Update: Cuban Pork Tenderloin With A Twist!

As promised, below is the finished product of the Weight Watchers’ Cuban Pork Tenderloin recipe I posted a few days ago, but with a spicy twist!

Yes, I loved the lime and garlic flavors, but last night I desired a little heat.  So I broke out a Christmas gift from my sister and her husband. Spicy and delicious with the right amount of crunch.  I topped the tenderloin with this bad boy and got the kick I wanted.

Added some heat with this pepper dish my sister and brother-in-law made. It was awesome!

Added some heat to the tenderloin with this pepper topper my sister and brother-in-law created. Amazing flavor without cauterizing your mouth!

The concoction includes  jalapenos, carrots and cauliflower soaking in oil. It’s spicy but not to the point where you burn your tongue off. I was really shocked by the crunch.  While the carrots are a little soft, the cauliflower really holds up. I don’t know if they will part with the recipe, but I want it!

This is so good I can't get enough. Need to convince my sister and hubby to share recipe.

Pretty with a bow on top! This is so good I can’t get enough. Need to convince my sister and hubby to share recipe.

 


It’s The Little Things…

weight loss body changesJust before my morning stretches I noticed something…I sat in a chair and crossed my legs. That’s it. I crossed my legs. I don’t mean crossing one leg over the shin or ankle of the other leg. Nope. I’m talking about an above-the-fricking-knee leg crossing!

And I did it without using my arms to pull the leg doing the crossing.

I haven’t crossed my legs like that since…well crap, I can’t remember.

I’m sure there are things I couldn’t do before that I can now. And that will continue as I get thinner and my body stronger. I just don’t know if I should be happy that I noticed my legs today or sad that I’m missing those little firsts.

It’s the little things that keep you going when the tape measure is unbending or the scale is just outright rude.

I know you’re not supposed to sweat the small stuff, but I think it’s time I start enjoying it.


Are Family And Friends Supportive Of Your Weight Loss?

weight loss questionsDuring my Weight Watchers presentation, members asked a lot of great questions that I’ll post over the next few days with my responses. The first question has to do with handling family and friends who are not as enthusiastic about your weight loss journey as you.

“How do you deal with unsupportive family and friends?”

I’ve never asked anyone for their support, except for one person and I’ll get to him in a bit. I believe that my health and happiness is my responsibility. I can’t let what others say or do knock me off track. At the end of the day it’s how I feel about myself that’s most important.

Having stated that, I’m pretty lucky that my friends and family support what I’m doing. I get peppered with lots of questions about what I’m eating, how my weight training is going, and what exercises are working. I have friends who offer to workout with me or send me encouraging messages. And that’s just awesome.

Tell Me What You Want. What You Really, Really Want.
My first real challenge came from my husband. Whenever I hit a major weight loss milestone, he always suggested we celebrate by going out to dinner. Really!?!

After much frustration, I finally figured out that’s just his way of showing me how proud he is of my efforts. Before dropping the 94 pounds, it was very common for us to go out and celebrate with frozen custard or a trip to 5 Guys (the most awesome burger ever!). It’s a pavlovian response for both of us.

Then it dawned on me — it’s my responsibility to tell him what type of support I need.

He can’t read my mind and he isn’t going to know what I want unless I tell him. So after figuring out what I wanted, we sat down and had a little chat. I asked him to not suggest food-related celebrations when it came to my weight and come up with other ideas like catching a movie, hiking, bowling or getting me jewelry (hint, hint). He’s been a champ ever since (although I’m still waiting for the jewelry).

Learn To Say Thank You!
One of the support areas my husband is great at is praise.  He’s always telling me how great I look and praising how much weight I’ve lost. Unfortunately one of my weaknesses is accepting praise. I tend to deflect his comments and not say “Thank you.” The more you shut down compliments, the sooner the compliments will stop coming your way. Not a good thing.  Thankfully, my husband ignores my dodges and still praises my weight loss work while I work on being more accepting.

Sometimes You Got To Move On
As for friends, I’ve only had one who wasn’t supportive and at times was down right snarky to me about my efforts. After spending too much time trying to figure out what I needed to do, I told myself, “It’s not my problem. It’s hers.”

If a friend isn’t supportive, you can’t force it. Just accept it and move on. And that’s what I did.


Creating A Weight Loss Kitchen

A disorganized pantry makes it difficult to prepare delicious and healthy foods at home.

A disorganized pantry makes it difficult to prepare delicious and healthy foods at home.

You’ve made your resolution to lose weight and feel inspired to start cooking healthy meals. But if your kitchen is a hot mess, it makes it all the more difficult to break bad food habits. Taking control of your kitchen is a great first step in the battle of the bulge.

That was my situation when I finally had it with my weight 2 years ago. Cooking in my kitchen was annoying. Not enough space. I could never find anything when I needed it. It was so much easier to order pizza…and pack on the pounds. After all, where you store food and how accessible it is really does decide how healthy you eat.

To lose the weight, I needed to take the fight to my kitchen. My plan – create a space without temptations and where I wanted to cook healthy foods.

I pretty much followed these 8 steps to whip my kitchen into shape. That’s not so say I’m perfect. I spent the bulk of last night reorganizing my pantry after the holiday cooking and baking frenzy.  But I’ll post about that tomorrow.

Dot’s Guide To Organizing The Kitchen

Step 1. Take out the trash
Anything in my refrigerator, freezer or pantry past it’s expiration date I tossed. The same for opened boxes of cereal that went stale. This was the hardest part of organizing my kitchen. We’re not supposed to waste anything, right? I mean there are little kids starving in China. Keeping expired food isn’t safe and certainly does nothing for the starving children.

Step 2. Find a new home for unwanted food
I packed up unopened food that was still good into boxes for my local food bank. This included cereal, canned veggies and fruit, sauces, spices, pastas, breads and grains.

Step 3. Create food prep space
It was near impossible for me to cook at home because I had no room to prep my food. Appliances, cookbooks and storage jars filled my limited counter space. It was time to rearrange.  Only those items we used daily sat on the counters – the coffee maker and the knife block. My cookbooks, blender, mixer and bread maker found a home in a pantry.

Step 4. Food storage
I don’t mean cabinets or pantries. Do you have enough containers (with matching lids!) for food prep, leftovers, and to take your lunch to work? Are they clear? Do they store easily (very important)?  Our mismatched food storage got so annoying my husband pitched all of them one morning and then drove me to the Container Store to find stackable storage that suited our needs and small kitchen.

Step 5. Assigning everything a home
Everything in my kitchen has its place. Fruits and vegetables are on the first two shelves of my fridge front and center. Utensils used daily I placed in a jar next to the stove. You’ll find my pots and pans in a cabinet next to the range. The food storage containers are always stacked the same place, as is the canned food and my baking supplies. Any junk food for the husband is banished to the top of our tallest cabinet so I can’t see or reach it.

The key is to organize your kitchen based on how you use it.

Step 6. Plan ahead
I prepare our foods for lunch and dinner ahead of time to save money (not eating out), time (no rushing around), and make sure we’re eating healthy.

Step 7. Portion control the snacks
I stopped buying the 100-calorie snack packs because we don’t eat processed foods and they ain’t cheap.  So I portion our snacks (veggies, nuts and seeds, or fruit) in small snack bags. They’re stored in the fridge or panty for easy access.

Step 8. How many points is that?
Before putting food in the pantry or fridge, I write the Weight Watchers PointsPlus value on the box.  It takes a few minutes but saves time when I’m whipping a meal together.

Once you organize your kitchen, you’ll find it a lot more welcoming in cooking great, healthy meals. Plus it’s a real time-saver when you are rushing to get out the door.


One Simple Start Recipe That Needs Work

My grilled cheese and vegetable soup. The soup was great, although it needs some protein. The grilled cheese, was lacking. Next time it's real cheese, not this fat-free stuff.

My grilled cheese and vegetable soup. The soup was great, although it needs some protein. The grilled cheese, was lacking. Next time its real cheese, not this fat-free stuff.

For lunch today I tried the Simple Start grilled cheese with vegetable soup. I can’t say I loved it. I made the soup last week and it is very tasty. I added elbow pasta and stewed tomatoes to it for a nice Italian twist. It’s the “grilled cheese” I have issue with.

The recipe calls for fat-free shredded cheese and two slices of tomato on a light English muffin. Just heat in the oven until the cheese melts.

Easy enough. Problem is fat-free cheese doesn’t really melt. It seems to form a hard shell on top of the tomato.  Also, I had to put the muffin in the toaster first. The cheese “melts” too quickly for the muffin to get toasty.

I can have real cheese on Simple Start, but it’s pretty expensive points wise. But in this case it would make for a better grilled cheese.

Finally, I ended up adding a hard-boiled egg to my lunch. This meal really lacks protein. I try to eat 3-6 ounces of protein at each meal. I think the next time I make the soup, instead of the noodles I’ll add chicken or turkey.


I Think I Over Did It At The Gym

How addicted am I to spinning? I just did 105 minutes. I love it.  Image courtesy of duron123 and FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

How addicted am I to spinning? I just did 105 minutes. I love it. Image courtesy of duron123 and FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

I woke up this morning feeling great and decided to ease my way back into my workout schedule.  After my leg stretches I headed off to the gym thinking I’d do an hour of yoga and about 15 minutes on a bike. If my knee felt great, then I’d try the Thursday spin class.

That was the plan…and it got shot to hell once I hit the gym.

Yoga was awesome, as usual. The poses weren’t overly stressful for my knee and after class I felt great.

For some reason I wondered over to the Zumba class across the hall.  I ducked in, but just seconds into watching the bouncy moves common sense took over. Realizing my knee couldn’t take the dance movements just yet, I headed down to the spin room.

I had 45 minutes before the next spin class, so I saddled up and did a few rotations. My knee felt great. I slapped on the headphones and started pedaling to the rockin’ sounds of Led Zeppelin and Rush.

I felt great 15 minutes in and decided to go another 15. I figured I’d get 5 miles in and then I’d do more stretching and call it a day.

The next thing I knew the class started and I’m still pedaling. I quickly turned off my music, took off the headphones, and stayed for class.

D’oh!

I already cycled for 45 minutes — 30 minutes longer than I intended. Sure I felt great and I knew I shouldn’t push it. But that blasted little voice in my head said, “You’ve been cooped up far too long. Just 60 minutes more. Time to really work out.”

So much for easing my knee back into the swing of things.  I even upped my resistance between levels 5-9.

Thankfully cycling doesn’t put pressure on my knees.  An added bonus during class: my instructor adjusted my seat (I was too low) and it was like my first 45 minutes never happened. Sweet!

I felt great and loved every minute of it, until the 100-minute mark. Just as we started our cool down my knee started to ache. Slowing the pace helped, but I needed to stretch.

Once we hit the stretching section, I quickly got off the bike and started working on that knee.

A few stretches later and I felt great.

I’m home now and icing up the knee as a precaution. I’ll find out soon enough if the extra spin time was worth it.


Grilled Cuban Pork Tenderloin

This is a great little Weight Watchers (subscription required for link) recipe I’ve made a few times and is a big hit with the husband. The pork is marinated for at least 4 hours, but to get the full flavor I recommend marinating overnight.

I’m marinating 2 tenderloins today to cook tomorrow (photo tomorrow).

Gilled Cuban Pork Tenderloin
Net Carbs: 2
Weight Watchers PlusPoints: 4
Servings: 4

Ingredients

  • ¼ C fresh live juice
  • 1 tbsp. olive oil, extra virgin
  • 1 tsp. tried oregano
  • ½ tsp. table salt
  • ¼ tsp. black pepper, freshly ground
  • 2 tsp. minced garlic, or to taste
  • 1 pound uncooked, lean pork tenderloin, use one or whole loin

Instructions

  • In small bowl, combine lime juice, oil, oregano, salt and pepper. Spoon 3 tbsp. of marinade into a zip-top food storage bag or shallow glass dish.
  • Add garlic and pork to bag (or glass dish). Seal bag and turn to coat pork with mixture (or turn in glass dish to coat and then cover). Refrigerate at least 4 hours, but preferably overnight.
  • Cover and refrigerate remaining marinade in a small bowl – this will be the sauce.
  • Heat grill to medium-hot heat or preheat oven to 425.
  • For the Grill: Remove pork from bag and place on grill or in shallow cooking dish. Discard marinade in bag (or glass dish). Grill pork, turning occasionally, until meat thermometer inserted in center reads at least 145 degrees, about 20-25 minutes.
  • For the Oven: Place pork in a shallow roasting pan, discarding marinade in bag or glass dish; roast until internal temperature reaches 145 degrees, about 20-25 minutes.
  • Remove pork from grill or oven and let rest for 10 minutes before thinly slicing. Stir any juices from cutting board into reserved sauce and drizzle over sliced pork. Yields about 3 ounces of pork and 1 tbsp. of sauce per serving.

How Yoga Changes Your Body

Wondered about the benefits of yoga? Does it really eliminate stress? Not sure if it will help you lose weight? What’s all that meditation mumbo-jumbo about anyway? A new study shows how yoga changes your body from day 1. Check out this cool yoga infographic the Huffington Post put together that shows the health benefits over time.

BodyOnYoga


The Great Nut Caper

I wasn't aware of the danger I was in while dividing my almonds and walnuts into single serving size snack bags.

I wasn’t aware of the danger I was in while dividing my almonds and walnuts into single serving size snack bags.

Today was food prep day. Lots of vegetables and fruit got chopped in preparation for the week. It just makes life easier when whipping up delicious foods. If there’s a weight loss food habit that’s a must, it’s food prepping.

At the grocery store I picked up some walnuts and almonds, about a pound each. Sadly nuts are not on my Simple Start food list. While off-limits to me this week (my last week of the program), my husband can enjoy these terrific, healthy snacks, provided he can stop with one serving.

That’s where my mad food prep skills come in — and a lot of snack-size baggies.

I simply weigh or measure out the nuts per the recommended portion and seal them in a snack bag. Simple, and it ensures a single serving size. Plus, it’s super convenient when he needs to grab something on the go or pack his lunch in the morning.

The amount of nuts I get last for about 3-4 weeks. Not bad for about 10 minutes of my time.

A warning to those of you considering food prep.  I routinely run into a hazard when I break out the chopping board, food scale, measuring cups, food containers and snack bags.

My first hazard likes to sit to my left.

This thief waited in vane for an almond. Patience paid off when a big, juicy strawberry fell.

This thief waited in vain for an almond. Patience paid off when a big, juicy strawberry fell.

The second hazard likes to sit on my right.

Thief No. 2 and the ringleader. She likes to use her cuteness to hypnotize you into tossing her a morsel.

Thief No. 2 and the ringleader. She likes to use her cuteness to hypnotize you into tossing her a morsel.

This time around, they enlisted help. The helper’s job — constantly bat at my head and neck (I sat down during today’s food prep because my leg needed a break).

The thieves came with an enforcer this time. While he loved batting my ponytail, jumping on my shoulder and kneading my back (which was awesome!) he couldn't distract me from my task.

The thieves came with an enforcer this time. While he loved batting my ponytail, jumping on my shoulder and kneading my back (which was awesome!) he couldn’t distract me from my task. Although I spent a lot of time shooing him off the counter and disinfecting.

I’m not sure what they promised their little enforcer, as he hates both thieves (and barely tolerates his humans).

Overall I did good. None of the nuts fell on the floor. However, A rather large strawberry slipped out of my hands. Shadowfax, my little dog, was so fast, the Old English Sheepdog was still laying down before she realized she missed the big prize.

Poor puppy. Maybe next time.


Great Stretches For Your Legs

I’ve learned my lesson. To avoid injuring myself I need to do more stretches in the morning before my workout.  Though the magic of YouTube I found this video from Fitness Blender for my legs.

The stretches have done wonders for my knee, hamstring and calf muscle.  I’m actually going to do a light workout today. Yeah!

You can check out Fitness Blender’s YouTube channel right here.