• 05Mar

    Remember my banana dessert trick that I like so much?  The mashed and whipped up banana with whatever fun additions you like?  Well, I’ve stumbled on to something else completely delicious and have gone completely overboard with it!  But if your options on a night you’re destined to sabotage your healthy ways are this or a pint of Ben and Jerry’s, this should do the trick.

    So I had a large can of pumpkin pie mix in my pantry from the holidays.  I had every intention to bake a pie, but never got around to it, so on a night I wanted to experiment making a new kind of dessert I opened it up.  I was really good at first.  It was one of those super large cans, so I took out maybe a third of it and put the rest in a freeze-able container.  I mixed a few scoops of the pumpkin mix (already has the sugar and spices included, so it’s a no-brainer) and a few scoops of my favorite yogurt: So Delicious Coconut Milk Yogurt in the plain variety.  Amazing.  For texture I threw in a few crushed pecans.  Holy Cow was it delicious.  I couldn’t believe how pumpkin pie-y it really was.  So I was hooked.  And I was on a mission to experiment adding other things to it.  In the days following I finished the small amount I left refrigerated and unfortunately dove into the frozen batch.  Sigh…sugar addiction in an upswing!  So, my recommendation to you would be a) to only buy a small can and share the dessert with the ones you love or to b) get a can of plain pumpkin, not the pumpkin pie, and add your own sweetener and pumpkin pie spices: cinnamon, allspice, cloves, nutmeg, I believe.  Then you can pick and choose your favorite flavor ratio and your sweetener (as long as it’s not artificial!) of choice.  Since I don’t eat regular yogurt, I don’t know how it would taste mixed with a cow’s milk yogurt, but I do know that the coconut milk yogurt isn’t nearly as tart as yogurt made out of animal milk, so it might not blend as seamlessly as the coconut variety.  The Westerly Market on 54th and 8th Ave has 4-serving size tubs of this yogurt, so I recommend you scoop a few up New Yorkers!

    In any event, in the days following my initial delicious discovery I’ve experimented with several combinations.  All winners in my book:

    1. Mixed the pumpkin with almond butter and spread on toast.

    2. Stirred almond butter into the yogurt/pumpkin mix for texture and protein.

    3. Added hemp powder (a protein powder made of hemp seed that ranks superior in nutrition, particularly fatty acid ratios- and no, you can’t get high from it.  It’s a different plant than what they make marijuana from).  I found that the addition of the protein powder even gives an extremely close resemblance to the true texture of actual baked pumpkin pie without the crust.  It’s amazing.

    4. Added ground flax to the above mixture.

    5. Added all, almond butter, ground flax AND the protein powder.

    Pumpkin has sooooo many great things about it including fiber, Vitamin C, E, potassium, magnesium and carotenoids, so it’s a great food to try to incorporate in meals.  Just don’t go overboard with the sugar, as the canned pumpkin pie mix is definitely sweet!

    Like I said, this is a better choice than many other death by dessert options you may be faced with and it is truly satisfying, but like all things sweet, a little goes a long way.  So be wise.  If you do go for the no-brainer option and get a can of pumpkin pie mixture, read the ingredients and just make sure it isn’t sweetened with corn syrup.  Real sugar only!

    But I’m definitely making this for Thanksgiving next year to enjoy while everyone else is stuffing their faces with creamy and milky and crusted pie.  And I honestly think I won’t feel left out!  The proof is in that I made it for Ameesh the other night (pumpkin/yogurt/hemp powder combo) and even HE thought it was delicious.

  • 14Jan

    So recently I’ve noticed a new trend happening within.  I’m starting to think that 3 meals a day for me plus healthy snacks is too much food.  Sounds crazy, right?  But here’s the thing- I think when you’re eating food that is exactly what your body needs, you actually need less of it.  Let me try and break it down even more.  When you eat a lot of food, but only say 35% of that meal is pure goodness for your body (and that’s a generous percentage for most of the stuff Americans have come to love), your body will still tell you it needs more nutrients, but you interpret it as needing more food.  Processed packaged foods have so many confusing ingredients for your body to sort through, so it takes a little longer to process and find actual needed nutrients in there while detoxing all the junk chemicals and additives.  You’re also left with needs unfulfilled and a little while later, more hunger or intense cravings, which most people satisfy with more nutrient-lacking foods.  However, when you’re eating pure foods, that are nothing but nourishing, like raw and lightly cooked vegetables, plain fruits and organic meats, your body knows exactly how to use them and does so much more efficiently.  You’re also left with fewer cravings because your body is getting all the amino acids, vitamins, and minerals it most likely needs.  So this is where I think I’m taking it overboard.  For me, my processed indulgences are organic corn chips and salsa and the occasional slice of gluten-free toast.  So that aside, I fill up on salad greens, eggs, nuts, sauteed veggies, and healthy meats, almost daily.  And I think 3 nutrient dense meals a day are adding up to be a bit too much for me.  I’ve been feeling kind of heavy and sluggish, like there is simply too much food in my belly at all times!  I am able to notice this now particularly because over the holidays, while I did have too much alcohol and a little too much sugar, my meals themselves were much more sparse.  We had a lot of activities, and with my gluten/dairy free lifestyle I was able to avoid a lot of the weight gaining fare.  Then when we got back to New York, we had already packed up our previous apartment to get ready to move, and had no cookware available.  We would wake up in the morning and immediately be distracted with what we needed to do to move, then had to go out and find food when we were hungry, then became distracted the rest of the day until we were hungry again for dinner.  I was probably only eating about two meals a day for a handful of days there, and I noticed that I felt lighter and more energetic.  I even indulged in gluten-free pancakes, with organic maple syrup and butter one Sunday afternoon, and then wasn’t able to eat again until dinner, which was rather light, whatever we could scrap together.  The next day I felt so great, I couldn’t believe I’d eaten so many pancakes the day before, because they usually leave me bloated when included in a day involving 2 more meals and snacks.

    So this might sound as if I’m saying calorie restriction is where it’s at, but that’s not it at all.  You can keep your calories at 1,000 calories a day by eating McDonald’s french fries and a cupcake, and you’d probably lose a lot of weight, but obviously you would not be healthy!  You’d be starving, and your body would go into starvation mode.  But if you’re eating 300 calories worth of pure nutrient filled foods a few times throughout the day, and you have things going on that keep you intrigued or busy in a positive way, you might not notice any hunger until it comes a knockin’ telling you it’s time for more pure food.  Now I’m not big on calorie counting, but every now and then I try and ballpark a figure of what I typically eat in a day, and I guesstimate that I eat about 1,600 to 1,700 calories a day, and almost 50 grams of fat a day (nuts, seeds, healthy oil and occasional meat).  For me, I know I use food as a procrastination and boredom tool.  This is a very dangerous habit, and I know I’m not alone.  So I’d like to experiment with this theory and go back to simply eating less, but still very nutrient dense to see if I can get back to feeling like I was a few weeks ago without feeling hungry all the time.  If I have time to realize I’m bored, I start thinking about snacks to get that will make me feel like I’m doing something.  So I’ll have to work against that urge and find lots of non-eating activities to fill my down time, but I’m very interested in exploring this.

    Things that I want to try:

    1) eating less nuts!  I know I eat too many nuts.  They’re power houses of health, but too many are simply too many.

    2) I also want to incorporate more raw vegetables into my day as snacks.  When I get hungry my go-to as late has been Kind nut bars.  See?  I’m just too nuts about nuts.  I want to try and incorporate filling, but low-calorie snacks like apples, carrots, and celery into my day to replace my nutty indulgences.

    3) In the morning, I’m going to try eating a lighter breakfast, maybe just some fruit or 2 eggs instead of the rich salad with 1 or 2 eggs and a nutrient dense Sunshine burger I’ve adopted as a breakfast habit.

    4) I also need to drink more water!  I’ve not been on top of this recently, and whenever I drastically increase my water, my desire to eat goes way down.  I just feel more satisfied when I’m hydrated and don’t feel the need to eat for the sake of eating.

    Sounds easy enough, but if it really was I wouldn’t have a career!  I’ll start tomorrow and see how things go and report back next week.  I already polished off the raw cashews today anyways, so we’ll see what my body tells me it needs tomorrow!

  • 19Nov

    I’m back friends!  Spain was an amazing adventure.  A little hectic as we crammed both Madrid and Barcelona into a few fun-filled days, but it was worth it.  If you have a chance to go to either city, I highly recommend it.

    Now that I’m back, I’m still working on getting my digestion back on track as well.  The Spaniards don’t exactly eat the way we do here in America, with 3 regular, filling meals as a protocol to follow.  They eat very small breakfasts, drink A LOT of espresso, and fill up on ham and bread it seems for dinner. Read more »

  • 02Sep

    Hey followers, (hmm, that sounds a little cultish, doesn’t it?)

    Hey friends!  That’s better.  Here’s an update of a day in the life of Caitlin’s way of eating!  To give you a glimpse of the things I do that I think keep me healthy or not and to let you know that I’m a real person with healthy ups and downs, I’m trying to every now and then show you what I eat in a day.  Especially since I eat gluten and dairy free, and many people just cannot fathom finding a way to eat like that, it’s helpful to see the things I do to give you ideas for yourself beyond the walls of sandwiches! Read more »

  • 13Aug

    Had a scrumdidlyumptious breakfast this morning, without the nauseating effect of a real IHOP breakfast.  I usually have a box of gluten-free banana waffles in the freezer for those wanna-feel-like-a-kid-again breakfast cravings.  Actually, I didn’t really have any other breakfast options, anyways, so I didn’t feel too bad concocting my waffly good meal.   Read more »

  • 16Jun

    It’s been a while since I’ve written about what it’s like to live in my shoes for a day.  So before hitting the gym today, I’m sitting down to update you on my foods of yesterday.  For those of you new to the blog, I decided some time ago that I would periodically write what I had eaten on any given day since so many people ask me, “well, what do YOU eat (and/or do to stay in shape)?” in hopes that I’d have some magical response that they could easily duplicate in their own lives to cure all their food confusion as to healthy, not healthy and lose weight (in most cases of being asked that question.)  Well my magical response is both ridiculously simple and difficult at the same time: Read more »

  • 02Apr

    So, today turned out to be a pretty decent food day.  For breakfast I had two sunny-side up eggs over a bed of jasmine rice (left over from dinner yesterday) mixed with some green beans.  Then I hit the gym and ran almost 4 miles in 45 minutes.  I’m just speedy like that. Read more »

  • 24Mar

    I can’t tell you how many times people ask me the “what do you eat?” question.  So I decided to start a category to tell you just that.  I was on the phone with a friend of mine recently who was frustrated that people always joke with her about being skinny, with comments about how she must not eat (read: must not eat the crap that they are eating.) The tone from fellow women who say things to her is usually not with the best intention.  They are not, “wow, you’re in such great shape” type of comments.  They are actually perceived at times as being mean.  The comments usually come from heavier women who struggle with their own weight, and struggle with healthy eating habits.   Read more »