Sunday, February 26, 2006
Two great meals
Two great meals:
Salmon and Shrimp with alfredo sauce
6oz pieces of salmon, poached. 2 large shrimp (16-20/lb size) per serving, steamed
1 egg yolk beaten
1 cup heavy cream
1 stick butter
1 clove finely minced garlic
1 T parsley
1 cup Parmensan Cheese, grated
1/2 cup Romano Cheese, grated
Add yolk to cream and heat slowly, stirring often. As it starts to boil, add 1 stick butter. When melted, stir in parsley and cheese. Heat, stirring constantly until cheese is all melted. Add more cheese as desired.
Alfredo sauce carb count per Fitday:
1/8c = 19g fat (12 sat/1 poly/ 6 mono)//Carb 1 // 8 protein
Place pieces of fish on plate, top with shrimp, and spoon sauce over all.
Serve with broccoli and butter.
Total for the meal (our salmon filets were 6oz each):
Fat 46 (S 22, p 6 m 15), Carb 11 (F 5), Protein 56.
Meal 2:
This one I got from Dana Carpender's cookbook 500 Low Carb Recipes:
Polynesian Pork:
4 large pork chops or pork tenderloin (4-6 oz each)
1/2 cup soy sauce (if you're not big on salt, you might want to use the lower salt version)
4 cloves garlic finely minced
1/2 tsp blackstrap molasses
1 1/2 tsp grated fresh ginger
Mix all ingredients except pork and pour into zip-lock bag. Add pork and let marinate at least 20 minutes.
Remove pork from marinate and arrange in shallow baking dish.
Bake 40-60 minutes, or until cooked thru. Baste with marinade as needed during cooking.
Counts (per book): total of marinade divided between 4 pieces would give 7 effective carbs, but figure around 3-4 as not all marinade will be eaten.
Counts per Fitday: 5 carbs and 2 protein (1/4 of recipe)
Serve with fresh asparagus with butter and parmesan cheese.
Total for the meal (our pork tenderloins were 6oz each):
Fat 25 (S 12, p 2 m 19), Carb 9 (F 2), Protein 53.
Sunday, February 05, 2006
Interesting reading
I've been reading a lot this weekend, and have learned some interesting things!
First off, I'm in the middle of reading The Cholesterol Myths by Uffe Ravnskov, MD, PhD. I'll go into that more when I finish.
Because of back/neck problems, I can only read books for short periods of time, so I read my book, then read on the internet. It's amazing how much information is out there! And how much of it never reaches the public!
Based on a post by Anthony Colpo on his The Omnivore website, I looked up Thomas S. Cowan, MD and found his web-site The Fourfold Path to Healing. Dr Cowan believes in the power of low-carb diets and doesn't use statins, so of course I just had to read his latest newsletter!
Dr Cowan
In the first article of the newsletter, Dr Cowan talks about how he (and many others) feel that arterial blockage is the result of a Myocardial Infarction (MI or “heart attack”), not the result! As evidence, Dr Cowan notes that in a 1998 editorial in The American Journal of Cardiology, a Dr. W.W. O’Neill notes that many patients having an MI do not have blockages, or have blockages that are not felt to be enough to cause an MI! As evidence of this, Dr Cowan notes that not all patients that have an MI have arterial blockages on arteriogram. Early on the medical profession has been trying, unsuccessfully, to “prove” that arterial blockage causes MI, but as noted in study after study, the findings were similar. Some had a recent thrombus (blockage), about 49%....however, about 30% had NO blockage, while another 14% had moderate plaque buildup, but not enough to cause an MI. Another study showed that in MIs with sudden death, about 50-60% had blockage. In a third study the authors found that as high as 75% had blockages, but didn’t qualify the degree. Additionally, the authors of another paper found that the longer the time after the MI to either angiogram of autopsy, the higher the degree of blockage found! An hour after the MI, only about 16% showed blockage, but after 24hrs this increased to 53%!
Weston A Price Foundation
One of my favorite sites for finding unbiased information, the Weston A Price Foundation (WAPF) has page after page after page of information about nutrition, environmental dangers, and myth busting. Read here about the foundation.
The article goes on to note that early man, as far back as Australopithecines (about 2 million years) we have been omnivores, not vegetarians. Early homo-sapiens were meat-eaters, as evidenced by their development of tools, and their ability to populate the world, even in areas where fruits and vegetables are only seasonal. (Also noted is that tooth decay was unseen until the start of using grains and increased dramatically when we started using refined grains!)
All very interesting reading!!!! I’ll post more as I am able to.