Chili Cheese Cubes - POSTED ON: Apr 21, 2011
Makes 12 servings
Ingredients:
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter 1/2 cup flour 1 tsp baking powder 1/4 tsp salt 10 raw eggs 1 small can of Diced Green mild Ortega chiles 16 ounces of cottage cheese (preferably 2%) 1 lb shredded Montery Jack Cheese
Directions:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees Shred cheese Spray non-stick coating on 13x8x2 baking pan Place butter in pan, and pan in oven to melt butter. Remove pan from oven when butter melted. Beat eggs in mixing bowl Add flour, baking powder, salt and blend with eggs. Add all other ingredients and mix toether. Pour in baking pan. Bake at 400 degrees for 15 minutes, then reduce oven to 350 for an additional 35-40 minutes 1/12 = 1 serving 1 serving has: Calories: 295 Carbs: 7.3 grams Protein: 19.8 grams
Sausage Egg Bowl - POSTED ON: Apr 19, 2011
Makes 1 serving
1 egg 1 piece cooked turkey sausage (Jimmy Dean) 1/2 ounce shredded cheddar cheese.
Spray non-stick coating on small skillet and small microwavable bowl. Cut 1 pre-cooked turkey sausage into small pieces. Weigh out 1/2 oz shredded cheddar cheese. Put sausage pieces and cheese into bowl.
Heat skillet. Beat egg with whisk or magic bullet. Add salt and pepper to taste. Scramble egg in skillet at medium high heat. Add scrambled egg to bowl and mix with other ingredients Microwave for 30 seconds to heat sausage and melt cheese. Calories: 197 Carbs: 1.1 grams Protein: 17 grams
Recipes When Tracking Food - POSTED ON: Apr 19, 2011
Here’s a question I received about Calorie Counting.
"One thing I always wonder about calorie counting: how do you account for cooked foods or whole meals? For example, an apple is easy: it's so & so calories. However if... (like we did today for dinner)... your meal consists of a) potato salad b) cucumber salad and c) cheese pie How would you go about counting all that? Would you have to input all recipes & divide by helpings to know what you've eaten?"
And Here’s my Answer to that Question.
DietPower, the software food journal I use, has a simple function that allows me to input label info from new foods into its food dictionary. It also has a simple function that allows me to input new recipes, using foods that are in its food dictionary.
I would use the search function in its food dictionary, and find potato salad, then input how much I ate (1/2 cup?) Same thing with cucmber salad and cheese pie. Each of the 3 specialized foods could be as easy for me to input as an apple.
During the past six and a half years, the DietPower program has been extremely helpful to me. After I've input a food or a recipe once, it becomes part of the program and is forever in my software dictionary.
As part of the process of entering a recipe the first time, I have to determine how many servings are in it. The program then immediately responds with correct nutritional values, including calories.
When I first started using the program, I'd put in one of my favorite recipes and divide it so that one serving was the amount I usually ate. SURPRISE... sometimes I found my chosen serving was TWO or THREE times more than the calories I thought I was eating.... so then... (during the initial input process)... I adjusted the recipe to a more reasonable number of servings such as 12 servings, not 6 servings. This taught me how much I should be eating, and served as a Forever reminder as to just what size my serving of that particular food should be.
When I log my food for each day, I just use DietPower's search function Up comes my food or recipe,
I put the amount I ate...1 serving, or 1/2 serving or whatever, and instantly I have all the nutritional values of what I ate... or what I PLAN to eat... because sometimes, when I see the total calories in advance, I alter my plan.
I've now been using DietPower a very long time so most of my standard recipes are now in its Dictionary. When I cook a new recipe, I just add it in. I also enter as a Recipe, frequent combinations of foods I eat, such as a particular Sandwich or even a complete standard meal. That way I am able to log an entire meal as easily as I could log an apple.
If I am going to eat in a restaurant, I plan approximately what I will eat in advance. I Look online and find that item or a similiar item, and put the restaurant nutritional info for that food item into DietPower. Then, after my meal, I make minor changes to reflect what I actually ate.
Anytime I eat something I haven't prepared, I can always find something similiar in the DietPower food dictionary, or find the nutritional values of a similiar food somewhere online. Once I put that food into the DietPower dictionary, it is there for future use.
Most people eat about the same foods month after month, so once the initial work is done, tracking food is very easy, and takes only a few minutes each day. I find doing this a very enjoyable and extremely valuable HABIT. Any Skill or Habit takes work to estabish in the beginning, but the payoff can be remarkable.
Storing Cakes - POSTED ON: Apr 18, 2011
This video gives information on how to store leftover cake.
Dr. Collins of www.DietHobby.com shares Diet Cooking Tips & Tricks.
Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting - POSTED ON: Apr 17, 2011
PART ONE <span style="font-size: medium"><strong><br> </strong></span>
PART TWO
Makes 15 servings Ingredients:
Cake: 1 cup white flour 1 cup whole-wheat flour 2 teaspoons baking soda 1 teaspoon Baking powder 2 teaspoons ground Cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon ground Nutmeg 1/3 cup chopped Walnuts 1/4 cup prune puree 1/4 cup Canola Oil 1 egg 3 egg-whites 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract 3/4 cup Buttermilk 1 1/2 cups of granulated Splenda 1 cup crushed Pineapple in its own juice 1 1/2 cups of shredded raw carrots
Frosting: 8 ounce tub of light cream cheese 4 ounces fat-free cream cheese 8 ounce container of Cool Whip 1/4 cup granulated Splenda Directions:
Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Coat 9 x 12 inch baking pan with non-stick coating. Shred raw carrots, set aside. In a medium bowl, combine the flours, baking soda, baking powder, spices, and chopped nuts. Stir to blend. In a large bowl, place prune puree, oil, vanilla, eggs, and egg-whites. Whisk or beat together. Add buttermilk and Splenda. Whisk or beat together. Stir in the pineapple, including juice, and carrots.
Add the flour mixture. Stir to form batter. Transfer the batter into prepared pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in center of cake comes out clean. Let cake cool in pan.
Soften block of fat-free cream cheese to room temperature. After cake has cooled, in small mixing bowl, beat both cream cheeses together with an electric mixer until smooth. Add 1/4 cup Splenda and beat for one minute longer. On slow speed, beat in the whipped topping (cool whip) and mix frosting briefly until smooth. Frost cooled cake. Refrigerate frosted cake. 1/15 = 1 serving. 1 serving:
Calories: 209 Carbs: 24.7 grams Protein: 7.6 grams
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