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Eat Like An Astronaut: Cook at Home Even When You HATE to Cook

I have a three-pronged problem: I want to eat healthy, I hate to cook, and I’m lazy. I was going to say “busy,” but I will own “lazy.”

I am also a science fiction fan. My favorite part of the movie is not when they defeat the hostile aliens, but when the crew gathers around to eat, envying how the computer always provides the spaceship crew with neat little compartmentalized meals. If only I had a spaceship that would make my dinner, I used to think, I could eat well.

So, this led me to the answer for me: To figure out how to eat like an astronaut. I found if I could open my refrigerator and find the equivalent of astronaut-packed meals, I would have my problems solved.batch cooking

I finally faced the fact that I was not going to suddenly enjoy cooking, I was not going to spend a whole day of my precious weekend in the kitchen, and I couldn’t make myself happy with the frozen dinners you buy in the grocery store; they taste like cardboard, are full of sodium, and are very expensive. So, here’s how I figured out how to do it:

First, I bought a “smart” pressure cooker. Mine is an Instant Pot, but there are many on the market. It was well under a hundred dollars.

The next thing I got were meal prep containers. These are like the plastic sectioned trays frozen dinners come in, with snap-on lids. They can be used and washed seven or eight times before they start to crack, and they are about eight dollars for a pack of fifteen or twenty. I like the two-section ones, but they have ones with three sections as well.

I make both lunches and dinners for myself in the astronaut style packs. I reserve a couple of hours on Sunday to get them together for the week, and I’m all set. I’m going to give examples of a dinner I make, and a lunch. I have a variety in my repertoire, and once I got going I found could rotate them around so that there were always some in the freezer and some in the fridge so I wouldn’t have to eat the same thing every day, or make a bunch of different things on my Sunday. I have it down so I make one batch of dinners and one batch of lunches each Sunday.

For a typical lunch, I do a wrap. I like the spinach and herb ones. I don’t like mayonnaise, so I use fat free sour cream for the “glue,” which you need to hold them together. You can also use hummus or plain Greek yogurt for this, it just has to hold it together. I start by putting down the turkey or ham, and then put in strips of carrots, cucumbers, or whatever vegetables I like. I do like a little crunch to them, and lettuce will wilt so I found the strips of raw veggies worked better. I sometimes throw in strips of cheese, black olives, cherry tomatoes…you get the picture. These get rolled up, cut in half, and put in the big section of my meal prep tray. I tried a handful of crackers in the small section, but the moisture from the wraps gets them soggy after a couple of days, so I use something already wrapped up, pre-wrapped crackers or fig bars. The lunches then get popped in the fridge and I have lunch ready to grab and put in an insulated bag as I’m heading out the door for work.

An example of a dinner I make is spaghetti and meatballs. Here’s where the pressure cooker really makes this come together. I pour in a jar of spaghetti sauce and two jars of water, a package of dry spaghetti (broken in half once so it fits in the pot), and a bag of frozen meatballs. I put the lid on the cooker, cook at high pressure for eight minutes, and the spaghetti and meatballs are magically ready when the lid comes off. I portion that out into my meal prep containers, and then steam broccoli for my side vegetable. This takes 45 seconds in the pressure cooker, and gets put into the small section of my container. Half of the meals go in the freezer, half in the fridge, where I already have a few beef stews, chicken and mushrooms, and some of the other meals I’m rotating through out of my frozen stockpile from previous Sundays. Total prep time for all of this, lunches and dinners, is around two hours, sometimes less.

In the process of learning to eat this way, I discovered I few principles and tips that make it easier:

  • YouTube is your friend. You can find lots of pressure cooker recipe books, but there are hundreds of people using pressure cookers who have great recipes you can watch them make for free. Put in the specific brand name of your cooker and “recipes” in the search bar of YouTube and you’ll be presented with a cornucopia of meals you can make in five or ten minutes tops. Pinterest also offers lots of healthy instant pot recipes.
  • The food prep containers are as important for eating this way as the pressure cooker. If I have a big serving container of a few day’s worth of an entrée in my fridge, I will probably look at it, think about dishing it out and putting it with a vegetable, also in a big bowl, and decide it’s easier to just have a bowl of cereal (yes, I will admit to being that lazy). If it’s one of my astronaut meals, I will happily grab it, stick it in the microwave for a minute and sit down to a healthy meal. I don’t even have to dirty an extra plate. I get meal prep containers that are dishwasher safe, but I will say that they will fill up a dishwasher in just a couple of days. I usually hand-wash mine after my meal at the sink with a brush and some soap and throw it in the dish drainer. By Sunday, I have a clean stack to fill up again.
  • Plan. Always know what your meals for the week are. You want to go into your Sunday session with all the ingredients ready and knowledge of what’s going in those meal prep sections. As I said, I make one set of dinners and one set of lunches per week. I have seven or eight entrees and make either wraps or chef’s salads for my lunches. I have cards for these that I take to the grocery store that have the shopping-list items already on them so I can be so lazy that I don’t even have to write out a list.
  • Be patient while you build up your stock so you can rotate meals from freezer to fridge and have a variety. In the beginning you are going to have to put up with repeats. But it only takes a month to six weeks to more towards no repeats in a week (I am happy for repeats on some of my absolute favorites).
  • You’ll learn to fine tune this as you go. In the beginning, you will probably buy more ingredients than you need, or end up with one of your compartments full and the second compartment with not enough of a side or a vegetable.
  • Make sure you don’t keep too many dinners in your fridge. I put six meals in on Sunday, and this leaves me a day that I eat out or get take out if I want it. I want to make sure the meals in the fridge are fresh and new, and don’t sit long enough that they go past when they are good to eat.

When I started this project, I didn’t realize what a difference it would make in how I eat. I definitely didn’t realize how much cereal I was going through, or how many times I was grabbing take out or fast food. Once I broke myself of my bad habits, it was jarring when I’d get busy and return to them—Taco Bell really isn’t as good as you used to think it was, when you’ve been away and eaten good food for awhile.

I have found that eating this way is more economical than preparing a full meal the traditional way, much more economical than frozen dinners (Lean Cuisine, Smart Ones), and much cheaper and healthier than take-out. Since I have my prebuilt shopping lists, when non-perishable items you use in your repertoire go on sale, you can grab a few extra cans, jars, or bags of what you use and sock it away.

So my fridge is now my space-age meal dispenser, through the technology of a “smart” pressure cooker that makes cooking almost like a game, my meal prep trays, and a little planning. Now I can be as lazy as I want to be and still eat good things. Even better, this form of eating has built-in portion control, so I also don’t overeat and gain weight. As far as lunches and dinners are concerned, I’ll never leave this mothership.

Five Ways to Avoid Gas with Beans

2021 Update

By the numbers who have read this blog post – nobody wants gas. This is not surprising as you want to eat healthy and more plant based but don’t want to pay for your healthier choices.

The 5 ways that I presented earlier still stand as good ways to avoid gas. However,  I would like to add another way that is perhaps better than some from the original blog post.

Hing

"small glass spice jar that reads Best Hing ever from Pure Indian foods"

Hing or asafoetida comes from the leaves of giant fennel plants. You can find Hing in Asian markets or online. I will not lie, it smells really bad. It does not smell like something you would want to put in your food. Fear not, it does not make your food taste like it smells.  When cooking beans, add a pinch per cup of beans.

I use about ¼ to ½ t for 2 cans of beans. Rinse the beans well and cover with fresh water. Add the hing and cook on medium for about 30 minutes. Then drain and use as you need in recipes or eat as is. 


2016 Post

A recent webinar on the Mediterranean diet, specifically on changing your protein – sparked a firestorm of discussion on beans and…gas. Eating more beans is a great way to get plant protein and decrease meat consuavoid gas from beansmption. They are inexpensive, versatile, add variety, and taste great. So why then are we not eating more beans – you guessed it – gas.

No one wants to feel bloated after a meal. Thanks to indigestible carbohydrates found in beans, they do have a bloating – gas – filled reputation. Here are some ways to decrease the gas but keep the beans.

  1. Go slow – add beans slowly into your diet. Start with just a few tablespoons and build up.
  2. Soak well and rinse well. If you are using dried beans soak for 48 hours and drain and rinse well before cooking. Use fresh water for cooking, not the soaking liquid. If you are using canned beans, rinse well.
  3. Cook beans until very soft. Cooking well-done until very soft can help with decreasing gas production as well. Even canned beans can be cooked more prior to serving.
  4. Add ajwain or epazote – both of these spices will decrease gas production – I swear by the epazote! Just add about a tablespoon to a large pot of beans during the cooking process. You can also add ginger or cumin as these spices help with digestion.
  5. Chew – eat slowly and chew well each bite.

Inhale Confidence and Exhale Doubt – Overcoming Gym Intimidation

Sometimes working out in the gym can seem difficult if you are out of shape and/or not fit. It can become a bit discouraging at times seeing already fit individuals making everything look so easy. Finally, I came to the realization that my increased sweat and fatigue will provide me the confidence needed for my own success. I therefore focus on and obtain personal fitness goals while having fun making others look up to me for their own inspiration.gym intimidation

Making fitness goals and scheduling an exercise routine decreases the power of doubt for success. It can be discouraging at times seeing the fit person run for what appears to be miles on the treadmill when it is difficult for me to run only a quarter of a mile. Focusing on my own fitness routine allows me to concentrate on my personal goals and ignore insecurities. Achieving daily fitness goals assists in building of my confidence and achievement. With daily fitness goal achievement, my confidence is enhanced considerably and I feel great!

A key to confidence is finding equipment that allows a challenging workout as well as a fun workout. Enjoyment of exercise assists with my success. The challenge of mastering my workout and equipment gives me great pleasure. I love to get looks from others that question how I could possibly be smiling or having fun during intense workouts. With success, my doubts and worries leave and with every step of confidence my goals are achieved.

There’s a First Time for Everything – Including New Holiday Traditions

The following is a guest blog by April. Take it away, April!

There’s a First Time for Everything – Including New Holiday Traditions

This is my very fabulous American Bulldog, Ruckus! I am sharing his picture not just because he is cute, but because he is the reason why I generally don’t get to bring food to holiday gatherings.  My family is old school African American and people who have indoor pets and healthy holiday potluckbring food are considered a little suspect.  I don’t know where this cliche comes from, but it was the reason that my family always had to know who cooked what at any potluck. The cliche included indoor pets, people who didn’t wash their hands, and those who were known to be poor cooks.  Also to be fair, in addition to having an indoor dog, I am not necessarily known for my outstanding culinary creations.

Despite having a dog who sleeps on the bed (but who does NOT walk on countertops, get bathed in the sink nor eat or drink out of the same bowls and cups as people, which you would think would be the case for this strict rule)—I made food this year.  Before you wish me well and think that I’ve overcome years of bringing drinks and store-bought options to potlucks—the food I made was for the Holiday Challenge Taste Test.  Here at the office, the Holiday Challenge staff and partners taste test several recipes before choosing which ones make the cut for the Holiday Challenge. For the first time, I made Mississippi Spiced Pecans.   This involved using Rosemary, Thyme, Extra Virgin Olive Oil and other simple ingredients.  It was an exciting undertaking for me to try something new, as I even went over to do it at my sister’s house because I didn’t have a knife sharp enough to finely chop the fresh Rosemary and Thyme.

I had a wonderful time making the nuts and most folks in our office found them more than palatable.  As any of you who follow the Mediterranean Diet know, nuts are a great healthy option.  I wanted to make them as an appetizer for Thanksgiving, but decided to wait until next year.  I was allowed to bring a store-bought option which everyone enjoyed.  It’s all about small steps. So while you are cooking your possibly complicated, mostly healthy but definitely tasty dishes for the upcoming holidays, just think of me, enjoying great food and only having to supply drinks.  Thank you, Ruckus!

Steps to Eating the Med Way: Change Your Protein

Webinar Recording Now Available

mediterranean diet

 Steps to Eating the Med Way: Change Your Protein

The response to the first Med Instead of Meds webinar was overwhelming. We want to give you the tools you need to Go Med AND answer all of your questions. As you know, the Mediterranean-style eating pattern has been shown to promote health and decrease risk on many chronic diseases. Eating the Mediterranean way is not only healthy, it is delicious and satisfying. Foods that you once thought of as too high in fat or unhealthy, including nuts, olive oil, olives, and whole grains, become an everyday part of your diet. This webinar mini-series will demonstrate simple steps to eating the Med way by making easy changes to the foods you eat. Additional resources for eating the Med way can be found at medinsteadofmeds.com.
 

My Santa Spin Playlist

I have the great privilege of entering into my twelfth year of indoor cycling ( spin ) teaching in 2017. Time flies when you’re having fun and staying fit with others on this journey to eat smart and move more for our entire lives. My holiday Santa Spin class is an annually anticipated event at my YMCA. Here’s some of
my holiday playlist and I hope you’ll consider adding what festive music gets you up and moving during your holiday weeks and weekends:

  1. Run Run RudolphBlack woman stretching and listening to mp3 player
  2. Rocking Around the Christmas Tree
  3. Walking in a Winter Wonderland
  4. Grandma Got Ran Over by a Reindeer (morbid, but we laugh as we sweat)
  5. Take a Walk Through Bethlehem (great cool-down song)
  6. Manheim Steamroller mixes
  7. Jingle Bells (especially the ‘ dashing ‘ part)
  8. All I Want for Christmas is You (great beat from Mariah Carey – can’t be beat)

Please comment with some suggestions and I’ll consider adding them to my Santa Spinning playlist in 2017 !

Happy and Healthy Holidays to You and Yours!

Best treadmill workout

Cooler weather often means more inside workouts. Running on a treadmill does not have to be boring or less intense than your outside workout. In fact, running on a treadmill can be a great way to do an interval workout – which can increase calories burned, amp up your metabolism, and increase fitness – when compared to a workout that does not vary intensity.

Give this 30-minute workout a try. If the intensity is too much or not enough adjust up or down. The goal is to vary the intensity over the entire workout.

  • Minute 1 4.0 mph
  • Minute 2 5.5 mph
  • Minute 3 6.0 mph
  • Minute 4 6.5 mph
  • Minute 5 7.0 mph

Repeat the above 5 more times for a total workout of 30 minutes.

Dinner is Ready

Wouldn’t it be nice to walk in the door after work to the beautiful sound of “Dinner is ready”? Well, the next best thing is to walk in the door to the tantalizing smells of a delicious meal ready and waiting for you.  This dream can be a reality.  Just look no further than your nearest slow cooker! img_9315edit

As the weather is getting cooler, it is especially enticing to eat something warm, like soups and stews. And as we approach the holiday season when evening activities ramp up, I definitely need preparing healthy, home-cooked meals for my family and myself.  Especially at this time of year, I like to turn to my closest slow cooker for help and to some recommended sites for inspiring slow cooker recipes.

A colleague recently told me about the site, Gimme Some Oven.  Among many delicious recipes on this site are these slow cooker dishes that I cannot wait to try are:

SLOW COOKER CRISPY CHICKEN CARNITAS

SLOW COOKER BEEF RAGU

CROCK-POT RED BEANS AND RICE

ITALIAN LENTIL SOUP

SLOW COOKER LASAGNA

SLOW COOKER VEGETARIAN CHILI

SLOW COOKER CHICKEN TORTILLA SOUP

SLOW COOKER BLACK BEAN SOUP

SLOW COOKER QUINOA, WHITE BEAN, and KALE SOUP

SLOW COOKER TACOS AL PASTOR

SLOW COOKER CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE SOUP

 

Please feel free to give these recipes a try and comment below.

Hope that you enjoy and Happy Holidays!

Snacking Tips for Healthy Holidays and Beyond

When it comes to holiday food, I grew up with a ‘love-love’ relationship. Traditions of the season meant indulging in once-a-year specialties– from Aunt Bonnie’s pies and Racine Kringle to making homemade pizza with Aunt Bev.healthy snack

I eat very differently now from even a decade ago. There are many reasons for this, ranging from food sensitivities (hold the onions, please!) to just plain knowing how to cook and eat healthier. I more easily resist foods that I know will leave me feeling blah, over-stuffed or unsettled. I am better at making room for the must-have holiday traditions that feel good and are ‘worth it’. And I can balance these decisions with post-meal walks—a newer holiday tradition for my family.

For me, Healthy snacking is one key to eating mindfully during the holidays. Yes, snacking! When my normal eating routine goes out the window due to holiday travel, pot lucks and meals at all hours, I rely even more on healthy snacks to keep me fueled and to stave off the hunger-impulse to overeat at meal time.

I’ve taken to traveling with a small spice jar filled with trail mix. The dried berries and nuts tide me over between meals. The spice jar is durable and a great size for my purse or travel bag. It’s a fantastic way to repurpose the used spice jars after the holidays. And the portion size is just right!

While it can be helpful overall, snacking does add more calories to your daily intake. Here are a few tips for mindful and healthy snacking through the holidays and beyond:

  • Choose healthy snacks that add good value. Go for snacks that help you get to your ‘five a day’ servings of fruits and vegetables. Snacks that have good proteins (low-sugar yogurt, nuts, a boiled egg) can also help stave off hunger.
  • Portion your snacks. The size of the snack matters—too big and you’ve just had another meal! Too small and you’re left still hungry. For me, a healthy snack of around 200 calories works well, this may be different for you. Try a variety and observe—what snacks and amounts work well for you?
  • Plan ahead. If you know your normal routine will be shifted, think ahead about what meals you’ll have and prepare for snacks where you think you’ll need them. Especially when traveling, I find it helpful to pack snacks. Not only does this save me money, it helps me make healthier choices.

Calories Never Take a Holiday

As a follow up to my Calories Never Take a Vacation blog from summer, I thought of how we may creatively battle the fact that Calories Never Take a Holiday—especially during the holidays. These days are upon us now, and you have challenged yourself to maintain and not gain for the next few weeks. In addition to eating healthier portions and utilizing recipes shared throughout this challenge, I encourage you to try the following each weekday:holiday challenge

Monday March:  Instead of just gazing at holiday parades on the television, design your own marching parade around your home. Think of what the movements would be like if you’re in the marching band or carrying the large helium characters aloft.

Tuesday Trot:  Pick up the pace and create own Turkey Trot (even after Thanksgiving!)— yes, you may go only 1k or 2k or stretch it to 3k— plus, emulate the turkey and get your neck into it. You can’t fly well and neither can they, but bat your wings and get silly with the kids (or the big kids at heart in your home).

Wednesday Wrap:  Put different items needed to wrap your packages in various rooms throughout your homes (tape, bows, paper, tags, scissors ) and move from room-to-room while wrapping. It need not be a sit-still activity!

Thursday Thanks: Each Thursday, practice some mindful movements like chair yoga or visual imagery to calm yourself for maybe 10 to 15 minutes. Look in favorite holiday magazines and see yourself (place yourself) in some cozy room and/or scenic wintry overlook while breathing deeply.  Find your heartbeat, your breathing pattern, your own centered rhythm while reminding yourself of the ‘why’ you celebrate this season– away from the bustle of shopping and free yourself momentarily from the frenetic pacing of 21st-Century-Holiday-Grind.

Friday Fa La La Festivity :  Jam out for 20 minutes to your favorite holiday carols/songs with your own dance party.  Mimic that yuletide favorite singer by physically grabbing the broom handle (microphone stand) and creating your own stage with plenty of Christmas karaoke and rocking (AND rolling, too) around the Christmas Tree. It’s your holiday concert—your dance moves— your fun. Just don’t sit still.

Saturday and Sunday Santa Sled Pull— OK, I don’t really expect you to pull a sled, but wanted to remind you of the importance of strength training to build lean muscle mass and potentially increase your basal metabolic rate (BMR). I encourage you to take a look at this site { https://esmmweighless.com/resistance-exercises/ } for your holiday weekend days and MOVE STRONG and MORE throughout these festive weeks. We can all maintain a healthy weight with a bit of creativity.

Happy and Healthy Holidays, folks!