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Meal Planning 102: The Next Step in Kitchen Organization

I wrote all about my basic meal planning strategy in this post HERE.

I have a free blank meal planning template give-away HERE.

I wrote this post for another website about meal planning, with sample menus and recipes HERE.

And I have a new post coming out on TheVeganWoman about Your Healthy Vegan Kitchen, which should be up later this week.

That’s a lot of blah-blah about cooking and planning and stocking, no?  As I looked at the editing room floor scraps of text that didn’t make the final Vegan Woman cut, I thought “But maybe my readers want to see things in ACTION more?”  Like, less theory – more DO.

I know it is helpful to actually see what other people do in their day-to-day lives, so right now, in this hot summer weather, this is how things have been going down in my kitchen.  Hope it’s helpful!

Morning:

I’m up before the sun these days!  Partly I am just excited about my new apartment and cannot wait to have a cup of tea on the balcony with my morning pages and the sunrise.

I don’t have to pack kids’ lunches because they are at home this summer, but I still pack a lunch for my husband.  While I’m at it, I do two other things:

  • Make a salad
  • Cut up fruit

The Salad:

It’s hot and really I don’t want much other than salad these days.  I basically take this large glass bowl and just FILL IT.  I put in lettuce, spinach, cabbage, cucumbers, kohlrabi, carrots, tomatoes, green onions, parsley, chopped fresh mint, sun-dried tomatoes – just really whatever we have.  Then I cover it with plastic wrap and put it in the fridge.  It will stay fresh and crisp all day like this.  I do not toss it.  I do not dress it.  Sometimes I even make segments of what each person likes, like this:

I serve it at both lunch and dinner – topped with different things like:

  • toasted sunflower seeds and pumpkins seeds
  • cooked beans
  • cooked corn
  • crumbled veggie burger
  • leftover cooked grains
  • salsa*
  • hummus*
  • tahina

*I am totally grooving on  the combo of 1 Tbsp salsa and 1 Tbsp hummus stirred into my salad instead of dressing.  I imagine I will get sick of it, but right now it’s the wind beneath my wings.

The fact is, if this salad were not pre-prepared, when it came to meal time, I might not get around to making it.  Kapish?

And the fact that it is not tossed and not dressed, makes it easy for picky children to pick around certain elements they don’t like.

The Fruit:

Sometimes this ends up being a fruit salad.  That usually happens when all the fruit becomes suddenly over-ripe at the very same instant.  Other times, I just cut up a bowl of watermelon or mango or whatever is ready.  Again, if it weren’t chopped and chilled in it’s nice bowl, do you think it would get served quite so easily?

My dears, doing salad and fruit prep in the morning before I go to the gym, is making it possible for me and my family to eat healthy this summer.  If it sounds to you like “Oh woe!  That is too much chopping in the morning!”, I promise it takes 20 minutes and is one of those things you will thank yourself for later in the day.  You could also do it at night before you go to bed if that’s how you roll.

Be strong and chop on.

The Smoothies:

At some point during the day, smoothies get made.  This is usually our afternoon snack.  Getting up pre-dawn means I’m ready for bed at 4pm. That won’t do so I have been making this Coffee Frappe to perk me up:

Coffee Frappe

1 frozen banana

1 date, pitted

1 tsp espresso powder (cafe shahor if you must know the truth)

1 Tbsp ground flaxseeds

1 1/2 cups water

Blend all until smooth and creamy.  Drink and wake up.

The kids’ smoothies are usually more like banana-flax-peanut butter-dates-and cocoa powder affairs.

The Entrees:

Basically whatever you see on this blog is what ends up on the lunch and dinner table.  (Recipe Index HERE).  But in the spirit of keeping it simple, I can tell you there are sandwiches and quesadillas or burritos normally for lunch and that dinner is a more organized cooked food deal with some sort of casserole, noodle/pasta dish, or bean/grain dish.  Plus the salad and the fruit at both meals.  Sometimes I pick up a really fresh bread at the bakery near my gym and center the meal around that with veggie dips and spreads.

Keep it simple sweetie!  This is not the time for long, slow cooked meals that heat up the house and make you cranky.

One final tip:  I am using Pinterest for meal planning A LOT.  I have gone ahead and re-arranged my boards for different dishes, courses and cooking tips.  It is truly a thing of beauty.  I am on there every day and am cooking so many new and interesting things.  You can see and follow along HERE.

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Taco Salad

It’s been a long time since we have had a recipe post around here.  I have been cooking.  A lot, actually, thanks to pinterest!  But it such a production to post recipes and the whole thing with photographing food is a real challenge for me.  Anyway, I will do my best to work us out of this recipe backlog.

One other thing:  Not only do I have my own pinterest account where you can follow me and find all kinds of amazing vegan recipes, art projects, fitness tips and work-outs and other inspiring content, but I am also now in charge of The Vegan Woman pinterest account.  I’ve been writing for The Vegan Woman for a month or so now.  I forget that maybe some of you don’t have Facebook, or are not following me there, so maybe you didn’t even know about this.  

Here are all the links:

MY pinterest account is HERE.

The Vegan Woman’s pinterest account is HERE.

Articles I have written for them so far:

“Why Did the Magical Vegan Weight Loss Skip Me?”

“How to Get that Healthy Vegan Glow”

You can friend me on Facebook HERE.  It’s my personal page – I don’t do a business page – but I would be happy to meet you there. 

On to the recipe!

This recipe comes from vegangela.com.  Check out her original recipe because she has photos of how she made the bowls and drool-worthy photos of her finished product.

First you make taco bowls out of whole grain tortillas:

homemade taco shell salad bowl

Then you let everyone fill their taco bowl as they wish:

taco salad bowls

We had beans, salsa, lettuce, tomatoes, cilantro, scallions, cucumbers and avocado.  You can add whatever you like in your taco salad, but these were really delicious and I loved seeing the kids heap salad into their bowls.

Taco Salad

Taco Salad

Original recipe can be found on vegangela.com here: http://www.vegangela.com/2011/08/14/vegan-taco-salad-with-homemade-tortilla-bowls/

Ingredients

    Taco Bowls
  • whole grain flour tortillas, as many as you want to serve
  • cooking spray
  • Filling possibilities:
  • Cooked beans of any type, whole or in a refried style, mashed and sauteed with oil and onions/garlic/cilantro
  • Lettuce/spinach/kale, shredded
  • Bell pepper, sliced
  • Carrots, shredded/julienned
  • Cucumber, shredded/diced/sliced
  • Corn kernels
  • Portobello mushrooms, sliced and sauteed (to mimic steak)
  • Tofu strips, sauteed (to mimic chicken)
  • Mexican rice
  • Salsa (store-bought or quickly made with tomatoes, onions, garlic, lime, cilantro, chili)
  • Creamy cilantro dressing (in a blender, whiz soft silken tofu with a bit of water, olive oil, garlic, and cilantro)
  • Guacamole or avocado pieces
  • Vegan shredded cheese
  • Vegan sour cream
  • Fresh cilantro (coriander) leaves
  • Green onions

Instructions

    To make the bowls:
  1. Preheat the oven to 200C.
  2. Find an oven-safe bowl that the tortilla fits in, crimping up the sides like a bowl.
  3. Gently press the tortilla into the bowl and spray it lightly with cooking spray.
  4. Bake 5-7 minutes.
  5. Carefully remove from the oven and overturn the bowl. Now drape bowl-shaped tortilla over the bowl, spray with a little cooking spray and place back in the oven for 5 more minutes until golden and crispy.
  6. Carefully remove from the oven and drape over another bowl to cool. (I gently squeezed each cooling tortilla between 2 bowls of the same size to ensure they would hold the bowl shape as they cooled.
  7. When cool, stack tortilla bowls into one another while you prepare fillings.
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This post is participating in Wellness Weekend at DietDessertnDogs.com and Healthy Vegan Fridays HERE.  Be sure to visit to see all the great recipes!

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Salad in Winter: Jumbo Croutons

Lately, lots of clients have been saying to me “I am SO not in the mood to eat salad now that it’s cold outside.”  Never mind that cold outside in Israel means 65F, I get the point.  We want hot, cooked food in wintertime.  Perhaps we are conditioned this way after years of eating so? Or maybe it really is better for our health to eat less raw food in the winter months?  Whatever the reason, it can be a challenge to eat that salad.

But salad is so important for our health and our weight.  Cooked veggies are fine if we cook and serve them without too much fat, but raw veggies are really the sparkle in your tiara, baby.

I am thinking that I will run a few posts on ways to Winterize Our Salads.  First up: Jumbo Garlic Croutons and Balsamic Vinaigrette!  Yum and Yum.  We ate a HUGE amount of salad tonight at Casa Segal due entirely to the presence of these crunchy croutons and savory sauce.  Enjoy!

Jumbo Garlic Croutons

Jumbo Garlic Croutons

Ingredients

  • 8 slices of stale leftover whole grain bread
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp oregano or rosemary
  • sea salt
  • freshly ground pepper

Instructions

  1. Pre-heat oven to 180C.
  2. Cube bread into large-sized cubes.
  3. Toss in a bowl with all remaining ingredients.
  4. Spread in a large baking tray.
  5. Bake 10 minutes, stir.
  6. Bake another 5 minutes until lightly toasted and crunchy.
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Balsamic Vinaigrette

This makes enough dressing for one very large salad or several smaller ones. Store the extra in the refrigerator.

Ingredients

  • 3 Tbsp olive oil
  • 2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • juice of 1/2 - 1 whole lemon
  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 1 tsp maple syrup
  • sea salt and freshly ground pepper

Instructions

  1. Place all ingredients in a jar with a lid.
  2. Screw lid on tight and shake vigorously until all combined.
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These recipes are taking part in Wellness Weekend at DietDessertNDogs.com

Mediterranean Salad Plus Tahina Tutorial

This is a sort of Kitchen Sink Salad, meaning use whatever you’ve got and whatever you like.  But don’t leave out the capers!  I always thought I hated capers.  Then in Greece I experienced my first big juicy salty capers and I changed that thinking!  So, if you don’t live here in the Mediterranean, (I’m sorry for you), invest in some good imported ones.

Mediterranean Salad

6 cups salad greens or Romaine lettuce, washed and torn

1 avocado, cubed

2 carrots, grated

1 beet, grated

1 handful sun-dried tomatoes, chopped

2 cucumbers, diced

2 tomatoes, diced

3 T capers

2-3 green onions, chopped

2-3 pickles, your choice what kind

Now, you can just dress the salad with lemon, olive oil, salt and pepper, as we most often do here, OR you can drizzle on some creamy, decadent sesame love sauce….  mmmmmm….

First, Tahina for Beginners.  It has come to my attention, that some readers have no idea what I’m talking about when I say Tahina.  So here ya go:

Three different brands of tahina

Go buy some tahina paste.  Outside of Israel, tahina is generally stored in the area of the market near the other nut butters.  (In Israel it has it’s own aisle!)  The only ingredient will be “Ground Sesame Seeds”

When you open the jar, usually these is sesame oil on top and you need to stir it back in, like natural peanut butter.

Different brands of tahina will have different tastes.  You can buy it made from unhulled sesame seeds and hulled sesame seeds, from black sesame seeds or white sesame seeds, etc.  Some will taste bitter right out of the jar.  Make a note to never buy that brand again!  Tahina should taste DELICIOUS and even a little sweet right out of the jar!

Magic Tahina Dressing

1/2 cup tahina paste

2 cloves garlic, pressed

1/2 cup water

juice of 1/2 lemon

salt and pepper to taste

(Optional:  Add 2-3 Tbsp of Nutritional Yeast for a scrummy cheesey flavor!)

Add all ingredients to a bowl and stir.  At first it is going to separate into a disastrous mess and you will curse my name. (see pictures below)  Relax and just keep stirring.  That mess is part of the tahina magic alchemy.  In another 30 seconds, you will have a creamy emulsified sauce, yay!

Variation:  Adding a few handfuls of minced fresh parsley will give you GREEN Tahina Dressing and loads more calcium and nutrition!

Ack!  What is this stringy mess??

Just keep stirring…

No!  Now it’s even worse!

Just Keep Stirring!

Ah, finally creamy, smooth tahina!

Oh ye of little faith.

This post is participating in Wanderfood Wednesday.  Click the link HERE to discover other food posts from all over the world!

And if you’re new here, don’t forget to register for my mailing list!  You’ll even get a copy of my amazing and witty and useful

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to calm and quiet those confounding cravings.

Sign up here…

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Creative Cures for those Canoodling Cravings! (recipes included!)
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Sushi Rice Salad

This recipe came from The Blissful Chef, Christy Morgan.  Her website is HERE.  Her Sushi Rice Bowl recipe and gorgeous picture is HERE.  I am posting it below with the changes I made:

  • 1 cup long grain brown rice, rinsed thoroughly
  • 2 cups water
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • 1 cucumber, peeled and cut into small rectangles
  • 1 cup thawed shelled edamame
  • 1 cup corn kernels
  • 2 tsp kelp powder (optional)
  • 3 Tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 Tbsp toasted sesame oil
  • 3 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 Tbsp pickled ginger, minced
  • 1 Tbsp brown rice syrup or other natural sweetener
  • 2 Tbsp minced cilantro (cusbara)  (optional)
  • 1 sheet nori, cut into little pieces
  • I topped mine with one peeled, spiralized carrot

Cook rice in water with salt under all the water is absorbed, 30-40 minutes.  Remove from heat and fluff the rice.  Wrap the pot lid in a clean kitchen towel and replace on pot for 10 more minutes.  The towel soaks up the steam and leaves your rice nice and fluffy.  Remove the lid, fluff the rice again and leave cover off to cool.

Meanwhile prepare all the remaining ingredients.  Add all to rice except nori and cilantro and toss to combine.  Right before serving, sprinkle with the nori and the cilantro if using.  Top with spiralized carrots if you wish.

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Pasta Puttanesca on a Quiet Summer’s Day

Shhh….

I am feeling very quiet these days.  I’m introspective.  Doing lots of yoga, meditating, journal writing, reading.  I’ve got a big birthday coming up and there is thinking to do.

As I was cooking dinner tonight, all was quiet, the dog was lying at my feet, and I just felt really peaceful.  This is what it was like in my kitchen:

pasta pot

guard dog

dog at feet

sauce ingredients

kohlrabi salad

final dinner plate

How did I make it?

I cooked pasta and then drained it, saving aside 2 cups of the pasta cooking water.  I rinsed the pasta in cold water and the tossed it with some olive oil and a pinch of coarse sea salt.  In the same pot the pasta cooked in, I water-sauteed

  • a chopped onion
  • 6 cloves of garlic,
  • 4 chopped tomatoes
  • 6 chopped olives
  • a handful of capers
  • 1 stalk of chopped fresh rosemary
  • 1 can drained chickpeas
  • the pasta cooking water
  • lots of freshly grated black pepper

Put on the cover and let cook for about 20 minutes while I made the salad.  Then tossed the pasta with the sauce and served.

The salad was:

  • chopped lettuce
  • chopped cucumber
  • chopped tomato
  • one peeled and julienned kohlrabi
  • handful of fresh parsley
  • juice of half a lemon
  • drizzle of olive oil

And for those who were wondering, yes I trip on the dog.  Every night.  Multiple times.  No, she is not interested in moving.  Yes, she loves me.

yes, she’s quiet…

The one about the Vegetarian at the Barbecue

Today is Independence Day.  Israel is 63 years young.  What to do?  B-B-Q!

Israeli Independence Day is a Festival of Flaming Meat.

Needless to say, I am always assigned The Salad.  But that’s OK, because I ROCK salad.

The following is the salad I make and eat every single live long day.  I got the recipe from my friend Meirav.  It has no oil or salad dressing, tastes surprisingly delicious and stays crisp and fresh in the heat.

Israeli Salad

Meirav’s Israeli Salad

1 head of Romaine lettuce, washed, dried and finely chopped

3 tomatoes, diced

3 Israeli cucumbers, peeled and diced (in the US these are often called Persian cucumbers or you can use Kirbys or one of those long English ones)

2 green onions, minced

1 handful fresh parsley, minced

1 handful fresh mint, minced

1 handful fresh cilantro (cusbara), minced (optional)

1/3 cup raw, unsalted sunflower seeds, dry toasted in a pan or toaster oven just until they start to color and become fragrant

juice of 1/2 lemon

salt and freshly ground pepper

Note:  Israelis like their salad chopped small, small.  It’s sort of a national obsession actually and it yields an explosion of vegetable flavor.  I do my best but cannot compete with native-born chopping skill.

Also, don’t add the sunflower seeds until shortly before serving.

Itai with peppers

We also grilled these tiny sweet peppers and then ate them like lollipops.  They were so good!  We did little onions like that too.

And I brought a few veggies burgers for myself.  Folks asked me lots of questions last time about what kind I buy, so here ya go:

veg burger

Sea, sun, food, family, fun, and living free in our beautiful homeland…  Life is wonderful today!

beach picnicthe med

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Baked Onion Rings

Yesterday on Facebook, someone mentioned that her Linchpin is SLEEP and I was like “Duh!  Of course.  Sleep is the most important Linchpin of all!”  I do teach this to clients and in the 30-Day Detox.

I just forgot.

Due to lack of sleep.

And yet again, a measly 4 hours last night due to the lovely scintillating women of Kfar Saba keeping me up too late hubba hubba, (ya’ll know who you are!), and then a 4:30am wake-up to get Number One Son off on a school field trip.  Burning the candle on both ends over here.

But luckily, there are onion rings.

onion rings

Vegan onion rings.  BAKED Vegan onions rings.  And they are AMAZING.   Make these!!!

Vegan Baked Onion Rings

This recipe is from Isa Chandra Markovitz’s book Appetite for Reduction, but she shared it on her website the Post Punk Kitchen.

This is the recipe exactly as posted HERE.

2 vidalia onions (about a pound), or other sweet onion like Walla Walla

1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons all purpose flour

2 tablespoons corn starch

1 cup cold almond milk

1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar

1 cup whole wheat bread crumbs

1 teaspoon kosher salt

2 teaspoons olive oil

Cooking spray

Slice onions into 3/4 inch thick rings. Separate the rings and place in a bowl. Cover with a kitchen towel or something, to keep the onioniness out of your eyes.

Preheat oven to 450 F. Line a rimmed 12×18 baking sheet with parchment paper, spray with cooking spray and set aside.

Now you’ll need two bowls for batter and breading. If you’ve got large, wide cereal bowls that’ll do the trick. In one bowl, dump in the flour and cornstarch. Add about half of the almond milk and stir vigorously with a fork to dissolve. Add the rest of the almond milk and the apple cider vinegar, and stir to incorporate. Set aside.

In the other bowl, mix together the bread crumbs and salt. Drizzle in the oil and use your fingertips to mix it up well.

Assemble the onion rings:

Get a conveyor belt going. From left to right, have the onions, the flour mixture, the breadcrumbs mixture and lastly the baking sheet. Dip each onion slice into the the flour, letting the excess drip off. Transfer to the breadcrumbs bowl and use the other hand to sprinkle a handful of breadcrumbs over the onion, to coat completely. This may take a bit of practice. Carefully transfer each onion to a single layer on the baking sheet. Make sure you use one hand for the wet batter and the other for the dry batter, or you’ll end up with club hand.

Spray rings lightly with cooking spray and bake for 8 minutes. Flip, and bake another 6 minutes. Rings should be varying shades of brown and crisp. Taste one to check for doneness. Serve as soon as possible. With ketchup if you must.

Servings per recipe-4 Calories-220 Cal from fat-45 Total fat-5g Sat fat-1g Trans fat-0g Total Carb-38g Fiber-3g Sugars-5g Pro-7g Chol- 0mg Na-520mg VitA-0% VitC-10% Ca-6% Fe-10%

I served mine atop a salad:

onion rings on salad

Thank you Isa Chandra!!!!

onion rings on tray

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Holiday Health Advice

Tonight is the first night of Hanukkah.  Happy Hanukkah for those of you who celebrate!  People always ask me if I eat sufganiyot, the donuts served on Hanukkah.  The answer is no, I hate sufganiyot.  One exploded it’s sticky pink jelly down the front of my shirt once and ever since then we have not been on speaking terms.  Truthfully, I just don’t care for them: too much dough, not enough filling/frosting.

And I’d rather save the calories for latkes!

So what would be my health advice for this Deep-Fried Holiday?  ONE NIGHT folks.  Indulge to your heart’s content on ONE night, at ONE party.  Do not feel compelled to eat sufganiyot and latkes at every single Hanukkah gathering on every one of the eight nights of this holiday.  If you do, you will regret it next week when your face is broken out, your scale shows an ugly number, your pants don’t fit and your energy is in the gutter.

“But it only happens once a year!” is often the refrain, right?  It does not and you know it!  They’ve been selling sufganiyot since Simchat Torah (October) and if you’re like most of the people I see in the street, you’ve already had quite a few before Hanukkah even starts.  Latkes you can make any old day of the week year-round.  My husband’s family eats latkes at Pesach in fact, so that’s two times a year.

And for my dear readers of other faiths also facing down with their “once-a-year” foods this holiday season:  Pick one or two favorites and let the rest pass right on by.  You already know what it all tastes like.  It will come around next year (or even next week most likely!).  None of it is going to disappear off the face of the planet (unfortunately).  Choose wisely and focus on looking and feeling your best.

All of us need to remember something.  NONE of this is about the food.  You know the old Jewish joke that says every Jewish holiday has the same theme?  ”They tried to kill us.  We won.  Let’s eat.”  Well, it’s not about the eating.  The Maccabees did not eat sufganiyot.  Jesus did not chomp candy canes and fudge.  He was a baby for heaven’s sake!  We are celebrating things like freedom, community, survival, and love – Primary Food every single one.  Edible Food is Secondary Food.  Let yourself be fed by the Primary Foods and you will be healthy, happy and energized.

OK, entirely unrelated to holidays, here is the stash I picked up today at the little health food store on Weitzman:

Italian Almond-flavored Organic Rice Milk (this stuff is yummy and has no sweeteners); Stevia; Organic Broccoli Sprouts;  Organic Tofu;  Spicy Baked Tofu slices;  Teva Deli sprouted quinoa and lentil burgers (my fave!);  Black Rice Noodles (we love these!)

And here are some of the things we ate today:

Persimmon Granola Bowl

Granola is often high in calories, so I use just 1/3 cup and then fill the bowl with 1 T each flaxeeds and chia seeds, cinnamon, rice milk and here, one chopped persimmon.

Lunch was this delicious carrot salad, some leftover black beans and a few baked tofu slices.

SO, delicious in fact, that I am sharing the recipe!

Sunny Carrot Salad

4 carrots, grated

1 handful of cilantro (cusbara), chopped finely

1 handful mint leaves, chopped finely

1 garlic clove, pressed

the zest of 1/2 lemon

the juice of the same 1/2 lemon

2 cups bean sprouts

1/2 cup shelled, but raw sunflower seeds

2 Tbsp Olive Oil

In a skillet, saute the seeds in the olive oil just until they begin to brown and turn fragrant (this takes like 60 seconds so watch carefully!).  Remove from heat and set aside.  Assemble remaining ingredients in salad bowl.  Add semi-cooled seeds and the oil they cooked in.  Toss salad and YUM!  Adjust seasonings and add salt and pepper if you wish.

So, are there any holiday tips any of my readers would like to share?  How do you manage to stay on track during the season of parties and junk food ambushes all around?

Caesar Salad, Hold the Caesar

Today was class #3 of this round of my 30-Day Detox.  The participants have now been off of sugar completely for 2 weeks and off of wheat for one week.  Today we took out dairy.  Results of the detox are as wonderful as ever:

-Weight loss
-Drastically reduced appetite
-Cravings greatly diminished
-More energy
-Beautiful skin
-A proud sense of accomplishment and control

I love my clients.  They are beautiful people, inside AND out!

Today I served them lunch, as always.  We had Curried Tofu Scramble with Tomatoes and Spinach, Vegan Caesar Salad, and Quinoa.

This salad rocks my world and I share it today with you my readers.  Enjoy!

Vegan Caesar Salad
No chickens, anchovies, or cows were harmed in the making of this salad.  Lettuce and cashews however, were not so lucky…


½ head romaine lettuce

1 tomato, diced
6 very thin slices of red onion
2 T sliced black olives
Freshly grounnd black pepper
2 T Ranch Dressing, as follows
Ranch Dressing:
1 cup raw cashews, soaked a few hours or overnight and drained
1 date, soaked with cashews
1/2 avocado OR 1/4 cup olive oil
1 clove garlic
¾ cup water
2 T fresh lemon juice
¼ tsp sea salt
1 T minced fresh basil or 1 tsp dried
1 T minced fresh dill or 1 tsp dried
Place all in FP and blend until creamy.  Toss 2 Tablespoons with salad.  Add more dressing as desired.

And in some inane randomness…

This is my Polar HRM and Trainer telling us all that I have just completed a 7.57mile run:
and that I torched 981 calories on this run…
enabling me to re-fuel with this:
Boo-yah!

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