Lazy girl meal prep lunches

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The concept of spending ridiculous amounts of time pre-preparing meals has always been unappealing to me, made worse by the fact that I don’t think I do it right because by Wednesday I’m always stuck eating sad, soggy veggies that I have to power through for two more days. So when I started seriously tracking what I eat and trying to save money by packing lunch, I came up with this lazy “bowl” type of meal that is semi prepped in advance, but still somewhat flexible.

I cook a bulk amount of chicken breast in the crock pot/instant pot with some sort of seasoning or broth (I got real fancy this week with leftover canned tomatoes and Moroccan spices, but it’s usually water and a couple shakes of whatever seasoning blend I see first). Then every morning I measure 4-6 oz of chicken (depending on how much protein I think I’ll need), 1 cup of frozen spinach and 1/2 cup of some sort of beans or starchy veggie (soy succotash from TJ pictured). Sometimes an additional vegetable, sometimes more spinach. It’s quick enough to assemble every morning but also allows for some more flexibility. Sometimes I put BBQ sauce on it, but lately I’ve been packing it plain and adding hot sauce at work to save calories (although TJ Sriracha garlic BBQ sauce is like 50 calories and delicious).

I haven’t gotten sick of it yet and it’s pretty filling and a lot more satisfying and nutritious than the sad, dry salads I used to pack. One day I’ll experiment with different proteins and sauces, but I kind of crave the chicken when lunch time rolls around. Plus, I’ve mixed up my vegetables enough that each week they’re a little different (I used butternut squash in the fall and it’s always a treat to mix in chick peas as my beans)!

I don’t prep dinner ever, that’s a meal that my husband and I like to enjoy together and he likes variety and fun things (hello, homemade pizza)! But eating these bowls for lunch leaves my eating plan for the rest of the day pretty open to whatever we’re craving for dinner because this one lunch is pretty high in fiber and protein, but low in fat and carbs.

One day I’ll incorporate roasted brussel sprouts into the mix (my all time, hands down favorite vegetable and probably one of my favorite foods in general), but the pre cooked chicken and frozen vegetables has been a life saver for the past 5 months (20 lbs down, body composition changes, etc).

Peanut Butter Energy Bites – Modified

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I’ve been making delicious no-bake energy bites for a while and I love them so much that tonight when I MEANT to make peanut butter protein balls, I ended up just making a slightly less caloric version of these delicious bites. Fine by me!

It’s not many fewer calories per bite, about 30 less, but if you “accidentally” eat four (or six or eight…) instead of one, it adds up (or subtracts up?).

I’m hyper-focused on eating better and working out more right now, which has been very beneficial since I started in early November. I avoided weight gain over the holidays (!!!!), can feel myself getting stronger and just overall feel a little better (when I’m not exhausted from spin class).

This also means that I can be a little obsessed (annoying) with my calories/nutrients. My tried and true method for keeping my weight in check is to count what I eat. I’ve been doing it for 16 years. I’m eternally grateful to my mother for encouraging me to start counting “points” when I was 12 and giving me the baseline knowledge about food and health that I have been using ever since. I’ve also matured from the days when I would ration my calories to eat a McFlurry after dinner (calorie math according to a seventh grader) and now try to get the right balance of nutrients in addition to sticking to a specific calorie range.

WHICH MEANS these bites are the perfect treat for my birthday week! Don’t get me wrong, I fully indulged over the holidays (hello, homemade ziti, cinnamon rolls, cookies, etc) and plan on eating REAL cake and brunch and BBQ on my birthday this weekend (I hope my husband reads this), I just don’t want to do that all week….

Not that these bites are much of a compromise. They are delicious and their texture is out of this world. omnomnomonomonom

Ingredients

  • 1 cup oats
  • 1/4 cup ground flax-seed
  • 1/4 cup lite agave nectar
  • 5 tbsps peanut butter
  • 1 scoop of protein powder (I used cookies n cream flavored whey protein because I got a huge 5lb barrel of it on sale, which side note, made me feel like a total badass (cough, poser, cough) carrying around Costco)
  • 1/4 cup coconut flakes – I only had sweetened, but unsweetened would probably be better!
  • 1/4 cup chocolate chips, slightly chopped up so they go further
  • 1-2 tbsp water as needed

Directions:

  • Add all ingredients except water in a large mixing bowl
  • Add water before forming into balls. The mixture will be a little dry since it’s modified and you will need extra moisture to bind them.
  • Use a measuring table-spoon to section out the bites and form into balls. Recipe makes about 22 bites.
  • Refrigerate!

Nutrition info per bite:

  • Calories: 80
  • Fat: 4
  • Cholesterol: 4
  • Sodium: 32
  • Carbs: 9
  • Fiber: 1.5
  • Protein: 3

Libraries and Emotions

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My mom and I went to the library a lot when I was growing up. The one near our house had two levels, with a large children’s sections I can only describe as a smaller library inside the main one. It was magical. We’d spend hours browsing books and always check out more than we could read in three weeks. I remember one time we had designated tote bags to fill full with new lives and interesting stories. Even in college, we would make trips together.

My current library has a free home delivery service, something I have fully taken advantage of since I learned about it. However, between home delivery and the library’s extensive e-book collection, I haven’t spent much time in an actual library since I got my Kindle three years ago. Not that I’m complaining, I love my library e-books and audiobooks.

But tonight I happened to return a delivered book on time while the library was still open. I spent a good forty-five minutes browsing the shelves, shamelessly judging each book by its cover and taking notes on potential picks for book club. Then I started to grab books I couldn’t live without, once again checking out way more than I can realistically read in three weeks. I realized this was the first time I actually parused a phsyical library in the two years since my mother passed away.

It was nicely comforting. I’m reaching a point in my life where I can no longer readily imagine what her advice would be for particular situations because we never discussed my problems as an almost thirty year old adult with almost thirty year old adult concerns. So much has changed in the past two years and there’s so much I wish I could discuss with her that it was nice to feel a small connection.

I hate the sense that I’m feeling sorry for myself by writing this, but I wanted to document some nice library memories and the emotional significance lirbaries hold for me. But now I need to stop dwelling and get cracking on the massive pile of books I have to read before November 19.

Coconut Ginger Peanut Chicken

This dish… where do I begin. I’ve made variations of this for almost four years. It started with a sauce recipe from a good friend, but has sort of evolved over time as I substitute ingredients and add new flavors I think would go well with it. I made it tonight and it has turned into something new and I needed to document my creation so it can be duplicated. For the first time I used coconut oil, which really added to the flavor and helped keep the sauce from soaking into the noodles and drying up. 

Coconut Ginger Peanut Chicken Ingredients
Somebody please remind me to take photos of my food so I’m not stuck with ingredient shots!

The very nature of this dish is that it’s not an exact science. The measurements for the sauce are estimates and can be adjusted according to taste. The trick is to add enough (maybe even too much) peanut butter to get that strong peanut flavor, while thinning it out with coconut oil and water so you have enough sauce to cover your noodles. Be careful with the soy sauce, as I’ve made it wayyy too salty before and that’s never fun. This dish goes well with lo mein noodles, spaghetti noodles and even the cheap ramen (minus the prepackaged seasoning)!

Serves 4-6 

Main Dish Ingredients:

  • 2 chicken breasts, cut into thin slices
  • 3 tbsp coconut oil (this sounds like a lot, but it becomes part of the sauce too)
  • 1 tsp curry mix
  • dash of salt
  • Mixed veggies 
  • Spaghetti or other long noodle

Sauce

  • 1 tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp teriyaki suace
  • 1/3 cup Tonton Ginger dressing and marinade 
  • 1/2 cup peanut butter
  • 2 tbsp sugar or sweetener (like stevia)
  • 1 cup water
  • 1/2 tsp sesame oil
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • A couple dashes of ginger powder
  1. Heat coconut oil on medium heat in your pan and start to make the noodles according to package.
  2. Slice the chicken into thin, sort of long pieces. Sprinkle curry and salt on it and cook in the coconut oil. You can add a small amount of peanut butter to the chicken as it cooks.
  3. Once chicken is fully cooked, turn the heat down to low-medium and add ingredients for the sauce over the chicken in the same pan. I add peanut butter about a third at a time so it can melt and mix in more easily. 
  4. If mixture is too watery, let it simmer for about 10 minutes to reduce.
  5. Add frozen veggies as you’re mixing in the sauce and cover for several minutes to cook all the way through. Don’t let the veggies cook too long or they can wilt and get mushy. I used California blend because the broccoli and cauliflower really soak up the sauce. I’ve made it with fresh veggies too, the frozen ones are just quicker!
  6. Serve over noodles and go back for seconds! 

Cinnamon Buttercream Icing/Frosting…Friceting

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I created this recipe from combination of recipes I’ve used before and some I was looking at right before making it. It’s really easy and I made it to put on cinnamon roll bread pudding – so dangerous! It’s a frosting icing hybrid because I used less butter than most butter creams and more milk. 

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups confectioner’s sugar
  • 6 tbsp butter (almost an entire stick)
  • 1/4 cup – or more depending
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 tbsp or more cinnamon

 

Directions:

Combine ingredients in a bowl and whip it up with a mixer on high speed. That’s it! I will be posting my version of the cinnamon roll bread pudding if it turns out good!

Farrah Fawcett Hair

I just came back from a satisfying, soul-searching jog and this song by Capital Cities popped up in my playlist. I’ve always loved this song. It has a cool, electronic mixed with gospel-choir sound, Andre 3000 makes an appearance, and the entire song is about appreciating a variety of things big and small. Nutella, Democracy, double rainbows, her hair in a bun, curled up in bed with a good book on a rainy night and scented candles are among the items listed in this song. It’s incredibly positive and it makes me happy every time I hear it. And, it turns a regular morning jog into a satisfying, soul-searching one!

“You’ll know it when you see it, you’ll know it when it’s there.”


“It’s good shit!”

Homemade Biscuits, Ya’ll (recipe review)

Homemade Biscuits

I wanted some sort of bread with my pot roast the other night and I was about to make canned biscuits when I thought, “I have a blog now I can’t just make canned biscuits!” I found this recipe a while ago for J.P.’s Big Daddy Biscuits and it seemed simple enough. It was! Several reviewers of this recipe used butter instead of shortening so I decided to try that too, because butter.

It was easy enough to make. I always have trouble cutting butter into flour, but I found I made the most progress by pre-slicing the butter and then using one knife while tilting the bowl and using it as sort of a cutting surface. Then came the fun part, cutting out the biscuits! messy aftermath of biscuit cutting I don’t have a circular cookie cutter so I used a little juice glass and it worked perfectly. Once you cut out a couple of biscuits, you have to roll the dough out again. This part got a little tricky and sticky, so just make sure you use a lot of flour on everything, including your kneading surface, hands, cutter, etc. It made an awesome, fun mess!

It was really fun cutting them out, I felt like a biscuit girl at Bojangles (that’s normal to get excited about, right?)!! I made seven biscuits with this recipes. And we definitely broke out the jam to carry these babies into dessert time.

 

Easy Peach Melba on Cinnamon Toast

As you may notice with several of my recipes, I like to modify existing ones to fit my needs. The same applies for the amazing, dangerously easy dessert I made last night. I tasted the original recipe for Peach Melba Cinna-bun at Publix, in their Apron cooking samples section. It was incredibly delicious, but called for things that felt a little extravagant. As much as I wanted to spend extra money on raspberry sauce, frozen peaches and (AMAZING) cinnamon buns, I felt like I should forego the extra charges. Also, I don’t need cinnamon buns lying around my house begging to be eaten.

So I got home and made dinner as usual, only briefly noticing the canned peaches in my pantry until they popped into my mind as my husband and I watched TV. I thought that with leftover cinnamon bread from Easter, I might have enough ingredients in my house to make something similar, and I did!!!

This was such a quick and easy thing to make, I didn’t have time to even take a picture of it, so I took a picture of the ingredients to show how simple it is to throw together.

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Ingredients:

  • Two pieces of bread for toasting (cinnamon or raisin bread)
  • 1 cup sliced peaches (preferably fresh, but canned or frozen work)
  • About 2 tbs strawberry or raspberry jam
  • Cinnamon, clove, nutmeg
  • Whipped cream (not pictured because my husband makes it from scratch and it’s too good not to use up)

 

Directions:

  1. Toast bread
  2. In a small sauce pan, add peaches and jam and stir on low heat until they are mixed and create a syrup
  3. Add cinnamon, nutmeg and clove to taste (about two dashes of cinnamon, a dash of nutmeg and a half dash of clove)
  4. Serve over the toast, making use of all of the sauce/syrup you just created
  5. Add whipped cream

 

That’s it!

Round two

It’s been a very, very long time since I have tried to blog. So much has happened in my life that I’m not even going to try to recap anything. I want to use this blog as a way to record memories, save ideas and write out thoughts.

I imported (the very few) posts from my old blog because I had included two of my favorite recipes ever and I thought they would be a good way to start. This won’t be a blog  just about recipes and crafts, but I do want to include the creative projects I involve myself with. I also want to write down memories: new ones I’m making and old ones I don’t want to forget.
I also want to focus on the small, positive aspects of life that make every day enjoyable. Right now I’m sitting on my front porch and it’s about to rain. I love that. The smell of an impending storm and how cozy everything gets on summer/late spring nights, preferably after a day of hard work or playing in the sun.

My view of rain clouds

I love being outside. I also love the new glasses my husband got today. They are quite sharp. And I love that I’m meeting a friend tonight and we are going to Chipotle to celebrate  promotions and new jobs with copious amounts of guacamole.

Sometimes life is meant to be appreciated in the small, everyday moments. Not every experience I have will be exciting, breath-taking or profound, but it’s about creating my own meaning and appreciation out of the things that happen that matters. It’s been a rough two years for me and if there’s anything I’ve learned, it’s that I don’t want to waste time on negative feelings. If I’m only going to be on this planet for a certain amount of time, I don’t want to spend any significant percentage of that time being sad, resentful, hateful, etc. Some of these emotions are really, really hard to control, but I want to use part of this blog as a tool to focus on the positive things in my life, big and small, to keep everything in perspective. I also want to use it as an outlet for all of the thoughts that are constantly floating around in my mind. So here’s to round two (or maybe three…)!