Category Archives: Paleo

menu monday: two week cook-up

I’m doing something a little different this week. Next weekend I will be in my first in-person NTP class session. The session is 9-6 on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday so I won’t have any time or energy next week to meal plan, shop, and cook. I decided to do a big cook-up this weekend of really easy recipes that I can pull from to create meals for the next two weeks.

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I tallied up how many breakfast, lunch, and dinners I need to have available (Greg does some traveling and doesn’t take lunch during the week so it’s not always six meals a day for the two of us) and picked a handful of my favorite recipes. My criteria was pretty simple: I could easily prep the recipe this weekend or I can make it ‘real time’ in less than 20 minutes. To include nutrient dense foods I stocked up on kombucha and sauerkraut for probiotics and made three types of veggie soup, all bone broth based.

I plan to make a shopping trip mid week for fresh veggies, but otherwise most of the items are already prepped and in the fridge or freezer. Hoping to make what will be a long two weeks a little healthier by not ordering take out every night. 

Pork Roast
Cincinnati Chili
Barbacoa (in the crockpot now)
Breakfast Casseroles (inspired by this, I just make it up now as I go)
Cauliflower Soup
Zucchini Soup
Carrot Soup

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pork roast from Stupid Easy Paleo

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breakfast casseroles ready to go, just add sauerkraut and avocado slices

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cincinnati chili from well fed 2 (I left it a little more liquid than normal so I can reheat on the stove)

menu monday: my kitchen mojo is back

As usual, after a short break from doing anything in the kitchen my mojo came back in full force. So much so I even ventured out to the farmer’s market on Saturday. It’s slim pickings in Seattle during March.  I’m hoping to start going more and was excited to have fun conversations with my fish guy and with a lady selling local apple cider vinegar.

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I haven’t been able to fix the fuzzy display of the menu in this post, but if you click the picture it will open large and clear in a new window. All recipes available online are linked in the pictures below, except for the dairy free, nut free pesto.

I had planned to go out to eat on Friday night but was feeling like cooking so I tried Pina Colada Chicken (we did the pork substitution) from Well Fed 2. Despite screwing the recipe up (quadrupling the seasoning), we both loved it. Good thing as I doubled it. We had it for lunch as well both Saturday and Sunday. So good. The recipe I linked to isn’t exactly the same as what’s in the cookbook, but very close. We had it with coconut cauli rice.

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That is not a beer. It’s my new favorite kombucha, a brand called Brew Dr. Kombucha. It is so good and totally feels like you’re drinking a cider without the crap that comes with booze. I’ll definitely be stocking these in the fridge for the summer BBQ months.IMG_7916_edited-1

We’ve not been eating breakfast on the weekends lately which is making for grumpy afternoons, so I decided to have some fun on Sunday morning and try plantain pancakes. Yum, they definitely have the consistency of ‘real’ pancakes. It’s a big plantain week for the Martins  – we’re having plantain nachos (another Well Fed 2 recipe!) on Friday night.

Since it’s a bit of an aggressive menu for the week, I made sure to prep a ton this weekend.

IMG_7910_edited-1I washed and chopped all the veggies as soon as I got home from the farmer’s markets. Took 15 minutes and greatly increases the chances of me cooking and eating them midweek.

IMG_7978_edited-1I made the meatballs and prepped everything for the Gyoza soup.

IMG_7975_edited-1IMG_7976_edited-1 A pork roast cooked away Sunday morning and I put together this parsnips and carrot puree. I’ll top my salads with pork all week; the puree is so we have a veggie ready to go.

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Three days worth of lunchtime salads ready to go. Excited about trying a new Tessemae’s dressing, too.

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It has been a long time since our fridge was this ready for the upcoming week.

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And as a bonus, some “candy”. For our current module in class we were required to try a new recipe. I tried these gelatin gummy candies from Balanced Bites. The flavor wasn’t my favorite, but I’m interesting in trying others. I’m adding the benefits of gelatin to a long list of menu monday topics I need to delve into.

Have a great week!

 

menu monday: 21DSD recap

Hello friends! Another week down. The only downside to my menu monday posts are the very tangible reminder of just how fast time is flying. This week’s menu is beyond simple. I had the pleasure of spending the day Saturday with several of my classmates at NTA’s annual conference (so much fun to geek out all day with fellow nutrition nerds). Today I’m enjoying the day with my boys, which means there was little time to cook this weekend.

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I discovered last week that I can walk to Whole Foods, grab food, and walk back in less than 45 minutes. Yes it’s more expensive and I have less control over what I’m eating, but it will be a nice change this week. I’ll get in some extra walking and sunshine (I hope) and I don’t have to stress about lunches for the week today.

No progress has been made on the damn paleo meals taking up all my kitchen freezer space. Our leftovers seems to be lasting longer and work dinners and lunches continue to pop up. I’m determined to make a dent this week. In more exciting news, I made a new WF2 recipe for breakfast this week. Finally. It’s been a while. I’ve only had a taste of both the recipes below but the tastes were delicious. Looking forward to breakfast this week.

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It totally looks like this when I eat it at my desk at work. Totally.

Ginger Carrot Soup (from PaleOMG, I doubled to get six breakfast-sized servings)
Chorizo Meatballs (from WF2 – I made burgers instead of meatballs this time to change things up and also doubled to make six servings)

21DSD Recap

  • I lost six pounds. My math was wrong last week and I was actually down five, then lost another this week.
  • I feel great and definitely have a better sense of all the little treats that were making their way into my diet without me really thinking about them.
  • I don’t actually feel like eating or drinking anything off plan right now. I’m sure a situation will present itself in the next little while and I’ll enjoy something, but for now there are no plans. In fact, since we’re going in to the work week I see no reason to not carry on until at least next weekend.
  • I miss fruit and definitely want to add it back in to my diet. But, I definitely don’t need to eat multiple apples every day just because they are sitting out at work.
  • My eyelid eczema hasn’t improved at all and it’s gotten worse on my right eye. I stopped wearing mascara (which is the only make-up I wear religiously so I feel very naked) which has helped some with the itching. I have an appointment with my naturopath on Thursday to confirm that it is actually eczema and I’ll go from there.
  • I wasn’t perfect. I had to eat a few restaurant meals where there were no options and I dealt with them the best I could, made good decisions, and moved on. I’m hoping this is a sign that my attempts at off-roading in the future will be more successful.
  • Aside from fruit I miss my BFF the sweet potato, but I realize I was eating them twice a day often and am not expending the energy necessary for that much starch. I’m looking forward to incorporating them back into my menus in a smarter way.

These are pictures I took in late January, so not exactly right before the 21DSD but I did nothing in February that would have changed my body much so I think they are an accurate reflection. The change isn’t dramatic, but I can see a difference. Also, side note: wearing horizontal stripes for before and after photos might not be the best outfit choice.

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Why yes, that’s an almost flat tummy!

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It might be wishful thinking, but I feel like my sides are looking trimmer.

menu monday: low cooking motivation

For whatever reason, it happens from time to time, I have zero interest in cooking this weekend. I find if I indulge myself I’m usually back to pouring over cookbooks and planning very quickly, so I just go with it. This might be the most boring meal plan I’ve posted, but it’s honest.

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Casablanca Carrots are a new WF2 recipe we’ll be trying this week. They aren’t a recipe available on Mel’s site, but I did find Cumin-Roasted Carrots which seem pretty similar. I love the shape she’s used for this recipe, you can almost pretend they are french fries! And Golden Cauliflower Soup is back in the breakfast rotation. I’m a little tired of hardboiled eggs so I grabbed chorizo sausages to accompany my soup.

I’m hoping this week we make a huge dent in the Paleo meals so I can have my indoor freezer space back. I’m holding off on ordering more offal as I really don’t have room to store it right now. Our chest freezer is still packed with the lamb, cow, and pork from the fall, plus a ton of pork fat I have for rendering. But clearly that’s a story for another day.

21 Day Sugar Detox Update

The two big updates this week are skin and weight. I was hoping it would be sleep, but wow did the time change really effect both Greg and me. We slept terribly the first part of the week. Is this just getting old? I don’t remember it ever being so impactful before.

I was pleasantly surprised when I finally remembered to weight myself on Saturday morning (day 13) and saw that I was down six pounds. That is just crazy. Every time I do a Whole30 I lose exactly four pounds. I absolutely love the Whole30, but I think what is making the difference in the 21DSD is forbidden fruit. We have a lot of free fruit in my office as well as a store just a block away that sells Larabars. While on the Whole30, when I get bored I can justify fruit and Larabar eating, but I can’t on the 21DSD. I have really been having to ensure that I eat big enough meals to not snack because there is nothing that is 21DSD compliant at work. On occasion I’ve had a handful of almonds or a Chomps meat stick as a snack, but for the most part I’m snack free and have really been conquering my bored eating issues by finding other solutions.

My skin is looking great, which is awesome. Always one of my favorite results of really clean eating. The only thing I’m frustrated about is not making any progress on my weird eyelid problem. I don’t think I mentioned it, but since we were in Hawaii in November I have been dealing with eczema on my eyelids. I’m pretty sure I know why it started, but I haven’t been able to get rid of it. I was hoping the 21DSD would help, but as of day 11 it was actually a little worse than when I started. (It has varied in severity for four months so I don’t think the 21DSD is making it any worse.) On Thursday I started taking my fermented cod liver oil again (it is so foul I had stopped taking it) and am going to try that for a week to see how it helps. If that doesn’t work then I’ll probably try some sort of autoimmune protocol for a few weeks. It’s itchy and the fear that it will jump to somewhere more noticeable on my face is driving me to find a solution.

5 Tips for Eating Real Food When You Lack Motivation

1. Raid your freezer. A prime reason why I stock away leftovers in the freezer is so that when I’m too busy to cook, or just plain uninterested in doing so, I can easily grab a meal from the freezer and go. I don’t have a magic formula, but I do keep an eye on what’s in the freezer that’s ready to eat (post defrosting, of course) and try to always make sure there’s at least something.

2. Accept a week of simple food. Buy a roast chicken and a bag of pre chopped salad. Eat tuna from a can with a side of olives. Scramble eggs for dinner. Food doesn’t always have to be amazing but it should (almost) always be nourishing. Putting gas in your car is not an exciting experience and sometimes putting food in your body doesn’t have to be either. Get it done in the simplest way possible and move on.

3. Stock some prepared food. Food that you can just eat with zero effort. In our house it is Chomps meat sticks and baby food sweet potatoes. (The Paleo meals will be short lived option for us since they just didn’t work well for the purpose I was hoping). I have in the past eaten a jar of baby food sweet potato and a meat stick and called it dinner. I wouldn’t recommend this daily, but sometimes it happens and it’s better than fast food.

4. Have a few take out places you trust. This weekend we had Thai on Friday night. I had bought a rotisserie chicken from Whole Foods on my way home from work (I try to do grocery shopping Friday afternoon so it’s done before I get home for the weekend) and I was even too lazy to make simple veggie sides. I sent Greg out for Thai; curry over a side order of steamed veggies instead of rice and I was 21DSD compliant with no effort on my part. It’s helpful to have a sweet husband in this situation, but GrubHub or a phone call work as well.

5. Do not force yourself to go big. When I try to force myself out of my slump by buying a bunch of groceries, assuming I’ll cook them if they are there, I end up spending money on food that’s going to get wasted. Instead I try to use these times to clean out the fridge, freezer and pantry. Use up the odds and ends and see what I can make meals out of when it seems as if there is no food. I assure you I’ve never gone hungry.

menu monday: soup for breakfast

I’m already overwhelmed by the week ahead so we’ll be enjoying a simple menu with long time favorites. I was pretty disappointed in a few of the new recipes I tried last week (though the Buffalo Chicken Egg Muffins were really tasty) and want to have a few delicious meals to look forward to this week.

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Between the two of us we have several work evening work events and on our one free week night we have a dog trainer coming to the house. I’m going to lose my mind if we can’t get the doorbell barking under control soon. Those of you that get to experience Alfred’s antics can understand why we’re paying a private dog trainer to put an end to it. It’s a crazy week, leftovers and simple side dishes are going to be key. This is not the week to play around with new recipes and ingredients; that will just turn into wasted food and take out.

One new Well Fed 2 recipe this week – Wasabi Mayo. I couldn’t find it on Mel’s site but if you haven’t bought the book yet, what are you waiting for!?!? (Really, I get paid nothing to say this I just love WF & WF2.)

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Lamb chops + pesto finally! The pesto was so good, and even better because my sous chef, Greg, made it.

Lamb Chops & Dairy/Nut Free Basil-Pesto (finally, it actually got made + eaten tonight)
Smokey Roast
Zucchini Soup
Chocolate Chili

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The spices of chocolate chili, and a little preview into my almost complete spice cupboard renovation.

21 Day Sugar Detox Update

As I write this on Sunday night I’m about to finish day seven. Since I’ve done several Whole30s this really hasn’t been too shocking. The huge difference for me is on a Whole30 when I want to take part in some “I’m bored” eating, I grab fruit. Fruit is pretty much off limits on the 21DSD so I’m finding I actually can’t eat when I’m bored and I need to move on since I don’t keep much other snack food around. It’s been really interesting to notice how often this happens.

Similarly, I always notice how I don’t eat as clean of a diet as I think I do when I take on a challenge like this. When I can’t have them, I really notice the glasses of wine, “just a bite”s of dairy, etc. that I would normally eat without thinking about too much.

Physically, my skin was pretty yucky the first few days which is always the case as detox occurs but it is getting better. I haven’t found the world of amazing sleep yet but that usually takes a little longer. I haven’t weighed myself, so nothing to report in weight loss.

5 Reasons Soup for Breakfast is Awesome

Soup has pretty much become a breakfast staple for me. I didn’t have it last week and definitely missed it.

1. Easy to cook ahead. I make a batch of soup on the weekend and it lasts me all week. Once I’ve discovered a recipe I really enjoy, I often times double it and have soup for two weeks. So that I don’t use up all of my individual containers, I will freeze half in a large jar (I have several 32 oz glass jars from IKEA). Just make sure you let it defrost in time to portion out the next week’s servings.

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Zucchini soup with two fried eggs.

2. Bone broth! If you’ve been at our house lately you know there is usually a crockpot of bone broth simmering. I’ve been making a batch a week in 2014 and loving it. At first I was drinking it in the evening instead of herbal tea. But now I’m just working it into food. Most of my soup recipes call for almost a cup per serving, which is awesome. I can definitely say that using homemade broths elevates the taste of each soup. I’ll do a post soon on how I’m managing to keep a freezer stock of broth and almost never using packaged broth these days.

3. Veggies at breakfast. Soup is a really easy way to get some veggies in with your breakfast. I also like my breakfasts to be full of protein and fat to get me to lunch, and soup goes well with hard boiled eggs or any leftover meat you might have.

4. Very portable. I recently purchased pint sized jars and have been using them for food storage, especially for my soups. No leaks in my lunch bag and they stack nicely in the fridge.

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Cauliflower soup.

5. It’s warm and cozy in the cold months. I love egg salad for breakfast, but sometimes when the office is chilly and I’ve commuted in the cold and rain, I really want something warm. Having a cup of soup as part of my breakfast usually keeps me to my one cup of decaf, rather than going for more cups of coffee for the warmth.

My favorite soups right now are from Well Fed 2 (gingered zucchini, golden cauliflower, sweet potato with bacon). I’m thinking about starting a petition for Well Fed 3. Nom Nom Paleo’s broccoli soup is also a great option, even when you screw it up like I did. I tried to branch out this past week and try another non-WF2 soup recipe. Unfortunately, all jars but one are still in the fridge now, desperately needing to be cleaned out.

Anyone have great soup recipes? Please share them in the comments!

menu monday: 21 day sugar detox

Hello, March! We’ve had a pretty mild winter rain-wise, but I’m definitely ready of some slightly warmer temperatures and hope we see them this month. We just got back from Phoenix yesterday afternoon so I made use of our leftovers to get through the first few days of the week.

Screen Shot 2014-03-02 at 11.05.33 AMRecipes with links:

Lamb Chops & Pesto
Buffalo Chicken Egg Muffins
Spaghetti Squash Bolognese
Meatloaf

Nothing new from Well Fed 2 this week (mostly because I didn’t have it with me when I menu planned in the hotel room).

21 Day Sugar Detox

I’m excited to start the 21 Day Sugar Detox today! I recently bought the book and read through it while we were in Phoenix. My sister and I are virtually working out together starting today and I thought it would be a good time to clean up the diet a little as well. I’m a Whole30 girl for life but wanted to try something different this time. I’m sure I’ll learn something new and I’d also like to have a selection of ideas for future clients who might be interested in a (real food) detox.

What I like about the 21DSD and why I think it will be a great suggestion for clients is that there are three levels to choose from. I’m doing Level 3 since Level 1 would actually introduce foods I don’t typically eat. But for those who are focusing on real food for the first time, I think Levels 1 and 2 seem much more manageable and less intimidating.

The hardest parts of the detox for me in the next three weeks is going to be no sweet potatoes (I probably need an intervention) and no fruit. L3 allows for one piece of fruit a day but you can only choose from 1 green-tipped banana or a green apple. Neither really interest me so I’ll probably be fruit free. Which is also good because I’ve been eating a lot lately and can definitely tell it’s creeping up my sweet tooth.

Next week: an update on week one of the 21DSD and why soup for breakfast is awesome.

menu monday: what I actually ate

Another easy week because we are headed for sun next weekend. I can’t wait to spend a few days in 80+ degree weather with the hubs. But first we have a week of work to get through and this is how I plan on fueling. I’m experimenting with offal a lot lately – definitely a menu monday dedicated to it in the near future!

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The paleo meals are pre made meals I purchased thinking they would keep us from eating take out. The meals are tasty IF they are defrosted in the fridge then heated in a pan. They are kinda gross and soggy if they go from frozen to ready via the microwave. Which unfortunately defeats the purpose of getting them so we have them on hand to eat in a pinch. Since they are tasty though I’m eating them when it’s just me for dinner in an attempt to win back some freezer space.

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Cauliflower Soup: Excited to try another soup from Mel for breakfast and increase my Well Fed 2 count by one more this week. I bought mason jars for transporting my morning soup, hopefully it’s a little easier than the containers I’ve been using.

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Spaghetti Squash Bolognese: I doubled this recipe from Balanced Bites and swapped out the ground veal/beef for ground beef heart. Already looking forward to my weekday lunches. Alfred was hanging out in the kitchen all morning while this was cooking.

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Meatloaf: Greg and I both love meatloaf so I was excited to come across this; I subbed lamb kidney for the liver because it’s what I had on hand. What, doesn’t everyone have lamb kidney on hand? It was delicious, I don’t think Greg actually looked up at me while he ate it.

What I Actually Ate

From Monday – Friday last week I documented my meals via my iPhone. I wanted to show that meal planning doesn’t have to be rigid. I doubt there is a single week that I eat food exactly how I’ve planned it out but (after some experience) I don’t waste much food either.weekoffood

  • Monday went according to plan.
  • Tuesday I forgot my lunch. The cafeteria had fish over rice with mixed veggies and spicy thai chili sauce – so good.
  • On Wednesday the chicken wasn’t defrosted yet so I swapped to salmon that I can defrost in under 20 minutes. Also realized at lunch that mixing my citrus cauli rice with my chicken is so good.
  • Greg had a last minute client dinner on Thursday so instead of roasting a chicken I ate a paleo meal from the freezer.
  • Forgot to defrost breakfast soup on Friday so went with an extra egg, most of a mango, and a little sauerkraut. We had dinner with friends but I didn’t take a picture of my meal (we went to a fancy pizza place so they put sausage on a salad w/ anchovy dressing for me and it was amazing). My cocktail was quite tasty as well.

menu monday: the crockpot

Screen Shot 2014-01-26 at 12.54.33 PMThis week’s menu is pretty simple. I have been out of town most of the weekend and it’s going to be a busy week plus we have guests arriving on Friday(!). I decided simple and easy was the only way to be successful. The paleo Pad Thai from Well Fed is one of my favorite recipes and this week I’m using a rotisserie chicken from Whole Foods to make it even easier. For the rest of the week it’s basically going to be reheating meatballs with salad or zucchini noodles and marinara sauce. (Other recipes are cookbook-only.)

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So let’s talk about the crockpot. My love for the crockpot started long before I turned my focus to eating a cleaner more nutritionally based diet, but I definitely find myself using it even more now. It’s probably on our kitchen counter more often than not, usually with a batch of bone broth bubbling away. I average maybe one actual meal a week in the crockpot. For those of us that work 8+ hours outside the house every weekday, having the ability to cook dinner while you’re miles away from home is a huge win for eating real food and not calling for take out.

While I love my crockpot and rank it in my top 3 kitchen appliance must haves (along with my food processor and immersion blender), it’s not without its faults. Usually when a crockpot recipe goes bad I end up wasting a lot of food. Thankfully that doesn’t happen often, but it does from time to time. Just last week I came home to a less than appetizing smell. Greg wanted to go out to dinner and when I popped the lid to check on my ham hock and collards soup, I quickly agreed. The ham tasted okay, but it smelled and looked terrible. We both had very long days and the thought of eating a bowl of mush for dinner just wasn’t cutting it. And fair warning, a crockpot-gone-wrong smell takes a while to leave your home.

I use my crockpot in three ways for the most part: bone broth, one pot meals likes stew/soup/chili, cuts of meat that needs to be slowly cooked for optimal taste and texture. I love coming home from work to a cooked meal. For crockpot meals I make during the week I do the prep the night before. I set my crockpot on the counter mostly as a reminder in the morning that I need to turn it on. I prep the meal based on the recipe and put everything in the ceramic part of the crock pot. Is that the crock or the pot? I put the lid on and throw it in the fridge. So far my track record for remembering to take it out of the fridge, drop it in the outer, metal part, and plug in is 100%. If you think you might forget, set your keys on the lid in the fridge, an old trick my dad used to do with his lunch.

Because crockpot meals are my easy go-to meals during the week, I tend to make the same ones over and over. Here are my favorites, the ones I’ve made multiple times that always turn out delicious.

Bone Broth

Balanced Bites
Nom Nom Paleo

One Pot Meals (a few do require additional pots for prep)

Sweet Potato Chili with Beef
Thai Yellow Curry with Beef

Mostly Meat

Kalua Pork (turn into lettuce tacos, eat with eggs for breakfast, eat straight out of the crockpot)
Italian Pork Roast (pair it with any veggies for an easy meal)
Chicken Verde (usually turn these into lettuce tacos or add to a salad)

Also check out this list that Holly put together – I usually browse it when I need new inspiration.

menu monday: prepping for your week

Screen Shot 2014-01-16 at 9.18.50 PMI’m really excited for this week’s menu. I broke one of my own rules and every recipe is new to me. But, I was really reasonable about timing (the bulk will be made over the weekend / on a day off from work) and they all are quick prep plus longer cook time recipes. I rarely stick to my meal plan exactly, but if I do it will be five recipes from Well Fed 2 in one week, plus a sixth I’ve made before (the kebab sauce).

This is a happy week where a bunch of the WF2 recipes are available online, but for those that aren’t page numbers from WF2 listed in picture.

  • Pork Roast – slightly different from recipe, but very close; I’m planning to do the Middle Eastern variation listed in the cookbook
  • Lamb gyro salad + kebab sauce
  • West African Stew – slightly adapted from the original recipe; I’ll be making it with a turkey breast I need to use but hoping it still works out well
  • Ham hock soup – I’ll probably do a combo of these two recipes with whatever veggies I have on hand (1, 2)

I’ve been prepping food on the weekends for the week ahead probably for about two years. I go in spurts with how much effort I put in, but I can say for sure that the more prep I do on the weekend the healthier we eat during the week and getting meals on the table (or counter / desk / couch) is that much easier.

Prepping (for me) is all about setting myself up the best I can to make the decision to eat a healthy, tasty, homemade meal versus calling for take-out. Considering I have to make this decision 21 times every week, the more work that’s done in advance the more likely I am to choose well.

Here’s a somewhat random list of what I’ve found to be helpful for me.

1. Any prep is better than no prep. Seriously. If you have only 10 or 15 minutes, brown some ground meat to make a very quick meal one night. While the meat’s browning, cut up a veggie to cook later in the week. I find prepped veggies speak to me after work whereas unprepped veggies find themselves in the compost bin at the end of a busy week. Also, prep doesn’t have to be done all at once. Sometimes I set aside a few hours on Sunday but more often than not I do a little prep each time I’m in the kitchen over the weekend.

2. Start with a clean kitchen. I do not start prepping until the kitchen is clean and the dishwasher is unloaded, especially if I’m doing a big prep session. This ensures prepping food doesn’t require a two hour cleaning session.

3. Have multiples of common kitchen gadgets. Because I do the bulk of my cooking at one time, I find it helps to  have several of a few key items. I have two sets of measuring cups and three sets of measuring spoons. I have several chefs knives (and use one for meat, one for non-meat). I have three of four cutting boards. Not having to stop and clean a meat filled cutting board and knife before moving on to veggies keeps me in my cooking groove.

4. Have a compost bowl out on the counter. We are required to compost in Seattle, but even if you don’t have to or want to, keeping a bowl for all your scraps on the counter is much more efficient than going into the trash can every few minutes. It also helps contain the mess. I have big plastic IKEA bowls that work great. I’ve also used plastic bags from veggies, but I like that the bowls don’t have to be opened each time I want to throw more peels in. Once it’s filled Greg takes it out to the compost for me and brings it back in.

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5. Have a defrost bowl in the fridge + start defrosting early. My meat is all wrapped in plastic with paper from the butcher, which means it drips as it defrosts. To keep messes in the fridge to a minimum, all my meat defrosts in a bowl that I can change out regularly to clean. As soon as you know what you are going to cook, put it in the fridge. It’s annoying when you find yourself with a few minutes to prep something and frozen meat.

6. Don’t cook too far in advance. I’ve made the mistake of cooking all my veggies on Sunday. Opening my lunch on Thursday at work with veggies that were roasted five days ago is only going to have me tossing my lunch and buying something instead. Prep veggies (wash, peel, cut) early, but I try to cook them no more than three days in advance.

7. Store by serving (and stock up on storage!). If there’s a meal already packaged in the fridge with meat + veggies, I’m that much more likely to go for it. Instead of storing 4 meals worth of chili in a big container, I’m more likely to store 4 individual chili servings because I know it works better for me. When I need to make my lunch, it is so much easier to grab the chili plus two veggies than it is to portion out each item into a new container. We have tons of two cup glass containers and a few LunchBots. I also save good sized glass jars and we have a few plastic containers I’ve picked up here and there.

8. Do something now that will help you later. A few nights ago I realized I didn’t have breakfast for the next morning. I’m currently working on bringing my breakfast to work every day, so I hard boiled eggs way later than I wanted to. At first I only wanted to peel three for my breakfast the next day. But I was already there, peeling the other six would only take 2 minutes tops and would save me the hassle for two more breakfasts. Finish the job if it’s going to make your life easier in a day or two. (Says the girl who drove by three gas stations today with the tank on empty but 21 more miles in range…)

I kept track of how my prep went for this coming week. Every week is a little different, but here’s the run down:

Thursday

  • ~1 hour to meal plan and defrost meat
  • 5 minutes to start bone broth in the crockpot

Friday

  • 20 minutes at lunchtime to walk and grab groceries (I realize that because I “shop” my chest freeze and have a CSA deliver most of my veggies my shopping time is really minimal)
  • 5 minutes to swap out half the bone broth (and strain and bottle it) with fresh water

Saturday

  • 10 minutes to make mayo
  • 20 minutes to prep the southwest frittata and cut/wrap in foil once it finished baking
  • 20 minutes to prep veggies (wash and cut a head of lettuce, peel and chop a pound of beets and a turnip)
  • 10 minutes to strain and bottle the bone broth
  • 5 minutes to prep the pork roast and toss it in the crockpot to cook overnight

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Sunday

  • 10 minutes to shred the pork roast and toss it in the fridge for dinner

I made meals as well to eat (lunch and dinner Saturday, dinner Sunday) but I don’t really count those as prepping food for future use since we’re eating them once they are ready.

Happy cooking! Any good prep tips for me? Leave ’em in the comments.

NYEE and a meatball bar

Last night was the tenth anniversary of New Years Eve Eve. It was also my fourth one to attend/host, which seems crazy. Perhaps it’s a sign you married the right person when it seems like there’s no way possible you’ve been together for four years already? We had a small crowd this year, just eight of us, but it was nice and low key for a Monday night when half the crowd had to work on Tuesday. For the first time ever, a baby attended NYEE. We also added a white elephant exchange this year and it was pretty hilarious. It was definitely a different party than previous years and I’m sure it will continue to evolve as the years go on.

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This is a terribly fuzzy and dark photo, but the only proof I have that humans attended our party.IMG_7671_edited-1

I had a fun idea to make a meatball bar. Seemed perfect since they are bite-sized snack foods that are easy to make ahead of time and reheat for the party. I made then on Sunday then followed the reheating directions before the party; they tasted fine room temp as well. I picked four of the fifteen meatball recipes from Well Fed 2 (bringing my total to six so far); I did switch up some of the meat suggestions to ensure we had a good mix for people’s preferences.

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I made beef Thai Curry balls with curry sauce; beef Cuban balls with Lizard Sauce; pork Japanese gyoza balls with an Asian dipping sauce; and turkey Greek balls with a kebab sauce. Just realized it’s kind of funny I make Greek balls with Turkey, not always known as a loving combination. Perhaps the way to world peace is through balls? Everything was tasty (minus the Cuban balls but that is because they had olives and we all know I think olives are the devil’s food).

The meatball recipes are all in the cookbook only as far as I can tell, but try out a few of Mel’s other meatball recipes that are available on her site.

I clearly went way overboard for just eight guests who mostly had already eaten dinner, but now we have a stash of meatballs in the freezer for next week. I also made sweet potato with bacon soup and have a ton leftover so my breakfasts will be something to look forward to the first week of January.

IMG_7666_edited-2Champagne corks + Project Life cards made for cute and free food labels.

Our hosting is done for 2013! Tonight it’s a quiet night on the couch with our yearly take-out of homemade chow mien noodles from Snappy Dragon with a fancy bottle of champagne my parents sent for our first anniversary. I’m sure it will involve (almost finishing) The West Wing, knitting, a sleepy doodle, and probably some coding. What more could you want from NYE? (answer: absolutely nothing)

Happy New Year’s Eve, friends!