In The Next 30 Days

A 30-Day Challenge Closer to Brighter, Shinier, & Happier.
July 12th, 2012

Healthy Eating, My Way

In the mornings I exercise. I try to do my cups, run my stairs, or push the stroller (fast) through the neighborhood. I sweat and swear (just a little), and I guzzle water to stay ahead of the heat. It’s not easy, and it’s not pretty. But I know that exercise is just one step toward my healthy goals. What I put in my body is another another step. I gave myself some black and white rules. I know that I do better when there’s no gray area, no room to question, no room to cheat. But that said, I can’t been Catholic-nun strict either, or my eating well won’t last.

So here are some rules I’ve given myself:

  • Avoid the white, starchy foods, and eat whole grains instead.
  • When there’s a choice, choose whole and unprocessed.
  • Don’t snack on the kid’s Goldfish (or Cheez-its or any other processed, carb-heavy foods).
  • Try to fill up my plate with fruit or veggies.
  • Eat more protein.
  • The occasional splurge is okay.

At breakfast, I got rid of cereal that had more sugar. We’re not talking Coco Pops, but a lot of cereals that fall under the “healthy” subhead are filled with sugar. So now I opt for steel cut oats. I make it with skim milk because it’s better than with water. Then I throw some blueberries on top and call it done. Yes, I’m still drinking coffee, cream and two sugars. But I use fat-free half and half and Splenda. Yes. I’m breaking my processed food rule. I don’t have an excuse. I like my morning coffee.

Lunches are typically sandwiches. But I’ve switched to whole-grain bread. I used to use the kid’s bread, which is a “white wheat.” But saying that out loud sounds silly. What, really, is white wheat? I don’t know. So these days, I’m making my sandwiches with better bread. Add some fruit (watermelon has been a lunchtime staple, lately), and sometimes there are some rice cake chips. I like crunchy.

Dinner is a little trickier because the four of us eat the same meal. It’s not like breakfast or lunch when I can pour Cheerios instead of oatmeal or use white wheat bread instead of something less whole. Last night’s dinner was silver turtle pork chops with all the veggies in my fridge. I added squash, tomato, green pepper, corn, and carrots to my pork chop and baked it. Easy? Yes. Healthy? Yes. A hit with the family? No way. Neither kid touched it, but I’m not giving up on healthy dinners. There has to be some kind of balance between what they’ll eat and what is good for them. I just have to search to find it. But dinners like this one fill up my veggie quota and increase my protein intake. Plus, it was really good.

See? Healthier choices, but not too crazy restrictive that I feel like I’m missing out on anything more than some Goldfish with the kids. I can handle that.

June 25th, 2012

Washington Square Picnic

Last week was my ninth wedding anniversary. And while anniversaries aren’t the romantic endeavors with the Kiddo Combo that they once were, picnics are a way to celebrate in a special way without hiring a baby sitter.

Washington Square is my new favorite Charleston spot. It’s a small and beautifully landscaped park behind City Hall near the corners of Broad and Meeting Streets. But despite its busy address, the park is still, quiet, and shaded with lots of green grass and blooming flowers. In other words, it’s an idyllic location for a dinnertime picnic. (Did you see that I put my monogrammed picnic basket to good use?)

For everyone, I packed BLTs on French bread, tomato salad with onion and basil, brie cheese, herb pita chips, and blueberries. Us grown-ups drank white sangria, and everyone ate (and ate) dessert that layered cake, white chocolate-raspberry icing, white chocolate chips, and sprinkles in a Ball jar. I always wonder what the perfect picnic food will be, but I think this menu might be perfection. The kids ate everything stretched out on a blanket under the trees. We all kicked off our flip flops. And the sangria tasted like summer.

And if all this picnic goodness wasn’t enough, I have to share the ultimate picnic resource for Charleston. The Charleston Parks Conservancy strives “to increase the quality, awareness, appreciation, and usage of Charleston’s parks and greenspaces.” Their web site includes a parks directory that lets you search for parks by amenities or location. The conservancy was quick with picnic location suggestions on Twitter (them and me), and the directory was where I found Washington Square. The site is an amazing resource that every local or visiting Charlestonian should utilize.

April 12th, 2012

Arugula Pesto

Yesterday, I mentioned that I had arugula left over from the first CSA. Well, it’s not left over any more. In fact, we ate it last night as pesto on orzo pasta with local tomatoes and sauteed chicken breast. It tasted fresh and summery, and on our lunchtime picnic today, after picking strawberries at Amrbose Farm, it became ideal picnic food and the topic of conversation.

Arugula and Spinach Pesto

Equal sized bunches of Arugula and Spinach (really any greens would work)
Olive oil
Garlic
Basil (fresh would be best)
Orzo pasta (or really any pasta will do fine)
Tomatoes, chopped (but red or yellow peppers or any veggie would work as well)
Parmesan cheese

In a large pot of boiling water, blanch the arugula and spinach until it is bright green (super quick, just 10 seconds). With a slotted spoon move the greens into a bowl of ice water to stop the cooking process. Squeeze the liquid from the greens using your hands. Then, in a food processor puree the spinach and arugula. Add garlic and fresh basil to taste (I used two cloves and several leaves) and enough olive oil to make it moist. You might need to add more oil as the mixture mashes. Cook your pasta according to the directions on the box. (I boiled mine in the green’s water for the extra nutritional goodness.) Drain. Stir chopped tomatoes into the pasta. Spoon pesto over pasta and mix well, use as much or as little as you like. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.

So flexible and versatile. How could you go wrong? Pesto freezes really well. I froze some in small Tupperware to pull out one dinner’s worth at a time. Plus, it’s really good to use on chicken or fish or even steak as a kind of a marinade. And (this might be the best part) I told Julia it was Monster Rice, and she finished her plate and asked for seconds.

pixel Arugula Pesto