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Garbanzo Bean Soup

…Or as I’ve named it this evening, Dinner on Deadline.  I’m behind the 8-ball, lots to do, but I squeezed in a workout, which made my stomach rumble even more!  I will not, however, succumb to unhealthy quick fixes like fast food, frozen dinners, or canned meals as I did in days of yore.  Well, OK, to be perfectly honest, I did use a can for this recipe, but it involved garbanzo beans…one of nature’s most perfect and useful foods because they’re low in fat and high in fiber and nutrients.

I use garbanzos in everything from hummus to baking bean-based chocolate cakes to thick, hearty soups like this one.  Super easy. All you need is a few augmentations and a food processor.  Viola – a healthy meal in 30 minutes!

 

Dinner on Deadline Winter Soup

1 can drained garbanzo beans

1 large clove garlic

3 Tbs. tomato paste

1 cup beef or vegetable stock

1 Tbs. dried thyme

Salt to taste

Place all ingredients in a food processor and blend until smooth. Bake on a covered crock at 300 for 30 minutes and serve. So easy, so HEALTHY! Finish with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. If you’re feeling it, add some cooked brown rice, quinoa, or gluten-free pasta. Bon Appetit!

 

The tomato paste and fresh garlic give the garbanzos a perfect tang

The tomato paste and fresh garlic give the garbanzos a perfect tang

 

 

Making Peace Through and With Chocolate

Not all chocolate is the same. Your body knows the difference between a drink made with raw cacao powder and an amalgamation of cocoa butter and refined sugar.I’m maintaining a 180-lb. weight loss. To do this I have had to both make peace with food and give the pink slip to those which were not doing my body, mind, or spirit any favors.

I’m a firm believer in when you really want a piece of chocolate cake, there’s simply no substitute. But let’s get real, I can’t be doing chocolate cake everyday, and it’s not exactly nutritional anyway. But I do want the taste of chocolate in some capacity on a daily basis, and I want good nutrition, plus the privilege of remaining comfortably in my size 8 jeans. Remember (if you’re old enough) when size 8 was THE standard? Now it’s practically considered a plus size but lemme tell you, and no pun intended, I put no weight into that insane kind of thinking. I look good with my clothing on, I’m no longer a size 28/30, and the list of physical freedoms once denied me by 180 extra and very burdonsome pounds is endless.

Therefore, I’ll pass on regular rounds of cookies, candy bars, cupcakes and other nutritional vagaries. No…drinking a chocolate protein shake is by no means the same experience as a mountainous slice of double-layer cake, but it does the job. And by that I mean it satisfies physical hunger in a big way, delights my chocolate-craving taste buds, and keeps my progress intact.

Disappointingly, bottled protein drinks are the latest thing to be appropriated by the big food companies. You can find them everywhere now, from supermarkets to convenience stores. Their mass-production and ubiquitousness are a red flag – only take the bottled option if you’re in dire need. A far better choice is to concoct your own at home. For so many reasons: cost effectiveness and quality control among the top benefits.

Becoming a regular with protein drinks is a process. It may not be love at first gulp, but when you consider the benefits (and when you feel the supreme satisfaction of actually being nourished by something sweet and delicious, you just may end up like me and so many others, giving the prepackaged goodies a rest.

 

Stacey’s Liquid Chocolate Satisfaction

8 oz. unsweetened vanilla almond milk

1 scoop protein powder (I like Jay Robb’s Egg White and Plant Fusion, both in vanilla)

1 Tbs. raw cacao powder

1 tsp. maca (a favorite superfood)

And if I’m feeling really racy, 1 Tbs. coconut oil (optional)

 

Place all ingredients in a blender and blend for about 20 seconds or until smooth. Serve and feel nourished.

 

Liquid Chocolate - One of My Constant Companions!

Liquid Chocolate – One of My Constant Companions!

 

Happy and Healthy

Happy and Healthy

 

The Reformed Elvis

I can’t say I was ever a fan of Elvis Presley’s music, but the man himself was undeniably intriguing.  How could he not be with the velvety voice, uber-charisma, and white-hot fascination of his fans which only seems to have grown stronger with each decade following his 1977 passing.

And then there was The King’s attraction to food.  His alleged comfort food binges even seemed to rival mine in ferocity and scope.  For that, he has earned my eternal astonishment, because not many of my eating buddies could keep up with me. I tended to outperform them all.

I feel a twinge of sadness anytime I hear of a binge-eater (famous or not) who never escaped the cycle that goes something like this: gluttony, self-loathing, severe dieting…repeat. It’s really quite awful. I was stuck in it for decades.  But I was luckier than Elvis and his generation.  I was bolstered by phenomenons such as the Self Help movement, New Age Spirituality, The Oprah Winfrey Show, Pop Psychology, and various factions of the Fat Acceptance army who, little by little, illumined to me the Truth that I wasn’t a horrible piece of crap afterall…just a wounded one, who needed Love and Acceptance much more than she needed a diet or gym membership.

Please refer to blog posts under the ‘Heart’ category to read in more detail how I made peace with myself, which included embracing my weight as well as my wounds, and standing vociferously up to the size bigots, until they eventually faded from my life. It’s shocking, I know…but bully’s detest confrontation.

And as for how I made peace with food, check out the Head and Hips categories for specifics on how I deal with cravings, remake former binge and comfort foods, and how I do it all while (most of the time…I’m no robotic saint) incorporating whole, health(ier) ingredients.  Like these banana ‘bread’ muffins for instance!

The word ‘bread’ is qualified because there’s no flour involved. They get their heft from Garbanzo beans and sweetness from bananas, but they taste and feel enough like banana bread to disseminate the recipe and let you be the judge. The Elvis part came after wondering aloud if this might possibly work as a clean version of  one of the King’s favorite snacks:  The Peanut Butter and Banana Sandwich, which he preferred pan-fried if legends are correct.

In my own adventures with reformed eating, I’ve come to learn that it’s enough to approximate flavors and textures of decadent concoctions such as the above sandwich. Or chocolate cake, or full-fat gelato. In other words, as long as I’m getting the genuine flavor and texture of bananas, bread, and peanut butter, I’m good. It doesn’t have to be jammed between two slices of butter-smeared, squishy white bread and fried to a greasy crisp.

So here it is, my version of something Elvis is said to have loved.  And considering the brilliance of the pairing of peanut butter and banana, I have to say I agree with the King on this one. It’s an irresistible combination.  And would like to think that if Mr. Elvis Aaron Presley had access to all the help I did to get me where I am today, he just might try, if he were here today, one or two of these sweet and sticky little gems…and probably like them.  Here’s to ‘ya, King!

 

 

The Reformed Elvis  or:  Stacey’s Version of The PB&B Sandwich

1 can garbanzo beans, drained

2 eggs

2 bananas, nice and ripe (overripe’s OK too)

1 tsp. vanilla

1 TBS. coconut oil

 

Preheat oven to 325. Blend all ingredients in a food processor until smooth.  This will take a few minutes and require some scraping of the sides. Spray a six-muffin tin with cooking spray. (Or use a medium sized loaf pan). Place batter in each muffin cup, filling 1/2 to 3/4 of the way. Bake for 30 minutes then turn oven off and let muffins cool in the over another 15-20 minutes.  Bean-based batters tend to be ‘wet’ and heavy, so a little extra heat is required. Enjoy muffins at room temperature or when still slightly warm.  Optional: slather tops with peanut, almond, cashew, or sunflower seed butter. Proceed to moan.

 

Non-damaging Deliciousness!

Non-damaging Deliciousness!

 

Banana.Bread

 

 

The Art of Going Without…

…Or:  There Shall Be No Security Blanket Yanked Before Its Time

 

This week, we had two amazing guests on DDP Radio:  Nutritionist Nancy Guberti, who helps clients reach optimal health through better food choices, and Terri Lange, a 61-year-old walking success story who proves it’s possible to become lighter, leaner, more energetic, and sexier with age.

In addition to being a certified nutritionist, metabolic and functional medicine specialist, and a Defeat Autism Now Practitioner, Guberti is the mother of two food-allergy-ridden kids.  In other words, healthy eating is more than a vocation to her, it’s her entire life. For both personal and professional reasons, Guberti has found ways to circumnavigate the jungle that is the American way of eating and help bring people into balance, whether it’s someone with a food allergy or a weight issue or a hormonal imbalance.

Lange is a longtime celiac with an allergy to dairy.  She eats a clean and “UnAmerican” diet in order to not feel lousy and take sick days from work on a regular basis. Both women realize that at this particular stage of our nation’s gastronomic development, avoiding foods laden with gluten, dairy, refined sugar, and genetically modified ingredients isn’t exactly a breeze.  It takes time, effort, and extra cash.  Both agree that the payoff is huge:  In better health, improved appearance, heightened energy levels, and in preventive medicine.

I have my own success story that began five years ago when I decided it was time to end the three-decade reign of terror I’d been waging on my nervous system, internal organs, and skeletal frame via a lifestyle of sedentary binge-eating. Starting weight: 345 lbs. Weapon of Choice:  The best protective shield ever concocted to combat a life of dieting and overeating: The resolve to never diet again, honor my body’s healing process, and never again bully it with orders of a goal weight and delivery date thereof.

Instead, I began by just saying no to binge-eating. When that became a comfortable state of being, I eliminated gluten and cow dairy, and watched as my body made mind-blowing changes for the better. In less than two years I dropped 180 pounds.  No one was more astonished than I was. My initial goal was to get out of the 300’s, something I’d tried in vain for 20 years to do.  Then I set my sights on the ultimate prize:  being a size 14/16…something I hadn’t been since high school.

The fact that I’m now a size 6/8 (depending on who’s making the clothing) speaks VOLUMES on the ill-effects of gluten and cow dairy. And I’m not suggesting that obesity is a snap to overcome.  It’s a multi-layered issue and includes multiple solutions such as regular movement and exercise, paying attention to portion size, and being mindful of feelings and emotions that can suddenly have me, glassy-eyed, at an open refrigerator door; or worse, idling in a drive thru line.

I’ve kept the weight off for more than three years, an astounding accomplishment considering that on two occasions in my life, I regained 100 lbs. lost through dieting.  Given my slow thyroid, family genetics, and age (49), I guess you could say the odds of staying slim aren’t in my favor.  But I don’t cast energy in that negative direction.  I know that a lot of my weight-fate is in my hands, and I’m of the firm belief that genetics are the loaded gun and my choices and behavior pull the trigger (or not).  And for the very reason of not wanting the weight to make an encore appearance, I decided to give up refined sugar six months ago.

Terri Lange was my inspiration and Nancy Guberti my nutritional guiding light.  I’d gotten far too friendly over the past few years, with refined sweets such as gluten-free cupcakes, cookies, pastries, and the like.  They actually were not part of the food pyramid, as I liked to delude myself into believing.  Lange dropped another 20 pounds off her already svelte frame by giving up white sugar and flour and looked and felt better than ever. I was tired of the tight jeans, sapped energy, and the mental fixation on baking, shopping, and the general treasure-hunting I’d been doing for the daily sugar high.

Six months off sugar, I’m indeed leaner, lighter, and more energetic, but I’m also, on occasion, blues-ridden and irate.  That’s just the way it is without the sugar-drug giving me that rush of pleasure, or, the ringing of the dopamine bells as Guberti calls it. Sugar is addictive.  Insidiously so. Its feel-good side effects are undeniable.  So are its downsides, but the problem is, sugar’s feel-good properties are so alluring, most of us willingly take the downside just to experience its fleeting opposite.

Trust me, though, feeling blue or irate isn’t such a bad thing.  It’s a simple practice called being in the moment, and I’d rather take my reality straight-up vs. clouded over by a chemically-induced, seconds-long high.

But how does one live this way long-term, you must be wondering.  Good question.  Nancy, Terri, and I have a few pointers.  If you’re ready, here are some ways you can make a few changes.  No one’s saying to go cold turkey.  It’s actually not a good idea.  And it directly contradicts the Universal Truth of respecting the Security Blanket. We all have forms of them, whether in habit or substance.  I still have mine, but they’re far less destructive.  IE, espresso in the morning with almond milk and stevia drops instead of cream and sugar; and gluten-free pizza with Manchego instead of Mozzarella.

Any parent or pre-school teacher knows the inseparability of a child with its security blanket, pacifier, etc.  Ever try to yank it away and have the kid go cold turkey?  It’s a scream-fest on steroids.  But leave the kid alone and let them have their security device  and they pass through the clingy phase. Without forcing or pestering, there’s one day no need for the attachment.  There were reasons I needed the binge eating.  I was filling myself up with pleasure and comfort. I was taking refuge from an unhappy life. And it also had simply become a habit.  When I got to the core of what was troubling me, the need to eat as if I was prepping for an impending famine dissipated.  But I also had to retrain my brain and my palate, which took time.

Look at the list below as just an adventurous foray into adding some healthy and different foods to your repertoire.  No one knows you better than you, and only you can determine if you’re desiring, willing, or ready to go gluten-, sugar-, or dairy-free (or all of the above).

Below is a partial list of ideas.  The internet is full of fantastic sites that have clean products, recipes, and other resources. Here’s to a healthier you, and I’ll toast to that with a shot of reality, straight-up.

 

For a Clean Halloween

Yummy Earth

Annie’s

Endangered Species

 

Amazingly Delicious, Stupendously Healthy Hot Chocolate

1 TBS. Coco Mojo mixed with warm almond or coconut milk

 

Sugar Free Desserts

Banana ‘Ice Cream’

 

Pizza Crust

Still Riding

 

Pasta

Andean Dream

NorQuin

 

Bread

Ener-G Tapioca Bread

Paleo Bread

 

For the Salt Cravers

Riceworks

Tierra Farms

 

 

Tapping Into The Ultra-Mind

I’m going to get all metaphysical on you here for this one, but if any of you have been following me for a while, you know that’s nothing new.  I’ve always maintained that healing and balance require attention to the physical (good food and regular movement); psychological (loving yourself, feeling the feelings); and metaphysical or spiritual (meditation, nature walks, focused relaxation).

In the past, when I focused on only one of these elements, the result was short-term success. Now, I focus on them all. Lately I’ve been feeling the pull to spend more time going within, especially in the morning, before I let the world in.  I reacquainted myself with a technique I used when I first began releasing weight in 2009. It’s a focusing exercise I found written on two sheets of blue notepaper, written by me in purple ink. I have no idea where or who I got it from and there’s no date on it.  Could have been from a friend or a workshop…I’d love to credit the author of it.  But I feel compelled to share it, so here it is. I’ve reworded it to align with the results I prefer (weight-release instead of weight-loss and instead of merely releasing weight (which could include muscle and other valuable commodities, I prefer to be rid of excess fat and water).

If this technique appeals to you, I urge you to do it regularly…three times a week or more.  Let its message percolate through all the layers of both the conscious and unconscious mind and don’t put a time-table on results.  You may put it aside for a few months and then come back to it.  Your path is your own and there’s no right or wrong.  I hope it helps in some way as it did for me.

What I enjoy most about this is the first three steps, which really allow me the luxury of tuning in to my body and being present in it.  As a trance-eater, that’s something I avoided. Like the plague.  I put a lot of mental energy, actually, in denying my body’s existence.  Sounds odd, but when you’ve been trained by the society around you to loathe your body, it becomes an automatic survival skill.

As the years go by and the healing of both the inner and outer blossom, I find it to be  a friendly and enjoyable endeavor to just stop for a minute and realize where I am and what a powerful and amazing mechanism I’m living in.  Give it a shot. It doesn’t take that long once you get in the groove.  Here’s to a little restoration and quiet time.

 

Ultra-Mind Technique for Weight Release

 

1.  Select a location where you are not likely to be disturbed. Lie or sit down in a chair whose back is high enough to support your head.

2.  Close your eyes and for one minute, follow your breath without any attempt to control it. Be aware of the relaxation flowing through your body.

3.  Take a deep breath, extending your diaphragm , and release your stomach muscles immediately. Allow your consciousness to follow this breath through your entire body, following it as it is absorbed in al your body cells. Repeat the breath exercise three times.

4.  Repeat the following words to yourself mentally: Through the Miraculous Power of my Ultra-Mind, I Direct that my physical body begins this very moment to release excess fat and water.  I Direct that with a release of excess fat and water, my body attains and maintains a condition of Perfect Health.  I further Will that the Intelligence of my High Self Directs that this release is proportional in that I release excess fat and water only in areas where excess fat and water release is needed. 



5.  Repeat the breath exercise in #3, but now allow your consciousness to follow the distribution of breathe to the areas of your body where excess fat and water release are needed most.

6.  Repeat the following words to yourself mentally: Through the Miraculous Power of my Ultra-Mind, I Will that the Miracle of Metaphysical Healing is also brought to my appetite and that I desire the most nutritious foods for my body, and only in amounts that my body can use for the attainment and maintenance of Perfect Health. 

7.  For one minute, follow your breath again with no attempt to control it. Allow yourself to be aware of the great feeling of relaxation that flows through your entire body.

8.  Open your eyes and go about your normal daily life.

 

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