Today I am incredibly lethargic, and I seem to be wanting to eat everything in sight.  It's got cold outside all of a sudden.  Perhaps I am heading for late hibernation.
I grabbed a copy of The Longevity Diet from Amazon; I thought I should probably read it.  This will be the last time I buy a "diet book" - I have so many, and it's so stupid that I do!  What instantly struck me from a quick flick through is that I really *have* been eating according to the recommendations in The Longevity Diet for a good fifteen or more years now, at least as far as choice of food is concerned.  I suppose the wine I drink could be said to cancel out the benefits, though; the calories in that would have been pushing me out of restriction.
I was starting to think that I was being a bit of a CR fraud - especially in the light of last week's blogging around degrees of restriction and severity.  I'm never going to be an April - although I wouldn't eat the cheese either (but then nor would I eat the processed eggwhite patty!) - but I think I'm reasonably up there with what I eat, and getting there with cutting down on the wine.  I dunno, maybe I still am just kidding myself that I am doing anything other than eating, or practising CS - common sense.
P this weekend, of course, said that what I eat is mad, and I am the worst person in the world to cook for.  *sigh*  On one of those, though, he probably has a point; he can't put a plate of pasta in front of me and expect me to eat it.  A plate of broccoli, on the other hand...  But I really do not see the point of eating junk.  Admittedly my definitions of junk are fairly wide-ranging.   I'm trying to decide if Quorn sausages, yummy though they are, actually come under "junk".  Quorn is certainly as processed as I am willing to go.  The jury is out on the occassional glass of fortified lite soya milk I might drink.
Today's Food
Breakfast - the usual blueberries and yoghurt, grapenuts, almonds, pumpkin seeds
Snack - the 3 hardboiled eggwhites I was prepping for one of my salads.  The shells were being such a pain in the ass to peel off that I ended up just eating the whites there and then as I got to them.
Lunch - Quorn sausages with steamed kale and broccoli, cherry tomatoes with chilli and garlic and a huge amount of baked sweet mama squash (300g!!).  CoM says 111 cals for the squash.  I say, I wish!  Nothing could taste that good and sweet and be 33 cals per 100g.  I ate the 3rd 100g portion as a desert.
Dinner - 100g raw spinach leaves with avocado, roasted yellow pepper, mushrooms, and sunflower seeds; flax and lemon dressing.
Today's Crunch (to be taken with a pinch of salt) 
===========================================
Nutrition Summary for 05 February 2007
===========================================
General (70%)
===========================================
Energy               |   933.8 kcal    78%
Protein              |    61.3 g       88%
Fat                  |    35.6 g       55%
Carbs                |   117.1 g       49%
  Fiber              |    36.8 g      147%
Water                |  1378.2 g       51%
Vitamins (96%)
===========================================
Vitamin A            | 44070.0 IU    1889%
Folate               |   710.8 mcg    178%
B1 (Thiamine)        |     1.1 mg     103%
B2 (Riboflavin)      |     3.1 mg     281%
B3 (Niacin)          |    18.9 mg     135%
B5 (Pantothenic Acid)|     8.8 mg     177%
B6 (Pyridoxine)      |     2.3 mg     175%
B12 (Cyanocobalamin) |     1.2 mcg     52%
Vitamin C            |   529.5 mg     706%
Vitamin D            |   196.9 IU      98%
Vitamin E            |    15.6 mg     104%
Vitamin K            |  1624.1 mcg   1805%
Minerals (90%)
===========================================
Calcium              |   640.6 mg      64%
Copper               |     2.4 mg     264%
Iron                 |    14.4 mg      80%
Magnesium            |   421.2 mg     132%
Manganese            |     6.3 mg     348%
Phosphorus           |  1175.0 mg     168%
Potassium            |  5148.8 mg     110%
Selenium             |    58.0 mcg    105%
Sodium               |   829.6 mg      55%
Zinc                 |    13.3 mg     167%
Amino Acids
===========================================
Lipids (47%)
===========================================
Saturated            |     4.3 g       21%
  Omega-3            |     3.8 g      349%
  Omega-6            |     7.8 g       65%
Cholesterol          |     2.0 g        1%
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3 comments:
Hi Sara,
Don't beat yourself up. It's a long process. I've been at it for nearly three years, and I still have days when a piece of brie jumps into my mouth at a dinner party or as a Whole Foods sample. It's not about being perfect, it's about gradually improving your choices. It takes time! I am doing better all the time, but still learning, and often learning from my mistakes.
a
The food you eat always sounds great.
My partner and I eat different food. That makes things easier. He makes food that he likes, and doesn't find it strange that I make my own meals. But other couples like to make meals for each other. I'll be curious to read about how you two resolve that challenge- because it could end up being a big one, I imagine.
Take care :-)
I completely understand your reservations about Quorn, I have a few including the specific strain of fungus it's made from (just yucky, not unethical). On the other hand it's made in the UK using a fairly efficient process, and since the late 90s the egg whites used in it have been free range. It is also non-GM. So for people here its food miles are fairly low, as compared to other non-meat non-egg sources of protein.
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