Showing posts with label Strawberries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Strawberries. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Year 4, Day 108

After several days of buying strawberries at Russo's, I realize my refrigerator has shriveled them all to a unpleasant raisiny-version of themselves.  To add insult to injury, they taste like my refrigerator. 

Breakfast
Kashi Go Lean
Heritage Flakes
Banana
Strawberries
Blueberries
Soy Milk
Coffee

Lunch: Russo's ($5.45)
Green leaf, mushrooms, broccoli, red pepper, cheddar & feta cheese, chicken, balsamic vinegar

Snack
Lots and lots of almonds
Beef jerky

Dinner: Cabot's
Baby spinach salad with chicken


Monday, June 09, 2008

Year 4, Day 100

Strawberries are back.  I was just starting to think about them.  Then, like someone you're waiting for in the airport I saw them. I couldn't wait and starting eating them right away. It's really amazing how the locally grown strawberries are so good, and so unlike the awful, white, tasteless, unnaturally large ones that come from Driscoll, the evil anti-strawberry farm located somewhere (and everywhere) in California.  Vive la Massachusetts strawberry!!

Breakafast
Kashi Go Lean
Heritage Flakes
Banana
Strawberries
Blueberries
Soy Milk
Coffee

Lunch: Russo's ($5.35)
Romaine, mushrooms, cheddar cheese, feta, broccoli, red peppers, chicken, balsamic vinegar

Snack
Almonds
Beef Jerky
Strawberries
Pistachios

Dinner
Steak Tips
Bok Choy
Cauliflower

Monday, June 25, 2007

Year 3, Day 114: More Normal

The first of many hot days. Me and the lone other Domaniac went for a walk to Russo's. I vowed I would only buy my salad, I filled up my basket. It's hard to explain, but the walk back, and carrying more than one thing (like a salad and strawberries and bananas, for instance) makes your gait unbalanced; they only give you the crappy, landfill-laden plastic shopping bags that have no shape and are designed to allow things like tins of salad that want to be horizontal to angle themselves. Therefore, you have multiple problems of trying to keep things from opening, spilling or being crushed, and keeping an even walking position. Then you have to keep up a good pace and much of the walk in the hot sun. I cursed myself, and my inability not to buy things at Russo's, the whole way home, sweating.

Breakfast
Kashi Go Lean!
Heritage Flakes
Strawberries
Blueberries
Banana
Unsweetened Soy Milk
Coffee

Lunch: Russo's ($5.31)
Romaine, red pepper, red onion, feta
chicken, broccoli, mushrooms
balsamic vinegar, pepperocini


Snack
4 Sticks Beef Jerky
1 oz. Boston Lite Popcorn

Dinner:
Burger
Broccoli
Salad, Pickles
10 Cashews

I want to go back on phase one but can't give up my breakfast during strawberry season. They are just so good. I am eating them all the time. If loving them is wrong, I don't want to be right.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Year 3, Day 99: A Paean to Strawberries

I must confess that I love my breakfast, and so the fact that I am in a breakfast rut has stopped bothering me. Local strawberries (that appear in plywood-like containers, as opposed to the green, egg-type containers that feature California strawberries [bad] or the even worse, the plastic containers by Driscoll [evil]) are so perfect- so sweet and sour; so firm but tender, so delicious but low in carbs. Part of the ritual in the morning I have come to love is the selecting and slicing of strawberries for my breakfast. I am probably overdoing it- eating almost a whole cup of strawberries in each bowl of cereal. Though even a whole cup (152 g) is only 49 calories, 12g of carbs and 7g of sugar. It has zero fat and 3grams of dietary fiber and 1 gram of protein. I'm not even thinking about how I will get by when the season is over. I can't.

Breakfast
Kashi Go Lean!
Heritage Flakes
Strawberries
Blueberries
Banana
Unsweetened Soy Milk
Coffee

Lunch: Fordee's
Greek Salad with Chicken
Oil & Vinegar

Snack
1 Pink Lady Apple
4 Sticks Beef Jerky
50 Banana Chips

Dinner
Hamburger
String Beans
Cabbage, Feta & Balsamic Salad

Today we ventured out to a new place, Fordee's which used to be a glass-cased counter refrigerator passing as a sandwich shop. I really demand more in a sandwich shop than just the display of your Boar's Head wrapped deli meats. Does that do it for some people? Really. But now they've come under new ownership, added seating, and turned into a pretty nice place. It's in a part of Watertown called "Little Armenia" but don't get a romantic notion- it's just a few shops and restaurants filled with nice Armenian folk. We stopped in a little market and I picked up a package of banana chips, which I thought were just dried bananas (oh, when will I learn!) but they are actually cured with oil and sugar, and so even worse for you than just a banana with its 14grams of sugar (for a medium). Of course most of these little shops don't feature products with nutrition labels on them. So before I was any the wiser, I was half done with the package. Drat.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Year 2, Day 364: Tuesdays 'n' Strawberries

Emily purchased strawberries for Ruby last week and though buying strawberries out of season for me is strictly a no-no, I had one and thought it was good enough to start using in my cereal. Strawberries are excellent because out of all the breakfast berries they are the lowest in sugar/carbs and they taste good. Most strawberries out of season (even by a little bit) are white on the inside, not red, and while they may resemble real in-season strawberries, don't often taste like them. It's such an immense difference that I swore off off-season strawberries, but I like them so much 'even a bad one is good' sometimes. I noted that Russo's had very good looking ones and I have been buying them for Ruby. She likes a 'fruit plate' for breakfast—strawberries, grapes, apples, blackberries, bananas, whatever's around. I can't say I mind.

Breakfast
Kashi
Heritage Flakes
Blueberries
Strawberries
Unsweetened Soy Milk
Coffee

Snack
3 pieces Beef Jerky
2 oz 50% Jalapeno Cheddar
100 Nuts (60 Pistachios, 40 Almonds)
1 Fuji Apple


Lunch: Russo's ($4.90)
Romaine, Tuna, Broccoli
Mushrooms, Red Peppers, Red Onions,
Feta, 2 bites of Grilled Tofu
Balsamic Vinegar

Dinner:
Cabbage & Romaine with Feta, Balsamic Vinegar
Robert's Chicken Soup

And on that topic...from the South Beach Newsletter: Teach Kids Healthy Eating Habits

Teaching children the principles of healthy eating at an early age will go a long way toward helping them live a healthier life. "Children who learn to make the right food choices — selecting colorful fruits and vegetables, good fats, and good carbs, while avoiding trans fats in packaged foods and fast foods — are more likely to maintain a healthy weight and enjoy lifelong health," says Dr. Arthur Agatston, preventive cardiologist (sounds like he prevents the practice of cardiology-Ed.) and author of The South Beach Diet®.

The first step is to set a good example yourself. They'll pick up on the fact that you enjoy eating fresh produce, lean sources of protein, whole grains, and low-fat dairy. It's equally important to have a steady supply of these foods in the house. Stock the fridge with fruit and precut veggies so your kids can easily reach for a healthy snack. Begin to abandon refined grains and sugary cereals, and replace them with whole-grain crackers, sliced breads, and high-fiber, low-sugar cereals. (Check, check and check—Ed.)

It's also helpful — and fun — to include your children in selecting recipes, shopping for ingredients, and preparing the dishes you eat together. As active participants in the process, they'll be more interested in tasting their creations. Let young kids pour and mix, and allow older children to measure ingredients and slice vegetables. At the grocery store, encourage your kids to choose an exotic fruit or a grain they've never tasted. (They like to make chocolate chip muffins, and the last pomelo and pluot did not fare so well—Ed.)

Finally, don't deem certain foods "forbidden." It's OK for your kids (and you) to indulge in an occasional dessert, for example. This flexibility is what distinguishes the South Beach Diet® from other weight-loss plans — and what makes it a program you can follow for life.