Pesach and nutrition
Apr. 28th, 2005 09:04 pmNotes to self for next year:
- Use fish, a lot, to make up the protein deficit (waa! no soy!) without driving calories through the roof. That much meat, cheese, and egg is bad for you.
- But not tuna salad. I mean real fish, several times during the week. Fresh fish freezes.
- Eat more fruit. Fruit doesn't have to come in cans, you know; there's this place called the produce aisle.
- Eat more veggies too. Buy a microwave-safe casserole for this.
- There's a vitamin-balance problem, but I don't know how to fix it when the balanced breakfast drink is off limits.
- Baby carrots are not the only convenient raw veggie -- just the most convenient one. 400% RDA on Vitamin A is probably bad for you, even if it's only a week.
- Maybe you shouldn't eat matzah after the seders. It's not required, and there are other delivery systems for cheese and jam. Ok, maybe not jam, but you shouldn't be eating much of that anyway.
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Date: 2005-04-29 01:35 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 01:36 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 01:39 am (UTC)Whole wheat matzah helps digestive issues, as do bananas.
Multivitamins, fruit juice, and dairy will help the vitamin deficit.
So saith the pregnant woman. ;)
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Date: 2005-04-29 01:40 am (UTC)-- Dagonell
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Date: 2005-04-29 01:55 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2005-04-29 01:58 am (UTC)Yogurt: good point. I've been doing that, but maybe I need to do more.
Matzah: what I really want is rye matzah. :-) (I don't care for whole-wheat bread, though I like all the other grains. I should try whole-wheat matzah, though; it's not like matzah overly resembles bread anyway.) And yeah, I've been using bananas to help with that.
I know effectively nothing about vitamin supplements, as I'm used to doing it through diet. Are there bazillions of incompatable options, or will I be ok if I just hunt down anything that claims to be balanced?
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Date: 2005-04-29 02:00 am (UTC)Kitniyot is stuff that's not chametz but that the rabbis ruled is "like chametz", kind of the way chicken is meat not to be mixed with dairy even though you can't milk a chicken.
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Date: 2005-04-29 03:42 am (UTC)I leave it to you to decide the value of these links:
http://www.aish.com/passlaw/passlawdefault/All_About_Kitniyot.asp
http://judaism.about.com/library/3_askrabbi_o/bl_simmons_passoverkosher.htm
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Date: 2005-04-29 09:03 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 09:17 am (UTC)* 1 x 95g tin salmon (John West, a local brand, not sure if you have it there, makes it in various "flavours" including smoked, lemon & thyme, etc).
* 1 x boiled egg.
* 1 x handful sprouts (OK, so my rabbi told me that alfalfa sprouts were kosher for passover, not sure about mung bean, check with yours).
* 1 x splodge kosher vegetable oil mayo or similar.
* 1 x tomato, sliced over the top.
The aim is for high-protein and low-carb rather than specifically kosher for passover, but it works as a protein boost, and has fibre, vitamins, and omega-3's as well. Put it on some matzah for added carbs. It's surprisingly filling for a relatively small serve.
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Date: 2005-04-29 09:24 am (UTC)<a href="http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/3142605"Here's</a> the newspaper version.
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Date: 2005-04-29 11:21 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 11:46 am (UTC)If you get some, do rinse it before boiling.
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Date: 2005-04-29 12:32 pm (UTC)We have all his food that he can eat, in this case no sugar and no dairy not no fat, on one shelf in the pantry. We have no food in the fridge that isn't going to be eaten by one of the three of us. No expired food, no condiments that one on likes, etc. We do not load up the fridge so you can't find stuff anymore.
Oatmeal is a wonderful low fat source of iron and protien and now comes in sugar free instant packets.
Wheat germ and sugar free apple sauce make a wonderful snack. It tastes like apple crips.
Small tomatoes are just as convient as baby carrots. So are grapes.
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Date: 2005-04-29 12:39 pm (UTC)http://www.recipeland.com/recipe/1000/
I sub any kind of bean on hand (including chick peas) for the butter beans, leave out the honey and salt, and sub black peper for the cardamom.
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Date: 2005-04-29 12:39 pm (UTC)I think we would've eaten better this week if we had more than one pot.
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Date: 2005-04-29 02:52 pm (UTC)Convenient veggies: grape tomatoes. Grapes (not a veggie, but healthy and convenient) Also, if you cut up celery into snack sized portions before Pesach and keep them soaking in water, they'll last all through pesach. That's what I love about celery. Another nice snacky food is cucumbers. Slice 'em, or cut them into spears. It only takes a few minutes to peel and cut up a cucumber. And it's a tasty snack with next to no calories.
Convenient fruits too: (grapes of course), strawberries. Just rinse them off when you buy them and then you can snack on them whenever. Blueberries, blackberries, raspberries. Apples. Bananas. Oranges.
I make a fruit salad virtually every day during Pesach. Pineapple, honeydew, strawberries, mango, and assorted berries. It's sweet, it's filling, it's healthy. You've probably noticed, also, that I don't believe in canned fruit.
I eat little matzoh during the week. I make few things with matzoh, even. I made farfel stuffing this year, but that can be eaten sparingly and still enjoyed.
Most of the money that I spent on food this year, believe it or not, went to the produce aisle at Whole Foods. I spent a lot of time browsing, finding interesting things and getting inspired. It worked out well, I think.
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Date: 2005-04-29 04:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 04:42 pm (UTC)I rarely use canned fruit at home (only when using fresh is too much of a PITA, like pineapple, or fresh is out of season). The canned fruit is for work, where the can and a plastic spoon are all I need for a mid-afternoon snack.
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Date: 2005-04-29 04:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-29 04:55 pm (UTC)