September 30, 2012

ThirtyOne's October Customer Special



2 Dinners from this last week (and frozen leftovers tonite b/c of timing)

This first meal show was a slow cooker meal:
2 turkey 'tenderloins'
1 can beef broth
1 tablespoon EVOO
Pour in water to just cover meat and so you'll have enough for rice later
--Cook on LOW 5 hours--
REMOVE turkey.
Add 1 box of RiceARoni Wild Rice Mix half hour before serving.
Tear apart and replace turkey, stir in well, let heat for a few minutes while setting out plates, dishing out sides, etc, serve & enjoy!

Black beans on the side, cooked & drained

Pulled out the frozen leftovers this afternoon to heat up this eve because we were pressed for time.





This next meal was a throw-together:
Tortilla, warmed slightly in microwave
guacamole (store-bought)
black beans
Jasmine rice cooked with herbs and sea-salt in chicken broth instead of water
Zach ate 2 huge ones!








September 23, 2012

A couple of meals from this week, both with Tilapia


Tilapia in Extra Virgin Olive Oil, garlic, herbs (I love parsley, cilantro, oregano, sea salt, pepper, paprika). Zucc and yellow squash in herbs mixed with a bag of frozen veggies.


Today's lunch was tilapia, made the same way as above, served on a bed of white quinoa (cooked in water with a chicken bullion and sea salt), and a zucc, yellow squash, onion casserole.  If you'd like the recipe, just ask and I'll post it here :)

September 20, 2012

Healthy Recipes from today's NBC TODAY Show


These looked awesome and I would have no problem trying them! Just HAD to share! ~PhyllisAdelle~

Recipe: Zucchini linguini with omega-rich pesto


Ingredients
  • For the "pasta":
  • 2 medium zucchini or yellow summer squash
  • For the toppings:
  • 1/2 pint cherry or grape tomatoes
  • 1/2 cup black Kalamata olives
  • 1/2 cup sundried tomatoes, chopped
  • 1/4 cup Savi seeds
  • 1 teaspoon kelp granules
  • Sunflower sprouts
  • For the pesto:
  • 1/2 cup Savi seeds (plain/sea salt)
  • 2 tablespoons hemp seeds
  • 2 cups fresh basil
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • Squeeze 1/4 lemon
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
Preparation
This pasta dish looks like pasta and satisfies your pasta craving, but without all the refined carbs! That's because it's not really pasta — it's zucchini.  A kitchen-gadget spirooli slicer transforms your regular summer squash into zucchini noodles!
To prepare the noodles:Add zucchini to spirooli and turn until noodles are formed. Add noodles to a bowl, add sunflower sprouts and toss with pesto (recipe below). Then top with the following: cherry tomatoes, sundried tomatoes, olives, Savi seeds and kelp granules. 
To make the pesto:Add all ingredients to food processor and process until well combined. Add 2 tablespoons of pesto to 1 cup of zucchini linguini and mix until well combined. Top with fresh cherry tomatoes, Kalamata olives and sundried tomatoes.
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Recipe: Chocolate chip quinoa Cookies

Ingredients
  • 1 cup cooked quinoa
  • 1 cup uncooked quinoa flakes (or oatmeal flakes)
  • 1 cup unsweetened, shredded coconut
  • 2 tablespoons almond butter
  • 4 large VERY RIPE bananas
  • 1/2 cup coconut sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1/2 cup chocolate chips
  • Pinch sea salt
Preparation
These cookies are SOOO GOOD! The are jam-packed with protein, fiber, stress-busting B-vitamins, energizing goodness and deliciousness! They're also gluten-free and will kick your cravings to the curb.
To prepare the cookies:Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees. In a large mixing bowl, mash bananas in bowl with a fork and add vanilla, almond butter and coconut sugar. Add quinoa, oatmeal, coconut and pinch of salt. Mix until well combined. Stir in chocolate chips. Line baking sheet with parchment paper and drop batter on to cooking sheet. Bake for 25-30 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool.
Serving Size
Makes about 25 cookies that look more like muffin-tops and are chewy.
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Recipe: Chocolate mousse

Ingredients
  • 2 cups cooked, pureed pumpkin
  • 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/3 cup maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup coconut butter (make sure it's heated to point of being liquid)
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
Preparation
This mousse is so light, so airy, so decadent, and so HEALTHY! The secret ingredient? Pumpkin! This guilt-free goodie helps to energize, combat stress and lower heart disease. Plus it's super high in fiber, helping to curb cravings and balance blood sugar levels.
To prepare the chocolate mousse:Add all ingredients to a bowl and mix well with a fork. Refrigerate for an hour before serving. That's it!
Serving
I normally serve this in a short martini glass and garnish with berries and/or shaved chocolate.

Peggy has many websites, here's a Bing link to them:
http://www.bing.com/search?setmkt=en-US&q=Peggy+Kotsopoulos

Sugary Truth (from Weight Loss Wednesday/IEatGrass.com)


Sugary Truth

By Callie McBride
The cat’s out of the bag: you’ve been buying frozen dinners and snack bars left and right due to a hectic work or school schedule. We all do it from time to time, don’t sweat it. Instead, make sure you are choosing the right products! Nothing will compare to fresh, home-cooked meals of homemade vegetable dishes and deliciously ripe fruit smoothies; when it’s time to put your health in the hands of your local grocery store, you know it’s time for a game of This Or That. I have a handful of brands that carry amazing vegan products that fit in with my healthy lifestyle. Many mainstream brands that claim unreal nutrition, though, can pack in loads of unwanted sugar. I don’t mean to bash certain food companies by any means, but just inform my fellow vegans of the extra sugar they may be consuming throughout their quest for weight loss.
For instance, the well-known brand Special K advocates for eating a balanced and nutritious diet for women, yet its latest product, the Dark Chocolate Protein Shake, has 190 calories per serving and contains 13 grams of sugar. Yikes! A better option for taste, protein, and fiber is Kashi‘s Go Lean Toasted Berry Crumble Cereal, offering 180 calories and only 10 grams of sugar per every 3/4 cup.
We vegans love our milk: soy, almond, coconut, rice, the list goes on! The brand Eden has an “original” soymilk product that, for 8 ounces, has 170 calories and 13 sugars. Whaaa?! I prefer West SoyUnsweetened soy milk, which offers half the calories and only one-ONE!-gram of sugar. Oatmeal, meet West Soy. West Soy, meet oatmeal.
You all know I am a huge fan of coconut water. Aside from its awesome flavor and incredible taste, it has a much better track record than a leading competitor for flavored drinks, Vitamin Water. Hey-the packaging is fun and the titles are awesome, but 120 calories and32 sugars per bottle? Taste Nirvana has as only 50 calories and 9 grams sugar…I’ll take two, please.
College life = snack bars. It’s that simple. But snack bars do not need to equate to meal replacement bars! How can a measly little bar replace an entire meal!? I may be crunched for time, but never to the point where I must forgo my beloved vegetable and quinoa stir-fry from my awesome campus cafe. ProBar, an entirely vegan meal replacement bar line, offers its products with 370 calories and 26 sugars. Whoa! Kind Bars, however, as a simple afternoon snack, are a better option for your body’s sugar levels. The newest flavor, Dark Chocolate Nuts & Sea Salt (need I even go on?) has only 200 calories and 5 sugars!
Finally, when dinnertime rolls around and your oven has become more of a storage unit than a functional kitchen tool, frozen meals do come in handy (yep, I said it). Lean Cuisine is a very popular brand for properly proportioned and tasty frozen dinners; don’t be fooled: the sodium and sugar content is through the roof! The Vegetable Egg Roll, for instance, packs in 320 calories and 12 sugars. I spent a few minutes on its website and learned that none of its products are vegan yet. So, passing on this brand is a no-brainer! A better option, still, is Amy’s Kitchen. Her Veggies & Brown Rice meal is a mere 260 calories and 7 sugars. Quickly broil up some tofu squares or heat up a sweet potato, and that’s a dinner of champions right there.
Keep these facts in mind when you are stocking up your pantry. Sugar is everywhere, but there is no need to add unncessary amounts to your diet. You’re sweet enough! (I said it. Not sorry.)

*All images and nutritional information of the mentioned brands came directly from their official websites.
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