Showing posts with label healthy cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthy cooking. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Embrace Summer with Pasta Salads


I have been craving pasta salad for the last couple of weeks.  A summery, crisp, and bright pasta salad of some kind. At the same time I read an NPR blog post that basically read my mine (http://www.npr.org/2013/06/26/195311156/helping-pasta-salad-dress-for-success).
Think differently about your pasta salad - ditch your jar of mayonnaise and think of it as a salad or a complete meal (whole grains [e.g,, pasta], vegetables, protein [e.g. nuts, beans, tofu, shrimp], and fat [e.g., olive oil]) not just a starchy/fatty side dish.  Look around you at all of the fresh summer tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, chards, asparagus, and leafy greens for inspiration.

Friday, 15 March 2013

Flip Your Food

Pancakes.  Burgers. Eggs Over Easy. Pineapple Upside Down Cake. No wait, sorry, that isn’t what I meant by “flipping”. If you aren’t mad at me now, I’ll continue. When you plan any meal, start with thinking first about what good and nutritious thing you can include. I think we’ve all been trained to think (or shamed into thinking) about what we should eliminate or minimize in our meals. Thinking things like if I make a pizza I should really cut down on the cheese or if I make a traditional egg breakfast I should cut down or cut out the butter and bacon. This type of thinking is exhausting and I think it sort of sets us up for failure. If you are always eliminating, you can never win, there will always be something else that you can think to minimize or eliminate.

Stir-fry - Peas, two kinds of peppers, red onion, green onion, garlic, ginger, and tofu.
So instead, try this. Focus your energy and thoughts on adding good things to your meals.

Sunday, 10 February 2013

But I don't know what is healthy!


I’ve heard this a million times and probably said it like 1,000 myself, “but I don’t know what is healthy”.  But think about this, really think about this, and it’s pretty ridiculous.  We know, and certainly don’t need some scientific study to confirm, that eating a medium delivery pizza for dinner is not healthy.  We know that eating a big bowl of ice cream at night while watching TV isn’t healthy.  We know that eating ½ pound of bacon for breakfast isn’t healthy.  We know this.  We just wish there was a way to get away with it.