingredient for dinner. The way I look at it is, it's worth it! To be healthy, to get rid of the massive amounts of sodium, fat and calories that is in pre-prepared food or canned goods, it's worth it.
In the meantime, I am hoping that the kids pick up on what they see and grow to think that's the way it should be. I know that my father never allowed sugar in the house unless he was baking, which was usually Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter. Other than that, we always had artificial sweetner and very seldom used actual sugar. This is something I have carried over from my childhood, as I can actually feel the granules of sugar when it's used in drinks and such and I don't like it! Just as well......we get enough processed sugar in breads and starches and cereals.
Last night we had a couple of things that I have made before, so I am just gonna copy and paste the recipes for those, but I also made a new dish --- Creamed Spinach. I got this recipe out of a low fat cookbook, so it's rather healthy.
This whole meal, with the serving sizes suggested and without dressing or cheese on the salad, is only 271 calories, 5 grams of fat, and virtually no sodium. How's that for a healthy meal??I also included the individual nutritional information with each dish, in case you want to make them separately to add to other dished you may make.
Add non fat yogurt and fresh blueberries/strawberries for dessert!
So Dinner Tonight is:
Garden Salad
Spaghetti Squash
Creamed Spinach
Broiled Tomatoes
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Garden Salad
This salad when using iceburg and without dressing or cheese, contains:
59 calories
0 fat
virtually no sodium
- 2 cups of lettuce of choice
- 1/4 yellow squash, sliced
- 1/4 cucumber, sliced
- 1 small portobella mushroom, sliced
- 5 cherry tomatoes
- 3 baby carrots, sliced lengthwise
- Parmesan Cheese (optional)
- low cal, low fat dressing of choice
- Add more raw ingredients of choice
Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Serve.
Spaghetti Squash
1 cup has:
42 calories
0 fat
10 grams of carbs
4 grams of sugar
28 grams of sodium (very, very low)
1. Pre-heat Oven to 400 degrees.
2. After cutting and cleaning the seeds out of the spaghetti squash, place 1/2 cup of water in a casserole dish. Place the squash open side down in the water. Bake for an hour.
3. When you take it out, the outside of the squash will be very very soft, as well as hot. I use an oven mitt to pick up one half of the squash, and take a fork and clean out the inside into a large bowl. It will come out in strands, like spaghetti. Do this with both halves.
4. Use about 1/2 stick of Smart Balance butter (a 50/50 butter blend with omega fats) and toss with the squash.
5. Serve, adding pepper if desired.
Creamed Spinach
Makes 4 servings at 137 calories and 4 grams of fat per serving
- 2 lbs of fresh spinach
- 2 cups of 1% milk
- 1 small shallot clove, peeled and chopped
- 2 garlic cloves, peeled and chopped
- 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
- 1 teaspoon oil
- i teaspoon unsalted butter (we use Smart Balance, a butter blend that's healthier)
- 1 1/2 tablespoon of cornstarch (you can use flour, but cornstarch has no sodium)
1. Trim the spinach and rinse in cold water. Shake and squeeze the excess water from the leaves. Put spinach in a large pot, cover and cook on medium high heat until wilted (about 3 minutes).
2. Pour into colander and rinse with cold water to cool it. Squeeze out excess water and coarsely chop.
3. In a small saucepan, mix milk, shallow, garlic and thyme. Bring to boil, then immediately reduce heat. Simmer for 20 minutes.
4. When milk mixture is close to finishing, place oil and butter in a medium saucepan and set over medium heat to melt butter. When melted, add the cornstarch and cook for 1 minute, stirring constantly with a whisk.
5. Strain the milk mixture into the flour mixture, stirring constantly with whisk. (Discard the milk solids left behind from the garlic and shallots). Cook, stirring constantly with whisk for about 5, 10 minutes or until thickened.
6. Add the chopped spinach. If sodium is not an issue, season with salt and pepper. Cook one minute to heat thoroughly.
Broiled Tomatoes
One large tomato has about 33 calories, less than 1 gram of fat, virtually no sodium, and comes packs with a good 1/3 of your recommended daily intake of Vitamin C and Vitamin A. Of course, they're also a wonderful source of lycopene an antioxidant known for its disease prevention properties. Sinply factor in the sprinkle of parmesan into your calorie intake.
- 4 large tomatoes
- basil
- parmesan cheese
- Halve the tomatoes
- sprinkle with basil and Parmesan
- Broil for 2-3 minutes
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