Post-Drinkcation Diet

I still have a lot of photos and adventures from Kentucky to post, but I'm going to blog this one as encouragement for my now diet, detox, and restoration mode post-drinkcation.

I definitely gained 5-7lbs after the 2 weeks of eating all the things in both the Bay Area and Louisville... while I'm hopeful some of that is water weight from salt bloat, some of it is definitely just fat from eating literally everything.  I'm getting back to the gym today as well, but since weight is 85% diet, I'm getting back on the wagon with a yummy recipe: spaghetti squash via two prep methods.

Spaghetti squash is named such because once it's cooked, the flesh shreds into strands that look very similar to spaghetti... and it's a great substitute.  A little crunchy, but takes on sauces just like spaghetti, with a fraction of the calories, carbs, and glycemic index.  1 cup of spaghetti squash runs you about 42 calories on average, compared with 1 cup of spaghetti, which can easily be around 200.

Glycemic index is a measure of a food's effect on blood glucose levels - particularly how quickly it rises in response to consumption of a particular food.  Foods with low GI release sugar more steadily into the bloodstream, whereas foods with high GI spike sugar into the bloodstream quickly.  The basic (very, VERY basic) theory is that by releasing sugar more steadily, the body releases insulin more steadily.  Insulin is the hormone that allows for various cells within the body to absorb glucose for conversion to either glycogen (immediate energy in muscles) or fat (long-term energy storage).  A few studies have correlated high blood sugar levels with increased fat storage, so the theory goes that if you keep more steady levels, your body will be less apt to store more fat.

In general, the GI ranges are as follows:

Low: <55
Medium: 56-69
High: 70+

Some examples: Waffles (109), White Bread (101), Kidney Beans (42), Mac & Cheese (72), Potato (93), Broccoli (<20), Spaghetti Squash (<20), Tomatoes (23)

In any case, I tend to do spaghetti squash with some kind of protein, like turkey meatballs or shrimp or whatever just because the fiber with some protein helps keep me full.

I was hungry tonight - this is roughly 2 servings of spaghetti squash, Trader Joe's bolognese sauce, parmesan cheese, topped with turkey meatballs.  Total: 424 calories

Oven-Roasted Spaghetti Squash:
This is definitely my favorite way to prepare it, but prep work and waiting time can be annoying, so below this, I included the lazy way of preparing spaghetti squash too!

Prep: 15 min / ~45 min bake time
Tools: sharp chef's knife, cutting board, dish towel for stability, fork

Spaghetti squash
Olive oil (to coat)
Salt, pepper, parmesan cheese to taste
Sauce of your choosing (I like marinara)

  1. Set your spaghetti squash onto a bunched up dish towel on the cutting board to prevent it from rolling around while you cut it open.
  2. Carefully & slowly cut the spaghetti squash in half.  I usually stick the knife point into the squash vertically to get the tip into the cavity inside the squash and then slowly push the knife down to horizontal on the non-stem side.  By then, enough of the squash has been split to generally crack it open.
  3. Scoop out the seeds and discard.
  4. Coat the inside of the squash with olive oil and sprinkle salt and pepper.
  5. Bake at 375 for ~45 minutes (longer if you've got a bigger squash).
  6. Let cool and use the fork to shred the squash into strands.  I like to sprinkle parmesan cheese on at this point to give it some extra flavor.  Mix in your favorite sauce to taste!
Spaghetti Squash!
On a dishcloth for stability, knife in point down

CAREFULLY push down

Once you split it open, it looks like this.  Scoop out the seeds and discard.

Coat with olive oil & seasonings.  Bake at 375 for ~45 or until the flesh is soft

Microwave Spaghetti Squash
Let's face it, there are all those days where it's a struggle to eat healthy if you're running late and starving.  So here's a quicker way to make spaghetti squash:

Prep: 5 min / 6-8 min bake time
Tools: sharp chef's knife, dish towel, cutting board, fork

Spaghetti squash
Salt, pepper, parmesan cheese to taste
Sauce of your choosing

  1. Place squash on bunched up dish towel on the cutting board for stability.  Take the fork and pierce the squash deep several (10ish) times all over the squash.  You should get it all the way to the central cavity.  This is to prevent squash explosions!!
  2. Put the squash on a clean paper or dish towel in the microwave (it will leak a bit after it cooks).
  3. Microwave for 6-8 min, depending on the size.  I did 8 for the one pictured below.  Better to have to re-microwave than to have an exploded squash, which will probably also ruin the microwave.
  4. WAIT for it to cool.  Steam burns are not fun.  Carefully cut open the squash - it will be HOT.  Scoop out and discard the seeds.
  5. Use the fork to shred the squash.
  6. Salt and pepper to taste.  I drizzled in some olive oil as well for additional flavor, but this can be skipped.  I also sprinkled in parmesan cheese to taste.
  7. Coat in favorite sauce!
Pierce with fork in several places so steam can escape
Microwave 6-8 minutes, I did this one for 8.
Be careful, when cutting open... it's hot!  Don't forget to scoop out the seeds.

2 spaghetti squashes' worth!

In terms of photo quality... I'm no food stylist and I don't get natural light in my kitchen, so these really ended up being more snapshot-y.  I'll have to work on that... it's hard to be artistically minded when hungry, which is kind of ironic given the whole "starving artist" stereotype.

Active Shooting Hours: 0.5
Review Hours: 0.5
Total Hours to Date: 46

Venturing Beyond the Comfort Zone

Little kids, especially toddlers, are fearless.  They run around with an insatiable curiosity of the world that drives them to seek out bright stoves, dark electrical sockets, and climb everything in sight.  It's not until their little blank slates start to fill with experiences of pain, embarrassment, fright, and ridicule that fear of the unknown starts to develop and slowly snuffs out any further attempts at doing something bold, foreign, or new.

It is really hard to step out of the comfort zone.  Even though I moved back to where I grew up (more or less), most of my close friends with whom I grew up are either elsewhere geographically.  Or we've grown apart since high school/college and have become different people with different priorities.  It's been a challenge for me to have meaningful personal experiences outside of work and meet new people who share similar interests.  Work and working long hours became my comfort zone.  Indeed, for most people in a new city, work seems to starts off as the most common comfort zone - it's convenient and easy to meet people through coworkers and their friends.  In my case, because I advanced quickly, my peers at work are not in the same place in life as I am - they're all older and have kids.  While I get along great with them and we'll occasionally hang out, it's not the same and I can't meet people the same way my friends in other cities do.

And because I'm the kind of person who hates inaction in the face of discontent (Einstein once said that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results), I did something about it.  A few months ago, I signed up for a beach volleyball class on a complete whim because it sounded like a fun activity and potentially a way to meet people.  It was hard to go that first week - I wasn't sure if I was going to the right place or if I was wearing the right thing... but it ended up being a great experience for me and a reassurance that I can still be like a little kid and fearlessly explore the unknown.

In many ways, this 10,000 hour project is all about stepping out of my comfort zone.  While I have no problem going somewhere foreign or talking to strangers, work has long been my security blanket that I've taken around with me everywhere all the time.

Today is the beginning of learning how to fold the blanket and put it away at night and on weekends:  I just booked two back to back trips with the main goal of getting some serious hours in on this project.  8 consecutive business days and the surrounding weekends off and spent traveling... I'm vacillating between excitement and panic at taking this much time off.  But mostly excitement that I'll have plenty of interesting things to photograph.  First stop will be up to the Bay Area and doing a multitude of touristy things I never got around to when I actually lived there and then it'll be off to Louisville to visit a sorority sister, drink my way down the Bourbon Trail, and check out Churchill Downs.

And as a birthday gift to myself and in preparation for this trip, a new camera lens with a wide aperture for shooting in low light that arrived a day earlier than expected from the magic that is Amazon Prime:

And of course I had to play around with it, so I took a pictures around my apartment this evening, including the yummy tequila lime chicken wings & drumsticks I made in a slow cooker, which were fall-off-the-bone tender and juicy:

Wings & drums in a crockpot - brilliant!

Tequila Lime Crockpot Wings & Drums:
Tools: Slow cooker, some mixing bowls or a large ziplock bag, mixing utensils  

1 - 2lbs of wings & drumsticks
4 - 5 Limes
1.5 - 3 oz Tequila
0.5 cup Ginger Ale
Olive oil to coat
Salt, pepper, garlic power, cayenne powder, chili powder, cumin, paprika to taste

  1. Coat chicken lightly in olive oil.  Toss and then coat with the dry seasonings in a bowl or in the ziplock bag.  Marinating for a few hours is probably a good idea, but I didn't today and it still came out delicious.
  2. Juice the limes into a mixing bowl.  Pro-tip: microwave them for ~10 seconds to get the most juice out of them.  Mix in tequila and ginger ale.
  3. Place the chicken in the slow cooker and pour the tequila lime mixture over.
  4. Cook on high for ~2.5 hours or until cooked through.

Hours to Date: 18

New Recipes and a Weak Attempt at Flash Photography

The whole Friday BBQ session totally inspired me to try another take on a summer BBQ classic: pulled pork.  Now, I'm sure all the barbecue purists out there will spend their time arguing and defending their method/sauce/style of choice, be it Tennessee, Carolina, Texas, or Kentucky.  As far as barbecue goes, I'm an equal opportunity eater - I love it all (as I have previously stated, I fully believe barbecue should be its own food group).

But, I wanted a new twist.  A spicy twist.  And a low carb one, now that I'm back on the watching-what-I-eat wagon.

Enter: Korean-inspired Spicy Pulled Pork Tacos topped with a quick cucumber pickle

This photo does not do this justice - I got impatient and just wanted to eat at this point
Cucumbers, pickling away in rice wine vinegar
And a southern-inspired Bubbly Bourbon Mint Sweet Tea to accompany

These photos are all pretty awful - the cucumbers probably came out the best.  This was the first attempt both at using flash and photographing food made in my teeny kitchen.  Given the practically non-existent counter space at my apartment and the awful light, it's no shock to me these came out the way they did.

Also, I just don't focus well on anything when hungry and surrounded by tantalizing food...  But at least the food came out delicious!!  Recipe below, because I hate it when people post something tasty without sharing how to replicate.

Korean Inspired Spicy Pulled Pork Tacos:
Tools: Slow cooker, some mixing bowls, mixing utensils

Pulled Pork:
~2 lbs Pork butt/shoulder
 Sweet Onion
4-5 cloves Garlic
Cayenne Pepper
24oz Root Beer

1. Cut up the onion and garlic and layer half in the bottom of the slowcooker.
2. Coat the pork in cayenne pepper and any other seasonings you want & place in the slowcooker.  Cover with the other half of the chopped up onions/garlic.
3. Pour root beer over all.
4. Cook on LOW for 8 hours or so.
5. Drain off the liquid, remove the onions and garlic (I saved it for toppings later), and shred the pork.

Spicy BBQ Sauce:
2 tbsp Gojuchang (Korean spicy pepper/miso fermented business - found at Asian markets)
2 tbsp Soy Sauce
2 tsp Sesame Oil
2 tbsp Sugar
1 tsp Rice Wine Vinegar

1. Mix the gojuchang, soy sauce, sesame oil, sugar, and 1 tsp of the rice wine vinegar together.  Dunzo!

Quick Cucumber Pickle:
2 Persian Cucumbers (the teeny seedless ones)
Red Onion
Salt
Sesame Seeds
Crushed Red Pepper
Rice Wine Vinegar to coat
1 tbsp Sugar

1. Slice the cucumbers thinly and chop the red onion into a bowl.  Coat with the rice wine vinegar.
2. Add in salt, sugar, crushed red pepper and sesame seeds.
3. Toss and let it sit for half an hour.

Assemble onto a tortilla and try your hardest not to inhale it like a starved hyena.

Bubbly Bourbon Mint Sweet Tea
To be fair, for drinks, I never measure, I just kind of pour until I'm pleased.

~2oz Bourbon (I'm a Maker's girl myself)
~4oz Iced Tea
~4oz Ginger Ale
Fresh Mint
Lime

Mix and pour over ice.  Add a spiffy straw if you're so inclined.  I love drinking out of straws, but apparently the action of drinking out of a straw causes mouth wrinkles over time :( so I've been trying to wean myself of the habit.

Hours to Date: 9