Thursday, September 29, 2011

I Am Boosting the Economy One Frozen Dinner At A Time

While trying to bend with a learning curve that comes with graduate school, I am discovering what it means to forsake oneself for something bigger. Although my nutrition knowledge pool may be on the rise, my diet has gone to the gutter. Amid hunting for my normal foods, learning to run errands by subway, bike or on foot and trying to tackle the mountain of homework that calls my name each and every night, my dietary world feels to be in shambles at the moment. Oh, and let's not forget my new Game of Thrones addiction. Say what you will about literary adaptations, but that show makes True Blood look like a tacky bargain bin romance novel meant for those without taste. Game of Thrones makes me want to put on a forty pound dress, learn how to ride a horse, shoot a bow and arrow and eat a turkey leg...simultaneously. Word to the wise - get HBO. If profanity, nudity or gore offends you - don't get HBO.

Long ago I found my freezer can be my greatest ally in the kitchen. Gone are my days of lounging, cooking, and baking. I am still batch cooking, just on a smaller scale. Thanks to my time and space constraints, my traditional food choices have been slightly compromised for the sake of my own sanity. Lucky for you, my total anguish and partial melt down has paved the way for your body's betterment. Rest assured, I receive no monetary compensation for this blog so the products spotlighted here are purely of my own opinion. There is no exchange of money for product endorsement. Just ask my depleted bank account.

Like so many people around our great nation, I am pressed for time. My coursework is demanding, homework is unrelenting and I live two blocks from Fenway Ballpark so you better believe I am getting used to living with noise. Perhaps my greatest Boston rival to date has been eating on a budget. Holy bagel sandwiches! Food is expensive out east. My conservative mid-west food spending days are over.  When my plane flew over the Pennsylvania border, there was no turning back. My new home city is awesome but high-priced.

Frozen Dinners - often times these words next to one another makes the health conscience cringe. Understandable. For MANY years frozen entrees meant three things: high sodium, high fat and no vegetables. Over the last decade however, the food industry has made some pretty substantial improvements in these pre-made meals. Still, at times walking through the freezer section can feel like a bad movie preview you can't look away from because your intelligent inner self just wants to see if it can get any worse. Well that and those twenty milk duds you just ate make you think the lead actor looks like your gym teacher minus the unisex polyester gym shorts.

Enough schticking. There are two important things to remember when opening that freezer door:
  1. Not all frozen meals are created equal.
  2. Just because the word 'healthy' is on the cover doesn't necessarily make it your waist or heart's friend. 
Below are three more favorable choices I find to be both nutritious and delicious. Because, let's be honest, no matter how nutrient packed a meal is, if it tastes like crap from a dumpster that been rotting in the sun for four days, I sure as heck ain't eating it.

PRODUCT #1
Amy's Light in Sodium Vegetable Lasagna 

Yes, it's a vegetable lasagna. Get over it. With stacks of organic lasagna noodles layered with tomato sauce, roasted vegetables and low fat cheese, this one is unapologetically delicious. One serving has 290 calories and 8 grams of fat. The real thing about Amy's Vegetable Lasagna that gets my heart pumping (in a good way) is its sodium content. With 340mg per nine-ounce piece, Amy's makes Stouffer's like a bottle of soy sauce. Most traditional frozen lasagna pieces run around seven ounces, pack 350 calories, 12 grams of fat and carry between 600 to 800 mg of sodium. You're body and taste buds will thank you.


PRODUCT #2
Kashi Mushroom Trio and Spinach Pizza

With a whole grain and flax crust topped with a tomato Parmesan sauce, baby portobello, champignon and shiitake mushrooms, spinach, mozzarella and provolone cheeses you really can't go wrong. One serving (1/3 the pizza) has 250 calories and 9 grams of fat. The sodium content on this one isn't a bragging point, however, it does bring a sizable amount of dietary fiber (4 grams) and protein (2 ounces). Enjoy it for dinner and heat up the leftovers for lunch the next day. Yum, yum!

PRODUCT #3
Amy's Light & Lean Bean & Cheese Burrito

It's like a fiesta in your mouth. This burrito has a whole-wheat tortilla filled with pinto beans, Cheddar and Monterrey Jack cheese, brown rice and a tab of chili sauce. One serving contains 280 calories and 5 grams of fat, 8 grams of fiber and nearly 2 ounces of protein. Does the word burrito make you flatulent simply reading it? Well, take your Beno, drink some water and put the dog outside. No but really, for some, beans require practice. With practice will come tolerance. It may not be pleasantville, USA the first time around but it does get better with time.

Note: If you can't find the Light & Lean version, the traditional bean and cheese burrito is just as good and honestly, the nutrition profile is not greatly different.

One final frozen dinner tip. Add vegetables. Toss up a side salad. Roast or steam vegetables. The possibilities are endless. The frozen dinners can be on the smaller end and rightfully so for the sake of calorie, fat and sodium control. The trick to making sure they are both filling and nutrient dense is to add some color either directly into the dish or on the side. 

Happy Heating!

Friday, September 9, 2011

Easy Eggplant Parmesan

Where was I? If you've been keeping up with my blog or know me in any way, then you're aware I am now living in Boston. Allow me to apologize again for the month of August. There was no Shameless Product Placement and ONE measly post for the entire month. Talk about slacking. See the opening paragraph of the last blog post for further explanation. Bottom line: August, like that three year old I babysat when I was twelve, totally got away from me. At least I had hurricane Irene to welcome me to New England.

I am happy to report I am alive and well.  Finally settled into my apartment, I've taken the subway, navigated the city streets on my bike and walked my mid-west butt all over the 2 mile radius that surrounds my overpriced, frat-house adjacent apartment. This new (terrifying) chapter in my life may have repercussions for this blog. I didn't move to Boston solely for the beautiful Fall foliage and 'wicked' clam bakes. Obtaining a MS in nutrition and completing my dietetic internship are all on the docket for the next sixteen months. Hello anxiety.

I'm not one of those people who pretends to have it all together while the pieces of her life crumble internally. I'm more the openly paranoid, borderline neurotic, caffeine dependent type. One finals week during my college career I actually attempted to sleep in a lecture auditorium to negate the time wasting activities of driving, eating, and bathing. It was going pretty well until the janitor showed up around mid-night and called the department of public safety on me.  Armed with nothing but Twizzlers, notecards, and 4 one-liter bottles of Mountain Dew, the three officers set me free with a warning for loitering. To this day I wonder why three officers were corralled. The greatest danger I posed to anyone in the immediate area would have been a legendary sugar crash. Moving on, I'm afraid the days of weekly blog posts may be on strike for a bit. My obligation is to school and the Stafford Loans keeping me here. I am hoping to continue the blog so don't loose faith. I only ask for patience. 

My relocation has already brought some new challenges in the area of, you guessed it, food. Don't get me wrong, Boston has some pretty amazing food to offer.  But this girl is as single as it gets, not to mention on a budget, so you better believe I'm not wining and dining every night. Well, maybe a little wine. I have discovered that cultivating some of my familiar favorites isn't as easy as I thought it would be. Not only that, my apartment sqaure footage has been chopped in half and yet I'm paying more in rent. Location, location, location. Yeah, I know. Did I mention my kitchen is less than ten square feet? And with no dish washer, I am quickly adapting to what it means to be kitchen efficient.

Over the last five years I've perfected batch cooking. The whole idea is to give myself some options when it comes time for dinner. It goes a little something like this. I make recipes that typically feed six or eight, divide it up into single portions, stick them into tupperware and freeze. Cashew burgers, lasagna, homemade spaghetti sauce, chili, and chicken enchiladas are just a few of the various dishes I have on hand in my freezer at any one time. This eggplant parmesan is about the easiest thing in the world to make. It freezes, defrosts, and reheats without a glitch. Making it in my tiny kitchen was no easy feat so if I can do it, so can you. 

Easy Eggplant Parmesan
Serves: 6-8

1 medium-large eggplant
1 egg beaten plus 2 TBS milk
Dried Italian bread crumbs (at least one cup, may need more)
8 ounces mozarella, sliced
1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese
4-5 cups of marinara sauce 

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

Slice eggplant into 1/2 inch slices. (NOTE: if you wish to peel the eggplant, do it before you start slicing)   Dip each eggplant slice into eggwash, followed by breadcrumbs. Place onto cookie sheet and bake for 15 minutes or until underside is golden brown.  Flip slices over and repeat for another 15 minutes.  

Remove eggplant from oven.  In a 13x9 baking dish, cover bottom of pan in marinara.  Next arrange eggplant slices in one layer (some overlapping may be necessary).  Top each eggplant piece with a slice of mozarella, cover with marinara and top with parmesan cheese.  

Bake for 20 minutes. Serve hot.

Recipe Note:  I used a combo of italian breadcrumbs and panko breadcrumbs and it turned out very good.

Happy Cooking