healthy food
Banting Babe Lunch…
Food Journal for today:
Breakfast – Overnight slow cooked chicken necks and feet with turmeric, cayenne pepper and Italian parsley. Lots of gelatin!
Lunch: A delicious Banting Burger at The Red Plate in Haenertsburg with some new Banting Babes. The burger had avocado, bacon and cheddar on top and it was placed on top of a Courgette Fritter. Yummy. It is so nice to have a restaurant in our little village that has a Banting Menu.
Dinner was a fresh garden salad with pan-fried Pork Neck Steaks and a cream and mustard sauce.
Snacks: Greek Yogurt smoothie with frozen Strawberries, 6 Macadamia nuts and 3 Brazil nuts. Lots of water, hot water and lemon, iced Rooibos and Green Tea, sparkling mineral water, filter coffee with cream.
2236 Calories: 44 Carbs:
Generally, my calories are anywhere between 1900 and 2400 and generally my carbs are anywhere between 40 and 80. On very low carb/protein days days I do some cardio – walking and/or spinning – while on higher carb days I will do free weights and eat the higher carb snack or meal after my routine. I use the mini trampoline to warm up.
This is all very new at this time, but so far so good! Being 12 kilos lighter has got me moving more, and I am finding that I have more energy than I have had in a long time. Instead of finding reasons to sit at my desk, I am out in the garden more, sharing territory with my horses, checking fences, planting seedlings and generally getting out and about. It elicits in me a warm feeling of hope for the future! It also makes me want to keep on keeping on.
A serious commitment needs to be made if you want to take on this new lifestyle, because it is a lifelong commitment, just like a marriage. There will be good times and bad, but you don’t just give up – you work through it and get to the other side, and you also don’t just give up because you are bored. You do what it takes to succeed. Make it interesting if it bores you, try something different, get a new recipe, cry on your friend’s shoulder and then get back in the saddle and ride that horse! (Note that I speak mostly to me!)
Looking forward to trying out a few more different Banting recipes. Watch this space, the weekend could be creative!
Banting cooks!…
Banting…12 kilos gone
Wow, it’s been a long time since I was here on my blog and that is because I was caring for my husband after eye surgery. He is now on the mend and I am back doing what I usually do when I am not being Florence Nightingale
The good news is that I have lost 12 kilos to date – that is since the last week in September. I hit a plateau after 10 kilos and that lasted for about 2 weeks. I researched and ended up doing a carb cycling programme and then the weight started moving again. Yay! I also did a day’s fat fast which also helps to shift the weight.
Calorie counting is said not to be necessary by some advocates of low carb living, but I am finding that it really is a useful tool. I punch my food into SparkPeople’s nutrition tracker and it tells me all I need to know – fat grams, protein grams, calories, carbs, fibre…it’s all there. So useful.
Today’s food intake has not yet reached my calorie goal and yet I am sated. I need no more food. Cream cheese was my helper today. I just wanted that mouth feel! This morning’s brunch at 11 was Green Scrambled Eggs with Swiss Chard, Turmeric and Cheddar, Bacon, Zucchini Fritters with Coconut Flour. Snack mid afternoon was Blackberries and Cottage Cheese while dinner was Vegetable Soup with Beef Broth and again some Cream Cheese as a snack.
Walking is becoming easier for me now and I find I can walk a little longer and further every week. There are many more kilos to lose, but it is beginning to feel like it is not impossible anymore!
Banting sure Rocks!…
Reward Meals, do they work?…
Mine has been a long journey with diets, weight loss, weight gain and more diets and I have finally found something I can really live with, and it came about after much research, trial and error, experimentation, failures and now success. Here I am, steadily losing weight at a reasonable pace. MOD – My Own Diet. I knew I would find it one day, and it totally appeals to me every single day. Everything I have read and experienced about healthy foods and different low carb diets, everything that has resonated with me has been included in my diet. Not all at once of course.
I have lost and found so many kilos on low carb because I could never stick to any one regime absolutely and there were always a whole new slew of special low carb recipes to learn when all I wanted was to eat some of my favourite dishes from a “normal” life (like real mashed potatoes instead of faux potatoes made with cauliflower!). So I would stop the diet and go back to my favourites, and that would cause more and more cravings and I would put on some serious kilos all over again.
My Own Diet involves a few basic ideas that work for me. First is intermittent fasting, and that is not every day mind you, probably most of the week with perhaps a day or two of Reward Meal breakfasts or brunches and lunches with friends. (Read about intermittent fasting in an earlier post on this blog.) The one thing that supports intermittent fasting and makes it possible is fat in the diet. That is the secret weapon – appetite suppressing fat. As I write, the spinach and garlic is cooking in coconut oil waiting for the cheese and eggs. It will be followed by Earl Grey tea with a touch of cream. This first meal is eaten close to 12 noon.
This meal will hold me until 3 or 4 pm when I will have some biltong (beef jerky) or a piece of roast chicken (with the skin). Or, if I am really feeling in the mood, I may make some almond flour pancakes. Often I am not that hungry, especially if I have eaten a protein and fat snack. Another good reason for having my first meal at around 12 noon is because of the Ayurvedic premise that the digestive fire, agni, is at its strongest. The evening meal is usually eaten between 6 and 7 and if I should feel at all peckish later, which is not often, a little more biltong does it.
My eating lifestyle is now never boring and I don’t feel deprived in the slightest. My first drink of the day is usually lemon juice and warm water with a touch of salt and later in the morning I have my favourite freshly ground mocha java with a little cream. Sometimes it is followed with a black coffee, and always throughout the day, water. The first meal is anything done Banting style from the Real Meal Revolution, as well as Atkins and general low carb meals learned along the way. Through the years I have collected many a low carb recipe and I have no less than a zillion low carb books…OK, maybe 15 or so. And then there is my collection of other cookbooks which include many recipes that can be converted to low carb cooking, or eaten at the reward meal.
Low Carb Cookbooks Galore!
I am so excited. Why? Well, since one of my top passions is reading cookbooks, cooking and entertaining my friends and family with really yummy food, I can do so with whatever food I please within my reward meal hour, with no guilt. My husband is easy to please as long as I don’t give him too many vegetables. Meat and salad have become his way of eating of late and now he rarely eats bread and he has never been a great fan of rice either. It is easy living with him on this lifestyle. Of course I do try to hide an extra vegetable or two in somewhere, like in a soup.
For further explanation as regards my excitement, it is all about the best meal of the day for me. The Carbohydrate Addict’s Diet Reward Meal is the reason I think so many lose weight on that regime, and it would appear that 80% keep it off. What I have discovered is certainly exciting for me. If I eat a reward meal and do not go crazy with refined carbs, I continue to lose weight, 0.1 to 0.3 kg in a day. The ratio of the reward meal is protein, low carbs and starches in thirds. (Rule of thirds?
Of course it doesn’t always work out like that, and that’s OK too. Yesterday, when out shopping, I had a reward meal lunch and that was a scone with jam, cheese and cream and some filter coffee with cream, (no thirds here) but then I kept the rest of the day’s food really low carb and quantities minimal as well. This morning the scale was .3 kg kinder to me.
So far I have lost 10.5 kg in seven and a half weeks which is extremely cool. The weight loss got stuck on 9 kilos for a while and then I started enjoying Reward Meals. The next 1.5 kilos loss happened in the course of this week while enjoying a daily hour of food and wine that I love. Needless to say, I choose fairly healthy reward meals and that is because I like the concept of alkaline food, vegetarian food now and then, but mostly I likw real food. Meat from animals that are reared ethically, raised and killed humanely, and natural food grown organically for my table. Of course it isn’t always perfect. Yesterday I looked at the mince from free range beef and it had in it fillers, unnamed vegetable oil, preservatives and soya that no-one can guarantee is not GMO. Why would one want to do that to healthy free range meat?
It may not always be easy to keep to a low carb lifestyle, but the reward meal has made it so much more alluring and do-able for me. It is eaten in the space of an hour so that the insulin release stays manageable. At least that is how I interpret it. Since I am pre-diabetic this is truly good news.
So what is my reward meal for today? A large green salad with a few baby tomatoes, strips of yellow pepper, shredded red cabbage and freshly picked snow peas with some feta cheese and a few raisins. This is dressed with extra virgin olive oil and verjuice. With this a free range medium rare rump steak served with a grainy mustard cream sauce. With that I will have one or two glasses of good red wine. As I have said before, this is eaten within an hour. An hour of food bliss.
That was bliss, even though I made the mistake of munching on some salad ingredients and salami before actually sitting down to dinner. The result is that I did not have time to finish the steak, the salad nor the second glass of wine. I stopped on the hour, determined to keep to the rule, but it taught me to hold back while cooking and wait to sit down when the entire meal is ready and then really enjoy the hour.
All that I have tried, learned, failed, tried again, all this has brought me to this point and now I really am excited!
Tonight’s Reward Meal
Reward Meals Rock!!!…
Interesting Diversion from Banting…
I don’t mean to sound disloyal to Banting – I eat that way for two thirds of the day anyway – and then I have a reward meal (Carbohydrate Addicts style) that needs to be eaten within one hour so that the insulin response is less vicious than if I were to eat for two hours. At least that is how I understand it. It truly does help me not to overeat if I have drinks, a main meal and perhaps a dessert within one hour. Up to now I have not had time for a dessert. It just takes planning.
No snacking in between meals is also a good rule for me to follow because I can overeat quite absentmindedly, especially on pistachio nuts! That is a nudge to remind me to eat mindfully. In fact, learning how to do everything mindfully is a goal to which I aspire. It is amazing how disconnected one can be if we don’t watch it! I find meditation helps me to focus on living mindfully. The trick is to not forget to meditate. A big lesson for me is to work on doing things consistently and to follow through on projects I set myself.
Something that bothers me a little is the acidity level of the kinds of low carb food I am eating on this diet. I need to eat more green vegetables and perhaps add more alkaline vegetables and fruit to the reward meal instead of dessert! But I will work to add that one little Crème Brûlée in a month! Strangely enough, I found myself eating plain wasabi rice crackers in my reward meal today. It was what I wanted at that moment and that was it. Satisfied me enough not to want to go back for more. Normally I would eat the whole box in a day. Today it was just 6 little crackers. The entire day’s carbs added up to 32 grams, reward meal and all. I am watching to see if cravings come back; so far so good. Drinking water is a great help.
This is all about finding out what works best for me. No one diet fits all and I do like the way one can plan for personal tastes in the Carbohydrate Addicts Diet. I shall continue with this for a month and then check the stats.
Moving on…
Back and Still Banting…
If you have been following this blog, I do apologise for my absence. My husband was my patient for three weeks after a serious eye op.
I have been very well behaved on the food front and Banting away merrily. I put on 2 kilos in one day and lost them again the next. This tells me it is not a good idea to jump on the scale every day! All in all I am down 9 kilos since I started in September around the 26th. About 6 weeks. An average of 1.5 kilos per week. It has now slowed down and I am beginning to look at tweaking my intake and doing a bit of a Fat Fast. More about that in my next post.
The acidity of all the meat I have been eating has had me a little concerned which has resulted in a desire to see how one does a vegetarian low carb diet. I am now going to concentrate on getting in some alkaline veggies in green smoothies, using the lowest carb vegetables and some whey protein powder. It does not mean I am going to stop eating meat, but I am going to add more vegetarian options to my new lifestyle. This means a minimum of legumes, like a 1/4 of a cup, (which is around 10 carbs) and the vegetables highest in protein content, along with the protein powder.
Today, however, was a seriously carnivorous day: here is my intake…
Meal 1
Boerewors 200g 6 Carbs/26g protein
Eggs x 2 XL 1 Carb/15g protein
Full fat milk ¼ cup 3 Carbs/2g protein
10 Carbs/43g protein
Snack
Macadamia nuts 30g 4 Carbs/2g Protein
Coffee x 2 0
Cream 30g 1 Carb/1 protein
5 Carbs/3 protein
Meal 2
Swiss Chard 50g 2 Carbs/1 protein
Mushrooms 1/3 cup 2 Carbs/1 protein
Broccoli ½ cup 2 Carbs/1 protein
Garlic 1 tsp 1 Carbs/0 protein
Onions fried 1 Tbs 2 Carbs/0 protein
Lamb chop 200 g 0 Carbs/41 protein
Coconut oil 2 Tbs 0 Carbs/0 protein
Lard 1 Tbs 0 Carbs/0 protein
Feta Cheese 30g 1 Carbs/4 protein
10 Carbs/48 protein
TOTALS 25 g Carbs/94 g protein
Still Moving On with the Revolution…
Banting Food Journal 21 Oct 2014…
If I was to be counting calories I might be freaking out today. Nearly 3 000 calories!!! But only 30.4 carbs!And I have lost another two kilos…
I do my nutrition tracking on SparkPeople but they are wrong at times, so I double check with http://www.carbohydrate-counter.org. It is keeping me honest with myself. My fat percentage of calories was 79% today. Weird to see that, but happy I am not hungry or craving bread. If I had to choose which I would like for the rest of my life, bread or fats, I would definitely choose fats. Butter and cream are gourmet foods for me, as are cheeses. How could I possible say no to them! So this is a decision we all need to make re our chosen lifestyles. I know from experience that when you “stop dieting” and go back to breads and sugar, you get really big! So the motto is – Keep on Keeping On!
Food Journal 21 Oct 2014
Eggs 2 – 1g carb
Bacon 3 slices – 1 carb
Spinach 0.5 cup – 3 carbs
Coconut oil 2 tsp – 0 carbs
Filter coffee 2 cups – 0 carbs
Cream 60g – 2 carbs
Breakfast Carbs – 7
Avocado 100g – 9 carbs
50 ml full cream milk in tea – 2 carbs
Lunch carbs – 11
Boerewors 200g – 6 carbs
Cheddar cheese 30g – 0.4 carbs
Mixed Salad 1 serving – 5 carbs
Oil and Verjuice Dressing 1 Tbs – 0 carbs
Dinner Carbs – 11.4
Celery Stick 1 – 1 carb
Kiri Cream Cheese 90g – 2 carbs
Snack Carbs – 3
TOTALS
Carbs 32.4
Calories 2 858
Keeping on with the Revolution…
(Guided by The Real Meal Revolution – Tim Noakes et al)
Banting 10 Commandments, My Thoughts…
These are my thoughts on the Banting Beginners 10 Commandments…
Before I begin, please know that this advice and these thoughts are aimed at me first! My Banting journey is one month old and I have lost 6 kilos. I know I could have lost more if I had listened to this advice from the beginning, but no! I must obviously need to learn the hard way at times by doing it wrong before it goes right.
Back I went to the book – The Real Meal Revolution by Tim Noakes et al – to read the Banting Beginners 10 Commandments once more with feeling, to meditate on each one and see where I am with the rules.
1 Eat Enough Fat – Fat is an Appetite Suppressant which gives you Energy for Longer
Fat is the luxury we have been denying ourselves ever since the FDA gave us the Food Pyramid. We need not fear it and we should love it. It has zero carbs! Butter is good stuff. Coconut oil, (good article here http://authoritynutrition.com/why-is-coconut-oil-good-for-you/) olive oil, avocado oil, ghee, animal fats. When we cook bacon, beef, lamb, chicken and pork, the fat that is rendered can be used for the next cooking session. It saves money and you don’t need to support the corporates that flood the market with their unhealthy vegetable oils.
2 Eat Enough Vegetables – Eat Your Greens with Every Meal
Leafy greens are so easy to grow for yourself, even in containers. My herbs, green leaf spinach, kale, chard, pak choy, lettuces – they all grow successfully in pots on my veranda. They grow in the garden as well, with companion plants to keep them healthy. There are also beans in a raised window box climbing up a simple hand-made trellis. Purple heirloom beans at that. No GMO here. Potatoes (for the hubby and other non-Banters) are growing in large pots and there are even cucumbers growing in hanging baskets. But do I eat my greens every meal? No. So I shall concentrate on getting that right.
3 Don’t Snack – Drink water, herb teas, meat broth with fat and marrow, and filter coffee with cream.
If a snack attack sneaks up on you, drink water or herb teas first as we often mistake thirst for hunger. Meat broths are really easy to make especially in the slow cooker. Put water in a pot with meaty soup bones with fat, marrow and all. Add a bunch of parsley and herbs, a bay leaf, an onion studded with 3 cloves, a couple of garlic cloves, a carrot and a stalk of celery and you will have a tasty broth that will assuage any munchies. My personal favourite is a jug of celery sticks in water in the fridge. When I open that fridge door and stare in wondering what to eat, there they are! More often than not I will open the jar of mayo and scoop out a blob. Low carb, crunchy, juicy and a good fast food.
4 Don’t Lie to Yourself – Be Informed, Carbs Count
Don’t fool yourself and don’t guess, count. Know what you are putting in your system. A good idea is to make a weekly meal plan and a Banting Pantry List from which you can plan your shopping. I am only beginning to get this right now. I have lost so many vegetables by buying too many and not getting to them before they die of old age. (A case of spending irresponsibly without proper planning.)
5 Don’t Over- or Under-Eat – One Serving per Meal, One Meal at a Time
Tummies stretch when they are given too much food. Then they want more. Give it just enough. It is said that your stomach is the size of your fist…well I don’t know about that, but I know that we know when we have had enough, if we listen to our bodies and eat slowly. We need to give our tums time to tell us when they are full. I am still practising that, so one day I will get it right.
6 Don’t Eat Too Much Protein – 80g of Meat per Meal
What?!! I can eat 100 g of biltong in one sitting! And now that I can eat fats, my husband picks out the best fatty biltong he can find, much to his delight. 80g of meat per meal? I don’t know. I eat more than that with a steak of around 200g. Should I eat less protein and more fat? (Yes.) A smaller steak with more butter perhaps? (Good idea.) Protein shake once a day? Chia seeds on my salad? These are ideas to work on.
7 Be Alert – Read the Labels/Packaging
Not long ago I bought some plain cream cheese and a couple of flavoured ones, (mustard, ham etc) only to find out at home that the carb counts were way higher than the plain one so I gave the flavoured ones away. (Another case of money irresponsibly spent by not reading the labels!) Shopping needs to be done on the outside aisles of the supermarkets where everything is fresh. Skip the middle aisles. The produce in the inner aisles usually has mysterious E numbers and ingredients that are hard to pronounce, and so much of the packaged food has sugar in it and by now we all know that refined sugar is a poison.
8 Avoid Too Many Fruits and Nuts – Berries and Nuts have Carbs & Carbs Count
Berries are the lowcarb dieters’ best fruit and nuts the nicest fast food for me. However, half a cup of strawberries amounts to six grams of carbohydrates while twelve almonds counts three carbs, six macadamias two carbs. Go slow. I found out the hard way. Too many nuts, no weight loss. I soak almonds overnight to break down the enzyme inhibitors and then dry them in a little dehydrator. You can also dry them in a low oven or in the sun. Or not. Any way you do it, I think soaked almonds are really tasty. And good for you.
9 Control Your Dairy – If your Weight Loss is Stalling, Limit the Dairy
I would eat cheese every day at every meal if I could. I love it, but if I eat too much I know all about it on the scale. Milk in tea or coffee, yogurt smoothies, cottage cheese – all these can call a halt in the weight loss proceedings. Choose carefully…and count those carbs!
10 Be Strong – Play the Movie of your Success in your Mind. See it. Feel it. Be it.
And if you don’t like what you see in your own movie, change it!
Rock on with the Revolution…
Banting Leftovers make great Banting Pancakes…
On my way to the kitchen to fix myself green eggs, I suddenly had an inspiration. (I must be into pancakes right now!) There was a little leftover Cauli-mash and some leftover mince from the Spicy Cottage Pie, so I got out a bowl, the leftovers, eggs, coconut flour and baking powder. This is what I came up with:
Banting Leftovers Pancakes
Ingredients
3 free range x-large eggs
1/2 cup of left over Cauli-mash
1/2 cup of cooked left over beef mince
2 Tbs coconut flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
salt to taste
Beat eggs and add all other ingredients. Heat a frying pan. Put in a little ghee or coconut oil. Use a dessertspoon to drop spoonfuls of batter into pan. Put a lid on the pan. This helps to cook the pancake/fritters from the top. After a minute, check and turn very carefully. They are a little fragile. When browned on both sides, take out and eat with relish!
Banting Pancakes Recipe…
In South Africa we call these flapjacks. In the States they are called pancakes. Whatever you call them they are truly delicious. We had them for lunch yesterday and they were a hit.
Coconut Pancakes with Strawberry Jam and Cream
Ingredients:
4 eggs
1/4 cup coconut flour
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 Tbs xylitol
1/4 cup yogurt or cream (I used cream and added more coconut flour)
1/2 tsp baking powder
Beat eggs and cream or yogurt together then add all the other ingredients. Let it sit for a little while and make the strawberry jam. If the pancake mix seems too runny, add a little coconut flour.
Strawberry Jam
1 punnet of strawberries
2 Tbs xylitol (or to taste)
1/2 cup of water
Cut up the strawberries and put all ingredients in a saucepan and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes. Check the water level and add a little if needed. Break up the strawberries and simmer a little longer until you get a good jam-like consistency. Let it cool down a little.
Heat a little coconut oil in a pan and drop pancake mixture by the dessert spoonful into pan. When underside is done, flip and cook the other side. Spread with jam and serve with cream.
Banting Food Trial – Spicy Cottage Pie
It was delicious. There was no photograph but I aim to make it again and take a pic. Easy recipe really. Just make your favourite mince (ground beef) filling and top it with cauliflower mash. I got the mash out of the Real Meal Revolution cookbook and made it with cream instead of milk. My guests loved it and scraped the dish clean at the end! Not a smidgeon left.
Here’s my version:
Spicy Cottage Pie with Cauliflower Mash
2 Tbs Coconut Oil
800g to 1 Kg beef mince
1 onion chopped fine
3 garlic cloves minced
2 carrots diced
2 celery sticks diced
2 cups of vegetable or beef stock
2 Tbs Tomato Paste
2 Tbs of your favourite curry powder (I make my own with coriander, cumin, cardamom, cinnamon, cayenne and turmeric)
Directions:
Heat the oil in a pot. (Please don’t use aluminium as it is hazardous for your health.)
Brown the onion and garlic for a few minutes, then add celery and carrot for 5 minutes. Remove to a bowl.
Add meat in batches so as not to steam the meat. Take each batch out when browned and add to the bowl.
When all the meat is browned, put it all back in the pot and add the stock, tomato paste and your chosen spices. Put the lid on the pot and turn it down to a simmer and leave for about 30 minutes.
Open it up and check the seasoning, adding salt and pepper as desired.
Leave the pot open and reduce the liquid until it reaches the desired consistency.
Cauli Mash (I used the recipe from the Real Meal Revolution and twisted it just a little:)
One head of cauliflower broken into florets
300 ml milk (I used cream)
100 g butter
salt and pepper to taste
2 cups grated cheddar cheese
1 cup of dessicated coconut
Steam cauliflower until soft. Blend with wand blender or in a food processor. Add cream and butter and blend until smooth.
Put the meat mixture in an oven proof dish and cover with the Cauli-Mash. Top with a mixture of grated Cheddar Cheese and Coconut.
Bake in the oven at 180°C for half an hour or until the cheese is golden and bubbling.
Serve with a crisp garden fresh salad.
PS: Just a little note on the snack I had later. In the afternoon I made a strawberry coulis with xylitol which we had with Coconut Pancakes. There was a little coulis left over so I mixed it into some left over cream, only about a quarter cup. It was a most satisfying taste delight. Another way to get the fats in! What a treat:)
Rocking with the Revolution!…





