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Skwigg Blog
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Random Foodables

I've been eating new stuff and taking pictures of it (like a normal person). Here are some recent tasties.

 

Celery, peanut butter and raisins. It's called "bugs on a log." I wish I'd invented it but I saw it on an episode of The Office.

 

 

This is brown rice, black beans, lettuce, tomato, onion, avocado and salsa. It's a little something I like to call Chipotle-at-home.

 

 

My favorite sandwich to take to work - hummus, cucumber, tomato, onion and mixed greens on a whole wheat sandwich round. This is deliciously messy. It has vegetable projectiles. My other favorite work sandwich is peanut butter, grated carrots and raisins on a sandwich round. I don't have a picture of that one but if you go out in public with a carrot sandwich, prepare to be called a "freakin' freakazoid." That totally happened to me. LOL Still, I love the plant sandwiches and need more ideas, so if you make something tasty with no meat or cheese, do share.

 

 

I discovered Kashi Honey Sunshine cereal in a neighbor's recycle bin. I saw the empty box and thought, mmmmm.... must... try... It's good. It's like Cap'n Crunch with fiber and pronounceable ingredients.

 

 

Sweet potatoes! I'm on a sweet potato kick. I'm sure the novelty will wear off at some point but I've been having them with lunch almost every day. I bake them at 375 for an hour and sprinkle them with cinnamon.

 

 

The other part of lunch is usually a big honkin' salad such as this one.

 

 

Today I'm making soup. I can't remember what the recipe was called. I've been referring to it as Hippie Soup. It's six cups of water or vegetable stock, an onion, 3 celery stalks, 3 carrots, 1 1/2 cups lentils, 1/2 cup couscous. Simmer it on low for 2 hours. It's almost done now. I'm about to go have a bowl with piece of seed bread.

 

 

Lest anybody think I've become a radical home-cooking health nut, I'm drinking a Diet Mountain Dew at this very moment and I have approximately 452 Cadbury Creme Eggs in a drawer in the kitchen.


Posted by skwigg at 1:03 PM CST
Updated: Saturday, 13 March 2010 1:08 PM CST
Saturday, 6 March 2010
Rice Cooker Mania

I've developed a weird fixation with rice cookers. It started when I bought a bag of plain brown rice instead of my favorite sodium bomb rice mix. I made my first batch in a saucepan on the stove. The whole thing erupted like Mt.Vesuvius, belching starch steam all over the stove, sticking the lid to the pan, the pan to the burner, and the spatula to the pan. It looked like, you know, when the ash hit Pompeii. It left the cooking dolt and all the cooking accouterments frozen in time by starch steam.

The rice itself was quite sticky and gloppy but absolutely delicious. I had to have more rice with less mess, so I started looking at rice cookers. They range in price from fifteen to four hundred dollars and everybody recommends a different one. Zojirushi is the really popular and pricey Japanese brand. Naturally, I wanted that one. I decided the $150 low end Zojirushi would be fun. It has something called fuzzy logic that allows it to outsmart the rice. Also, it plays Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and I'm not even making that up.

After a week of staring at it on Amazon I chickened out. I couldn't bring myself to spend that much money on my first-ever rice cooker, something I might use twice and shelve. I decided to trust the thrifty people who swear the cheap ones work just fine. I ordered a twenty dollar Black & Decker that doesn't look like a spaceship and doesn't play music. My thinking was that if it turned out to be junk, I'd only be out twenty bucks and could still buy the Zojirushi. If it worked I'd save over a hundred dollars.

It totally worked! I tried it yesterday and it made perfect rice without any volcanic activity. You put the rice in using the little scoop, add water to the corresponding fill line, and hit the cook button. It somehow knows when the rice is done and flips over to a warming setting. I stirred the rice once at the end of the cook time and then left it on warm for almost half an hour until I was ready to eat. The rice was fluffy and perfect, the bottom didn't burn or get crunchy, and nothing stuck to the pan.

It has a steamer basket for vegetables that I haven't tried yet. I'm planning to make steel cut oats next and maybe try some other grains. We'll see how long it lasts. I'm guessing a twenty dollar doodad isn't going to be very durable but if it breaks I can always get the Japanese rice spaceship.

 

Here is the Zojirushi:

 


 

 

Here is the Black & Decker:


 

 

I bought this dealio with my own money but I use Amazon affiliate links in the post. I will receive a small portion of the sale if you buy through the link. See my Disclosure Statement.



Posted by skwigg at 12:15 PM CST
Updated: Saturday, 6 March 2010 12:16 PM CST
Friday, 26 February 2010
Body Fat Pics and Vegan Kickstart

Just a couple of things to share. Leigh Peele put up a fun post on Body Fat Pictures and Percentages. Both of these women are 15 percent. That's one reason I gave up on numbers. The whole mess is so subjective (and error prone) that knocking yourself out for a random body fat percentage doesn't actually mean anything. Get fit. Feel good. Be happy. Don't sacrifice your sanity for two more percentage points on the wingnut scale.

For anybody trying to eat more plant food and less moo cow, I found a free 21-Day Vegan Kickstart program starting March 1st. I'm not technically a vegan but I steal their food all over the place. Me likey monkey food. I signed up and I'm eager to get my hands on the grocery lists, meal plans and recipes. 


Posted by skwigg at 12:52 PM CST
Updated: Friday, 26 February 2010 12:58 PM CST
Sunday, 21 February 2010
What the World Eats

I found the coolest photo essay on the Time magazine web site. What The World Eats, Part I is a collection of photos showing what's on family dinner tables in fifteen different homes around the globe. It's a total happy geek-out for anybody fascinated with what other people eat. 

I was sort of alarmed at how much packaged Western junk food is in the pictures. In Sicily some of the favorite foods were hot dogs and frozen fish sticks. In Kuwait they put Pringles, Ritz crackers and Corn Flakes on the grocery list. The North Carolina family eats mountains of bright, plastic, packaged stuff. It's funny how you can tell without looking at the captions which families are from the US; just look for the mountain of bright plastic and nothing resembling actual food... oh, wait, I think I see some grapes in the middle of the pile. They're probably decorative.

In Mexico, the whole spread is backed with a dozen 2-liters of Coca-Cola, probably the good kind with real sugar. They score big on the fresh fruits and vegetables though. There is KFC on the table in China. In Poland, they like pig knuckles and peanut M&Ms (not together I hope). In Egypt, Ecuador and Mongolia, most of the food looks like food. They eat plants and meat and bread and stuff. In Great Britain I see purple Cadbury packages! Squeee!! Also, there's a dog at the table with his packaged dog treats. And they eat mayonnaise sandwiches?! That can't be good. LOL

Anyway, check out the photos. What do you think? Is civilization doomed? Having just read Michael Pollan, it's a wee bit shocking to see the emphasis on engineered edibles (says the Cadbury Egg hoarder ;-).


Posted by skwigg at 12:25 PM CST
Friday, 19 February 2010
Exercise TV, The Kind Diet and The Baby Gate

This week I bumbled across ExerciseTV on demand on cable. It has gobs of workout videos available instantly, some killer and some painfully cheesy. Normally I don't have the attention span for exercising in front of the television but curiosity and bad weather got the better of me. So far my favorite has been Jillian Michaels' 30 Day Shred. It has no dancy choreography or silly stuff, just lots of push-ups, squats, lunges jumping jacks and crunches. It's very Turbulence Training-esque.

I finished reading The Kind Diet by Alicia Silverstone. Food politics and celebrity nutrition claims aside, it has some beautiful color photos and tasty looking vegan recipes. If only I could get someone to make them for me, starting with the cupcakes. That's always my problem with cookbooks. I like reading them. I like looking at the pictures. I like eating. I don't like cooking.

Ripley is a menace. A few days ago it started snowing, which I guess smells sort of like rain, which must in some way remind her of thunder, which resulted in a full-tilt, head-spinning panic attack. She darted out the front door and down the street in a blind terror, chased by invisible demons and imaginary thunder monsters. Yes, a slush-colored dog darting through traffic in a snowstorm, oblivious to any calling, pleading or commands. It took forever to catch her and aged us like ten years. We have since purchased the biggest most ridiculous baby gate we could find. It's like four feet tall and you need three hands to open it. There will be no more door-darting!


 


 

I use an affiliate link when discussing these products. I will receive a portion of the sale if you buy. See my Disclosure Statement.


Posted by skwigg at 12:00 PM CST
Saturday, 6 February 2010
Monster Quads and Chicken Legs

Here are a couple of interesting tidbits from around the interwebz. Tom Venuto answers the question, Once an Endomorph Always an Endomorph? (Can Your Body Type Change?). One big hint toward your true body type is how you looked before you started training and what you drift back to when you're not highly trained. Here's a body type quiz if you're wondering where you stand right now.

Then, I saw a fascinating five minute conversation between elite strength and conditioning coach Mike Boyle and Hollywood trainer Valerie Waters where they discuss women's leg training, big quads and buttless people. Not many female clients say to their trainer, "I would really like to build some great big thighs that don't fit in skinny jeans." But if you don't want to add size, what should you do differently and how do you convey it to a squat-happy trainer who has memorized the "women can't get bulky" spiel? Mike says any muscle a client doesn't want is too much muscle. He uses a different training approach for "appearance" clients and "sport" clients. Interesting stuff. I think some viewers will nod their heads off in agreement and some will have a rage attack.

So, I'm curious, what's your natural body type and do you go with it or do you fight it? And for women who lift, are you trying to build shapely muscular quads or are you doing everything in your power to tone those suckers down?

My body type is ecto/meso and for a long time I trained to get bigger, faster and stronger. When I'm training hard and eating all day I have a muscular mesomorph body type. When I relax a little my natural state is more of a skinny ectomorph. What I've discovered is that I'm happier not fighting my natural state. Sports performance is still important. I just shifted my "sport" to more of a TRX Pilates kettlebell thing and less of a creatine and squat racks bodybuilding thing. It's more fun and less of a struggle. But what if your natural body type is something you don't like? Do you embrace a few curves (or muscles, or chicken legs) or is the battle on?


 

 


Posted by skwigg at 1:18 PM CST
Monday, 1 February 2010
Mostly Plants

My favorite Michael Pollan food rule, "Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants." My mostly plant lunch today was whole wheat rotini pasta with veggie Italian sausage, a salad, and an apple. Not pictured is the Cadbury Creme Egg I added as a really delicious afterthought.

I haven't used protein powder in a couple of years but I just ordered some Sun Warrior raw vegan rice protein. I'm eager to see if it's delicious or if it tastes like paste. My intention is to put it in my green smoothies, which already taste like monkey vomit, so I'm not too worried about the rice protein jacking them up.


Posted by skwigg at 2:28 PM CST
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Food Babble

Did anybody catch the Food 101 Oprah episode? One of my favorite nutrition dudes, Michael Pollan, was on talking about the movie Food, Inc. and his new book(let) Food Rules. I like his rules because they're goofy and clever, like "Don't eat anything that doesn't rot." Real food goes bad in a few days or weeks. Pseudo food has enough chemicals and preservatives to stay fresh forever. Another good one is "Eat all the junk food you want as long as you make it yourself." That way it will be less junky and you won't eat it every day because it's a lot of work. Trying to create my own treats certainly slows me down. I baked a cake this week. It took hours and looked like a bomb went off in the kitchen. I won't be doing that again anytime soon!

In an unfortunate coincidence, I happened to be eating chicken as Oprah showed the full-tilt factory farm chicken slaughter conveyor belt scene from Food, Inc.. Holy appetite destroyer! Blah! Plth! Consider me happily tilted back toward the vegan end of my food spectrum. Alicia Silverstone was on talking about her vegan cookbook, The Kind Diet. I wanted to order it but there's no Kindle edition and the stampede of Oprah viewers has it backordered for weeks on Amazon. The Cheesy Oozy Guacamole Bean Dip looks good, so do the Chocolate Peanut Butter Cups. She clearly embraces the "make your own junk food" rule.

This morning my kettlebell workout was one of Caroline Radway's cardio supersets. Lots of swings and lunges and high heart-rate stuff. Love it!

The new dishwasher finally arrived after like three weeks of Sesame Street paper plates and plastic forks. Here's one of my many salads with Ernie and Bert.


 

 


Posted by skwigg at 1:22 PM CST
Saturday, 23 January 2010
Ask Skwigg

I happily answer all kinds of questions from blog readers. Most people have one, maybe two. This time I got eight in one e-mail, just like a quiz show! It's from someone who read Brad Pilon's intermittent fasting e-book Eat Stop Eat and is starting to question the nutrition rules they've lived by. Fun stuff! I'm entertained by how my own answers to these questions have evolved over the years. Protein? Fasting? Ratios? Glycemic index? I had strong opinions about all of those and I'm pretty sure they were the exact opposite of what I say now. I've either matured or my brain has fallen out.

1. So how much protein do we need daily if it's not protein that helps us maintain our muscle mass??

The RDA for a woman my size is like 46g. No kidding. And that's with a large safety margin. To calculate it, it's .8g of protein per kilogram (2.2lbs) of ideal body weight per day. I probably eat around 45-65g most days and I don't think my arms have diminished a bit (sort of to my dismay LOL). For someone who is training hard (I'm not right now), the RDA increases to 1.2-1.8 grams per day per kilogram of body weight. That would take me up to a whopping 70-104 grams, still well below the "1g per pound of body weight per day" bodybuilding rule.

My feeling is that if you're eating a boatload of protein and you like it and your body comp is where you want it and you have no complaints, continue with the boatload of protein. BUT if you're a woman choking down 150-200 grams of protein per day, hating your meals, and struggling to see any fat loss...maybe rethink.

2. Seems that intermittent fasting is really only meant to give a bit more help (more of a deficit) on top of your current nutrition plan of choice?

Yes, it's primarily about increasing the calorie deficit. It's also convenient and it gives your digestive system a break. I don't think we were meant to eat all day long. That's a quirk of modern Western society. The rest of the world probably feels a hunger pang or misses a meal occasionally and is healthier because of it. Their immune function and cellular repair and stuff doesn't always take a backseat to digesting a meatball sub. ;-) Keep in mind that with intermittent fasting, the fast is the whole deficit. You don't fast *and* diet. Calories shouldn't be restricted at all on non-fasting days.

3. Macros don't really matter at all; it's calories in the end?

Nutrition matters. "Macros" are loopy-speak for OCD crazy people. It definitely does make a difference whether you're eating mostly healthy whole foods with a variety of nutrients or eating mostly french fries and bread. If your nutrition is highly processed and wildly unbalanced you'll look and feel like hell. It's not about high-carb or high-protein or low-fat. If your high-protein diet is mostly bacon, or your low-fat diet is mostly rice cakes and Weight Watchers desserts, you're screwed. Quality is important, a deficit is important, ratios not so much.

4. Are you born with a certain set metabolism?? Is that why some people can eat a ton and some can't?

You may be born with a certain metabolism and body type but that's so heavily influenced by activity and nutrition that it's hard to use fate as an excuse. Skinny ectomorph types can sprout beer guts and pudgy endomorph types can win figure competitions. If you have a "slow" metabolism and find yourself in a situation where you're training hard for several hours a day, that changes things. People may start to envy how tiny you are and how much you eat. Just like if you have a "fast" metabolism but find yourself sitting at desk 12 hours a day eating carry out, your ass will eventually widen. Nobody is immune.

5. Food doesn't affect your metabolism? Meaning, eating more protein doesn't really help burn more fat.

Food does affect your metabolism and you do burn more calories if you eat more protein. But eating more doesn't create a bigger calorie deficit. That's where people get all retarded. Sure, adding an extra 30g of protein to each meal might cause your metabolism to speed up a bit, but it's not going to speed up enough to cancel out the 600 extra calories you just ate for no damn reason. :-D

6. The GI index of a food doesn't really matter so much other then helping to keep you fuller longer?

Glycemic index doesn't make much difference to me. I think some people may have more of an issue with blood sugar where they're going to feel hyper or sleepy or hungry if they don't keep it on an even keel. Still, people talk like if you eat something high glycemic it will raise insulin levels and fat loss will be impossible. Yet when I was anorexic my diet consisted mainly of gummy bears and powdered sugar donuts. I felt awful but the sugar and carb bonanza didn't prevent dramatic fat loss in the face of a dramatic deficit.

7. Is there such thing as a damaged metabolism?

Oh, hells yes. Mine was whacked. When you undereat for extended periods of time, your body becomes quite efficient at conserving energy. Other things like thyroid problems can dial down the metabolism too. In most cases a damaged metabolism is fixable, or at least improvable.

8. Can my maintenance calories really be around 1600-1700 daily? Seems so low.

Yes, it depends on activity, age, weight, hormones, stuff like that but that's not an unreasonable number. However, I will say that a lot of women who think they're maintaining on 1600 calories are actually eating 2150 or something. :-) I learned that from Leigh Peele. Even the ones who measure and track everything can really futz it with things like heaping tablespoons, deceptive portions, forgotten bites, chewing gum, coffee creamer, Splenda, and butter spray. 

 


Posted by skwigg at 2:30 PM CST
Updated: Saturday, 23 January 2010 2:35 PM CST
Tuesday, 19 January 2010
You're Kidding, Right?

I got Ripley some dog shoes. She loves to play in the snow but if it's deep powder she gets balls of ice between the pads of her feet and is limping in no time. I looked at the fancy shoes with the Vibram soles ($60?!!) but ultra runner, Julie Berg, said that her dog wears the $2.50 ones from DogBooties.com and that they survive miles of use in Minnesota winters. I put them on Ripley and she looked at me like, WTF? I told her this is what real sled dogs wear in the Iditarod race and she seemed unimpressed. I'm sure that once we're out in the snow she'll be oblivious to them but watching her prance around the kitchen was a riot.

 

 

I have no affiliation with this product. I like it but I don't make any money if you buy it. See my Disclosure Statement.


Posted by skwigg at 2:07 PM CST

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