1500 Calorie Plan: Day 5

At this point I am totally getting the hang of this “eating healthy/normally” business. I continue to be amazed with what I am able to/ allowed to eat with a “budget” of 1500 calories. Like I said before, it’s all about portion sizes!

Breakfast
Pancakes

2 whole wheat pancakes
2 tbsp maple syrup, 1 tbsp almond butter, or 3oz plain yogurt
1/4 cup blueberries
1/4 blackberries
1/4 cup raspberries

Total: 335 Calories

Snack

1/2 head endive
1/4 cup hummus (make your own and freeze some for later, I know! Who knew you could freeze hummus?!?)

Total: 205 Calories

Lunch
Soup  and Sandwich

1 cup butternut squash soup (make your own, or buy a low sodium variety)


2 slices rye bread
1 tbsp dijon (or you can use the hummus you made, because it’s delicious, and you have a bunch)
3 oz turkey breast
1/4 of an avocado

* go crazy and add some tomato, onion, or even a pickle to your sandwich. It won’t hurt you, I promise.

Total: 375 Calories

Snack

1 medium banana
2 tsp peanut butter (I recommend the crunchy variety)

Total: 165 Calories

Dinner
Lemon-Ginger Steak Salad (click for recipe)

*This picture is from a different meal. Unfortunately the brie and baguette didn’t make the cut in a 1500 calorie day :(

4oz steak
lettuce
tomato
cucumber
onions
1 tbsp feta
2 tbsp dressing

Total:  400 Calories

Daily Total: 1480 Calories

1500 Calorie Meal-Plan: Day 4

It’s crazy how fast your body can adjust to a pattern of eating. Morning snack is a brand new thing to me, but already my stomach is grumbling at 10:30. Maybe it’s the smaller portions in the morning, but I’d like to think it’s my metabolism getting it’s act together.

Breakfast
Spinach-Berry Smoothie (my absolute favorite breakfast on the go)

1 cup frozen mixed berries
2 cups spinach
1 frozen banana
1/2 cup water

Total: 190 Calories

Snack

1 graham cracker
1 small nectarine
1/4 cup skim ricotta cheese mixed with 1 tsp honey

Spread ricotta on cracker, and top with sliced nectarine.

Total: 225 Calories

Lunch
Chicken Salad Wrap

1 whole wheat wrap
3 oz chicken breast, chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
1/2 cup chopped apple
2 tsp plain yogurt
1 tsp dijon mustard
3/4 cup baby spinach
2 slices tomato

Mix chicken, celery, apple, yogurt, and mustard. Assemble. Enjoy

Total: 380 Calories

Snack

2 Tbsp Peanut Butter (peanuts only please…none of that junk with icing sugar as the second ingredient. Don’t believe me? Do some investigating next time you’re at the grocery store)
4 celery stalks
1 small apple

Total: 185 Calories

Dinner

Pork Tenderloin with Sweet Potato

 4 oz roasted pork tenderloin (make a dry rub of your choice)
1/2 baked sweet potato
1 cup salad with olive oil and balsamic vinegar

* You may have noticed that I add sprouts to just about anything I can. I love them, but you don’t have to!

Total: 360 Calories

Dessert
ICE CREAM!!!

1/2 cup Haagen Daaz Light Vanilla Bean
1/2 cup fresh raspberries

Total: 230 Calories

Daily Total: 1570

1500 Calorie Meal-Plan: Day 3

You know what’s difficult on a 1500 calorie meal-plan? Poker night….or girls night, board game night…whatever your Saturday night plans are (it just so happened that my night was poker).

Whatever your plans happen to be, we all know what Saturday night can mean. Chips and beer. Wine and Cheese. Cocktails and…more cocktails…You get the picture.

OK, so there are a couple of scenarios that could go down here.

1. You accept that your will-power is not the best, admit defeat at noon, and call the day a write off. Hello ice-cream for lunch!

2. You bring a bottle of water and celery sticks and spend the evening scowling at everyone for daring to enjoy delicious junk food in front of you (how rude!).

3. You accept that you’ll probably have a drink or two, eat normally during the day, but go easy on the snacks, and enjoy yourself in the evening. I had a scotch, felt pretty darn cool, and didn’t blow my whole day. OK, full disclosure…I also had a handful of chips.

Breakfast
Granola with Berries and Almond Milk

1/4 cup granola (I have Natures Path Pumpkin Flax)
1/4 cup blueberries
1/4 cup blackberries
1/4 cup raspberries
2 strawberries
1/2 cup unsweetened almond milk
1 tbsp slivered almonds

Total: 190 Calories

Snack

1 medium pear
2 slices prosciutto

Total: 163 Calories (and 8 grams of protein!)

Lunch
Tuna Avocado Wrap

1 whole wheat tortilla
1/2 can tuna (in water)
1/2 avocado
salt & pepper
dash of hot sauce
3 tbsp alfalfa sprouts

Mash 1/4 of the avocado with the tuna, salt, pepper, and hot sauce (optional). If you feel like it needs to be a little creamier, add a tsp of plain yogurt. Yum!

Total: 375 Calories

Snack

4 oz nonfat cottage cheese
1 small peach
1/3 cup Kashi GoLean Cereal

Make yourself up a cute little parfait, or if you’re like me and prefer 1% cottage cheese, just skip the cereal.

Total:  180 Calories

Dinner
Sea Scallops with Kale and Squash (sounds like a restaurant meal, right??)

Don’t let the price of fresh seafood (please buy fresh seafood) deter you. You’ll eat less, enjoy it more, and be proud of yourself for branching out.

2-3 oz fresh sea scallops
2 tsp olive oil
2 wedges lemon
1 1/2 cups roasted acorn squash
2 cups kale sauteed in olive oil and garlic

Cook scallops in a non-stick skillet over high heat with olive oil. Cook for 1 1/2-2 minutes (until browned) and then flip and cook another minute and half. Drizzle with lemon before serving.

Total: 500 calories

Daily Total: 1408 (the extra is for your scotch: 78 calories for a shot)

New Month, New Challenge

OK, so the raw food thing is over. I officially DID NOT make it the whole month. I think it was 23 days. That’s still pretty good right? I think so. Besides, I went longer than anyone thought I would.

I cannot say enough about how good I felt eating raw food. I felt fantastic. I had lots of energy and I was losing weight. If I had gone on for longer I might have even experienced the amazing skin, and lesser sleep requirements that I heard so much about.

But, there were a couple of big problems with my raw food experiment.

1. COST

Good quality produce is not cheap! Seriously. When a tiny little container of berries is $3 and I’m eating 2 of them a day…not to mention a head of lettuce, and 4 bananas, it adds up, even more so if you really follow the rules and go all organic. Then there are the raw but prepared items you can buy at the organic stores. A bag of kale chips would set you back $7-9, and a tiny package of dehydrated crackers (think 6 crackers) would be at least $4. I tried to stay away from those sorts of things, but still, I think a regular eating at home day would come to $15-20, and that’s being conservative (no fancy cashews or macadamia nuts for this girl). Maybe that doesn’t sound so bad if you’re someone who is used to eating out all the time, but let’s do the math here, $20/day for 365 days. That’s $7300 a year in food. Fruits and vegetables only. No eating out, no fancy desserts. Imagine trying to do that with a family of four? Not to mention the personal chef you would have to hire in order to have time to prepare everything!
Not only is the food expensive, the accessories are too. I thought I had it covered. I have a blender, my roommate has a food processor (thank goodness), and I could use the oven to dehydrate. For a month, it should be fine. NOT TRUE. First of all, my oven is digital, and apparently only goes as low as 170. The cut-off temperature for raw food being 118 means…no oven dehydrating for me. I mean I suppose I could prop the oven door open (and pay the hydro bill for 10 hours straight of the oven being on) as well as purchasing a digital food thermometer to determine to exact internal temperature of my food…OR I could shell out the $500 for the dehydrator. BUT, none of these options seemed financially responsible.
Then there is the blender issue. Apparently not all blenders are created equally. OK, obvious, but I still thought I could get by. Then my blender met kale. My blender started smoking, and I spent the next 20 minutes picking kale pieces out of the blades… Apparently what I really needed was a Vitamix. I mentioned this beautiful machine once before. And she is certainly a thing of beauty. For $500 she better be.

2. I LOVE COOKING

I experimented with a couple different kinds of bars. I tried kelp pasta with pesto. I made more salads than I can name. But, it’s just not the same (no rhyme intended). Blending, chopping and processing are not cooking. They’re like the prep work of cooking. The boring part that restaurants hire high-school kids to do. Soaking a (very expensive) pile of cashews, and then processing them and putting them in a mold to make “cheesecake” will never be the same as baking. So, there’s a lot of work, a lot of time, a lot of prep, but none of the fun stuff.

3. ORGANIZATION

I am organized, but not organized enough for raw food. I tend to think of what I’m going to have for dinner sometime in the morning. That way, if I need to pick something up at the grocery store, or take something out of the freezer, I have lots of time. Eating raw requires WAY more forethought than that. For example, if I want to make a salad using wild rice I need to know this at least 3 days in advance so that I can soak the rice. In fact, any nut, seed, or grain requires minimum an hour of soaking time, but overnight is usually the standard. I also need to know what produce I will need to make that meal in three days, because most likely the things I have on hand now will be gone (fresh produce only lasts so long), and plan a grocery shopping trip for those items.

So, my complaints are not really that serious. It takes time, work, and some serious organization and dedication. Unlike some meal plans or diets, there are no sketchy substitutes, and no preservatives. Two big bonuses for me were that I used VERY MINIMAL packaging, and ate way less meat (I could only handle so much sashimi and prosciutto). If you want to try something new, or just want to kick-start a healthy eating lifestyle, I HIGHLY recommend trying out raw food. I know there are quite a few things that I will be incorporating into my lifestyle from now on.

Now, it’s a new month, so there is a new challenge. Of course, right? During my raw-food trial I was told about many different diets ranging from slightly (OK more than slightly) odd, like freeganism (the practice of only eating things that are free, which includes foraging, dumpster-diving, and plate-scraping), fruitarian (eating mostly fruits, or things that fall naturally from a plant), and one-ingredient only. I was very intrigued by the one ingredient only (exactly what it sounds like), and was about to go that route. THEN, my roommate suggested I do something CRAZY.

Eat Normally.

I know, it’s pretty intense.

It makes sense though. I mean, here’s the routine. I do some sort of eating experiment (gluten-free, lactose-free, raw, caveman…) and then I rebel and eat whatever I want. Well, of course I’m going to feel good when I start bringing some structure back into my diet. I’m not sure if I can attribute feeling so great to eating raw (gf, etc…), or just to not eating all the junk I was eating before.

Now I know “normal” is a relatively loaded word, and I don’t really want to get into that, but here’s what it will mean for me. A 1500 calorie a day meal-plan that includes fruits, vegetables, lean meats and fish, grains, and dairy. I would say the “food-groups”, but I’m fairly skeptical about the food pyramid and food guide. I strive to stick to the “edge of the grocery store” philosophy, so that’s what I’ll be doing. Also, no alcohol, or more specifically 1 drink a week (because sometimes a girl just has to have a beer on a patio).

I’ll be tracking and posting my meals on here, so feel free to follow along. I’m on day 3 right now, so stay tuned for a few 1500cal meal-plan posts with pictures and recipes :)

Check out Day 1 here.

Happy (healthy) cooking!