Archive for Recipes

Aug
10

Simple veggie-fruit salad

Posted by: Lon | Comments (1)

Had a surplus of ripe tomatoes from my garden, so I decided to make a tomato-fruit salad. Here’s my free form recipe:

1 pound of tomatoes, diced.

1 pound of papaya, diced

1/2 pound fresh strawberries, diced

1 ounce chopped walnut

Toss and chill

Categories : Recipes, Vegetables
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This is another quick and easy nutritious veggie soup I made. Its a big batch, so I freeze the rest and thaw out as needed.

100 grams (g) red lentil

178 g onion, minced

578 g brocolli (sliced, 1 inch pieces)

216 g green pepper, diced

287 g baby bokchoy, chopped

406 g zucchini

882 g tomato, chopped

95 g green onions, thinly sliced

10 g garlic minced

Spices, to be freshly ground in a coffee grinder: 1 tbs each of cumin, coriander, fenugreek; 1 tsp each of black mustard, black peppercorn.

Mix all the ingredients in a soup pot, add enough water to make 16 cups of soup. This translates to about 65 calories per cup.

Categories : Recipes, Weight Loss
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Aug
04

Simple summer salad

Posted by: Lon | Comments (0)

217 grams carrots, diced in Vidalia chopper

455 grams green beans, cut in 2 inch lengths

519 fresh tomatoes, diced and chilled for a few hours beforehand

Steam carrots and green beans until cooked (not too soft, not too hard), then rinse under cold water.

Mix all of the above with juice of half a lemon. You can add a dash of balsamic vinegar if you wish.

(I ate this whole salad as my dinner. I think it would be enough for two people.)

Categories : Recipes
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Aug
03

Quick & easy weight loss veggie soup recipe

Posted by: Lon | Comments (0)

746 grams (g) tomato, cubed

152 g watermelon, chopped

648 g red cabbage, thinly sliced

200 g onion, thinly sliced

241 g frozen peas

546 g tofu (firm, whole block) cut into 1/2 inch cubes

335 g lettuce (sliced). This is my leftover lettuce — not too fresh for a salad, but not inedible either. (You can use whatever leafy greens you have in your fridge.)

118 g apple, diced

30 g garlic, minced

Spices, ground altogether in a coffee grinder: 1 tbs each of cumin, coriander, fenugreek; 1/2 tbs each of fennel seeds, black mustard seed; 1 tsp whole peppercorn

Add water enough to make about 18 cups, and bring to a boil. Once boiling, lower heat to lowest setting and simmer for about 20 minutes.

This is under 70 calories per cup.

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Jul
23

Kitchari (Ayurveda) recipe

Posted by: Lon | Comments (0)

Prep time: 30 minutes
Servings: 3

1 cup basmati rice
½ cup mung beans (whole, soaked overnight)
6 cups boiling water
¼ teaspoon turmeric
1 pinch asafoetida (a spice also called hing—available at Indian groceries)
1 cup chopped vegetables, such as zucchini, carrots, cauliflower, or anything you choose (optional)
1 teaspoon ground cumin, coriander, or any other spices you choose (optional

1. Combine the rice with the mung beans and wash twice.

2. Place rice and beans into boiling water, adding the turmeric and asafoetida.

3. Cook over medium heat until the water is mostly absorbed.

4. Add one more cup of lukewarm water, vegetables, and optional spices if you’re using them. The final dish should be a stew with a very moist and soft consistency.

From: Ayurveda for Women: A Guide to Vitality and Health
(Healing Art Press, 2000), by Dr. Robert E. Svoboda

Categories : Food, Nutrition, Recipes
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Jun
29

My secret weight loss soup template recipe

Posted by: Lon | Comments (0)

Standardal” is my secret no-fail template of a soup that combines legumes with a high quality whole grain.

Here’s how Standardal fits into my eating scheme. I generally prepare a huge plateful of miscellaneous steamed veggies, about 500 grams (roughly a pound) of leafy greens such as baby bokchoy, broccoli rabe rapini, mustard greens, or cruciferous greens such broccoli and/or cabbage. On top of this I pour a cup of Standardal (typically chilled, straight out of the fridge).

Then I grind (using a coffee grinder) some seeds and/or nuts, and pour that on top of the Standardal layer. I use about 10 grams each of sesame seeds, pepitas, and sunflower seeds. This is roughly an ounce, and translates to about 170 calories of high quality fat and micro-nutrients. (Note: I take my obligatory flax seeds with my breakfast fruit bowl.) I’ve experimented with just Standardal and veggies, but it definitely tastes better with the ground seeds/nuts on top.

I also recommend grinding seeds alone, rather than nuts? Why? Because I find it more satisfying chewing the nuts by themselves; the seeds (e.g, sesame seeds) are too small to chew.

Notice that your heaping plate actually follows the healthy “food pyramid” (please note: this is not the USDA food pyramid, which is obsolete) – - the greens on the bottom, then the legumes, then the seeds/nuts topping the “pyramid” on your plate. This is a three-layered pyramid packed with nutritionally dense micronutrients (phytochemicals and minerals/trace elements), plus a “flexible” macronutient stack of protein, fat and carbohydrates.

I say “flexible” because you can control your caloric intake by decreasing/increasing the amount of food in each “layer.”

Here’s the Standardal recipe:

150 grams of Chana Dal

50 grams of Quinoa

150 grams of Onions (finely chopped)

20 grams of Garlic (finely chopped)

10 grams of Coriander

10 grams of Cumin

10 grams of Fenugreek

10 grams of Ginger

5 grams of Black Mustard Seed

2 grams of Black Pepper

1/2 teaspoon ground Turmeric

5 cups of water

You should grind the dry spices (except the Turmeric) right before you mix them, so you have a better flavor. The ginger can be cut into fine (1/8 inch) slices (to be thrown out of the soup later if you don’t like chewing on a huge piece of ginger) or you can chop it into very small pieces and eat it as part of the soup. I use my pressure cooker — I can have a meal ready in less than 12 minutes from start to finish.

The nice thing about this recipe is that you can change the legumes and the grain (as well as the proportions), and it still works. I vary the legumes for every batch I make (i.e., chana dal, mung, urad, brown lentils, red lentils, adzuki, black-eyed peas etc.) as well as the grains (quinoa, millet, barley, brown rice are my preferences, in that order). I like to stick to 3 parts legume, 1 part grain as a starting point because it balances protein content with texture and taste.

BTW, a cup of the above recipe is 133 calories, with 5.6 grams of protein, 19.9 grams of carbohydrate, 1.9 grams of fat, and 4.6 grams of fiber (I excluded the macronutrient count contributed by the onion, garlic, ginger, and spices — the P.C.F.F. counts are just from the legume and the grain). The recipe makes 6 1/3 cups of soup.

Categories : Food, Recipes
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On-the-cheap Blendtec  application, this time with vinegars. I’ve been eyeing those fancy fruit flavored gourmet vinegars, but I’ve taken it as a challenge to create my own. After spending some time googling some recipes, I’ve decided to short circuit the process using my blender.

This time I bought a couple of bottles of apple cider vinegar and made 3 preparations. The first batch I used using dried figs (100 grams of figs) and poured some vinegar into the Blendtec container and blended at the highest speed setting. I used the same amount of raisins on the second bottle. With the remaining liquid I made a separate batch of garlic-flavored vinegar. Excellent for salad dressings or as a “steak sauce.” Yesterday, I used the fig vinegar (which was quite thick and syrupy, BTW) as a delicious sauce for a raw portabello “steak.”

If it’s too flavorful or strong for your taste, you can dilute it (prior to pouring it over a salad) in a small sauce container or cup with a little bit of orange or apple juice.

Categories : Food, Recipes, Tools
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Jun
22

High-energy fruit smoothies

Posted by: Lon | Comments (0)

I’ve been enjoying my new 3 horsepower Blendtec blender, experimenting with smoothies that contain green leafy vegetables. This is a valuable idea I picked up from Dr. Fuhrman, the author of Eat to Live .

Here are some recipes I’ve developed recently (ingredients are measured in grams), except the liquid measure (in cups). I use the Tanita KD160 Kitchen Scale with a tare function, which makes things easier.

Pinky’s Delight: 1/2 c soymilk + 70g flowering kale, 71g orange, 259g watermelon, 90g frozen strawberry, 29g medjool dates = 292 calories

Walepa’s Wonder: 1/2 c soymilk + 200g red leaf  lettuce, 257g watermelon, 110g frozen strawberry, 200 papaya, 17 medjool dates = 327 calories (makes about 32 ounces).

Pomwalepa Power Potion: 1/2 c pomegranate juice + 359g watermelon, 289g red leaf lettuce, 19g noor dates, 136g frozen papaya, 12g walnut = 412 calories (makes about 32 ounces).

Categories : Food, Recipes, Tools
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