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12/10/2016

Go-to recipes part 4:  smoothies!

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This is part 4 of my 5-part series, "Go to Meals". These are recipes I do on a weekly basis that I find easy, quick, cheap, and healthy.
Part 1: roasted veggies
Part 2: Easy fritatta
Part 3: Paleo Shepherd's pie

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A cold, delicious blend of all my favorite things!
A smoothie made just from fruit doesn’t sound like much of a meal, but if you add other things, it can actually be a very easy and filling meal with minimal cleaning up and no cooking time that can be made any time of day!

Some smoothies can easily go from a “healthy” drink to one packed with over 50 grams of sugar. Yes, it is fruit sugar, but it still isn’t good to have so much in one go. It is much easier to eat too much fruit in one go if it is in a smoothie than if you were just eating fruit. Thats why my smothies use many other healthy ingreditnts along with some fruit.

This post isn't necessarily a step-by-step exact recipe. To be honest, I don’t think I’ve ever followed a smoothie recipe, but here are a list of ingredients I like to put into smoothies, and you can add them together in pretty much any combination, and they will go. I usually don’t add all of these at once. This is just a list of my arsenal I might choose from. Omit what you like, get creative, and adapt quantities depending on how many people are going to enjoy it!
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  • Bananas: I highly recommend using some bananas – frozen or fresh – because it adds texture and makes the smootie smooth and less “slushy”
  • Frozen berries: for one person, I usually do about a cup
  • Peas: Sounds weird, but if you start with a quarter cup per person, you don’t even taste them and it adds volume without adding tons of fruit sugar.
  • Raw egg: 1 per person
  • Choice of protein powder: I like this one
  • Flax meal
  • Avocado: makes it smooth and creamy. I usually use half. Ever have all your avocados ripen at the same time and don’t know what to do? Take out the flesh and freeze them. Although they won’t be the same if defrosted, they work great for smoothies
  • Water and ice: often, water or liquid is needed so that the blender can actually work. I usually don’t use more then 3-4 cubes of ice in a smoothie.
  • Peanut butter/other nut butter: its easy to go overboard, start with 2 tablespoons per person
  • Cacao powder: makes it chocolatey J
  • Instant coffee or cold brew coffee
  • Stevia extract: This is a super-concentrated, all-natural, sweetener you can find in most stores
  • Spinach: just like the peas, if you start with a quarter cup, you won’t even notice itQ
  • Yogurt or keifer: If you don’t have protein powder, this is a great way to add protein!
  • Cooked pumpkin: I usually use it frozen

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12/9/2016

Gourmet meals on a College student’s (time and money) budget

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​One false impression that people have about eating healthy is that it is really expensive and time-consuming. In a world where soda is cheaper than water, and “kale chips” are three times the price of regular chips, it is easy to see where this comes from.
Not only do I hope to provide you with some ways I save money on food in this post, but I also want to remove the idea that eating healthy takes a lot of time and effort. 
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An average dinner in the life of me. Cost under $5 and took a few minutes thanks to some planning ahead!

​#1 tip is PLAN, PLAN, PLAN ahead! 

And I’m not specifically talking about meal prepping, since I’m not a big fan of doing that. (although if that is your style, then send it!) I’m talking little things like having an easy breakfast in the fridge instead of buying it on the way to class or work, or having a fridge full of real food, so when you come home after a long day you're not tempted to go out and get something pre made.
 
What I have learned is that although I love variety and experimenting with food, I have about 7-10 under half hour recipes to cook from home, which I call my “go-to” recipes.
Find them here

Out and about all day?
See how you can plan ahead when you’re out on the slopes here

​#2 Crockpots

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slow cooked beef stew. You can buy the cheaper, tougher cuts and still enjoy tender meat!
Speaking of thinking ahead, I can’t help but bring up my reliance on the crockpot. I call him my “personal chef” because I can come home and dinner is 100% done! All it takes is ten minutes in the morning chopping up vegetables, and adding seasonings and meat. Unlike the stove, you can leave it at home while you are out all day. I don’t think in all my years I have ever burned or overcooked anything in the crockpot, and I’ve left stuff in there up to fourteen hours! Not only does the crock pot save you money by being an alternative to eating out/takeout, but it also allows you to buy the cheaper, tougher meats because no matter what the cut, the crock pot makes it super tender and juicy!
Want an easy recipe to get you started? Check out my go-to recipe here
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​#3 don’t let anything go to waste.

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this is the kind of stuff I eat when I search the back of the fridge and freezer
​Have “What’s for dinner? Let’s look in the fridge” nights several times a week. (those meals are like every other night for me haha)
 planning is good, but also learn to improvise and use up everything. Here are two meals I like to use for finishing up extra veggies (cooked or uncooked!)
Chicken soup
Easy fritatta

​#4 your freezer is a huge asset

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a couple days worth of cooked chicken after making crock pot chicken soup that can be frozen and eaten any time.
When you live by yourself, it is tempting to buy pre-made dinners or go out instead of cooking. Meat is sold by the pound, and sometimes you just don’t feel like eating cauliflower for the next five days because you bought one whole head of it. There are two ways I have found a freezer to be a hero in the single-person’s arsenal. First, you can cook up a whole family-size stew or crock pot and freese one or two portions per container for another day. Yout busy-future-self will thank you!
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The other way I use my freezer is buying frozen vegetables. I buy more frozn veggies than fresh because you don’t have to spend any time chopping or washing. Plus, they can be a lot cheaper and are just as nutritious!

​#5 Avoid the “superfood” pitfall

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Humble meals, like chicken soup, omelettes, or stir-frys can be made healthy, and are not labeled as "superfoods"
Chances are, you’ve seen the term “super food” thrown around a lot lately.
However, most of the food I buy does not have this word anywhere on the packaging. Actually most of the food I buy doesn’t even have much packaging

Want to see what I buy on a average trip to the store? Check this out.

Although Superfoods are usually good for you, they are not necessary to have a balanced, healthy diet. To me, “healthy” food means a diet of mostly fresh or frozen vegetables, some fruit, nuts, seeds, and a sensible amount of high-quality meat/dairy. By high quality meat, I don’t even mean the best, leanest cuts, but organic or grass fed does matter. 
Things like Kombucha, Maca powder, spirulina, or kale chips are great, but are in no way necessary to have a “healthy” diet.

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