Getting Healthy: Flavorful Vegetables

My mother was never much of a cook and neither was I. Cooking is one of the things I retired from when Dave retired from his day job. But Dave doesn’t enjoy cooking either and eating mostly restaurant or frozen dinner meals has not made me healthy. So I am trying, within my limited physical capabilities, to learn to cook healthful foods. I have been reading and saving many recipes for making vegetables then trying to figure out how on earth I’m going to be able to do all that prep work.

One of the challenges I face is that neither Dave nor I have ever been particularly fond of vegetables. We pretty much stick to frozen broccoli, carrots, and green beans. But, I crave variety. So, I’m working on a theory of how to meet both of those preferences.

Here’s my theory. Start by cleaning out all the old spices in my cupboard. We did that three years ago but I’ve been told spices only keep their full flavor for a year so we should probably do it again. Then we should buy the smallest containers we can of these spices: onion powder, garlic powder, chili powder, dill weed, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and whatever else appeals when I get to the spice section of the store. We should also buy a small bottle of sesame oil.

The recipe for vegetables then goes something like this. Steam a cup of vegetables until just tender crisp. Melt a tablespoon of butter and add a teaspoon or so of one of the above flavorings. Toss the vegetables in the butter and serve. That would give us eight different flavors of each vegetable. Multiply that times the three types of vegetables and you get nearly a different flavor each day for a month. Once we learn which flavorings we like most we can start combining flavors. I already know I like onion with dill. And I like garlic on most anything. But having only a small container of each of those will help me remember to also use the other flavors to help keep me out of a rut.

What do you think? Does this sound like it should work?

TTYL,

Linda

ps. I just remembered that some of the recipes I’ve been researching used lemon juice or orange juice as a flavoring. Now I have more than a flavor per day. Orange/cinnamon carrots sounds good to me. Lemon/garlic is popular. I think I may be on to something here.

It’s morning!

I function best if I sleep nine hours a night. But I am a night owl. So, if I stay up until two o’clock like I did this morning that means I will have my best day if I sleep until eleven o’clock. But…

A day or two ago Dave asked a neighbor about the process of getting propane here. Do they deliver to motorhomes or do we need to drive somewhere? I had seen a propane truck driving through the park but Dave doubted we could just flag him down. But, Paul said yes we could. We could also call to schedule a delivery but there’s an extra charge for that. Well, Paul must have told the driver we inquired because about nine-thirty this morning: boom, boom, boom. The propane guy was at our door wanting to know if we wanted some. So Dave bought propane and I went back to sleep.

Less than an hour later I was awakened by people talking right outside my bedroom window. Then our front door slammed again. So, I got up and inquired. There are people out there surveying the lot lines.

So, I surrendered. I am up. But I am not awake.

TTYL,

Linda

ps. Just as I was posting that the Schwan’s truck driver stopped to see if we wanted anything even though we hadn’t ordered for today’s delivery. No one understands us night owls need to sleep in. But, we now have steaks and wild Alaskan salmon filets in our freezer so at least there’s some payoff for not being allowed to finish sleeping this morning.

Giving Directions

The other day I had to give a delivery driver instructions on how to find our site in the park. Fortunately, I had already been thinking about how to tell friends and family how to find us so he got here just fine. It doesn’t always work that way, though.

I once had a friend give me directions to her house but she forgot to tell me I needed to jog left at one point to end up on her street. She was thrilled when I actually arrived. Because I had been up that street before to a different destination I automatically took that jog. It doesn’t always work that way, either.

My favorite story about giving directions happen to a bunch of computer programmers. They participated in a team building exercise where they were to write direction for making a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. They were told the table held a loaf of bread, a jar of peanut butter, a jar of jelly, a plate, and a knife.

We could all do that, right? Try it. I’ll wait for you.

Hmm. Hmm.

La la.

Dum diddly dum.

Ready? Let’s see what happened.

One employee was chosen to pretend to be a computer and follow the directions exactly as written.

One set said remove two slices of bread from the loaf. The computer could not do it. The loaf had no opening through which to remove the bread.

Another set got the bread open OK and put the slices on a plate. Then it said to pick up the jar of peanut butter and open it then pick up the knife. Couldn’t do it. Jar in one hand, lid in the other, no hand available to pick up the knife.

Another set gave all the correct instructions right up through spreading the peanut butter on the bread and setting everything down. Then it said repeat the steps that gave instructions for the peanut butter except using the jelly. So the computer picked up the jelly, opened it, put the lid down, picked up the knife, used the knife to get some jelly, spread it on the bread and set everything down. Then it picked up the jelly and stopped. It was trying to repeat the directions from the peanut butter section but there was no lid to remove. Every computer programmer will tell you a repeat command needs to be followed by a stop command.

So how did you do with your instructions?

What else would you like to give us directions for doing?

TTYL,

Linda

Weight roller coaster

After my weigh-in at Weight watchers today I went to weightwatchers.com to enter my new weight in their tracking program. I do this each week. The first week I lost 4.4 pounds, the second 1.2, and the third 0.4. I didn’t care much for that trend. So I was happy today to be down another 3.4 pounds.

Until the program fussed at me for losing too much too fast. It seems you are not supposed to loose more than 2 pounds per week on average and my new average is 2.4 pounds per week.

But, the program also looks at your current weight to see how many points you should get. Because I now weigh 9.4 pounds less than I did when I started I don’t need to eat as much to stay healthy. So, it dropped my daily points allowed from 30 to 29.

So the first feedback is that I’m losing too fast and the second feedback is that I should eat less.

Right hand meet left hand.

TTYL,

Linda

Fathers’ Day

My Dad took me on my very first RV trip when I was ten years old. He rented a fold up trailer that had six bunks in it and we went with two other families to Giants City State Park. It rained all weekend but we kids didn’t care.

Many years later, he and my step-mom bought a class c motorhome and went traveling.

Thanks, Dad, for teaching me about this wonderful life Dave and I are now living.

TTYL,

Linda