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Baby Steps Are A Virtue

For those bowled over by my (or anyone else’s) before and after shots: There’s no ‪magic‬ moment where it all begins. ‪ Healing‬ is a process. A series of Realizations. One big extended ‪Awakening‬.

People often write to me looking to have it all solved with a diet or food plan. While their intentions are in the right place, an overly rigid food plan usually does nothing more that figuratively tie your arms into an uncomfortable position that you can’t wait to free yourself from.

My starting point...let the rational baby stepping begin.

My starting point…let the rational baby stepping begin.

Very often the biggest and most helpful step you can take is to agree not to diet or force change where food is concerned. It’s a huge and significant load off your back that allows change from within to begin. And you’ll have the time and emotional energy to invest in cementing healthy habits that will feel natural.

As I say in my book “Clean Comfort,” you can’t keep everything intact in your life and expect change. So go for little shifts, instead of black and white thinking.

Are you a fast food addict? Add more produce to your life. Any form will do.

Is soda your drink of choice? Cut back a little and drink water, seltzer, or herbal tea instead.

Feel stymied by a toxic person in your life? Start by being honest with yourself about how it affects you and work up to some straightforward communication.

Baby steps. It’s the best and most enjoyable way to lasting change. The mind and body can only take so much change and shuffling around anyway before they put the brakes on one way or another and tell the torrent of rigidity to talk to the hand.

Baby steps got me to where I am today. Baby steps. All I’m asking you to give up is the All-Or-Nothing belief system.

 

Lighter, freer, happier, and still baby-stepping. Know why? 'Cause Life's a Journey!

Lighter, freer, happier, and still baby-stepping. Know why? ‘Cause Life’s a Journey!

Gluten-Free Popovers

Gluten-Free Popovers

 

Nothing like a little comfort food that’s clean and won’t give you a hangover! These popover are easy to make and GOOD. They require a bit of attention to detail in order to ensure they rise and turn out light and airy.

In homage to Transformation Tuesday, I give you a transformed recipe! The effort’s worth it and these are a guaranteed crowd pleaser:

 

  • 2 cups Namaste all-purpose baking mix
  • 1/4 teaspoon xanthan gum
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 ½ cups milk (unsweetened almond or coconut) at room temperature
  • 5 large eggs at room temperature
  • 2 tablespoons butter, melted

 

Preheat oven to 425. Spray muffin tins or popover tins with non-stick cooking spray and place in the oven for at least 10 minutes while mixing batter.

 

Place all ingredients in a large blender or Vitamix. Blend for 10 seconds and no more (it’s important not to overbeat the eggs or the popovers won’t rise).

Carefully remove hot pan from oven. Ladle or pour batter into muffin cups till cup is ¾ full. Bake for 25 minutes then reduce heat to 350 and bake for another 10 minutes. Popovers should be golden brown. Serve immediately.

 

Wish you could smell these!

Wish you could smell these!

 

 

Can you hear them begging for a schmear of Kerry Gold?

Can you hear them begging for a schmear of Kerry Gold?

DIY Protein Bars: Sweet and Neat

Sweet and Neat Protein Bars

Protein bars are my sweet-tooth salvation, especially when traveling. Compact and already packaged in airtight containers, they’re easily stowable in suitcases and carry-on bags. And sometimes I slip them into my purse when going to a restaurant, party, food festival, or any other setting when I might be setting myself up to go without as everyone else is diving into donut sundaes or chocolate layer cake. Not only do they satisfy the sweet tooth, they’re anything but empty calories with an average of 20 grams of protein per bar!

Still, they’re expensive, and a bit, shall we say, chemical- and preservative-laden. Another drawback for me: most of the gluten-free and sugar free options still aren’t great because whey is the primary protein source. Maybe one day brands such as Orgain and Garden of Life will come up with sugar-free and gluten-free protein bars but until that happens, I’m rolling up my sleeves and making protein bars at home. That’s right, it can be done. It’s a bit labor intensive but you control the quality and the flavor, so what could be better? I can’t take total credit for this because the idea is inspired by the wonderful vegan cooking blog Oh She Glows and its genius creator Angela Liddon. I adapted this to be completely sugar-free and to accommodate my undying love of coconut . It’s a pretty accommodating recipe which means you can feel free to amend it to suit your tastes and preferences. Throw in nuts, chips and/or dried fruit if you like. It’s your protein bar. This recipe is a great starting point. Let me know how you like it, and what your favorite version is!

Ingredients:

1 cup oat flour

1/3 cup dried unsweetened coconut

1/2 cup Orgain vanilla protein powder *

½ cup peanut butter (sugarless and non-hydrogenated)

1 tablespoon vanilla

¼ cup coconut oil

¼ cup hot water

Topping

1/3 cup cacao nibs, whirred in Vitamix or coffee bean grinder

1/3 cup coconut oil

1-2 TBS espresso

* The protein powder I use is sweetened so I find these to be sweet enough as is. If you’re using unsweetened protein powder, add more sweetness with 1/3 cup agave syrup, maple syrup, raw sugar, honey, etc.

In a medium sized mixing bowl blend the oat flour, coconut, and protein powder together until well sifted. Add the remaining ingredients. The mixture will probably be too thick to stir so make sure your hands are nice and clean and start kneading. If it’s too dry, add a few more splashes of hot water. Flatten the dough-like mixture into an 8-inch brownie pan and flatten out with your hands until it’s an even thickness throughout. If it’s easier, flatten by rolling with a pastry roller or a pestle from a mortar and pestle. Freeze the bars for 10 minutes.

Good enough without the drizzle, actually

Good enough without the drizzle, actually

See what I mean? Add a cup of herbal tea or almond milk and you've got Nirvana!

See what I mean? Add a cup of herbal tea or almond milk and you’ve got Nirvana!

While the bars are chilling, melt the cacao nibs, coconut oil and espresso over low heat, whisking constantly until melted. Cacao nibs are ‘rocky’ by nature and won’t completely melt. Just get it as close as you can. Remove bars from the freezer and slice into squares before drizzling with cacao. These bars can be stored in the refrigerator or freezer for several weeks.

Another option for the topping is to melt 1/3 cup chocolate chips (regular or sugar-free) with 1 tablespoon of coconut oil and drizzle. The cacao nib version has more nutrients as cacao nibs are a superfood. Kids, however, might not dig ‘em so much.

A square of tin-foil make these DIY Protein Bars officially stowable!

A square of tin-foil make these DIY Protein Bars officially stowable!

The Ritual of Comfort…The Comfort of Ritual

Whether we’re aware of it or not, our lives are embedded with ritual. I suppose a worthy debate could be waged pointing to  the synonymous nature of the words ‘ritual’ and ‘habit,’ but I’ve learned that whether they’ve been consciously put into place or not, my life is filled with rituals…and yes, some of them have become habits.  From quietly mumbling (while still in a sleep fog) a few gratitude-filled sentences when I first open my eyes the morning to my 11 p.m. cotton-ball-and-olive-oil make up removal technique, my waking hours are embroidered with rituals.

I’ve noticed a theme with the rituals:  The conscious ones are almost always constructive.  Not so for the unconscious rituals.  Like the one that was on auto-pilot for much of my life. It was my split-second reaction to a bad day at work, a rude clerk who hurt my feelings, or a boundary-busting friend who had taken advantage of me. The ritual response was trance-eating. For hours. There were variables that included food choices, location of the trance-eating, and whether the food was slapped together in my kitchen or the product of a drive-thru spree. So seethingly impatient was I to get the edible tranquilizers into my system pronto, I actually sometimes did (as Joan Rivers famously joked) stand in front of the microwave and implore it to HURRY THE F*^$K UP!  No matter where it took place though, the trance-eating  always bore the common thread of me doing a much slower version of Lucille Ball standing at the chocolate factory conveyor belt…stuffing, and stuffing, and stuffing. 

Picnic 2009

 

But back to the constructive rituals.   These are the ones that have kept and continue to keep me in a balanced place.  Rituals such as regular sessions of DDPYOGA at my television set, shopping trips to the produce section of my supermarket, keeping a food diary, and sharing my deepest feelings with people I trust when in states of despair  – these are all rituals whose disciplinary benefits and character-building bonuses are obvious.

The best health insurance

The best health insurance

 

And then there are the rituals that are practiced strictly because I enjoy them. Like my morning coffee.

My tried and true Bialetti

My tried and true Bialetti

OK, espresso, if you want to get technical.  It’s something I developed a taste for about two decades ago when I lived in a Puerto Rican neighborhood of The Bronx. After my first taste of Cafe Bustelo, I quite simply could never return to the Maxwell House-drenched roots of my WASP upbringing and have always made sure my cupboard’s stocked with the strong stuff. And the stove top Bialetti percolator which brews it so beautifully.  I adore the taste of espresso, but I also know it’s not the best move for me to make it my daylong drink of choice and this, my friends, is where the art of ritual comes into play.

I concoct my canvass of ingredients first thing in the morning.

Coffee tastes better in a mug from a place you loved visiting

Coffee tastes better in a mug from a place you loved visiting

It’s the only time of the day in which I’ll be indulging. The rest of the day it’s water and herbal tea, but at 9 a.m., I gather together earthy spoonfulls of black, superfine dark roast, purified water, vanilla-flavored Stevia drops, a teaspoon or so of coconut oil for bulletproofing purposes, and steamed sugar-free almond milk.  For the first few years of my new way of eating I refused to give up light cream in my morning ritual. It was a firm line in the sand I drew because I was agreeing to let go of so many other so-called comforts:  Binge foods like Cheetos, gooey double cheeseburgers, bagels with cream cheese, my favorite Italian bread…the list was long. Being insistent that the cream stayed in the picture was a good move because it imbued my ritual with pleasure and gave me something to look forward to each morning.  Taking away every pleasure (I’ve learned through my award-winning former career as a dieter) is a set up for swan-diving off a wagon that was never a realistic ride to begin with. I dropped 180 pounds drinking cream with espresso every morning.  Then out of the blue, on an out of town visit to a friend’s home three years ago, I awoke in horror to discover she was out of cream and only had almond milk in the refrigerator.  I hadn’t the desire to do an early morning run to a grocery store in an unfamiliar town so I gave the almond milk a shot, thinking it would be awful.  When I actually enjoyed it, I decided the time had come to amend the morning coffee ritual.

For latte's supreme...and no dairy cramps

For latte’s supreme…and no dairy cramps

The point is, I make sure to practice this – my first ritual at the stove of the day.  It gets my heart pumping with a little excitement, I unconsciously love and care for myself with each subtle movement, from measuring the coffee, to swirling in the coconut oil til it’s dissolved.  And then I get to step back and look at the glorious beauty I’ve created, savoring the view for a few seconds before bringing my lips in slowly, for a reverent, full-of-awareness first sip.

My philosophy with coffee or anything: Why not make it as good as it can be?

My philosophy with coffee or anything: Why not make it as good as it can be?

And that’s the official start of each day for me. There are more rituals to come and it doesn’t matter so much how many there are but that they bring me a few good things like joy, structure, nourishment, and connection. Heck, this blog post has me thinking…I might come up with a few more to add to my life.  Why not?  There’s always room for more of anything good.

 

 

Silence is A Golden Ritual

The Healing Power of Silence

Take Time

However Brief

However Imperfect

To Invite Stillness

Into Your Life

(It Works Wonders)

Silence Is Healing

Silence Is Healing

Photo: Joan K. Lentini Photography